Title: Government Process Re Engineering James Joseph Adhikarathil
1Government Process Re Engineering.
- T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
- Managing Director, Realutionz Properties(P) Ltd..
2GPR The road to smart administration.
- If you do not update,
- you will be outdated.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
3GPR The road to smart administration.
-
- Government Process Re Engineering (GPR) is the
analysis and redesign of work flow and process
within or between Government Organisations.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
4GPR The road to smart administration.
-
- It is the fundamental rethinking and radical
design of government processes to achieve
dramatic improvement in critical measures of
performance such as cost, quality, service and
speed .
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
5GPR The road to smart administration.
- It is the collection of activities that takes
one or more kinds of input and creates an output
that is of value of customers.. - Eg.
- Online pokkuvaravu.
- Torrence system.
- CMO Portal.
- E pattayam.
- E District.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
6GPR the road to smart administration.
- Specific.
- Measurable.
- Achievable.
- Result oriented( efficiency effectiveness)
- Time bounded.
- An organization, No matter How well designed, is
only as good as the PEOPLE who work in itDee
Hock.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
78 Symptoms of poor governance.
- Denial of natural justice.
- Air of mystification of procedures.
- Multiple visit to government offices.
- Long queues at delivery points.
- Outcome is suspicious.
- Poor quality services.
- Service is mercy...not a right.
- Too many intermediaries.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
88 Symptoms of poor processing.
- Poor receipt and recording of applications.
- Un necessary attachments and huge inventaries.
- Multiple level reports and approval.
- Poor efforts in storage and retracing data. .
- Poor maintenance of records, registers and file .
- Processing by mis interpreting act and rules.
- Not applying technology.
- Disposal of application without speaking orders.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
9Symptoms of poor governance.
- Denial of natural justice.
- Air of mystification of procedures.
- Multiple visit to government offices.
- Long queues at delivery points.
- Outcome is suspicious.
- Poor quality services.
- Service is mercy...not a right.
- Too many intermediaries.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
10GPR The road to citizen centric administration.
- R-esponsiveness.
- E-quity
- P-articipation.
- E-fficiency.
- A-ccountability.
- T-ransparency.
- E-ffectiveness.
- R-easoned decisions.
- GPR can potentially improve these elements in
public service. - There is no greater challenge and there is no
greater honor than in Public Service. -
Condolezza Rice.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
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12We need to re invent the process..
- All problem are simple and efficient when
originally designed. - User friendly.
- Deploying contemporary rules and techniques.
- Process become complex and inefficient with
passage of time.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
13GPR The road to smart administration.
- GPR is not
- Automation of existing inefficient processes.
- Sophisticated computerization of obsolete
processes. - Playing with organizational structures.
- Down sizing and doing Less with the Less.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
14Old wine in the new bottle Vs New wine in the
new bottle..
- Effectiveness Vs Automation.
- Automation use technology to computerize the
AS IS process to make it happen faster, often
wrongly perceived as E Governance. - Effectiveness to improve service delivery and
satisfy customer needs , while lowering costs.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
15What are the essential parameters of GPR?.
- Ease of applying for a service.
- Processing and Movement of files/communications.
- Tracking the application and delivery of service.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
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171. Ease of Applying for a Service..
- The mode of filing application should be relevant
, efficient and effective. - Supporting documents required for submission are
also scrutinized and its essentiality should be
checked. - Language should not be a barrier for anyone
applying for a service hence inclusivity is an
important criterion against which forms and
documents are measured. - QUALITY.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
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19Service Quality.
- The quality of
- Physical product.
- The time taken to deliver.
- Cost of service.
- Customer experience.
202. Processing and Movement of files/communications
..
- The processing of files, communication,
Collection of reports and data should be SMART ,
efficient and effective. - START FROM CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
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223. Tracking the application and delivery of
service..
- It is necessary to know how the applicant is
informed about the status of the application and
how the service is delivered to them. This makes
it easier to ensure that citizens have to make
physical visits and follow-ups only when
necessary. Additionally, it also helps keep a
check on corruption and opportunities for
harassment. The right to get a reasoned reply
should be ensured. Subsequently, the
re-engineered service is notified under the Right
to Service Act of the state to ensure compliance
with the revised timelines.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
23The role of ICT inteventions in GPR..
- Wherever possible the process should be digitised
to make it more traceable, transparent, and
accessible. - Under each GPR parameter, it is essential to
understand the reasoning and requirement of
documents, steps, and asks. - However, it is crucial to understand that
digitisation is only an enabler to a good GPR and
not the solution in itself. Archaic processes,
digitised as is, do little to improve service
delivery, nor make the process more efficient or
effective.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
24GPR The road to smart administration.
- The Knowledge of GPR enables officials to
improve through - Improved citizen focus.
- Minimised process, cost and time.
- Increased Transparency levels.
- Reduced Administrative burden.
- Adoption of best practices.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
25Knowledge, Skill and Attititude development in
the course.
- Relevance, importance benefits.
- Key concepts.
- Process documentation, mapping methods tools.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
26Knowledge, Skill and Attititude development in
the course.
