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Scoping An Enterprise Process

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Highly regarded in the commercial sector. Excellent banking technology base. State-of-the-art hub in Carlsbad, CA. Paloma Bank : BPR Triggers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Scoping An Enterprise Process


1
Scoping An Enterprise Process
2
Ready to Launch
  • Status
  • BPR project has been been identified
  • Process selected
  • Design team has been mobilized
  • BPR software has been selected
  • What typically goes on in the scoping phase
  • Paloma Bank Case

3
Background Managing Projects with Deliverables
  • The Activities / Deliverables / Participants
    approach to project management
  • What is a deliverable?
  • What is a milestone?
  • Tracking projects
  • Appropriate deliverables

4
Activities in Phase 1Scoping the Process
  • Operationalize process performance targets
  • Define process boundaries
  • Identify key process issues
  • Understand known best practices and define
    initial vision
  • Familiarize participants with BPR software
  • Outline data collection plan and collect baseline
    data

5
Deliverables / Participants
  • Deliverables
  • Process scoping report
  • Participants
  • Process owners and partners
  • Customers of the process
  • BPR team

6
Paloma Bank Profile
  • Regional bank CA, NV, AZ
  • Serves 1.1 million individuals, 105,000 corporate
    and institutional customers
  • Corporate, retail, and consumer banking
  • 309 offices
  • 12,000 employees
  • Highly regarded in the commercial sector
  • Excellent banking technology base
  • State-of-the-art hub in Carlsbad, CA

7
Paloma Bank BPR Triggers
  • BPR project is in its Research Adjustments area
  • Corrects errors and imbalances in the item
    processing stream
  • Research to identify problem and make adjustment

8
Paloma Bank BPR Triggers
  • Triggers
  • In 1996, centralized RA in Carlsbad and lost
    good employees
  • High training costs
  • Large write-offs
  • Estimate that 20 million could be saved
  • Business customers becoming more demanding in
    terms of quality and turnaround time
  • Bank has started to use check imaging elsewhere
    in the firm and wants to expand its use to RA, a
    strategic opportunity

9
Operationalize Process Performance Targets
  • Fuzzy goals are made concrete. A consensus on
    targets focuses the BPR team
  • Defines success
  • What gets measured, gets done
  • Alerting mechanism
  • Too many targets
  • Priority
  • Conflict

10
Operationalize Process Performance Targets
  • The less well developed the BPR project goals
    are, the harder it is to operationalize
  • Increasing the quality of customer service
  • Faster response time? How much faster
  • Which customers? Which services?
  • Cutting processing time for simple requests from
    five days average to 24 hours max, and for
    complicated requests, from 10 days average to 90
    being processed in 3 days or less

11
Operationalize Process Performance Targets
  • Initial goals should not be set in concrete!
  • How?
  • List goals in priority order
  • For each goal, identify the related process
    performance targets in specific terms
  • For each process performance target, identify
    tangible measures
  • Group by type (cycle time, cost) and flag
    critical measures
  • Identify the major resource constraints
    associated with the work environment related to
    the process

12
Define Process Boundaries
  • Defines scope
  • Counteracts temptation to expand scope Scope
    Creep
  • Pointers for where to collect data

13
Define Process Boundaries
  • Who are the customers of the process?
  • Categories and types
  • What are the outputs of the process?
  • Types of deliverables
  • What are the inputs to the process?
  • Type of triggers that start the process
  • What departments does the process interface with?
  • What other processes does this process interface
    with?
  • What external entities does the process interface
    with? (Suppliers, Customers, etc..)
  • Subdivide the process

14
Identify Key Process Issues
  • Assess what is known about the current state of
    the process.
  • What are the critical problems?
  • What is the state of the work environment?
  • HR practices
  • Better parts of the process
  • Not a comprehensive analysis

15
Identify Key Process Issues
  • Why?
  • Provides a common starting assessment
  • Identifies key issues related to the work
    environment
  • Ensures process customer input

16
Identify Key Process Issues
  • How?
  • Questionnaire
  • Current Expectations
  • Process Problems
  • Process Credits
  • Time and effort expended by customers and
    interface departments
  • Future requirements
  • Elicit process issues thru brainstorming
  • Categorize to distinguish process from work
    environment issues
  • Distill key process issues and present in a
    summarized form

17
Identify Key Process Issues
  • Results
  • SWOT analysis
  • Assessment of Work Environment Around Process

18
Understand Known Best Practices Define Initial
Vision
  • Why?
  • Do not want to reinvent the wheel
  • Avoid NIH syndrome
  • Adapting another companys (even in a different
    industry) process solution can be a rapid way to
    reengineer a process.
  • Preliminary vision of the process puts a stake in
    the ground

19
Familiarize Participants with BPR Software
  • By the end of premodeling, BPR participants must
    be familiar with the S/W selected
  • Conceptual Familiarization
  • Test Drive
  • Learn to Use
  • For those directly involved in use

20
Outline Data Collection Plan and Collect Baseline
Data
  • Know which subprocesses, departments, and
    external entities to collect data from.
  • Why?
  • Data collection takes time and effort so it must
    be well planned to be effective.
  • Early data gathering speeds baselining
  • Increases buy-in

21
Outline Data Collection Plan and Collect Baseline
Data
  • How?
  • Identify sources
  • Select case categorization criteria
  • Define types of data needed
  • Define data collection methods
  • Start collecting baseline data

22
Outline Data Collection Plan and Collect Baseline
Data
  • Is it difficult?
  • Generally, yes
  • Process of joint discovery
  • Data Collection Methods
  • Using documents and archival data
  • Structured group interviews
  • One-on-one structured interviews
  • Questionnaires/forms/templates

23
Outline Data Collection Plan and Collect Baseline
Data
  • What is appropriate data for baseline modeling?
  • Default or typical process case
  • Squeaky wheel process case
  • Exhaustive Process Case

24
Process Scoping Reports
  • Provided to the process owners for reporting and
    feedback purposes
  • Used as a focusing and guiding device
  • Structure of report (suggested)
  • Executive Summary
  • Brief explanation of steps taken so far
  • Process performance targets
  • Process boundaries
  • Key process issues
  • Preliminary vision of new process
  • Data collection plan
  • Plan for Phase 2
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