Title: What Has Happened
1What Has Happened
to our Business Processes?
2Why Is Improvement Necessary?
What worked yesterday may barely pass today, be
inefficient today, and totally unsatisfactory
tomorrow
3Definition of a Business Process - SIPOC
SIPOC Model
- Process - A logic series of related transactions
that converts input to results or output.
PROCESS
SUPPLIER
CUSTOMER
Input
Output
REQUIREMENTS AND FEEDBACK
Business Process Improvement Toolbox, Bjorn
Andersen, ASQ Press, 1999
4Business Process Fallacies
- 1. Ineffective business processes do not cost
the organization much money. - 2. There is little to be gained by improving
business processes. - 3. The organization can work around business
practices. - 4. Business processes cannot be controlled
- 5. Business processes are unimportant compared
to production processes.
5Vertical Departments - Horizontal Processes
- A conflict exists between the traditional
departments and the way work gets done
6Suboptimization
Optimize
Optimize
Optimize
Suboptimized
7Transition to Business Process Management
- Every process has a customer
- The value creation takes place in horizontal
processes - Identify process boundaries, customers and
suppliers - By managing entire processes to reduce the risk
of suboptimization - Appoint process owners, who are responsible for
the process - Managing processes provides a better foundation
for controlling time and resources.
Business Process Improvement Toolbox, Bjorn
Andersen, ASQ Press, 1999
8Business Process Customers.Many Types
- Primary Customers
- Secondary Customers
- Indirect Customers
- External Customers
- Consumers
9Asking the Customer
- The finance department of a large company
produced weekly reports for the sales department
containing credit status of the customers. The
responsible accountant put his heart into the
accuracy of the report despite the time involved
and occasional delays. The sales department was
not depending on precise accuracy, but on having
the report on time, so as to be able to issue
order confirmations at the agreed upon time.
They assumed that the finance department
understood this and did nothing to enlighten the
accountants. Instead, they continued to be
annoyed by the delayed reports, without
appreciating the accuracy, and nothing got
better. - What is critical to the customer?
10Customer Perceptions The Kano Model
- It helps employees set priorities
- Dont work on Delighters until Must Bes are in
place - It helps you avoid the trap of thinking that
- no complaints customer satisfaction
Delight
Delighters
More is Better
Neutral
Must Be
Dissatisfied
Absent
Fulfilled
Dr. Noriaki Kano
11Example Buying a Car
Leather seats Alloy wheels Metallic paint
Gas milage Luggage space
Delight
Delighters
More is Better
Neutral
4 wheels Working engine
Must Be
Dissatisfied
Absent
Fulfilled
What happens if the must bes are absent, but
you have the delighters and the more is
betters?
12The Customer
Huh?
- At the start . . .
- We need more customer complaints!
The trick is to increase complaints while
improving quality
13The Danger of Suboptimization
- Optimization - is a process of orchestrating the
efforts of all components toward achievement of a
stated aim. Optimization is managements job.
Everyone wins with optimization. - Suboptimization - the maximizing or fine-tuning
of a part of the system - We need to work together to optimize the system
as a whole, not seek to optimize separate pieces.
- Deming - Optimizing separate pieces
- destroys the effectiveness
- of the whole.
14To Avoid Suboptimization..
- Know the difference between a function and a
process - Solve the problem (or work the project) taking
into consideration the next higher level, core
processes
FUNCTIONS -Accounting -Sales -Engineering
PROCESSES -Invoicing and Collections -Customer
Acquisition -New Product Development