Title: Process Design Strategies
1Process Design Strategies
Chapter 3
2- Process design decisions when
- A gap exists between competitive priorities and
competitive capabilities - A new or substantially modified product or
service is begin offered - Quality must be improved
- Competitive priorities have changed
- Demand for product or service is changing
- Current performance is inadequate
- Competitors are gaining
- Costs have changed
3Major Decisions for Effective Process Design
Figure 3.1
4Different Dimensions of Customer Contact in
Service Processes
Figure 3.2
5Customer-Contact Model for Processes
Figure 3.3
6Service Process Structures in the Financial
Services Industry
- Hybrid Office
- Creation of quarterly
- performance report
- Data obtained electronically
- Report calculated using standardized process
- Report reviewed using standardized diagnostic
systems - Manager provides written analysis and
recommendations in response to individual
employee performance - Manager meets with employee to discuss
performance
- Back Office
- Production of
- monthly client fund balanced report
- Data obtained electronically
- Report run using standardized process
- Results checked for reasonableness using
well-established policies - Hard copies and electronic files forwarded to
analysts - Process repeated monthly with little variation
- Front Office
- Sale of financial
- services
- Research customer finances
- Work with customer to understand customer needs
- Make customized presentation to customer
addressing specific customer needs - Involve specialized staff offering variety of
services - Continuing relationship with customer, reaction
to changing customer needs
Figure 3.4
7Process Repositioning at a Restaurant
Higher Complexity/Divergence Current
Process Lower Complexity/Divergence
Figure 3.5
8Product-Process Matrix for Processes
Figure 3.6
9Production and Inventory Strategy
- Make-to-stock strategy
- Holding items in stock for immediate delivery
- Combined with line process, it is sometimes
called mass production - Assemble to order strategy
- Producing a wide variety of products from
relatively few assemblies and components after
the customers orders are received - Make-to-order strategy
- Make products to customer specifications in low
volumes - Changing position
- Moving a manufacturing process in the
product-process matrix. - Changes can be made horizontally be changing the
degree of customization and volume. - Changes can be made vertically be changing the
process complexity or divergence. - Process flows can be made more linear by
dedication human or capital resources to a
specific product.
10Vertical Integration
Figure 3.9
11Resource flexibility
12Capital intensity
- Which tasks will be performed by humans and which
by machines? - Automated (capital intensive) operations must
have high utilization. - Automation may not fit with competitive
priorities being emphasized. - More capital intensity is not always best.
- Fixed automation favored when
- High demand volume
- Stable product design
- Long life cycle
- Flexible automation
- Automating service processes
- Using capital inputs as a labor-saving device is
also possible for service processes.
13Decision Patterns for Service Processes
High Contact Customer Contact Low Contact
Figure 3.11
14Decision Patterns for Manufacturing Processes
High Volume Customer Contact Low Volume
Figure 3.11
15Strategies for change
- Process reengineering
- Critical processes
- Strong leadership
- Cross-functional teams
- Information technology
- Clean slate philosophy
- Process analysis
- Process Improvement
- The systematic study of the activities and flows
of each process to improve it. - You have to get process improvements forever.