You Say Process Excellence, She Says Operational Excellence, I Say Performanc...Mike Gammage
This document provides definitions and perspectives on operational excellence, process excellence, and performance excellence from various sources. While there is some variation in definitions, the concepts generally overlap and share common goals of improving processes, customer satisfaction, and business results through principles of continuous improvement, lean thinking, and quality management. The document suggests that in practice, organizations blend various tools and approaches based on their unique needs rather than adhere strictly to single methodologies.
The Myth Of Process Excellence - Aditya YadavAditya Yadav
This document discusses running an agile Fortune 500 company. It addresses how processes are traditionally viewed as the basis for manufacturing excellence but are not well-suited for knowledge work excellence. Processes take significant time, money and effort to change, maintain the status quo, and are aimed at consistency rather than creativity and innovation. The document advocates for process minimalism and prioritizing individuals and interactions over rigid processes.
This document discusses dimensions of quality in education that can be measured, including learning outcomes, education processes, classroom conditions, teaching inputs, information and communication technologies (ICTs), textbooks, governance, and finance. It provides data on indicators like pupils-teacher ratios, repetition rates, survival rates, and salaries as a percentage of education expenditure in different countries. While statistics provide some insights, qualitative observation is also needed. Measuring classroom processes is difficult but important. Learning outcomes are ultimately the most important factor to assess, though inputs and processes must be considered as well. Both national and international assessments are necessary.
This document discusses process control and operational excellence. It covers key topics like:
- Reducing variation is important for process control and profitability. Variation is the enemy of Six Sigma.
- Standard deviation and variance are statistical measures of variation. Standard deviation quantifies how far data points deviate from the mean on average. Variance is the square of standard deviation.
- Many processes follow a normal distribution curve. Six sigma quality implies processes operate within 6 standard deviations of the mean 99.9997% of the time.
- Effective sampling plan design is needed to ensure sample data represents the true population and allows for statistical analysis despite non-normal parent distributions, according to the central limit theorem.
Key Result Areas (KRAs) define the expected outcomes or results of a job, while Key Performance Areas (KPAs) define all the activities an individual must perform in a job, whether result-oriented or not. KRAs fall within the scope of KPAs and identify crucial outcomes important for achieving goals, while KPAs define the overall scope of activities for a role. A job description separates duties into KRAs, which are critical functions tied to results, and KPAs, which are important but not critical associated activities.
Training Module including 116 slides and 6 exercises covering Introduction to Statistical Process Control, The Histogram, Measure of Location and Variability, Process Control Charts, Process Control Limits, Out-of-Control Criteria, Sample Size and Frequency, and Out-of-Control Action Plan.
KRA stands for Key Result Areas. It refers to the main objectives and outcomes an employee is responsible for achieving in their role. The process for determining KRAs involves listing main responsibilities, asking "why" for each activity to identify themes, and sharing the identified KRAs with others on their team. KRAs should be specific, measurable, achievable, related to the job, and time-bound. Identifying KRAs helps employees clarify their roles, set goals, focus on results, and improve time management and performance.
You Say Process Excellence, She Says Operational Excellence, I Say Performanc...Mike Gammage
This document provides definitions and perspectives on operational excellence, process excellence, and performance excellence from various sources. While there is some variation in definitions, the concepts generally overlap and share common goals of improving processes, customer satisfaction, and business results through principles of continuous improvement, lean thinking, and quality management. The document suggests that in practice, organizations blend various tools and approaches based on their unique needs rather than adhere strictly to single methodologies.
The Myth Of Process Excellence - Aditya YadavAditya Yadav
This document discusses running an agile Fortune 500 company. It addresses how processes are traditionally viewed as the basis for manufacturing excellence but are not well-suited for knowledge work excellence. Processes take significant time, money and effort to change, maintain the status quo, and are aimed at consistency rather than creativity and innovation. The document advocates for process minimalism and prioritizing individuals and interactions over rigid processes.
This document discusses dimensions of quality in education that can be measured, including learning outcomes, education processes, classroom conditions, teaching inputs, information and communication technologies (ICTs), textbooks, governance, and finance. It provides data on indicators like pupils-teacher ratios, repetition rates, survival rates, and salaries as a percentage of education expenditure in different countries. While statistics provide some insights, qualitative observation is also needed. Measuring classroom processes is difficult but important. Learning outcomes are ultimately the most important factor to assess, though inputs and processes must be considered as well. Both national and international assessments are necessary.
This document discusses process control and operational excellence. It covers key topics like:
- Reducing variation is important for process control and profitability. Variation is the enemy of Six Sigma.
- Standard deviation and variance are statistical measures of variation. Standard deviation quantifies how far data points deviate from the mean on average. Variance is the square of standard deviation.
- Many processes follow a normal distribution curve. Six sigma quality implies processes operate within 6 standard deviations of the mean 99.9997% of the time.
- Effective sampling plan design is needed to ensure sample data represents the true population and allows for statistical analysis despite non-normal parent distributions, according to the central limit theorem.
Key Result Areas (KRAs) define the expected outcomes or results of a job, while Key Performance Areas (KPAs) define all the activities an individual must perform in a job, whether result-oriented or not. KRAs fall within the scope of KPAs and identify crucial outcomes important for achieving goals, while KPAs define the overall scope of activities for a role. A job description separates duties into KRAs, which are critical functions tied to results, and KPAs, which are important but not critical associated activities.
Training Module including 116 slides and 6 exercises covering Introduction to Statistical Process Control, The Histogram, Measure of Location and Variability, Process Control Charts, Process Control Limits, Out-of-Control Criteria, Sample Size and Frequency, and Out-of-Control Action Plan.
KRA stands for Key Result Areas. It refers to the main objectives and outcomes an employee is responsible for achieving in their role. The process for determining KRAs involves listing main responsibilities, asking "why" for each activity to identify themes, and sharing the identified KRAs with others on their team. KRAs should be specific, measurable, achievable, related to the job, and time-bound. Identifying KRAs helps employees clarify their roles, set goals, focus on results, and improve time management and performance.
This document advertises the 14th Annual PEX Week conference from January 21-25, 2013 in Orlando, Florida. Over 45 senior process leaders from major companies will speak, including executives from Citi, Kraft Foods, Nationwide, and Xerox. The event will focus on innovating business processes, reaching process excellence through various tools and industry forums, and benchmarking process improvement strategies. Attendees will gain new ideas and networking opportunities to further their process improvement programs.
The PEX Corporate Leaders Boardroom event brings together C-Suite executives to discuss key issues for driving process excellence and business transformation in 2013, including redefining quality, leadership engagement, change management, and strategic alignment. Through an exclusive boardroom-style discussion format, participants can engage with peers, develop leadership skills, and focus on operational challenges to formulate a forward vision and competitive strategy for their organizations. Previous attendees of the event include senior executives from major companies across various industries.
This document provides information about sponsoring an event called PEX Week hosted by PEX Network. It discusses the benefits of sponsorship, including access to senior decision makers from major companies. PEX Week is described as the largest annual gathering of process professionals and a chance for sponsors to meet prospects and current partners. Details are given about the audience breakdown by region, job function, company size and industry to help sponsors understand the potential customers that will be attending.
The document summarizes an invitation-only boardroom discussion event for senior process and technology executives called the IBM Corporate Leaders' Boardroom. It will be held alongside PEX Week 2013 in Orlando, Florida and hosted by IBM. The boardroom format allows an informal discussion of key issues facing executives in aligning people, processes, and technology to drive revenue growth and customer-centric strategies. Discussion topics will include leveraging innovation for global growth, enabling customer-centricity, and using insights to drive sustainable competitive advantages. Attendees in 2012 included executives from Thomson Reuters, UnitedHealth Group, and The McGraw-Hill Companies.
