Title: Business Process Reengineering
1Business Process Reengineering
- The history of radical management
Presentation by Bhininder Kaur and Timothy
ODonnell MGMT390 -004 March 22, 2006
2BPR Basics
- BPR is defined as "the analysis and design of
workflows and processes within organizations1 - BPR has also been described as the critical
analysis and radical redesign of existing
business processes to achieve breakthrough
improvements in performance measures.2
3Who invented BPR?
4Michael Hammer
- Michael Hammer, besides being one of the founders
of BPR, he is also the president of Hammer and
Co., a management education company. Hammer
started out as a engineer and was a professor at
MIT in the computer science department. Both TIME
(1996) and Business Week (2002) listed Hammer as
one of the Top 25 most influential businessmen of
all time.
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6James Champy
- James Champy is the co-author of Reengineering
the Corporation with Michael Hammer. He started
his career as a civil engineer at MIT. He also
passed the bar at Boston College Law School and
taught at MIT for some time. He was the CEO for
CSC Index and is now the Chairman of Perot
Systems consulting practice.
7The third wheel?
Thomas H. Davenport is sometimes credited as a
co-creator of BPR. His articles in the Sloan
Management Review were coming out around the same
time as Hammers articles. Davenport was not
involved in Reengineering the Corporation
although many cite his definition of BPR.
Davenports thoughts on BPR are similar to
Hammerism (BPR as defined by Michael Hammer)
8The Evolution of BPR
Hammer and Champy name Business Process
Reengineering and the craze begins. (1990s)
Adam Smiths Wealth of Nations (1776)
Scientific Management (1911)
1945
1900
2006
Total Quality Management in Japan (post-WWII)
Gilbreths Motion Studies (1910s)
9The BPR of Nations?
- In the introductory chapter of Reengineering the
Corporation, the authors liken their book to Adam
Smiths Wealth of Nations in terms of importance
and continuing influence.
Hammer and Champy noted that Smith developed the
concept of work specialization during the
Industrial Revolution and his involvement in
early management techniques lead to Taylorism
and eventually to BPR. Even Smiths ideas needed
a reformation to fit into the 20th century.
10Frederick Taylors influence
- Business Process Reengineering was influenced by
Taylors Scientific Management. However, the
dehumanization of the workers under Taylorism
created problems. Workers slaved for hours under
difficult labor conditions and became little more
than the machines they worked on. Taylors ideas
provided a backbone for BPR, but drastic changes
were necessary.
11The Gilbreths Influence
- BPR was also influenced by the Gilbreths Time
and Motion Studies. Similar to Taylors ideas,
the Gilbrethian efficiency studies increased both
the workforce productivity and the dehumanization
of the workplace. Changes needed to be made in
order to make way for a new century of business.
12Total Quality Management
- Scientific Management lead William Deming to
develop Total Quality Management, yet another
efficiency strategy that helped Japanese business
reform after WWII.
William Deming
13Management for the future
Americas business problem is that it is
entering the twenty-first century with companies
designed during the nineteenth century - Hammer
and Champy (1993).
Even though nineteenth century management theory
is cited as an influence to BPR, it is still a
modern theory hoping to reform twenty-first
century business by rewriting the dogmatic
business procedures of the last hundred years.
14In the beginning
BPR began when Hammer and Champy noticed some
corporations dramatically improving their
performance in one or more areas of business
using techniques that were radically different
then those found in management at the time. This
observation heralded Hammer and Champy to
reevaluate popular management theories. Both
authors noticed that it wasnt gradual changes,
but radical reformation of businesses that led to
the greatest change.
15Algorithm for programming real life
- Hammer created reengineering as a logical
extension of his computer science background. In
an interview with Wired magazine, Hammer agreed
to an interviewers analogy that a
reengineering plan is an organizational hack
an algorithm for programming real life. The bits
are people. The routines are business processes.
(Wired, 1995) - Hammer himself was a one of the famous Cambridge
hackers during the 60s and 70s and parlayed
his computer expertise into management with the
Index Group, a management-consulting firm in
Cambridge. There he met with James Champy,
co-founder of Index, and from there the two
co-authored their best-selling business bible
16Reengineering the Corporation
- First published in 1993, Reengineering the
Corporation became the handbook for businesses in
the 90s. - It was subtitled A Manifesto for Business
Revolution. - The tag line states Forget what you know about
how business should work. Most of it is wrong!
17The Reengineering Revolution
- Michael Hammer also co-authored The Reengineering
Revolution in 1995. When Hammer noticed companies
succeeding when they implemented BPR, he wanted
to document what techniques individual companies
used to achieve their goal. - He also noticed companies doing badly after
implementing BPR and wanted to know why they were
failing.
