Calculating Return on Outcome
Source: Pixabay

Calculating Return on Outcome

By Sara Watts and Iggy Pintado

How do you calculate a return on an outcome that is not quantifiable? I discussed this recently with Sara Watts, former Chief Financial Officer (CFO) at IBM and esteemed colleague for many years. This is her perspective.

I held a number of senior positions in finance including CFO, Financial Controller and Internal Audit Director at IBM for 10 years. I am currently a company director and chair the audit committee of the boards I serve on.

In my free time, I sing with a prestigious Australian choir – which means I must keep in tempo, count bars of music, and constantly subdivide note values. I also bushwalk with friends, and we always compare the number of steps our devices have recorded at the end of a day’s walk. In summary, pretty much everything I do can be measured and my life is full of numbers and numerical acronyms.

ROA, ROE, ROI, IRR, WACC, EPS, P/E are just some of the financial acronyms that are quantifiable measures.?But what about Return on Outcome (ROO)??

How do I describe ‘outcome’??It’s the way things turn out.

Therefore, ROO could be interpreted as a return on or from the way things turn out. That’s very different from ROI which is a relative measure of the return on an investment, and usually requires a quantifiable - often cash or profit - return. ?

As a non-executive director (NED) I must consider ROI. After all, one of our key responsibilities is to make sure that we’re spending shareholder, government grant, or donated funds wisely. ?However, most NEDs also consider impact, outcome, value, and legacy even if it’s harder to quantify and measure.?

Of course, that is not unique to the NED world.?This concept is important enough that some governments have introduced outcomes-based budgeting.?For example, both the NSW and Victorian governments in Australia have recently moved towards this. Departments and agencies are asked to submit budgets and make investment decisions based on how the use and expenditure of public resources will deliver outcomes for citizens.?It is seen as a way to improve performance and promote transparency.

The concept of ROO appeals to me for two reasons. Firstly, it creates a way to give structure to a discussion that is often informal rather than formal and, secondly, because I see it as complementary to ROI.?A discussion about ROO encourages a different conversation around the board table which in turn means deeper consideration of multiplier effects, linked benefits, and unintended consequences whether good or bad.

A discussion about ROO acknowledges that some returns we’re seeking are not easily quantified, can’t be measured, may have secondary and tertiary impacts, and reminds us that not every investment outcome can, nor should, be monetised. ?

I don’t know how to quantify the relief someone feels knowing that their aging parent is getting good care, or the benefit to a small and remote African community who received COVID-19 vaccinations. Nor have I yet worked out how to measure the economic benefit of a child learning English when their capacity to earn is still 10-15 years away. ?

Whether an organisation is listed on a securities exchange, privately owned, or a non-for-profit, their NEDs will be considering a range of outcomes alongside the more formal ROI measures.?

As the conversation around the board table turns to the impact of the decision on shareholders, the likely reaction of investment analysts or clients, the impact on Environmental, Social, and (Corporate) Governance (ESG) credentials and other reputational factors, it may not be called a discussion about Return on Outcome, but it probably is.

Neil Wilson

Commercial & Strategic Mindset | M&A Due Diligence & Integration | Delivering Transformational Value | Customer Centric | Sustainable Ambition | Compassionate Leader | Champion for Diversity & Inclusion

2 年

Hi Sara, This is so relevant and thought provoking.. extending this discussion further, to consider the value that Companies are delivering beyond financial (shareholder) returns is also another angle. That is, contribution more broadly to community, to eco-systems, to Planet! Cheers,

Shree Nanguneri

President and CEO, Millennium Global Business Solutions Inc. USA (Senior Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belt)

2 年

4/4 Concluded... A finance person may not be restricted to ABC, or GAAP systems to seek the calculus of ROO, instead look at actions, tasks, outcomes to figure out the most simple & reliable way to quantify outcomes. There are only 3 fundamental physical outcomes in this world we live in, that was part of our education around our middle school years (or around that time), which are: a - Length, => Distance, Length Square (Area) and Length Cubed (Volume) b - Mass (Weight), and c - Time (Duration) All other measures such as ROA, ROE, ROI, IRR, WACC, EPS, P/E are all pseudo that are made up to suit a fiscal narrative to normalize measures, thus possibly blinding our ability to visualize metrics to critically think to quantify outcomes of processes associated per the author's suggested three areas in everyone's lives.

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Shree Nanguneri

President and CEO, Millennium Global Business Solutions Inc. USA (Senior Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belt)

2 年

3/3 Continued... It is easy to disqualify and state these aren't measurable or aren't quantifiable, whereas such questions listed above are to be posed prior to thinking of defining a quantifiable outcome, let alone economic. A high school student will ask these questions of their parents in each of these categories be it: - Aging care for grandparents - COvid-19 Vaccinations during teen years, and - Taking English classes at their primary school level (here the elder sibling would ask or address it) By the way, in one of the European nations teenagers put in hours into a fiscal ban by taking care of elders (senior citizens) so that it is no labor cost for the recipients of their care, so that when these teenagers become senior citizens 50-60 years from then they can enable similar care by using their banked hour credits. Such a simple model practiced in the real world simplifies the health care system for this section of our society. Let Us All KISASS => By "Keeping It Simple, Achievable, Sustainable, and Systemic" 4/4 Concluded...

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Shree Nanguneri

President and CEO, Millennium Global Business Solutions Inc. USA (Senior Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belt)

2 年

2/2 Continued... a - Someone feels knowing that their aging parent is getting good care. => Why does someone approach good care for their aging parent? => What happens if they don't provide the care that they they should have done so? => What kind of tangible manifestations show if good care is not provided for one's aging parents? b - Small and remote African community who received COVID-19 vaccinations => What happens when such vaccinations aren't administered? => Why did they choose to go and vaccinate people in a small and remote community in the first place? => What has happened to other remote communities that were vaccinated recently in other nations? => What has happened to other remote communities that weren't vaccinated recently in other nations? c - Child learning English when their capacity to earn is still 10-15 years away => Why does someone provide english classes for their child 10-15 years ahead of time? => What prompted them to do so in the first place? => What has been a desirable outcome for children who were provided such an education early on? => What has been an undesirable outcome for those children who weren't provided such an education? 3/3 Continued...

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