IQPC provides B2B inbound marketing services through their portals and business conferences. This case study details how they helped two clients, i-nexus and Villanova University, generate hundreds of qualified leads. For i-nexus, IQPC developed a content marketing strategy around webinars and whitepapers on their software that generated over 1,000 leads over six weeks. For Villanova University, IQPC promoted a whitepaper on Lean and Six Sigma concepts that was downloaded over 700 times, in addition to banner ads generating over 1,100 clicks.
Process Excellence At Credit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank Case StudyNat Evans
Credit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank launched a Lean Six Sigma initiative to improve efficiency. They identified the Cash Payments process as an opportunity, as it was high volume with low revenues. They applied Lean Six Sigma tools to redesign the front-to-back process and organizational structure, reducing non-value-added activities. This resulted in over 10% productivity gains through realigning roles, reducing manual work, and improving client focus. Key success factors included cross-functional participation and validating solutions with operational staff.
This document is the table of contents for a book titled "Outside-In. The Secret of the 21st Leading Companies" by Steve Towers. The table of contents lists 13 chapters in the book, including chapters on business transformation, process management, successful customer outcomes, and transforming processes. The final chapter is titled "Lord Nelson and Successful Customer Outcomes (SCO)".
Paul Nelson discusses trends in Lean Six Sigma (LSS) implementation in the pharmaceutical industry. While LSS tools remain the same, focus has shifted from cost savings to supporting innovation and speed to market. LSS is being applied to new areas like mergers and acquisitions. Common failures occur when initiatives lack senior leadership, focus on tools over culture change, or fail to deliver quick results. Adoption of practices for process understanding from mature industries shows promise. Nelson cites Failure Modes and Effects Analysis as a simple but effective tool for managing risk when driven by senior leaders.
A scatter diagram shows the correlation between two variables through data points plotted on a graph. Strong correlations are indicated when data points appear clustered along an imaginary line. The scatter diagram document provides guidance on constructing and analyzing scatter diagrams to understand relationships between process variables and determine if suspected cause-effect relationships exist. Key steps include collecting paired data, plotting it on a graph with the potential cause on the x-axis and effect on the y-axis, and using a sign test table to determine if correlations are statistically significant. Stratifying data and considering alternative variable ranges may provide additional insights into correlations.
Pareto charts are a tool used to identify the most significant problems in a process. They graphically display problem categories from highest to lowest value to show which few problems make up the majority of issues. To create a Pareto chart, problems are classified and tallied, then categories are arranged from highest to lowest occurrence and displayed as bars on a chart. The chart is used to target addressing the biggest issues first to produce the greatest improvements.
A histogram is a tool that uses a bar chart to visualize the variation in a process. It shows the central value and dispersion of data on either side. The shape and size of dispersion can identify hidden sources of variation. Different histogram shapes provide insights - a symmetrical bell shape occurs most often, while skewed, multi-modal, plateau, or twin peak shapes indicate non-normal distributions and opportunities to reduce variation. Examining histograms is useful for process improvement in Lean Six Sigma.
Dot plots are a tool for visually representing variation in a process. They involve measuring a characteristic, recording the results, and plotting each data point as a dot along a scale. The shape that emerges can provide insights into the sources of variation. Common shapes include symmetrical, skewed, multi-modal, plateaued, and those with isolated peaks. Comparing dot plots over time can track process improvement.
Cause-and-effect diagrams, also known as fishbone diagrams or Ishikawa diagrams, are tools used to explore and display the potential causes of quality problems or other effects. They involve drawing a diagram with the effect at the head of the fish and primary causes as bones extending from the backbone. Secondary and tertiary causes are drawn as smaller bones extending from the primary causes. The diagrams help identify, define, and display the major factors influencing a process and their relationships to better understand problems and their possible solutions.
The affinity diagram is a management tool used to organize ideas and issues into groupings based on natural relationships. It involves generating ideas on individual cards, arranging the cards into groupings, and identifying a header card for each grouping that describes the central unifying theme. Affinity diagrams help make sense of complex problems by allowing patterns to emerge from large amounts of information. They are useful for planning, problem solving, and process improvement efforts.
The document discusses the benefits of Lean Six Sigma for employees. It notes that while top-down support is important for deployment, sustained success also depends on employee commitment. To gain employee buy-in, companies should define "WIIFE - What's In It For Employees" and identify change leaders to communicate benefits. Recognition for generating results and linking Lean Six Sigma to performance reviews can further motivate employees. The document also addresses challenges with low mix production models and potential future applications of Lean Six Sigma such as in marketing, accounting, education and addressing social and environmental issues.
The document provides a template for a Project Action Team Charter that can be used to guide the creation of charters for process improvement teams. It includes sections for identifying the team and improvement opportunity, objectives, metrics, milestones, resources, boundaries, stakeholders, and a communication plan. The template is intended to clearly define the team's purpose and ensure agreement between the executive sponsor, team leader, and facilitator on what the team aims to accomplish.
The Path To Operational Excellence 5 Components Of SuccessNat Evans
The document discusses operational excellence and provides a definition and framework. It argues that operational excellence must be strategically focused on areas where an organization can outperform competitors to provide competitive advantage. It emphasizes that leadership must select a tight focus area and guide implementation, and that operational excellence initiatives should align with strategic goals to ensure support and sustainability. The framework identifies five drivers of operational competitive advantage: safety, asset productivity, human capabilities, process excellence, and supply chain management.
Empowering Front Line Managers By Professionalizing Operations ManagementNat Evans
Front-line managers are critical to organizational performance but often too busy with non-managerial tasks. Empowering them through a professional operations management approach like Active Operations Management (AOM) can improve performance by giving managers more control and reducing workload. AOM has helped various organizations increase productivity by at least 30% by focusing on methods, skills, and tools to transform management style from top-down to collaborative.
Leadership Essentials For Process ProfessionalsNat Evans
This document discusses essential leadership skills for leading process improvement initiatives. It contains an introduction and four articles on leadership topics. The introduction provides an overview of the compilation and its goal of sharing practical leadership advice from experienced practitioners. The first article discusses five essential leadership qualities: perspective, respect, humility, active listening, and avoiding a "superhero" complex. It argues that success depends on creating an environment where teams can flourish through collaboration. The other articles provide advice on questions leaders should ask before starting improvement, interview leadership skills, and habits of effective leaders. The compilation aims to bridge the gap between theoretical leadership concepts and practical application in process improvement.
Creating Winning Businesses Deming’S System Of Profound KnowledgeNat Evans
This document discusses Deming's system of profound knowledge and systems thinking. It begins by introducing Deming's work identifying common management practices that can destroy companies, such as incentives and pay-for-performance targets. It then discusses the importance of systems thinking and having a clear organizational aim. Examples of effective aims from well-known companies are provided. The document argues that committed individuals and a shared vision are needed to enact systems thinking. It also discusses forces that can destroy a system, such as extrinsic motivation and competition between groups. Finally, it advocates using flow diagrams rather than traditional organizational charts to help individuals understand how their work fits within and impacts the larger organizational system.
This document advertises the 14th Annual PEX Week conference from January 21-25, 2013 in Orlando, Florida. Over 45 senior process leaders from major companies will speak, including executives from Citi, Kraft Foods, Nationwide, and Xerox. The event will focus on innovating business processes, reaching process excellence through various tools and industry forums, and benchmarking process improvement strategies. Attendees will gain new ideas and networking opportunities to further their process improvement programs.
The PEX Corporate Leaders Boardroom event brings together C-Suite executives to discuss key issues for driving process excellence and business transformation in 2013, including redefining quality, leadership engagement, change management, and strategic alignment. Through an exclusive boardroom-style discussion format, participants can engage with peers, develop leadership skills, and focus on operational challenges to formulate a forward vision and competitive strategy for their organizations. Previous attendees of the event include senior executives from major companies across various industries.
