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CM51111 Structured Systems Analysis Techniques

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Why do we need to embrace change? Competitive advantage ... LL bean Inc - order despatch. 61% turnaround in 24 hours. 93% achieved. C. R. England - invoicing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CM51111 Structured Systems Analysis Techniques


1
Business Process Reengineering a critique
CSM - Week 5 part 2
2
Organisational Transformation
  • Why do we need to embrace change?
  • Competitive advantage - Porter
  • Demographic change in markets
  • age
  • education
  • geography
  • Technological developments
  • Competition from developing countries
  • These reasons are leading to what?

3
Organisational Transformation 2
  • Globalisation of markets
  • sourcing and buying of materials, services and
    products
  • Marketing and selling of products
  • this leads to
  • Greater market choice
  • which means
  • Customers demanding and getting improved quality
    at lower prices
  • need to have
  • Much shorter product life cycle
  • faster roll out of products

4
Product Life Cycle
5
Product Life Cycle shortened
6
Product Life Cycle faster roll out
7
Organisational Transformation 3
  • Not all organisations face an identical challenge
  • As Porter suggests it depends on the
  • the industry
  • the industry value chain
  • the companys own (generic) value chain
  • Here we are interested in the part IT/IS strategy
    plays in the organisations change strategy

8
Business Process Reengineering
  • Late 80s early 90s
  • IT/IS was being used in radically new way
  • Used to improve or eradicate processes rather
    than automate, for example in
  • Davenport and Short (1990), The New Industrial
    Engineering IT and business process design
  • The term BPR was used to describe the use of
    IT/IS to transform an organisation

9
BPR
  • The watershed publication
  • Hammer M. and J. Champy (1993), Reengineering the
    Corporation a manifesto for business revolution
  • Chapter 2 - Reengineering - the path to change
  • BPR informally defined as Starting Over
  • Formally defined as
  • the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign
    of business processes
  • to achieve dramatic improvements in critical
    contemporary measures of performance
  • such as cost, quality, service and speed

10
BPR - the keywords
  • Fundamental
  • Radical
  • Dramatic
  • Process

11
The main concepts
  • Fundamental rethinking
  • ignores what is and
  • concentrates on what should be
  • Radical resign
  • throwing away the old and
  • inventing new ways of doing things

12
The main concepts 2
  • Dramatic improvement
  • not marginal or incremental but
  • quantum leaps
  • Process
  • removing focus from tasks, jobs, people,
    structure to
  • processes

13
What BPR is not?
  • Automation
  • despite the prominent role of IT
  • automation is said to provide faster ways of
    doing wrong things
  • Software Engineering
  • associated with rebuilding obsolete IS
  • automating obsolete processes
  • Downsizing and Restructuring
  • fancy terms for reducing capacity in times of low
    demand
  • BPR is doing more with less

14
What BPR is not? 2
  • Delayering or flattening hierarchy
  • even though it may produce flatter organisations
  • Bureaucracy busting
  • organisations need bureaucracy
  • Quality improvement/TQM
  • even though they have similar characteristic
  • Kaizen - continuous improvement

15
Some of the successes 1
  • Cigna Corporation - financial services
  • 70 countries employs 50000 people
  • 20 reengineering projects
  • saved 100 million
  • Progressive insurance
  • claims settlement
  • 31 day cycle
  • 4 hours

16
Some of the successes 2
  • LL bean Inc - order despatch
  • 61 turnaround in 24 hours
  • 93 achieved
  • C. R. England - invoicing
  • 5.10 - invoice cost
  • 0.15 - achieved
  • Philips petroleum
  • 36 head office staff
  • 12 achieved

17
Some of the failures
  • BPR failures are hard to pinpoint - nobody wants
    to publicise their failures, however,
  • see system failures in text books
  • only 16 of executives fully satisfied with BPRs
    results
  • 68 experienced problems
  • cutting jobs did not always lead to improved
    profits

18
What the authors say
  • Page 200
  • many companies that begin reengineering dont
    succeed
  • end their efforts precisely where they began
  • make no significant changes
  • achieve no major performance improvement
  • fuel employee cynicism with yet another
    ineffective business improvement programme
  • 50 to 70 do not achieve any dramatic result

19
What the authors say 2
  • Hammer M. (1996), Beyond Reengineering
  • Forward page xii
  • I have now come to realise that the radical
    character of reengineering, however important and
    exciting, is not the most significant aspect.

