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17 Definitions

Benchmark

For Benchmark we have terms and definitions in 17 topics. The topics are Accounting, Finance, Financial, Grantmaking, Import Cars, Investment, Land Management, Marketing, Mental Health, Non-Profit Accountability, Non-Profit Governance, Non-Profit Leadership, Organizational Capacity, Real Estate, Teacher Evaluation, Technology and Volunteer Management.



Benchmark (Accounting)

is a study to compare actual performance to a standard of typical competence; ora standard for the basis of comparison as being abovebelow or comparable to.


Benchmark (Finance)

The performance of a predetermined set of securities, used for comparison purposes. Such sets may be based on published indexes or may be customized to suit an investment strategy.


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Benchmark (Financial)

Is the standard to measure, monitor, price or evaluate a security or derivative. The treasury market is the benchmark for the corporate, mortgage backed, international and emerging credit markets. Here, securities are priced in terms of yield pickup relative to a comparable treasury. This comparability is often in terms of maturity though duration or average life become more meaningful for securities which have option characteristics. Is the standard to measure, monitor, price or evaluate a security or derivative. The treasury market is the benchmark for the corporate, mortgage backed, international and emerging credit markets. Here, securities are priced in terms of yield pickup relative to a comparable treasury. This comparability is often in terms of maturity though duration or average life become more meaningful for securities which have option characteristics.


Benchmark (Grantmaking)

An original set of data against which a later set is compared in order to measure progress toward stated outcomes. See also:Benchmarking Gap, Capability Mapping, External Benchmarking


Benchmark (Import Cars)

A test used to compare performance of computer hardware and software.


Benchmark (Investment)

A standard, such as the S&P 500 Index or Dow Jones Industrial Average, against which investment performance is measured.


Benchmark (Land Management)

Standard point of reference used to define progress, improvement, or change.


Benchmark (Marketing)

A control source against which you compare the area you're studying. For example, you may compare the results of a study in one state to the results of the nation as a whole.


Benchmark (Mental Health)


The industry measure of best performance for a particular indicator or performance goal. The benchmarking process identifies the best performance in the industry (health care or non-health care) for a particular process or outcome, determines how that performance is achieved, and applies the lessons learned to improve performance.


Benchmark (Non-Profit Accountability)

An original set of data against which a later set is compared in order to measure progress toward stated outcomes. See also:Benchmarking Gap, Capability Mapping, External Benchmarking


Benchmark (Non-Profit Governance)

An original set of data against which a later set is compared in order to measure progress toward stated outcomes. See also:Benchmarking Gap, Capability Mapping, External Benchmarking


Benchmark (Non-Profit Leadership)

An original set of data against which a later set is compared in order to measure progress toward stated outcomes. See also:Benchmarking Gap, Capability Mapping, External Benchmarking


Benchmark (Organizational Capacity)

An original set of data against which a later set is compared in order to measure progress toward stated outcomes. See also:Benchmarking Gap, Capability Mapping, External Benchmarking


Benchmark (Real Estate)

A permanent reference mark or point established for use by surveyors in measuring differences in elevation.


Benchmark (Teacher Evaluation)

A referenced behavior for comparing observed performance at a given level. See Holistic Scoring, Scoring Rubric.


Benchmark (Technology)

A test used to measure hardware or software performance. Benchmarks for hardware use programs that test the capabilities of the equipment--for example, the speed at which a CPU can execute instructions or handle floating-point numbers. Benchmarks for software determine the efficiency, accuracy, or speed of a program in performing a particular task, such as recalculating data in a spreadsheet. The same data is used with each program tested, so the resulting scores can be compared to see which programs perform well and in what areas. The design of fair benchmarks is something of an art, because various combinations of hardware and software can exhibit widely variable performance under different conditions. Often, after a benchmark has become a standard, developers try to optimize a product to run that benchmark faster than similar products run it in order to enhance sales. See also sieve of Eratosthenes.To measure the performance of hardware or software.


Benchmark (Volunteer Management)

An original set of data against which a later set is compared in order to measure progress toward stated outcomes. See also:Benchmarking Gap, Capability Mapping, External Benchmarking




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