This document provides information about sponsoring an event called PEX Week hosted by PEX Network. It discusses the benefits of sponsorship, including access to senior decision makers from major companies. PEX Week is described as the largest annual gathering of process professionals and a chance for sponsors to meet prospects and current partners. Details are given about the audience breakdown by region, job function, company size and industry to help sponsors understand the potential customers that will be attending.
The document summarizes an invitation-only boardroom discussion event for senior process and technology executives called the IBM Corporate Leaders' Boardroom. It will be held alongside PEX Week 2013 in Orlando, Florida and hosted by IBM. The boardroom format allows an informal discussion of key issues facing executives in aligning people, processes, and technology to drive revenue growth and customer-centric strategies. Discussion topics will include leveraging innovation for global growth, enabling customer-centricity, and using insights to drive sustainable competitive advantages. Attendees in 2012 included executives from Thomson Reuters, UnitedHealth Group, and The McGraw-Hill Companies.
IQPC provides B2B inbound marketing services through their portals and business conferences. This case study details how they helped two clients, i-nexus and Villanova University, generate hundreds of qualified leads. For i-nexus, IQPC developed a content marketing strategy around webinars and whitepapers on their software that generated over 1,000 leads over six weeks. For Villanova University, IQPC promoted a whitepaper on Lean and Six Sigma concepts that was downloaded over 700 times, in addition to banner ads generating over 1,100 clicks.
Process Excellence At Credit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank Case StudyNat Evans
Credit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank launched a Lean Six Sigma initiative to improve efficiency. They identified the Cash Payments process as an opportunity, as it was high volume with low revenues. They applied Lean Six Sigma tools to redesign the front-to-back process and organizational structure, reducing non-value-added activities. This resulted in over 10% productivity gains through realigning roles, reducing manual work, and improving client focus. Key success factors included cross-functional participation and validating solutions with operational staff.
This document is the table of contents for a book titled "Outside-In. The Secret of the 21st Leading Companies" by Steve Towers. The table of contents lists 13 chapters in the book, including chapters on business transformation, process management, successful customer outcomes, and transforming processes. The final chapter is titled "Lord Nelson and Successful Customer Outcomes (SCO)".
Paul Nelson discusses trends in Lean Six Sigma (LSS) implementation in the pharmaceutical industry. While LSS tools remain the same, focus has shifted from cost savings to supporting innovation and speed to market. LSS is being applied to new areas like mergers and acquisitions. Common failures occur when initiatives lack senior leadership, focus on tools over culture change, or fail to deliver quick results. Adoption of practices for process understanding from mature industries shows promise. Nelson cites Failure Modes and Effects Analysis as a simple but effective tool for managing risk when driven by senior leaders.
A scatter diagram shows the correlation between two variables through data points plotted on a graph. Strong correlations are indicated when data points appear clustered along an imaginary line. The scatter diagram document provides guidance on constructing and analyzing scatter diagrams to understand relationships between process variables and determine if suspected cause-effect relationships exist. Key steps include collecting paired data, plotting it on a graph with the potential cause on the x-axis and effect on the y-axis, and using a sign test table to determine if correlations are statistically significant. Stratifying data and considering alternative variable ranges may provide additional insights into correlations.
Pareto charts are a tool used to identify the most significant problems in a process. They graphically display problem categories from highest to lowest value to show which few problems make up the majority of issues. To create a Pareto chart, problems are classified and tallied, then categories are arranged from highest to lowest occurrence and displayed as bars on a chart. The chart is used to target addressing the biggest issues first to produce the greatest improvements.
A histogram is a tool that uses a bar chart to visualize the variation in a process. It shows the central value and dispersion of data on either side. The shape and size of dispersion can identify hidden sources of variation. Different histogram shapes provide insights - a symmetrical bell shape occurs most often, while skewed, multi-modal, plateau, or twin peak shapes indicate non-normal distributions and opportunities to reduce variation. Examining histograms is useful for process improvement in Lean Six Sigma.
Dot plots are a tool for visually representing variation in a process. They involve measuring a characteristic, recording the results, and plotting each data point as a dot along a scale. The shape that emerges can provide insights into the sources of variation. Common shapes include symmetrical, skewed, multi-modal, plateaued, and those with isolated peaks. Comparing dot plots over time can track process improvement.
Cause-and-effect diagrams, also known as fishbone diagrams or Ishikawa diagrams, are tools used to explore and display the potential causes of quality problems or other effects. They involve drawing a diagram with the effect at the head of the fish and primary causes as bones extending from the backbone. Secondary and tertiary causes are drawn as smaller bones extending from the primary causes. The diagrams help identify, define, and display the major factors influencing a process and their relationships to better understand problems and their possible solutions.
The affinity diagram is a management tool used to organize ideas and issues into groupings based on natural relationships. It involves generating ideas on individual cards, arranging the cards into groupings, and identifying a header card for each grouping that describes the central unifying theme. Affinity diagrams help make sense of complex problems by allowing patterns to emerge from large amounts of information. They are useful for planning, problem solving, and process improvement efforts.
The document discusses the benefits of Lean Six Sigma for employees. It notes that while top-down support is important for deployment, sustained success also depends on employee commitment. To gain employee buy-in, companies should define "WIIFE - What's In It For Employees" and identify change leaders to communicate benefits. Recognition for generating results and linking Lean Six Sigma to performance reviews can further motivate employees. The document also addresses challenges with low mix production models and potential future applications of Lean Six Sigma such as in marketing, accounting, education and addressing social and environmental issues.
The document provides a template for a Project Action Team Charter that can be used to guide the creation of charters for process improvement teams. It includes sections for identifying the team and improvement opportunity, objectives, metrics, milestones, resources, boundaries, stakeholders, and a communication plan. The template is intended to clearly define the team's purpose and ensure agreement between the executive sponsor, team leader, and facilitator on what the team aims to accomplish.
The Path To Operational Excellence 5 Components Of SuccessNat Evans
The document discusses operational excellence and provides a definition and framework. It argues that operational excellence must be strategically focused on areas where an organization can outperform competitors to provide competitive advantage. It emphasizes that leadership must select a tight focus area and guide implementation, and that operational excellence initiatives should align with strategic goals to ensure support and sustainability. The framework identifies five drivers of operational competitive advantage: safety, asset productivity, human capabilities, process excellence, and supply chain management.
Empowering Front Line Managers By Professionalizing Operations ManagementNat Evans
Front-line managers are critical to organizational performance but often too busy with non-managerial tasks. Empowering them through a professional operations management approach like Active Operations Management (AOM) can improve performance by giving managers more control and reducing workload. AOM has helped various organizations increase productivity by at least 30% by focusing on methods, skills, and tools to transform management style from top-down to collaborative.
Leadership Essentials For Process ProfessionalsNat Evans
This document discusses essential leadership skills for leading process improvement initiatives. It contains an introduction and four articles on leadership topics. The introduction provides an overview of the compilation and its goal of sharing practical leadership advice from experienced practitioners. The first article discusses five essential leadership qualities: perspective, respect, humility, active listening, and avoiding a "superhero" complex. It argues that success depends on creating an environment where teams can flourish through collaboration. The other articles provide advice on questions leaders should ask before starting improvement, interview leadership skills, and habits of effective leaders. The compilation aims to bridge the gap between theoretical leadership concepts and practical application in process improvement.