20
What the other academics say - Boyle 1
  • Boyle R. D. (1995), Avoiding common pitfalls of
    reengineering, Management Accounting, October
    1995 pp24-33.
  • Identifies the drivers to undertake BPR as
  • Increased competition due to deregulation
  • Low growth and increasing competition due to
    maturing industries - product life cycle
  • Fast growth and the lack of planning and
    development that can accompany it
  • The spin off of a business unit
  • Improve ROI in IT/IS - realising the full
    benefits of full integration
  • A needed change of corporate culture

21
What the other academics say - Boyle 2
  • Following a survey of North American CIOs
  • Deloitte and Touche in 1995
  • Top 10 barriers to reengineering success
  • 82 - Organisational resistance to change
  • 72 - Inadequate executive sponsorship
  • 65 - Unrealistic expectations
  • 54 - Inadequate project management
  • 45 - Case for change not compelling enough
  • 44 - Scope expansion/uncertainty
  • 44 - Project team lacked appropriate skills
  • 44 - Lack of effective change management

22
What the other academics say - Boyle 3
  • Critical success factors
  • 91 - Visible and involves executive sponsor
  • 81 - Strong project management
  • 70 - Compelling case for change
  • 66 - High ambition
  • 59 - Best and brightest team

23
What the other academics say - Boaden 1
  • Boaden (1996), Is quality management really
    unique, Total Quality Management, vol7, 5,
    pp553-570
  • Boaden identifies a group of management
    techniques
  • TQM - total quality management
  • CI - continuous improvement - Kaizen
  • WCM - world class manufacturing
  • Guru theory
  • HRM - human resource management
  • BPR - business process reengineering

24
What the other academics say - Boaden 2
  • She asserts that
  • all these techniques have broadly common elements
    and needs
  • customer focus
  • commitment by everyone - especially senior
    executives
  • training and education a major element
  • teamwork essential
  • they could all be seen as management focus
    repackaged
  • Boaden doesnt mention improved profitability

25
What the other academics say - Mumford
  • Mumford E. (1996), Business process Reengineering
    RIP, People Management, 2 May 1996 pp 22-28.
  • Asserts that BPR is a FAD
  • Identifies it as a vehicle for delayering and
    downsizing
  • Points to the ATT in the US as an example
  • In late 1994 a survey of 600 companies reported
    that circa 70 of US and European companies had a
    project underway

26
What the other academics say - Mumford 2
  • Identifies that BPR began to fade as a FAD in
    1994
  • McKinsey quarterly - dramatic results in
    individual processes were accompanied with a
    decline in overall results
  • BPR did not result in bottom line improvement
  • CFO journal -
  • only 16 of executives fully satisfied with BPRs
    results
  • 68 experienced problems
  • cutting jobs did not always lead to improved
    profits

27
What the other academics say - Mumford 3
  • Anatomy of failure
  • Tendency to copy others
  • in times of uncertainty organisations tend to
    copy each other
  • The global economy idea led to businesses being
    influenced by consultants obsession with cutting
    costs
  • Then become victims of their own downsizing and
    delayering - cost cutting

28
What the other academics say - Mumford 4
  • Anatomy of failure
  • An absence of theory
  • No real management theory underpinned the early
    increase in popularity
  • Do it now, do it fast mentality
  • The use of consultants
  • The fast rise in popularity led to the use of
    untrained and incompetent consultants
  • High fees low results - disasters
  • No long term accountability

29
Further Points
  • Hawthorne effect - well documented phenomenon
  • Can these techniques be described as management
    FADS?
  • Do they have a life cycle of their own?
  • Do good managers make use of the Hawthorne effect
    to increase productivity?
  • Are they just devoid of there own ideas?
  • Do high flyers attach them to a fad and all its
    buzzwords?

30
Fad Life Cycle
31
Further Points
  • BPR
  • Success or failure?
  • Management technique or Management FAD?
  • Change
  • Radical or Incremental (marginal)?
  • Read, for a positive view
  • Taylor J. A. (1995), Dont obliterate,
    informate! BPR for the information age, New
    Technology, Work and Employment, Blackwell, pp
    82-88

32
In Summary
  • Think about Organisation Transformation
  • Integration. The role of IT (networks) in
    redesign and BPR.
  • Dont forget- Very big projects have a tendency
    to fail when expectations exceed real
    capabilities.

33
Reading
  • This weeks reading is
  • Hammer and Champy Reengineering the path to
    change
  • Taylor Dont obliterate, infomate BPR for the
    information age
  • Mumford Risky ideas in the Risk Society
  • Boaden is total quality management really
    unique?

34
Next Week
  • This weeks study reading is substantial
  • Next week is put aside as a Self Study Week to
    complete this study
  • I will be available in the office for questions
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