18Affecting the World
In only a year and a half after the publication
of Reengineering the Corporation , the book had
sold 1.7 million copies worldwide. To date, it is
estimated to have sold over 2 million copies
world wide. The book has also been translated
into nineteen (19) languages including Finnish,
Hebrew and Thai (Hammer 1995)
19Butwhy has there been so much interest
in Business Process Reengineering?
20Why organizations are interested in BPR
- 1 reason cited by corporations
- Improving efficiency
21Additional attractions for corporations
- Competitive pressure
- Desire to improve poor customer satisfaction
- Desire to improve poor quality of products and
services
22BPR real steps for real results
- Develop the Business Vision and Process
Objectives - Identify the Processes to be Redesigned
- Understand and Measure the Existing Processes
- Identify IT Levers
- Design and Build a Prototype of the New Process
23Proscis Best Practices in BPR (2002)
- Third study in a series conducted over a five
year period - 327 organizations participated
- Companies encompassed 53 countries
- According to Prosci, The results of the 2002
study combine the most current findings with
those of the past two studies to provide a
comprehensive and comparative view of business
process reengineering projects.
24Geographic Distribution of Participants in 2002
Prosci Study
25Industry Segment of Participants in Prosci Study
26A sampling of the 327 companies that participated
in Prosci Study
- Allstate
- AutoZone
- Best Buy
- FedEx
- Gulf Air
- Hong Kong Productivity Council
- Industry Practice, Tata Consultancy Services
- Infosys Technologies Ltd - Quality (Corporate
Services Group) - Institute for Technology and Management
- Lockheed Martin Mission Systems
- Management Consulting
- Marriott Senior Living Services
- University of Missouri
- Vetri Software (India) Ltd
27Because of BPR
- American Express reported reducing its annual
costs by over 1 billion through reengineering. - ATTs Global Business Communications Systems
unit turned a nine-figure loss into a nine-figure
profit - the Semiconductor Group of Texas Instruments
reduced their cycle time of its order fulfillment
process by more than half.
- Progressive Insurance reduced the cycle time of
its claims process from weeks to days, and
dramatically improved customer satisfaction while
reducing costs. The revenue per employee
increased by over 70 percent.
Figures based from the years 1993 1995,
(Hammer2)
28CIGNA A BPR Success Story
- Viewed BPR as a way of life
- Not radical, all-or-nothing change rather, a
realignment of strategy and agenda - Sustained "from the bottom up, with learning
transferred "across.""3 - Took into consideration the differences in
management cultures in different countries
29Things went as planned when
- Team members demonstrated strong dedication to
the project. - The team had strong commitment and support from
top management. - The team shared a clear vision of the objectives
and goals and had a common focus and
understanding of project success. - The team utilized consultants as part of its
reengineering strategy.
30On the flip side
- 70 of BPR projects fail3
- Only 47 of the companies in Proscis study met
their project objectives to within 10 - According to one of the self-proclaimed
creators of BPR, around 1993 the modest idea
of BPR had become a monster.4
31Possible Causes of BPR failure
- Lack of sustained management commitment and
leadership - Unrealistic scope and expectations
- Resistance to change
32No more excuses
- When Hammer wrote The Reengineering Revolution,
he said, Failure is not caused by cosmic rays,
bad luck, or other factors outside of human
control. Failure is caused by people who dont
know what theyre doing and who dont pursue
reengineering the right way.(Hammer2) - BPR has been used as the scapegoat for any and
all problems if something did go wrong when
implemented. Companies misused the term to sack
people or downsize. Anyone could invoke the term
BPR and it could mean anything. It was a buzz
word that not enough people understood fully, and
was therefore utilized improperly. Many
criticisms of BPR that arose did so because they
did not understand the processes.
33Lessons Learned
- People, not the bottom line, are the most
important assets of a company - IT alone can not improve a companys financial
status technology is only useful if it helps
people do their work more efficiently. - Companies should underpromise and overdeliver4
- Clarity is key
34References
- 1Davenport, T.H. Short, J.E. (1990). "The New
Industrial Engineering Information Technology
and Business Process Redesign," Sloan Management
Review, pp. 11-27. - 2Grover, V., Jeong, S.R., Kettinger, W.J. Teng,
J.T.C. (1995). "The Implementation of Business
Process Reengineering," Journal of Management
Information Systems, 12(1), pp. 109-144. - 3Malhotra, Y. (1998). Business Process Redesign
An Overview, BRINT Institute.
www.kmbook.com/bpr.htm - 4Thomas, A. (1995). The Fad That Forgot People,
Mansueto Ventures LLC. www.fastcompany.com/online/
01/reengin.html - Hammer, M. Champy, J. (1993) Reengineering the
Corporation, Harper Business - Hammer, M. Champy, J. (1995) The Reengineering
Revolution, Harper Business - www.prosci.com
- www.brint.com
- www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.08/reengineering_pr.
html
35Any Questions?