Creating Winning Businesses Deming’S System Of Profound KnowledgeNat Evans
This document discusses Deming's system of profound knowledge and systems thinking. It begins by introducing Deming's work identifying common management practices that can destroy companies, such as incentives and pay-for-performance targets. It then discusses the importance of systems thinking and having a clear organizational aim. Examples of effective aims from well-known companies are provided. The document argues that committed individuals and a shared vision are needed to enact systems thinking. It also discusses forces that can destroy a system, such as extrinsic motivation and competition between groups. Finally, it advocates using flow diagrams rather than traditional organizational charts to help individuals understand how their work fits within and impacts the larger organizational system.
Creating Winning Businesses Deming’S System Of Profound Knowledge
Trends And Success Factors In Business Process Excellence 2012
1. Business Process
Excellence:
Trends & Success Factors
2012
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2. sluggish economic growth and above average
unemployment in developed countries led to a
Executive Summary summer of turmoil on the stock market and
persistent fears that another recession is Key Findings:
The last few decades have seen companies around the corner.
adopt a host of different approaches to
improving the quality and efficiency of their Against this backdrop, PEX Network set out to Companies are relying on shorter cycle
output: Total Quality Management, Business create a snapshot of where Process times for process improvement projects
Process Reengineering, Lean, Six Sigma, Excellence is headed in 2012 with the with a significant increase since 2005 of
Business Process Management, Business following questions in mind: respondents reporting average project
Performance Improvement, etc. Most are
represented by their own three-letter acronym
length of 90 days or less
- What impact has recent economic
and have a host of associated technical jargon; uncertainty had on process improvement Lean and Six Sigma methodologies
some have fallen out of favor, while others are practitioners within companies? remain prevalent although nearly 50%
gaining ground. - What are general trends experienced by fewer respondents report the use of Six
process improvement practitioners in Sigma methodology than in a similar
What all these methodologies have in common terms of approach, focus, and toolset in
is a focus on process – an activity through
2005 PEX Network survey
both general (industry wide terms) and in
which something (whether tangible or terms of company maturity? Businesses that rate their deployments
intangible) is transformed into something else. - What is it that makes some programs more as “highly successful” tend to have
At a fundamental, process excellence is about successful than others? customer satisfaction as a key driver
improving the way that businesses create and and metric of success.
deliver value to their customers, regardless of
what acronym may be applied to the challenge.
In October 2011, PEX Network conducted an Short term cost cutting is associated
online survey in which nearly 700 practitioners with process improvement programs
participated. The results of those surveys form
The backdrop for process excellence this year that have been rated as “unsuccessful”
the backbone of this report, although
is an uncertain global economic climate. The
interviews with industry experts and or “highly unsuccessful.”
latest report issued by the International
practitioners conducted throughout 2011 and
Monetary Fund (September 2011) begins with
previous survey data also inform the results of
one simple but ominous sentence: “The global
this report.
economy is in a dangerous new phase.”
Increasing fears over debt in the euro-zone,
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3. Contents
Executive Summary ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 2
Key Operational Excellence Trends ................................................................................................................................................................................................. 5
Background to the Survey ........................................................................................................................................................................................................... 5
Overview of Process Excellence in 2011 .................................................................................................................................................................................... 6
Impact of the Global Business Environment .................................................................................................................................................................................. 11
Factors for Success in Process Excellence ................................................................................................................................................................................... 18
What’s next in store for Process Excellence? ................................................................................................................................................................................ 23
Summary ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 28
Interested in Finding Out More? .................................................................................................................................................................................................... 29
Acknowledgements ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 30
About Process Excellence Network ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 31
About the Author ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 31
APPENDIX A: Profile of PEX Network October 2011 Survey Respondents ................................................................................................................................. 32
APPENDIX B: REFERENCES ....................................................................................................................................................................................................... 34
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4. Key Operational
Excellence Trends
Survey Results
2012
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5. Key Operational Excellence Trends
Background to the Survey
A majority of respondents came from North
In October of this year, PEX Network launched America (representing 45% of respondents) The survey built on data gathered in October
a Global Benchmarking Study of Trends and and Europe (30% of respondents) – so we 2009 for the Business Process Excellence
Success Factors in Business Process would expect general trends presented in this Global Trends and Success Factors – a
Excellence inviting members of the PEX report to be skewed towards the more benchmarking study of over 800 process
Network website and social networking groups operationally mature – and economically improvement professionals undertaken as a
(including Twitter, LinkedIn, and Xing) to uncertain – developed economies. joint collaboration between PEX Network and
participate. Market Value Solution, as well as further data
Respondents came from a variety of job roles collected in an early benchmarking study
The October 2011 study had 676 respondents and backgrounds, but were largely composed conducted by IQPC in 2005, in which 190
representing process improvement of manager-level and above. Approximately process improvement professionals
professionals working in a wide variety of 23% of survey respondents identified participated.
industries and disciplines. The largest majority themselves as senior business executives or
of respondents came from Manufacturing director level, while 45% identified themselves Where possible in this report, 2011 data will be
(15.9%), Financial Services (8.8%), Business as a manager or leader (including Master compared with data from previous surveys.
& Consulting (8.5%), other Services (7.7%), Black Belts) of some sort.
Energy and Utilities (7.7%), and Healthcare
and Pharmaceuticals (6.3% & 6.7% For a full breakdown of survey respondents by
respectively). job type, industries, and geography, please
see Appendix A.
What does 2012 hold in store for Process Excellence?
676 practitioners responded to our State of the Industry survey in October 2011.
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Read on for the results.
16-19 January 2012 – Orlando, Florida, www.pexweek.com
6. Overview of Process
Excellence in 2011
In the 2011 benchmarking survey, PEX
Network wanted to create a snapshot of what
process excellence programs look like going
into 2012 – what departments are the key
areas of focus? Which methodologies are most
popular, and what is the general interest level
in process excellence within organizations?
According to the survey, the majority of
process improvement work focuses on
traditional areas like General Business
Operations (over 85%), Supply Chain (52.2%),
and Manufacturing (47.2%), although a large
number of organizations had deployed process
improvement within less conventional areas
like Customer Service (47.8%), Finance
(34.6%) R&D (24%) and Human Resources
(34.8%).
Chart 1: In which department(s) are you applying process improvement methodologies? (Survey
respondents invited to select all that apply.)
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7. Interest in Process Excellence is Process Excellence Sits Largely A significant proportion of survey respondents -
Expanding Within Operations over 30% - selected “Other” as responsible for
process improvement. The most commonly
cited “other” location was that the process
A majority of organizations reported that Process Excellence sits within either an
improvement function sits centrally within its
interest in process excellence was expanding Operations (42%) or Quality (22%) function in
own office (called by various names: “Business
(51.4%) although this was a moderately the majority of those organizations surveyed.
Performance Improvement, Business
smaller figure than in our 2005 data. The Only a small number (4%) indicated that I.T.
Transformation Unit, etc.).
number of respondents reporting that their was responsible for the process improvement
program had been dismantled or was at risk function, although this number is also probably
has increased slightly since 2005 (3.2% in reflective of the smaller number of I.T.
2005, 5.8% in 2011). executives who participated in the survey.
Chart 2: What best describes the level of interest in process improvement within your Chart 3: Where does responsibility for process
organization? improvement sit within your business?
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8. Maturity of Deployments where problems are easy to identify and fix)
have been harvested. Some companies may
Nearly a quarter of respondents indicated that decide to cut their programs at this stage as
their process improvement program had been direct return on investment may also be more
running for 4-5 years, with a gradual tailing off difficult to prove. (Although there are benefits
in either direction. for companies that follow through with process
improvement, as discussed in a later section,
Further analysis would be needed to determine “Factors for Success in Process Improvement”).
the exact reason for this bulge. As process
improvement methodologies have been Finally, the majority of respondents had
around for several decades, it seems plausible Enterprise-wide deployments of process
that programs experience an equivalent of a excellence – reflective of the fact that a decent
mid-life crisis at the 4-5 year mark once much percentage of those surveyed had
of the “low-hanging fruit” (i.e. those processes deployments of 4 years or more.
