| dc.description.abstract |
David Norton and I introduced the Balanced Scorecard in a 1992 Harvard Business
Review article (Kaplan & Norton, 1992). The article was based on a multi-company research
project to study performance measurement in companies whose intangible assets played a central
role in value creation (Nolan Norton Institute, 1991). Norton and I believed that if companies
were to improve the management of their intangible assets, they had to integrate the measurement
of intangible assets into their management systems.
After publication of the 1992 HBR article, several companies quickly adopted the
Balanced Scorecard giving us deeper and broader insights into its power and potential. During the
next 15 years, as it was adopted by thousands of private, public, and nonprofit enterprises around
the world, we extended and broadened the concept into a management tool for describing,
communicating and implementing strategy. This paper describes the roots and motivation for the
original Balanced Scorecard article as well as the subsequent innovations that connected it to a
larger management literature. |
en_US |