- Principles, methods tools of GPR.
- IT lead process re engineering.
- statutory implications of GPR.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
27Knowledge, Skill and Attititude development in
the course.
- Recognize the need for change in government
process. - Recognise the need for customer focus.
- Recognise the neeed for change management and
capacity building in the context of GPR. - Recognise the need for transformation in e
governance rather than translation.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
28Advantages of the traditional approach to e-
Governance
- Minimal legal changes.
- Easier status updates.
- Real time management information system- MIS.
- Any time Anywhere service.
- But remember..
- Many of the government processes are inefficient
and obsolete. - Most of the processes were defined long back .
- In many cases, the processes were defined with
compliance in mind rather than citizen centric
services. - Thus GPR allows leveraging the benefits of IT
rather than just replicating the existing
process.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
29Government processes.
- Government process are processes in the
government domain. - A government business system is a collection of
processes that take one or more inputs that is
desired by stake holders. - Processes are not functions drive an
organization, They are the key for satisfying
customers and stake holders. - Hence it is the responsibility of government to
improve its - Internal process.
- Service Quality..
30GPR STEPS.
- Identify and define the problem.
- Define vision and objectives for GPR.
- Process study and documentation.
- Process analysis- process engineering and
defining to be processes. - Process implementation IT enablement and
validation.
31Identification of Problem and vision statement.
- Most organizations undertake GPR / BPR to address
problems or needs of the organization or its
customers with an objective to improve the
overall quality of the services. - These initiatives may be
- To address the specific concerns of the
citizens employees. - To address the challenges and issues in the
services and service delivery To improve the
quality of the services - To adopt best practices from similar
environments - To address the changing needs of the customers
(citizens and businesses) and the government - Accordingly, the GPR initiative should take
inputs from a problem identification exercise.
The current needs of the customer should also be
gauged. In many cases, the problems in service
delivery are understood poorly, leading to
stating them incorrectly. Also, the customer
needs and expectations change with time, and the
organization has to keep in track with changing
expectations, and deliver services in accordance
to such expectations.
32Identification of Problem and vision statement.
- Most organizations undertake GPR / BPR to address
problems or needs of the organization or its
customers with an objective to improve the
overall quality of the services. - These initiatives may be
- To address the specific concerns of the
stakeholders (citizens/ businesses/ employees) - To address the challenges and issues in the
services and service delivery To improve the
quality of the services - To adopt best practices from similar
environments - To address the changing needs of the customers
(citizens and businesses) and the government - Accordingly, the GPR initiative should take
inputs from a problem identification exercise.
The current needs of the customer should also be
gauged. In many cases, the problems in service
delivery are understood poorly, leading to
stating them incorrectly. Also, the customer
needs and expectations change with time, and the
organization has to keep in track with changing
expectations, and deliver services in accordance
to such expectations.
33Methods of problem identification.
Reactive Method Customer voice. Proactive method
Information comes through customer initiative. Information comes through customer initiative.
Customer complaints and grievances. Survey Questionnaires.
Media.research Focus groups.
Interviews.
Custodiand feed back.
Points of service contact.
34Methods of problem identification.
- In most government situations the problems are
identified by reactive methods. In other words,
the problems are identified when something goes
wrong and the customer / media seek redressal. - Proactive methods are used by successful
government/private sector organizations listen
to the customers to identify and address their
problems and needs at a very early stage. - This helps in building confidence in the
customers, enhancing overall image of the
organization, and in minimizing the impact of the
problems to larger segment of customers
35Customer needs and how they evolve ?.
- 1. Basic needs are the must-haves, which when
met will not contribute much to customer
satisfaction, but if they are not met will lead
to customer dissatisfaction. These are unspoken
but expected needs. - Eg No factual errors in a certificate issued
by a village officer - 2. Performance needs are the spoken and expected
needs, whose fulfillment leads to satisfaction
and Non-fulfillment leads to dissatisfaction. - Eg - certificate received within the stipulated
time limit. - 3. Delight needs are the unspoken and unexpected
needs, whose fulfillment leads to customer
delight. As the customer was not expecting the
need to be fulfilled, it does not lead to any
dissatisfaction. - E.g.village officer calls on day of application
and informs that the certificate is ready - Over a period of time Delight needs become
Performance needs and then Basic needs. - We will have to constantly sense the Delight
needs and service the customer to build a quality
organization.
366 Components of a good problem statement.
- A Problem Statement is a specific description of
the current situation of the problem that will be
addressed by the organization in measurable
terms. They are prepared to develop a shared
understanding of the problem that the
organization is trying to address. - States the effect and not the cause (What is
wrong not Why it is wrong) . - Focuses on the gap (between What Is What
should be) - Is measurable (How often, How much, When)
- Is specific (avoids broad ambiguous categories)
- Is a statement, not a question.
- Focuses on the Pain Area (How Customers /
Citizens, Employees and the Government are
affected)
37What is the Problem?.
- The problem is that we are governing in the 21st
century with the Act, Rules, Processes designed
in the 19th century - We need entirely new / different processes and
organizational structure for governance in the
21st century.