Chart 5: What best describes the scope of your process
improvement program?
Chart 4: How long has your company been doing process improvement?
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9. Methodologies/Tools Being Used
Lean and Six Sigma remain the most widely
employed methodologies for process
improvement (approximately 46.9% use Lean,
36.6% use Six Sigma, and 48.9% use a
combined Lean Six Sigma approach).
Closely behind these methodologies are
Balanced Scorecards and Dashboards with
25.3% of respondents reporting that they
already have these tools implemented with a
further 16.2% planning to implement in next 12
months).
Business Process Management (BPM) and
Business Process Re-Engineering (BPR) were
also widely used – with 25.3% of respondents
indicating BPM was already deployed in their
organization and 25.7% indicating BPR. Many
companies also planned to implement once of
these two frameworks within the next twelve
months (14.3% BPM and 16.2% BPR).
Chart 6: What tools/methodologies are you currently using/plan to implement/plan to discontinue?
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10. Impact of the
Global Business
Environment
Global economic growth has entered a “dangerous phase” according to the IMF.
For Process Excellence practitioners that means plenty of work is on the way – but
demonstrating ROI is more important than ever.
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11. Impact of the Global Business Environment
expect a decrease in those employment means that, ultimately, Process Excellence has
The latest report issued by the International figures. never been more important.”
Monetary Fund (September 2011) begins with
one simple but ominous sentence: “The global That expectation reflects the importance of “But,” he adds, “there’s more cost pressure on
economy is in a dangerous new phase.” process improvement to organizations at a organizations to look at non-line business
Increasing fears over debt in the euro-zone, time when businesses need to be agile in functions, which means that Process
sluggish economic growth and above average order to respond to changing conditions and Excellence support functions and Process
unemployment in developed countries led to a customer demand. Excellence training enabling capabilities are
summer of turmoil on the stock market. under pressure as well. So we have a rising
“The world is going through a series of very challenge to both deliver more value, but to do
“The structural problems facing the crisis-hit dramatic economic changes and technological it in a way that is as lean as possible in support
advanced economies have proven even more changes, which means that both the risk for of our enterprise goals.”
intractable than expected,” the IMF states. companies is higher and the pace of change is
faster,” says Gregory North, Vice President of
Against this backdrop, 54% of survey Corporate Lean Six Sigma at Xerox. “This
respondents reported that they expected
budgets for Process Excellence programs
would remain largely flat in the coming year.
However, a greater percentage of respondents
(27%) reported that the budget for process
improvement was expected to grow (compared
with 19% who expected budgets to shrink).
Likewise, 55% of respondents reported that
they expected the number of employees
dedicated to process improvement will remain
the same in 2012, a bullish 38% who expect
the number to increase and only 7% who
Chart 7: Do you expect the number of employees in Chart 8: Do you expect your budget for process
process improvement to increase, decline or stay the improvement to increase, decline or stay the same?
same?
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12. Process Excellence Drivers their process improvement program. the “Outside-In”, an approach advocated by
the PEX Network partners the BP Group,
The emphasis on demonstrating value for However, improving customer satisfaction was which encourages organizations to look at
money is reflected in the overall goals of the biggest primary driver for process defining and measuring process improvement
process improvement programs for 2012 – improvement with nearly 40% of respondents from the perspective of customers (what they
nearly 70% of respondents indicated that citing it as the key goal, demonstrating that call an “Outside In” approach).
either increasing efficiency or reducing cost many companies are starting to understand
was a primary, secondary or tertiary driver for the value of driving process improvement from John Corr, President of the BPGroup, says,
“Companies are moving away from
approaches such as ‘Design for Six Sigma’
towards “Design for Customer Success”
adding that the “shift in perspective reflects the
need to better align processes to win the triple
crown of enhancing service, reducing costs,
and growing revenues."
Progressive organizations – in both the private
and public sectors - understand that achieving
consistent, successful outcomes for their
customers is key to their long term success. It
enables companies to grow effectively,
enhance customer satisfaction and control
costs for the long term.
Chart 9: What are the key drivers for your process excellence program?
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13. Shorter Projects & Higher Impact
The percentage of projects that take less than improvement methodologies also appears to
90 days to complete has increased by nearly be on the decline (see graphic on next page).
100% since our 2005 data, illustrating the need Respondents reporting use of Six Sigma
for process improvement professionals to methodologies, or instance, has declined
demonstrate value and respond to changing significantly from 2005 when 71% of survey
conditions quickly. respondents reported using the method for
process improvement work.
In 2005, 8.2% of survey respondents reported “We [as process excellence
an average project length of less than 3 In 2011, only 37% of survey respondents
months. In our latest benchmarking study, that reported using the statistically-based practitioners] have a rising
figure has increased to 15.4%. However, the methodology as part of process improvement challenge to both deliver more
majority of projects, both in 2005 and 2011, fell work. Related methods such as Design for Six
within the 3-6 month range. Sigma have also experience declines to a low
value, but to do it in a way that is
of 19% reporting using DFSS methods from as lean as possible in support of
The use of both Lean and Six Sigma 33% (2009) and 29% (2005). our enterprise goals.”
Some of the decrease since 2005 could be
due to the introduction of a “Lean & Six Sigma” - Gregory North, VP
category in our 2009 survey. However, even
the combined Lean Six Sigma approach has
Corporate Lean Six Sigma,
experienced a decline according to survey Xerox
results. In 2009, 65% of survey respondents
reported using a combined Lean Six Sigma
approach, while in our 2011 study, only 49% of
respondents reported using a combined Lean
Six Sigma approach.
The graphic on the next page compares
process excellence tools and methodologies
organizations are employing in 2011 with data
from similar PEX Network benchmarking
surveys conducted in 2005 and 2009.
Chart 10: What is the average length of a process
improvement project at your organization?
Page | 13 Process Excellence Week - Where the Process Excellence community shapes its future
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14. Chart 11: What Process improvement Methodologies/Tools do you use?
Participants were invited to select as many frameworks as were applicable; compared where possible with 2005 and 2009 survey data.
Page | 14 Process Excellence Week - Where the Process Excellence community shapes its future
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15. How Business Are Adapting Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence have,
Process Improvement Tools after three years’ time, generated revenue
growth and gross profits either equal to or less
than their peers’.
Six Sigma has at times been criticized for the
rigidity of its approach and its need to
“Most continuous improvement initiatives focus
undertake a sometimes lengthy period of data
too much on implementing a particular “It’s not that we won’t deploy purist
collection. A time of economic uncertainty and
rapid change could explain why some
‘checklist’ of program tools and processes, Six Sigma projects when
organizations appear to be moving away from rather than on basic execution,” said Steve appropriate. But I think that
Maurer, managing director and leader of Alix
“pure play” Six Sigma methodologies. because of the market conditions
Partners’ Manufacturing Practice in a press
“It’s not that we won’t deploy purist Six Sigma
release about the survey. “Many traditional and the things that are going on in
Lean and Six Sigma programs also tend to fail
projects when appropriate,” explains Diane
to institutionalize the improvements that they the industry, we’re taking a hard
Francisco, Director, MBB of Process
Excellence and Change Management at do generate. As a result, the cost benefits look at how can we have high
often aren’t sustainable.” quality, effective service without
pharmaceutical company Covance. “But I think
that because of the market conditions and the spending decades trying to get
Paul Docherty, CEO of i-nexus, sees another
things that are going on in the industry, we’re
taking a hard look at how can we have high
reason why some companies might feel something improved.”
disillusioned with the results of their process
quality, effective service without spending
decades trying to get something improved.” improvement initiatives.
