Dashboards have become corporate attics, stuffed with numbers that once felt important and now just collect dust. Revenue sits beside social sentiment sits beside last week’s cart abandonment rate. Somewhere in that clutter is the metric that actually matters, buried under a pile of legacy KPIs no one has touched in three quarters.
KPIs were created to simplify decision-making. Instead, many organizations have turned them into participation trophies.
When everything is a KPI, nothing is a KPI.
It’s time to reclaim the word key.
The KPI Inflation Problem
Metric inflation is everywhere. Teams label every column in a spreadsheet “KPI” the way Oprah hands out cars.
The result is predictable: dashboards that feel informative but aren’t actionable. The signal gets lost in the static.
Consider an e-commerce seller of artisanal rubber ducks. The team tracks site visitors, click-through rate, cart abandonment, revenue, average order value, and lifetime value.
All are useful. Few are decisive. Only one is key.
Revenue is the goal. But cart abandonment is the lever.
You can’t fix revenue after the fact. It’s the score on the scoreboard. But you can fix a leaky checkout funnel today.
A machine learning model can surface this automatically, identifying abandonment as the variable most tightly linked to future revenue.
Abandonment becomes the early warning system. It reveals friction, pricing sensitivity, customer hesitation, and operational bottlenecks long before those issues show up in revenue. The other metrics describe the system. This one helps you change it.
That’s what makes it key.
What Makes a KPI Truly ‘Key’?
A KPI must meet a higher bar than “interesting.” A true KPI is a decision catalyst. It shapes what happens next.
Three attributes separate KPIs from background noise:
1. It reflects the core of your business model
A KPI should sit at the heart of how your business creates value.
Monthly customer churn? Yes.
Customer lifetime value? Possibly.
Twitter followers? Only if your business model is “being famous,” and even then, be suspicious.
If the metric isn’t tied to how you win, it’s not key.
2. It drives the behavior you actually want
Metrics don’t just measure performance. They shape it.
We’ve seen what happens when they go wrong:
- Emergency rooms rushing meaningless first treatments to hit wait-time targets
- Call centers dropping complex cases to protect handle-time metrics
- Retailers bundling unrelated items to inflate items per transaction
Economists call this Goodhart’s Law: when a measure becomes a target, it stops being a good measure.
The takeaway for executives is that metrics shape culture. Choose poorly and your organization will optimize for the wrong outcomes with impressive efficiency.
3. It is timely, reliable, and actionable
A KPI must be usable in the present tense.
If it’s hard to measure, slow to update, or impossible to influence, it’s not a KPI. It’s a museum artifact.
A true KPI tells your team what they can change today.
Why the Balanced Scorecard Still Matters
The balanced scorecard is often dismissed as dated thinking, a relic of 1990s strategy decks and consulting frameworks. In practice, most organizations didn’t reject it. They diluted it into a bloated list of metrics and then wondered why it stopped working.
At its core, the idea is simple: not all metrics tell you the same thing at the same time.
Financial metrics are lagging indicators, the rearview mirror showing where you’ve been. Customer, process, and learning metrics are predictive leading indicators, the windshield showing where you’re heading.
A strong KPI system requires both.
A CEO who only watches the rearview mirror shouldn’t be surprised when he hits a wall.
How Many KPIs Do You Actually Need?
Here’s the number: Three to five KPIs per scorecard area.
Enough to understand the system. Not enough to overwhelm it.
And if one area only has two that matter, even better. That’s clarity, not incompleteness. Dashboards don’t award extra credit for symmetry.
Counter-Metrics: Your Safeguard Against Gaming
Every KPI needs a guardrail.
If your KPI pushes the team to sprint, the counter-metric ensures they don’t run off a cliff.
You’re not just maximizing speed. You’re optimizing for safe velocity.
Think of these as paired forces: the KPI pushes, the counter-metric constrains.
- Speed ↔ Error Rate
- Revenue Growth ↔ Customer Retention
- Cost Reduction ↔ Employee Turnover
These pairings force balance. They prevent teams from “winning” one metric by damaging something more important.
If you hit your speed target but your error rate spikes, you didn’t win. You failed.
This discipline keeps your KPIs honest and turns metrics into strategic instruments instead of cover for creative number-chasing.
KPI vs. Goal — The Cheat Sheet for Decision Makers
Executives often blur the line between goals and KPIs. They’re not interchangeable.
A goal is the outcome you want.
A KPI is the lever you pull to achieve it.
If goals are the scoreboard, KPIs are the plays you call to change the score.
That’s why our rubber duck seller focused on cart abandonment. Revenue was the goal. Abandonment was the lever.
Goal vs. KPI:
- Goal: The destination → KPI: The steering wheel
- Goal: The scoreboard → KPI: The playbook
- Goal: Increase revenue → KPI: Reduce abandonment
A goal tells you what happened. A KPI tells you what to do next.
Executives don’t manage outcomes. They manage the actions that create them.
The KPI Qualification Test
Not every metric deserves the title. Before promoting a number to KPI status, run it through this test. Fail even one, and it’s just a metric.
- Is it important?
Would you act if it moved dramatically? - Is it clear?
If it needs decoding, it’s out. - Is it actionable?
Can your team influence it within a planning cycle? - Is it contextualized?
Do you know what “good” looks like? - Is it trusted?
Would someone stake their bonus on it? - Is it timely?
Does it arrive in time to act? - Is it efficient?
Does it cost less to measure than it’s worth? - Is it safe?
If optimizing this number could break something else, have you paired it with a guardrail?
Rule of thumb:
A KPI earns its title by driving decisions, not dashboards.
The Bottom Line: Fewer Metrics Create Better Decisions
A small, sharp set of KPIs aligns teams, clarifies priorities, and accelerates action.
A bloated set of KPIs muddies accountability and creates dashboard theater.
If you want your team to move faster, give them fewer dials to watch.
One final rule for your next dashboard review: If your KPI requires a 20-minute slide deck to explain, it’s not a KPI. It’s a liability. A true leadership metric should be understood in the time it takes to sip an espresso.
Click here for more columns from Michael Bagalman’s Data Science for Decision Makers series.
Contributor
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View all postsMichael Bagalman is VP of Business Intelligence & Data Science at Starz and Professor of Practice at the University of Oklahoma. He has spent more than 25 years building and leading data and decision-making capabilities at organizations including AT&T, Sony, Publicis, and Deutsch. He writes the Data Science for Decision Makers column at All Things Insights and publishes Data Science Rabbit Hole on Medium. Bagalman holds degrees from Harvard and Princeton. Learn more at MichaelBagalman.com.






















































































































