T. James Joseph Adhikarathil.
38Examples of a good problem statement.
- A Problem Statement is a specific description of
the current situation of the problem that will be
addressed by the organization in measurable
terms. They are prepared to develop a shared
understanding of the problem that the
organization is trying to address. - States the effect and not the cause (What is
wrong not Why it is wrong) - Focuses on the gap (between What Is What
should be) Is measurable (How often, How much,
When) - Is specific (avoids broad ambiguous
categories) - Is a statement, not a question
- Focuses on the Pain Area (How Customers /
Citizens, Employees and the Government are
affected)
39Examples of a good problem statement.
- Only 40 of the ration items distributed
through Public Distribution System (PDS) are
reaching eligible families. -
- It takes approximately two months to obtain
death certificate. -
- It requires minimum of ten visits to get the
pension amount sanctioned. - Process for Passport Issuance on Turn Around
Time (TAT) metric is operating at only 38 within
Service Level Agreement (SLA) -
- It takes 2-4 hours to get the railway
reservation done in Metro cities in India for
reservations across the counter
40Ground rules for a good problem statement.
- Focus on the following questions.
-
- Which outputs dont meet expectations?
- When and where do the problems occur?
- How big is the problem? o What is the impact of
the problem? - Things to be careful of / avoid .
- Avoid pre-determined solutions.
- Do not blame people o Ensure that the problem
statement is easily understandable by all . - Avoid including Why, lack of, due to since
they may imply solutions and thus mislead team
members.
41GPR Vision.
- Vision is a of what the organization intends to
become and to achieve at some point in the
future. - A vision statement takes into account the current
status of the organization, and serves to point
the direction of where the organization wishes to
go. - The vision statement provides the direction for
the organization, while not inhibiting the
development of the strategy that will allow the
organization to reach the desired goal. - A vision statement should
- Be clear, intuitive and simple
- Reflect the specific conditions and ambitions
of the organization - State what will be and will not be done
- Consider needs and opportunities
- Be aligned with overall development strategy
- Involve consensus building by stakeholders
42GPR Vision.
- Vision is a of what the organization intends to
become and to achieve at some point in the
future. - A vision statement takes into account the current
status of the organization, and serves to point
the direction of where the organization wishes to
go. - The vision statement provides the direction for
the organization, while not inhibiting the
development of the strategy that will allow the
organization to reach the desired goal. - A vision statement should
- Be clear, intuitive and simple
- Reflect the specific conditions and ambitions
of the organization - State what will be and will not be done
- Consider needs and opportunities
- Be aligned with overall development strategy
- Involve consensus building by stakeholders
43GPR Vision.
- Vision is a of what the organization intends to
become and to achieve at some point in the
future. - A vision statement takes into account the current
status of the organization, and serves to point
the direction of where the organization wishes to
go. - The vision statement provides the direction for
the organization, while not inhibiting the
development of the strategy that will allow the
organization to reach the desired goal. - A vision statement should
- Be clear, intuitive and simple
- Reflect the specific conditions and ambitions
of the organization - State what will be and will not be done
- Consider needs and opportunities
- Be aligned with overall development strategy
- Involve consensus building by stakeholders
44GPR Vision.
- Vision is a of what the organization intends to
become and to achieve at some point in the
future. - A vision statement takes into account the current
status of the organization, and serves to point
the direction of where the organization wishes to
go. - The vision statement provides the direction for
the organization, while not inhibiting the
development of the strategy that will allow the
organization to reach the desired goal. - A vision statement should
- Be clear, intuitive and simple
- Reflect the specific conditions and ambitions
of the organization - State what will be and will not be done
- Consider needs and opportunities
- Be aligned with overall development strategy
- Involve consensus building by stakeholders
45GPR Vision.
- Vision is a of what the organization intends to
become and to achieve at some point in the
future. - A vision statement takes into account the current
status of the organization, and serves to point
the direction of where the organization wishes to
go. - The vision statement provides the direction for
the organization, while not inhibiting the
development of the strategy that will allow the
organization to reach the desired goal. - A vision statement should
- Be clear, intuitive and simple
- Reflect the specific conditions and ambitions
of the organization - State what will be and will not be done
- Consider needs and opportunities
- Be aligned with overall development strategy
- Involve consensus building by stakeholders
46.
47.
48ERROR IN Sy Number.
49GPR Vision.
- Vision is a of what the organization intends to
become and to achieve at some point in the
future. - A vision statement takes into account the current
status of the organization, and serves to point
the direction of where the organization wishes to
go. - The vision statement provides the direction for
the organization, while not inhibiting the
development of the strategy that will allow the
organization to reach the desired goal. - A vision statement should
- Be clear, intuitive and simple
- Reflect the specific conditions and ambitions
of the organization - State what will be and will not be done
- Consider needs and opportunities
- Be aligned with overall development strategy
- Involve consensus building by stakeholders
50.
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52.
- Making things
- specific.
- Standardised
- formats
53.
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56Thank You!!
T. JAMES JOSEPH ADHIKARATHIL,Trainer ILDM
-9447464502 WEB- www.slideshare.net.in/mysandesham
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