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Business Process / Enterprise (Process Oriented)

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Title: Business Process / Enterprise (Process Oriented)


1
  • Business Process / Enterprise (Process
    Oriented) Systems

2
Information, Organizations, Processes and Control
  • Hierarchical organizations of past years
  • Today
  • Process-oriented, Learning, Team-based, and
    Fast-cycle organizational models
  • Flat, flexible, focused on core competence
  • Inside, empowered, interfunctional teams of
    knowledge workers are reengineering and
    continually improving core business processes.
  • Think globally and act locally

3
Flattening the Organizational Structure
4
Information, Organizations, Processes and Control
  • To accomplish the organizations of the year 2000
    and beyond firms must change the way they are
    organized, and employees at all levels must
    become information literate - not just computer
    literate.

5
Creating the Information Age Organization
  • Transforming an Organization Requires more than
    just Changing the Structure.
  • True change occurs deep within the organization
    as individuals and work teams redefine the way
    they work and the values that guide decision
    making and action.
  • Managers need to rethink the nature of control
    and authority
  • Smashing together the features of the hierarchy
    with features of an entrepreneurial firm will not
    work.
  • Work must change and people must change
  • New knowledge and skills are needed

6
Business Process / Enterprise (Process
Oriented) Systems
  • Business process systems are cross-functional
  • that is, the system boundaries are not within a
    singlefunction but actually go across boundary
    lines

7
BPR
  • Business Process Redesign
  • The fundamental rethinking and radically redesign
    of business processes to achieve dramatic
    improvement in critical, contemporary measures of
    performance such as cost, quality, service and
    speed.
  • The implementation of deliberate and fundamental
    change in business processes to achieve
    breakthrough improvements in performance.
  • Enabled by IT

8
BPR
  • Business Process Redesign
  • Also known as Reengineering or Process
    Innovation is offered as an enabler of
    organizational transformation.
  • Organization embrace a BPR approach when they
    believe that a radical improvement can be
    achieved by marring business process,
    organization structure, and IT change.

9
BPR
  • Hammer and Champy
  • It is an all-or-nothing proposition that produces
    dramatically impressive results. Most companies
    have no choice but to muster the courage to do
    it. For many, reengineering is the only hope for
    breaking away from the ineffective, antiquated
    ways of conducting business that will otherwise
    destroy them.

10
BPR
  • BPR Objectives
  • To dramatically reduce cost
  • Reduce time
  • To dramatically improve customer services or to
    improve employee quality of life
  • To reinvent the basic rules of the business e.g.
  • the airline industry
  • taco bell from Mexican food to fast food to
    feeding people anywhere, anyhow.
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Organizational learning

11
BPR
  • Change
  • To transform an organization, a deep change must
    occur in the key behavior levels of the
    organization
  • jobs, skills, structure, shared values,
    measurement systems and information technology.
  • Role of IT
  • BPR is commonly facilitated by IT e.g.
  • Organizational efficiency
  • Effectiveness
  • Transformation

12
BPR
  • Efficiency
  • Applications in the efficiency category allow
    users to work faster and often at measurable
    lower cost
  • Mere automation of manual tasks, resulting in
    efficiency gains (least deep)
  • Effectiveness
  • Applications in the effectiveness category allow
    users to work better and often to produce higher
    quality work.
  • Requires changes not only in technology, but in
    skills, job roles, and work flow (deeper).

13
BPR
  • Transformation
  • Applications in the the transformation category
    change the basic ways that people and departments
    work and may even change the very nature of the
    business enterprise itself.
  • A major change in the organization, including
    structure, culture, and compensation schemes
    (deepest).