- Diane Francisco, Director,
"In theory," he says "the integration of MBB of Process
Lean has equally suffered declines since 2009
frameworks such as Lean Six Sigma, Hoshin
when 66% of respondents reported utilising Excellence and Change
Planning and Balanced Scorecards do have
Lean methodologies in process improvement.
In the 2011 survey, 47% of respondents the ability to dramatically improve the Management
probability of delivering on organization’s goals.
reported using Lean methods.
The reality is however; very few organizations
are able to realize this potential as they are
New York-based consultancy Alix Partners
using tools not really fit for purpose."
released a study in September 2011 reporting
that that nearly 70% of manufacturing
executives said their manufacturing- Managers and analysts across all disciplines,
he says, can spend more than 10 hours a
improvement efforts only led to a reduction in
week chasing, manipulating and validating
manufacturing costs of less than 5%. The
company also claimed that winners of The
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16. what are frequently inconsistent inputs to certain companies. Other companies are
update their monthly reports. driving right into the statistics.”
"This is time that these key individuals could, What does seem to be happening is that
and should, be spending on value creating process improvement itself is becoming lean
activities that transform their organizations," and more agile as companies are required to
says Docherty. "When we see organizations cope with rapidly changing market conditions.
using more robust technology platforms to
integrate their goal management, program
management and performance management
processes, we will no doubt see a decrease in
the number of organizations discontinuing
Hoshin Planning, Lean Six Sigma and
Balanced Scorecards."
However, it is difficult to generalize about the
rise and fall of any one discipline broadly.
“It’s more about where companies are in their
maturity level, and what they are planning at
that particular time,” says Michael Marx,
Director Business Process Improvement at
educational service provider the Apollo
group/University of Phoenix.
“A broad general theme such as using Lean
more than Six Sigma is only happening in
“Companies are moving away from approaches such as ‘Design for Six Sigma’ towards ‘Design for Customer Success.’ The shift
in perspective reflects the need to better align processes to win the triple crown of enhancing service, reducing costs, and growing
revenues."
Page | 16 Process Excellence Week - Where the Process Excellence community shapes its future
- John Corr, President of the BPGroup
16-19 January 2012 – Orlando, Florida, www.pexweek.com
17. Factors for Success
in Process Excellence
2012
Page | 17 Process Excellence Week - Where the Process Excellence community shapes its future
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18. What makes the difference between a This suggests that the most difficult and
Factors for Success in successful process improvement program and dangerous stages of a Process Improvement
Process Excellence an unsuccessful one? journey is in the first three years. Companies
that stick with their programs begin to reap the
Three clear trends emerge when comparing benefits as they advance.
Survey respondents were asked to rate the
data between those who ranked their program
overall success of their process improvement
as “highly successful” and those who ranked
program. Overall, the majority of respondents
their program as “unsuccessful” or “highly
rated their programs as successful (52%),
unsuccessful”:
while a small handful of organizations rated
their programs as highly successful (1%).
1. Maturity of Deployment
2. Scope of Deployment
A small minority of professionals rated their
3. Customer-Focused
programs as unsuccessful or highly
unsuccessful representing (7% of the
combined total.
Success Factor #1:
Maturity of Deployment
The companies that reported having a high
degree of success with process improvement
were the ones that had been working in
process improvement for the longest periods
of time. Fully 35% of the highly successful
companies had process improvement
Chart 13: Companies that have been doing PI for
programs running for 11 or more years versus
11+ years report the greatest success
3% of programs rated unsuccessful. Programs
were most likely to be rated unsuccessful if
they had been going 3 years or less.
Chart 12: Overall, how successful would you consider
your Process Improvement program?
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19. Success Factor #2:
Scope of Deployment
enterprise-wide scopes would also be those fell within this range.
Companies that reported the greatest success that had most likely been running for the
were those that had Enterprise-wide longest periods of time. This could also correspond with the maturity of
deployments of Process Improvement activities. the process improvement program; as
Interestingly, one of the danger periods for discussed in the previous section one of the
Fully 81.1% of “highly successful” deployments process excellence initiatives is when moving danger periods for process improvement
were enterprise wide (versus 31% of those beyond the small scale pilot to a deployment programs appears to be around the 2-3 year
rated unsuccessful). As many companies that involves one or more departments. The mark.
begin a process improvement journey with a largest percentage (34.4%) of “highly
single project-based approach, those with unsuccessful” or “unsuccessful” deployments John Murphy, Vice President of Operational
Excellence at CSX, a transportation logistics
and company, explains that part of the reason
could be that the challenges of process
improvement change as an organization
matures.
“When we were just doing Six Sigma projects
you could put your hands around it; it was
visible and understandable,” he says. “But as
your program matures and moves beyond
projects it becomes much more about how
you're trying to get the company to work and
that’s a whole different beast with its own set of
challenges. It becomes much more about
people and changing people’s behaviours to
align, not just financials and projects, but to
overall business strategies.”
Dennis Narlock, Continuous Improvement
Leader with Catalent Pharma Solutions
agrees, arguing that with maturity, process
Chart 14: Companies with Enterprise–wide deployments of process improvement report
greatest success
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20. excellence becomes less about particular Sarkar adds that “many companies have approach that gets organizations to align their
toolsets. traditionally separated operational excellence processes with the customer experience -
and customer service into different functions” achieve greater results and stand a higher
“As you mature, process improvement but “many are, rightly, starting to merge the chance of success.
becomes more culturally focused,” he says. two departments. The focus shifts to
“You have to get into the people side and the enhancing the customer experience. “It’s a question of ensuring that everything your
skills side for that long term success, Operational excellence becomes one of the business does is geared towards creating a
understanding what drives, what motivates, levers supporting the customer.” successful customer outcome. Not only will
and how to sustain the benefits. that help your bottom line but it ensures that
Steve Towers, founder of the BP Group and a any process improvement work you undertake
regular columnist for PEX Network, said that maps to the larger enterprise goals, which at
Success Factor #3: these results demonstrate that “Outside In” its heart should be to create and serve
organizations - a process improvement customers. As we often say, it’s
Positive Focus
Companies that focused most on top line
revenue growth and increasing customer
satisfaction were more likely to rate their
process improvement initiatives as successful
(32.5% of “highly successful” companies
focused on the customer) while those that
focused most on cost savings were most likely
to be rated unsuccessful (40.7% of the “highly
unsuccessful” or “unsuccessful” focused on
cost savings versus 20.7% of those in the
“highly successful” category).
“Operational excellence is not the engine for
cost cutting,” cautions Debashis Sarkar, Global
Champion & Head (Asia-Pacific) - Enterprise
Lean Sigma at manufacturing giant Avery
Dennison. “You should use it for cost efficiency,
you should use it for revenue generation, you
should use it for customer service, but it’s very
dangerous to focus myopically on cost cutting.”
Chart 15: Companies that focused on “positive” goals such as improving customer
satisfaction and top line revenue growth experienced greater success
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21. about not just about ‘doing things right’ but can be difficult to achieve buy in with these
‘doing the right things’.” goals, especially in situations where process
excellence initiatives have been tried before
The benefits of focusing on a “positive” goal and failed.
could have the additional side effect of being
more motivating to employees and other In a similar way, a goal that is internally
business users. People are more likely to buy focused and has no tangible end benefit to the
into a vision if the improvement is related to business - such as the number of employees
something positive. A negative benefit such as trained in Process Improvement - was closely “Operational Excellence is not the
cost savings and increased associated with unsuccessful programs. 11%
throughput/efficiency, which although not of unsuccessful program reported focusing on
engine for cost cutting. You should
necessarily “negative” in themselves, have the number of trained employees. No “highly use it for cost efficiency, you should
sometimes translated into job losses and successful” company reported using this use it for revenue generation, you
budget cuts, coupled with increased workloads metric.
for the employees that remain. As a result it should use it for customer service, but
it’s very dangerous to focus
myopically on cost cutting.”
