Does it make sense to become Balanced Scorecard certified? What are the differences between the various programs out there? Has anyone been able to increase their marketability (get a job, promotion, win a contract, etc.) through the BSC certification program? asked Mar 28 '10 at 22:12 Dylan ♦♦ |
No. The topic has been exhaustively discussed in other fora, and in those discussions the only certification schemes to emerge appear to be simply training programmes that give you a certificate. I've worked with 'certified' Balanced Scorecard experts from two of the major programmes, and while it is great that they have had some training, in practice that's all they have had, and in both cases the training was based on pretty dated concepts / materials, so that also was not so helpful. What matters is whether you understand what you are doing, why you are doing it, and have some relevant experience.
The what, why and experience elements are also only part of the picture - to be effective in Balanced Scorecard design you need to be able to put this information / experience into context, and for this you need a good level of background understanding of how organisations and people within them work. Expertise on particular parts of business etc. is less important. Our normal educational pre-requisite for new consultants is a high level of general background education - typically an MBA from a good school. It doesn't seem that the current certification schemes have any such entry requirement. In the light of this, I think you need to be very sceptical of the value of certification. All it really tells you right now is that the person is sufficiently interested in the topic to want to spend money to get a badge to demonstrate this - and presumably in at least one case, cough up an annual subscription to retain the right to use this badge. Being 'certified' might make 2GC more interested in talking to you than if not, because of this demonstration of interest. But being certified would not help you any further - we'd look at you from a more broadly based perspective, and probably discount in large measure what you had picked up while getting your certificate. HTH answered Apr 21 '10 at 10:04 Gavin Lawrie |
I would like to understand this as well.