Benchmarking is the process of comparing one's business processes and performance metrics to industry bests and/or best practices from other industries. Dimensions typically measured are quality, time, and cost. Improvements from learning mean doing things better, faster, and cheaper. Benchmarking involves management identifying the best firms in their industry, or any other industry where similar processes exist, and comparing the results and processes of those studied (the "targets") to one's own results and processes to learn how well the targets perform and, more importantly, how they do it.
Public Benchmarking Surveys can be setup using the system. Our benchmarking platform is fairly new (April 2010) - we're in the process of making a lot of updates and changes. So please bear with us.
Before you setup the benchmarking survey, you need a unique identifier. We need a unique identifier to identify the "source" of each of the benchmarking data. You may be the administrator of the survey - you also need to create a "benchmarked" version of the survey.
As with any survey, you should distribute your "Benchmark Version" of the survey. NOTE - do not distribute the "Master URL" to the survey. Each benchmark has its own URL. You'll see it in the "Edit Survey" screen - see screenshot below:
One of the features of the benchmarking platform is that anyone taking the survey can create a customized link to the survey and poll their own users. This is a very powerful and enabling concept. At the end of the survey all survey takers are presented with a screen like this below: Any survey taker can then create a new URL to the survey, so that the system can track data coming in from "their audience" - this also allows us to cross-segment and compare data between different benchmark instances.
Yes - This is tricky. Here is our position and thought on the matter. As the administrator and designer of the survey, you obviously have access to all the data. You can go to the reports tab and have access to the entire data-set. This gets tricky, since other benchmark owners also need access to "their slice" of the data. We are still in the process of working the implications of data-ownership on benchmarking surveys. Comments welcome!
At this point - No. When a user signes up for a benchmark survey, a SurveyAnalytics account is also created.
This feature is available with the following licenses :