14
BPR
  • Process
  • A process is set of logically related tasks
    performed to achieve a defined business outcome
  • A collection of activities that, taken together,
    create value for customer e.g. new product for
    customer. This tasks are inter-related tasks

15
Business Function --
  • Business Function --A group of similar resources
    that perform similar activities or tasks.  
  • This is also called a task-oriented approach
    where the emphasis is placed on perfecting the
    execution of individual tasks.Functional IS
    Systems -- also known as "silo" systems supported
    one business function

16
 BUSINESS FUNCTION    IS SYSTEM
   Logistics     Procurement
   Production / Operations     Material Resources Planning
   Finance / Accounting     Accounts Payable
   Human Resources    Payroll
   Sales / Marketing    Sales Order Management
When information from one IS system was needed by
another business function, then periodically
information would pass from one IS system to the
other.
17
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18
BPR
  • How can Companies Identify their Business
    Processes. Examples
  • Manufacturing As the procurement-to-shipment
    process
  • Product development as the concept-to-prototype
    process
  • Sales as the prospect-to-order process
  • Order fulfillment as the the order-to-payment
    process
  • Service as the inquiry-to-resolution process

Business Processes
Business functions
19
Advantage of a business process
  • The inherent advantage of a business process is
    that its performance can easily be measured
    against the attainment of the goal. 
  • Looking at the business function systems --  how
    is performance measured?

20
Business process
  • IT Systems organized around business processes
  • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
  • or Business Engineering (BE)
  • or ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS (ES)
  • Packaged, application software (modules) designed
    to address common business processes (across
    industries and business functions)
  • Evolved, in part, from MRP (Materials Resource
    Planning) concepts,  thus the 'rp' in erp and
    mrp
  • Typically, vendors assume some customization and
    integration will be required -- but customization
    will NOT be to the core 
  • Vendors also assume system infrastructure exists
    (including RDB, client, servers, browsers,
    network, etc.)

21
Common Features
  • On-line system with no traditional batch
    interfaces
  • One database for all data
  • Clear definition of every data items
  • Efficient support of back-office transaction
    processing weaker in decision support and
    analytical support but improving
  • Templates for processes of best practices
  • Client/server computing, network infrastructure,
    RDB, GUI, Web Enablement
  • Proprietary language and tools (e.g. ABAP/4 for
    SAP R/3)

22
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23
Advantages
  • Tight integration among all modules
  • Single view of the business --     same db,
    consistent reporting and analysis
  • Process orientation streamline processes
  • Rich functionality templates reference model
  • Flexibility current and new environment
  • Scalability small group vs. enterprise
  • Expandability modular vs. total systems
  • Interoperability with 3rd party solutions
  • Rapid implementation "vanilla" version

24
Challenges
  • High cost with low payoff is the norm when
    vanilla version not implemented
  • Difficult to change /test all aspects that are
    affected simultaneously
  • Difficult to design a new process that's an
    improvement (particularly when the
    organization's structure is an issue)
  • Difficult to find/build software for new process.
  • Difficult to change all aspects simultaneously
  • Learning Curve Realities 
  • Idiosyncratic support needs are the norm

25
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26
BPR- How can Companies Identify their Business
Processes
  • How can Companies Identify their Business
    Processes.
  • Dysfunction Which process are in the deepest
    trouble
  • Important Which process have the greatest impact
    on customer
  • Flexibility which process are the most
    susceptible to redesign.

27
BPR- How can Companies Identify their Business
Processes
High
Catch up
Increasing operating performance
Manufacturing gap versus industry leader
Increase flexibility, responsiveness Differentiat
e product and services
Maintain Advantage
Low
Low
High
Services / Marketing gap versus industry leader
Different competitive investment strategies
facing industry players as they consider there
position versus industry leaders.
28
BPR
  • Embarking on Re-engineering
  • Persuade people to embrace or at least not to
    fight -the prospect of major change by developing
    the clearest message on
  • 1 A case for action- Here is where we are as a
    company and this is why we cant stay here
  • show your balance sheet
  • show competitors balance sheet
  • 2 A vision statement - This is what we as a
    company need to become

29
BPR
  • Simple Rules
  • Start with a clean sheet of paper.
  • With my current experience what can I do today
  • If I were to re-create this company today, given
    what I know and current technology, what would it
    look like.
  • How will I be focusing, organizing and managing
    the company?
  • Transition from a vertical functional departments
    to one that is horizontal, CUSTOMER focused and
    process-oriented?

