Critical success factor (CSF) is the term for an element that is necessary for an organization or project to achieve its mission. It is a critical factor or activity required for ensuring the success of a company or an organization. The term was initially used in the world of data analysis, and business analysis. For example, a CSF for a successful Information Technology (IT) project is user involvement.[1]
"Critical success factors are those few things that must go well to ensure success for a manager or an organization, and, therefore, they represent those managerial or enterprise area, that must be given special and continual attention to bring about high performance. CSFs include issues vital to an organization's current operating activities and to its future success." [2]
Critical success factors should not be confused with success criteria; those are outcomes of a project or achievements of an organization that are needed to consider the project a success or to esteem the organization successful. Success criteria are defined with the objectives and may be quantified by KPIs.
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The concept of "success factors" was developed by D. Ronald Daniel of McKinsey & Company in 1961.[3] The process was refined by John F. Rockart in 1981.[4] In 1995, James A. Johnson and Michael Friesen applied it to many sector settings, including health care.[5]
Many argue that the success of a business is based on identifying a niche market that will ultimately result in growth, development and profitability.
Critical Success Factor vs. key performance indicator (KPI):
Critical success factors are elements that are vital for a strategy to be successful. A critical success factor drives the strategy forward, it makes or breaks the success of the strategy, (hence “critical”).
Strategists should ask themselves 'Why would customers choose us?'. The answer is typically a critical success factor.
KPIs, on the other hand, are measures that quantify management objectives, along with a target or threshold, and enable the measurement of strategic performance.
An example:
6. ^Chung, Kae H., Friesen, Michael E., "The CSF Approach to Management at Boeing," Journal of Management Systems, Summer 1991, pp. 53-63.
7. ^Friesen, Michael E. (1998). The Internal Sell: Encouraging Executive Influence and Accomplishment, New York: Quorum Books. ISBN 1-56720-170-9