Beneficial outcomes

When establishing a set of weighted criteria for comparing options (or developing a business case) it is good to consider a broad range of “beneficial outcomes” – different kinds of good thing that might result.
One framework I found useful is represented in the table below:

Type of beneficial outcomeDescriptionExample
PerformanceThresholds of success against well-behaved Key Performance Indicators and measures of success.Net promoter score over 60|%.
Revenue exceeds £100m.
Return on Equity exceeds 5%.
AchievementsSuccessful completion of one-off initiatives. Complete an acquisition.
Open a new headquarters.
Introduce a new end-to-end process.
CapabilitiesSkills, competencies etc that can be appliedSkills and processes (for example to do our own marketing, logistics, invoicing etc)
ActivitiesThings that we will be able to routinely doProvide training for staff.
Donate 10% of profits.
Pay suppliers on time.
Behaviours and ValuesThinking and acting in line with values and beliefsDiversity, equity and inclusion practices
Types of beneficial outcome

Of these, behaviours and values are hardest to quantify.
Another framework of different types of benefit (more applicable to business cases, especially in the public sector, is the UK Govt 5 Case Model : Strategic, Economic, Commercial, Financial and Management cases (not to be confused with the different stages of project case: Strategic Outline Case, Outline Business Case and Full Business Case etc. )