30
BPR
  • Simple Rules
  • Listen to customer
  • Enhance those things that bring value to the
    customer or eliminate those that dont
  • Be ambitious, focus your commitment to radical
    change on the process

31
BPR
  • Process Improvement and redesign Process

Improvement Innovation/Reengineering
Magnitude Increment Radical Improvement
30-50 10x-100x Sought Starting
base Existing Process Blank skeet Top
management Relatively low High commitment Role
of IT Low High Risk Low High
32
Magnitude of Change 
Source Adapted From O'Hara, Watson and Kavan
33
The Seven Phases of Process Re-generation
  • 1. Strategy Linkage
  •  kicks off project
  •  secure management commitment
  •  discover process opportunities
  •  identify IT enabling opportunities
  •  align with  corporate strategy and select BPR
    project
  • 2. Change Planning
  • inform stakeholders and organize re-generation
    team
  • prepare project schedule and set performance
    goals
  • 3. Process Pathology
  • document existing process
  • uncover process pathologies

34
The Seven Phases of Process Re-generation
  • 4. Social Re-Design -- 5.  Technical Re-Design 
    (reiterative until satisfied)
  • explore alternative designs
  • design new process
  • design HR architecture (x-func/multi-discipline)
  • select IT platform
  • prototype holistic process

35
The Seven Phases of Process Re-generation
  • 6. Process Re-Generation
  • implement HR changes 
  • develop deploy IT support  -- tug of war game
    -- forces towards catastrophe and towards the
    ideal
  • re-organizing
  • teams
  • jobs
  • training
  • top management communication and persuasion
    critical here
  • 7. Continuous Improvement
  • measure performance
  • link to quality improvement

36
The Seven Phases of Process Re-generation
  • A. Imperative    "Prove the need"
  • Positive ("this change" is a big chance to grab
    it all)
  • Negative (without "this change" we will die)
  • B. Leaders     Instigate and Sustain the
    change    "Walk the talk" and "Block escape"
  • brave
  • fearless
  • communicative 
  • 1. Strategy Linkage
  • a. kicks off project
  • b. secure management commitment
  • c. discover process opportunities
  • d. identify IT enabling opportunities
  • e. align with  corporate strategy     select BPR
    project
  • 2. Change Planning
  • a. inform stakeholders     organize
    re-generation team
  • b. prepare project schedule     set performance
    goals

37
The Seven Phases of Process Re-generation
  • 3. Process Pathology
  • a. document existing process
  • b. uncover process pathologies
  • C. Levers    the tools-- changed
    processes, people, technology, environment   
    "Power the transition" and "Demonstrate new
    reality"
  • rewards/punishments
  • peer pressure
  • forced environmental/technological changes -- "no
    going back"
  • stakeholder feedback

38
The Seven Phases of Process Re-generation
  • 4. Social Re-Design -- 5.  Technical Re-Design 
    (reiterative until satisfied)
  • a. explore alternative designs
  • b. design new process
  • c. design HR architecture (x-func/multi-discipline
    )
  • d. select IT platform
  • e. prototype holistic process
  • D. Affected Agents    all those affected by the
    change    "Segment them" -- 
  • "Strategy and communication tactics for     
    each"
  • customers
  • suppliers
  • strategic partners
  • stockholders
  • community neighbors

39
  • 6. Process Re-Generation
  • a. implement HR changes 
  • b. develop deploy IT support  -- a tug- of-
    war game on forces aimed towards catastrophe and
    the ideal
  • c. re-organizing
  • teams
  • jobs
  • training
  • d. top management communication     top
    management persuasion     ( critical here)
  • 7. Continuous Improvement
  • a. measure performance
  • b. link to quality improvement
  • E.  Buoys     Stabilizers ( life
    preservers)      for affected agents    
    Exploit
  • camaraderie
  • consistency
  • core competencies
  • cultural values
  • strategic relationships
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