- Debashis Sarkar, Global
Champion & Head (Asia-
Pacific) - Enterprise Lean
Sigma, Avery Dennison
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22. What’s next
for Process Excellence?
“Lean Six Sigma is not terribly different from what it was 20 years ago or even ten
years ago. It will have to be ultimately the same ten years from now. Process
Excellence is about taking care of customers in a way that is cost effective and
provides the most value, and there are methods and tools that you have to bring to
bear that can help you do that. [To achieve that] you have to engage employees at all
levels of your organization. Those are the basic elements, and those aren’t going to
change.”
– Gregory North, Vice President Corporate Lean Six Sigma, Xerox Corporation
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23. Close behind was process redesign work efficiency and creating value for customers.
What’s next for Process (49.9%), followed by Customer-centric Process
Excellence? Management (35.5%). PEX Network has identified four general trends
to watch for 2012:
Although Six Sigma as a methodology has Continued uncertainty about market conditions
experienced some declines since our first coupled with an increasingly rapid pace of 1. Process Excellence Tools Become
global benchmarking survey in 2005 it still technological innovation means that the Increasingly Lean
forms the backbone of a large majority of leading businesses of tomorrow will be need to 2. I.T. Becomes More Strategic &
Process Excellence programs. Over 50% of be both agile in responding to changing Business-Led
respondents indicated that Six Sigma Process circumstances, and technologically forward 3. Mature Businesses Focus on End to
improvement projects would be involved in thinking to unlock the value that new End Improvements
their program for 2011-2012. developments in software and collaboration 4. People are Top Investment
technology, can bring in terms of employee
Trend #1:
Process Excellence Tools Become
Increasingly Lean
Although some of the discussion earlier in this
report focused on why Lean Six Sigma
methodology appears to have suffered overall
declines since 2005, PEX Network believes
that Lean and Six Sigma remain useful tools
for process excellence, but the way that
organizations use them needs to be adapted
for the rapid pace of change and uncertainty
with which businesses today must contend.
As Gregory North, VP Corporate Lean Six
Sigma at Xerox puts it: “If you’re trying to look
at the value stream of an inter-connective set
Chart 16: What will be the focus of your process improvement program in 2012?
of business processes that go across suppliers
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24. and customers, then where else but Lean Six like Lean and Six Sigma together combined
Sigma can you turn to, in order to be able to “We [realized] that after all this time and with the technical expertise of I.T. departments.
quickly reach into that morass and pull out investment Lean Six Sigma has only really
where is the constraint? Where is the involved 25% of employees – those that have Cable & Wireless, a UK-based
bottleneck? Where are the key drivers? What been trained or are on projects – to make LSS telecommunications company is one
are the key data points that, if you make sure truly part of our culture we need to involve all organization that has brought the disparate
that those are understood, will help you be employees and hence we have invented a approaches together.
able to have early process indications of simple form of Lean Six Sigma called
success or failure? Ultimately, these principles QwikSolver,” he said. “Xerox has had good “We’ve focused on bringing centralized
are more relevant now than ever before.” success in the past with a ‘problem solving agencies together to work on behalf of the
process’ directed to all employees and we are business. We look at, [what has been]
Shorter projects - a trend discussed earlier in bringing this back strongly. QwikSolver is conventionally ‘I.T.’ doing business process
this report - make sense from the perspective more about Lean than Six Sigma and among from a technical perspective and Lean Six
of quickly adapting business processes to its benefits is that it gives rapid results.” Sigma [doing business process] from a
reflect a changing reality. The tools themselves process operations perspective. We’re
also need to be adapted to better reflect the Trend #2: bringing those change agents together along
need to rapid and ongoing change in a hyper- with our transformational program teams under
competitive market. I.T. Becomes More Strategic and one unit called ’Business Enablement and
Business-led Technology,” explains Mark Zirbser, Head of
Xerox, for instance, has adapted Lean Six Process Excellence at Cable & Wireless.
Sigma methods to create a problem solving
tool kit called Qwiksolver to better reflect the In many businesses I.T. is taking a greater role
in leading end to end process improvement, Despite this the majority of Process Excellence
agility demanded by today’s competitive divisions are considered part of general
landscape and to get results quickly. enabled by technology.
business operations (427%) or Quality (22%)
with hardly any process excellence divisions
Mark Stewart, LSS Deployment Leader at the An increasing number of organizations, for sited within the I.T. department (4%).
company explained that Qwiksolver was a way instance, are looking to bring together
of getting a simplified set of Lean Six Sigma traditional process improvement approaches
tools into the hands of more employees.
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25. "It’s ironic that the I.T. team - which has one of in most organisations less than 50% of
the widest fields of view relative to efforts, processes are I.T. based,” says Ian Leaver, an
budgets, changes, and focus - is not independent BPM analyst with Forward Look.
strategically leveraged in many organizations, ”
wrote Ben Blanquera, the founder of TechLife “The I.T. [department] should be there to
Columbus, in a recent Deming Files column on enable all of the processes that it works in, but
PEXNetwork.com. “Instead, IT is thought of as it’s not the totality of what business is about.”
merely a utility; sometimes as a trusted “People make an assumption that
‘supplier’. Seldom as an internal strategic,
BPM, Leaver says, is about enabling “people [BPM] cananplay a much more
“I.T. is IT thing, so you push
cooperative partner.”
to understand what it is that the business is it out to role IT department and
strategic the in the creation of
He argues that “I.T. can play a much more
trying to achieve, what its goals are, what its
objectives are, and how the core processes
they do for the processes. But by
value all an enterprise in
strategic role in the creation of value for an that exist within the business create value.” releasing changelessinto 50%
most organisations than the
enterprise by releasing change into the environment (thoughbased. The IT
software and
environment (through software and enabling
of processes are IT
technologies).
The creation of value for the business and its
customer must be the focus of process
[department] should be thereour
enabling technologies). In to
improvement work; that should involve a technology-enabled worldthat a
enable all of the processes it
“In our technology-enabled world a currency of
innovation is the release of new software,” he
combination of both improving and automating currency but it’s not the totality of
works in, of innovation is the
processes. It also means that Lean Six Sigma release of new software.”
writes.
and technology teams should work more what business is about.”
closely to solve enterprise problems together.
But, a balance between I.T. and traditional
process improvement teams such as the Lean - Ian Leaver, IndependentLeader
- Ben Blanquera, IS
and Six Sigma approaches clearly needs to be Trend #3: Analyst, Forward Look TechLife
& Founder of
struck. Columbus
Some, for instance, say that Business Process Mature Businesses Focus on End
Management (BPM) - a holistic management to End Improvements
approach - has traditionally been too I.T.
focused and not concentrated enough on Many businesses realize that optimizing one
driving results for the business. part of the process may just be pushing the
problem elsewhere in the organization.
“People make an assumption that [BPM] is an
I.T. thing, so you push it out to the I.T.
department and they do all the processes. But
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26. “Organisations were applying their business 2012. Nearly 70% of respondents indicated
Trend #4:
excellence approach - whether this was the that some form of training in process
[EFQM] model or something else - to a specific improvement tools and methodologies was
business unit,” says Matt Fisher, Chief Companies Invest in Training among their top 3 priorities with approximately
Operating Officer at European quality 35% of respondents rating it their number one
organization EFQM. “And they would apply it in Cumulatively, investment in training topped the priority. Training in the softer side of process
lots of business units or factories or sales list of key investment areas for businesses in excellence such as in leadership, culture and
companies, and those sales companies
would be performing very well against
whatever tool they were using.”
