That 68% was a vanity metric. It hid the truth. Patients were using the search feature but not finding the right provider. The no show rate increased by 12%. Patient satisfaction dropped by eight points. The feature looked successful on the dashboard but was actually making things worse.
The metrics need to become meaningful. (5/39)
For a healthcare marketplace company, the problem is the same. The team measures vanity metrics. Those metrics hide the truth. Walton's strategy says: measure what drives decisions. Meaningful metrics drive decisions. Decisions eliminate waste. Eliminating waste improves the product.
## The Core Principle (10/39)
For a healthcare marketplace company, the situation is identical. The team measures vanity metrics that do not drive decisions. The fix is the same. Measure what drives decisions. Those metrics will improve the product.
## Four Steps to Apply the Strategy
1. Audit the Current Dashboard and Separate Vanity Metrics from Decision-Driving Metrics (12/39)
For an FDD team of six to fifteen, this audit should happen in one session of no more than two hours. Every metric gets evaluated with one question. For FDD, the audit should be part of domain object modeling. It is a modeling input.
2. Define One Decision for Every Metric and Write It Down Next to the Metric
Walton defined one decision for every metric at Walmart. He wrote it down. The visibility created clarity. Clarity created action. Action improved the business. (19/39)
For an FDD team, every metric should have a visible decision statement. For FDD, the statement should be part of feature design. It is a design requirement.
3. Set a Threshold for Every Metric That Triggers an Automatic Investigation
Walton set a threshold for every metric at Walmart. The threshold was a number that triggered an automatic action. This eliminated delay, reduced waste, and enabled low prices. (25/39)