The problem was that you may have “very
well defined process boxes, but it’s the
arrows that move between the boxes where
things fall down.”
One way that some businesses - particularly
in service industries – are addressing these
issues is through the appointment of
“process owners.”
A “process owner” is responsible for
understanding an entire process from start
to finish, regardless of which functional silos
are responsible for carrying out a part of the
process. The advantage with this approach
is that it ensures that one person has
visibility over and understanding of an entire
process to avoid changes in one area
pushing problems onto another.
Chart 17: What are your top three investment areas of 2012?
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27. change management was also high on the list Other areas for investment were hiring new
with approximately 60% of respondents Process Improvement resources (employees),
indicating it would be in the top three of list of data management, Business/Operational
priorities. Intelligence software and software integration
and third party consultancies and other
Investment in Business Dashboards trailed in vendors.
3
rd
placed with approximately 30% of
“As you mature, process
respondents indicating that it was one of their improvement becomes more
top three investment areas. culturally focused. You have to
get into the people side and the
skills side for that long term
success, understanding what
drives, what motivates, and how
to sustain the benefits.”
- Dennis Narlock,
Continuous Improvement
Leader with Catalent
Pharma Solutions
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28. Summary
While it is difficult to make sweeping process improvement activities contribute to trying to stabilize your processes, or whether
statements about the rise and fall of certain the overall success of the business has never you’re 10+ years into a mature deployment
process improvement methodologies there are been more important. and trying to sustain the momentum, Lean and
two clear trends that practitioners can take Six Sigma remain a key part of the process
away – the first that general cost pressures There is no magic formula for Business excellence toolset, coupled with the growing
and market uncertainty is contributing to an Excellence and the particular challenges availability of new technology to enable greater
increase in the number of shorter projects (<90 confronting practitioners will change from collaboration between employees, visibility
days) and a reevaluation of the tools and business to business, industry to industry. over processes, and opportunities for
techniques used for process improvement automation.
(with a bias towards “lite” tools, i.e. those that “A company doesn’t go through this idea of
provide improvement quickly). Secondly, a operational excellence or quality or TQM or Six Those businesses that are focused on
focus on a positive goal such as improved Sigma in any sort of set way,” says Brent improving the processes that matter most to
customer satisfaction is associated with highly Harder, Head of Operational Excellence at their customers and doing so in a way that is
successful programs, while those associated banking giant Credit Suisse. “It happens quick and responsive are set to stand out in
with negative goals such as cost cutting is differently for every organization and every 2012, even if operating conditions remain
associated with unsuccessful programs. business unit. “ difficult.
Businesses are likely to face difficult trading Wherever you are in your process excellence
conditions in the coming year. Ensuring that journey – whether you’re just starting out and
There is no magic formula for Business Excellence; the particular challenges confronting practitioners will change from business
to business, industry to industry. Those businesses that are focused on improving the processes that matter most to their
customers and doing so in a way that is quick and responsive are set to stand out in 2012, even if operating conditions remain
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29. Interested in Finding Out More?
The ideas presented in this whitepaper will be discussed in further detail at our flagship Process Excellence event, Process Excellence Week, which takes
place 16-19 January 2012 in Orlando, Florida. Hear from leading businesses how they’re making customer-focused process improvement a reality - to find
out more or to sign up for the event, please visit www.pexweek.com or contact our customer services team on customerservice@pexnetwork.com.
16-19 January 2012, Orlando, Florida
SIGN UP NOW!
www.pexweek.com
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30. Acknowledgements
Nothing like this could get written without the input of many different people. This report would not have been possible without the ideas and engagement
from members of PEX Network’s global advisory board, speakers and delegates at our events, and contributors to the Process Excellence website. There are
too many to mention them all – but everyone who has taken the time to contribute to the website or to our events has in a way helped expand the body of
knowledge about the discipline of process improvement over the course of this year.
That being said, a special thank you also goes out to Michael Marx, Steve Towers, Debashis Sarkar, and Dennis Narlock for their feedback and advice on the
draft version of this report and to those whom we have directly cited: Diane Francisco, Gregory North, John Corr, Paul Docherty, Mark Zirbser, Ian Leaver,
Brent Harder, John Murphy, Matt Fisher, Ben Blanquera, and Mark Stewart.
And of course, an especially big thank you is due to the 676 process improvement practitioners who took part in our 2011 survey.
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31. About Process Excellence Network
Process Excellence Network (PEX Network), a division of IQPC, provides access to online resources, holds regular industry forums and conferences on
Business Process Management (BPM), Lean, Change Management, Operational Excellence, Six Sigma, Risk Management, Customer Experience and more,
we provide the forum where key industry experts and organizations share their experience, knowledge and tools, and your practitioner peers connect with one
another all over the world, both face-to-face and online.
None of us has the time for continuous trial and error learning. We must learn more and more from the experiences of others. Learning is nothing more than
thinking with other people's ideas. We bring you the best ideas in a variety of media forms from outstanding academics and practicing professionals.
PEX Network enables you to advance your own process excellence journey by increasing your idea sources, widening your contacts and friendships and
participating in formal and informal learning opportunities.
Become a PEX Network member today and you'll have continuous exposure to new and timeless tools, techniques, and technologies to extend your
performance capacity and your organization's productivity.
Sign up for free at www.processexcellencenetwork.com
About the Author
Diana Davis is editor of PEXNetwork.com and follows trends in process excellence including Lean, Six Sigma, and BPM. She worked
previously as a producer with Associated Press Television News and she has also worked in marketing and business development in the
software industry. Davis holds a Master's in International Journalism from City University, London and a BA in English from the University of
British Columbia, Vancouver. She can be reached on diana.davis@pexnetwork.com.
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32. APPENDIX A: Profile of PEX Network October 2011 Survey Respondents
Chart 1: Survey Respondents by Industry & Company Size
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33. Chart 2: Survey Respondents by Job Title & Geography
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34. APPENDIX B: REFERENCES
This paper is not meant to be an academic piece so citations are not included within the body of the report but for interested readers many of the source
interviews are available publicly on www.pexnetwork.com.
References from PEX Network include:
Podcast interview with Gregory North, Vice President Corporate Lean Six Sigma, Xerox Corporation: http://www.processexcellencenetwork.com/six-sigma-
quality/podcasts/lean-six-sigma-in-2012-and-beyond/
Video interview with Mark Zirbser, Cable & Wireless: http://www.processexcellencenetwork.com/business-process-management-bpm/videos/how-process-
excellence-underpins-growth-at-cable-a/
Video Interview with Ian Leaver, Analyst Forward Look: http://www.processexcellencenetwork.com/business-process-management-bpm/videos/bpm-
software-needs-to-become-customer-centric/
Interview with Mark Stewart, Lean Six Sigma Deployment Leader, Xerox Corporation: (http://www.processexcellencenetwork.com/six-sigma-
quality/articles/interview-with-mark-stewart-from-xerox/
Ben Blanquera, “Banish the Silos: How IT Can Lead Competitive Advantage”: http://www.processexcellencenetwork.com/technology-for-process-
improvement/columns/seeing-the-system-as-a-whole-the-opportunity-for-i/
External references include:
International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook, September 2011: http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2011/02/pdf/text.pdf
Alix Partners, Press Release, Manufacturers Are Failing to Garner Long-Term Productivity Benefits, Despite Retrenchment Efforts Amid Weak
Economy:http://www.alixpartners.com/en/MediaCenter/PressReleaseArchive/tabid/821/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/154/Manufacturers-Are-Failing-to-
Garner-Long-Term-Productivity-Benefits-Despite-Retrenchment-Efforts-Amid-Weak-Economy.aspx
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