Introduction and History of BPR
Introduction and History of BPR
The idea behind business process reengineering is to make your company more flexible,
responsive, efficient and effective for all stakeholders including customers, employees and
owners. In order for BPR to work, your business must be willing to make the following
changes:
Change the focus from a management focus to a customer focus - the boss is not the boss,
the customer is the boss.
Empower your workers that are involved in each process to have decision-making and
ownership in the process.
Change your focus from managing activities to focusing on results.
Get away from 'score keeping' and focus on leading and teaching so employees can measure
their own results.
Change the company's orientation from a functional orientation to a process or crossfunctional orientation. This allows for an increase in organizational knowledge among its
members and a greater degree of flexibility in accomplishing tasks.
Move from serial operations to concurrent operations - in other words, multitask instead
of just doing one thing at a time.
Get rid of overly complex and convoluted processes in favor of simple, streamlined
processes. keep it simple, stupid.
Hallmark
A Definition of BPR
BPR is the
Fundamental rethinking and
Radical redesign of
Business Processes
to achieve Dramatic improvements in
critical measures of performance
.. such as Cost, Quality, Service and Speed.
History of BPR
The business world has been evolving:
1920
1960
History of BPR
History of BPR
But many factors influenced the birth and hype around BPR
The Productivity Paradox (Stephen Roach)
Despite powerful market and service innovations related to IT and
increased computer power in the 1980s there was little evidence that
IT investments improved overall productivity
Organizations were not able to utilize the capabilities of the new
technology Automating inefficient processes has limited impact on
productivity
Introduction to Reengineering
Michael Hammer, a former MIT professor in computer science
published an article in the Harvard Business Review, emphasizing the
need for fundamental organizational change and for the first time
using the term Business Process Reengineering
Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
The analysis and design of workflow and processes within and
between organizations. Davenport and Short
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. Hammer and Champy
The use of information technology to radically redesign the
business processes in order to achieve dramatic improvements in
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their performance. Hammer
Introduction to Reengineering
Key Words
Dramatic Improvement: Quantum leap in performance, achieving
breakthroughs.
Radical: Means going to the roots. Starting with a clean slate approach
and reinventing.
Process: A group of related tasks that together create value for a
customer. Ex: Order Fulfillment
Redesign: How work is done? A well designed process.
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Goals of BPR
ELEMENTS OF BPR
Organization Related Elements
Organization Structure
Role Assignment
Regulation and Culture
Incentive
Education/Training
New
Competitors
New
Work Force
New Rules of
Competition
2. Importance
3. Feasibility
Disease
Extensive information
Arbitrary fragmentation
exchange, data redundancy of a natural process
and re-keying
Fragmentation
Complexity, exceptions
and special cases
Importance
Assessed by determining issues the customers feel
strongly about and identifying which processes most
influence these issues
Market
Company
Customer Issues
Processes
Product Cost
On-time Delivery
Product Features
After-sales service
Product Design
Order Processing
Procurement
CRM
Feasibility
Determined by: Process Scope, Project Cost, Owner
Commitment and the Strength of the Redesign Team
Process
ProcessScope
Scope
Project
ProjectCost
Cost
Process
Process
Feasibility
Feasibility
Owner/Corp.
Commitment
Team
Strength
Team
Strength
BPR Objectives
Streamline/Compression remove waste,
consolidate and cutting major tasks of cost and
capital through out the value chain
Lose Wait/Speed squeeze out delays
Orchestrate let the most able enterprise
execute, outsource
Mass Customize any time, any place, any way Synchronize both the physical and virtual parts
of the process, real time processing of data
BPR Objectives
Digitize and Propagate capture information
digitally at the source and propagate it through the
process
Vitrify provide glass like visibility of the process
Sensitize fit the process with sensors and feedback
loops for prompt action
Analyze and Synthesize generate added value by
enhancing the process, constant improvement and
iteration.
BPR Objectives
Customer Focus Eliminate Customer Complaints.
Flexibility - adaptive processes and structures to
changing conditions and competition
Quality- superior service and value to the customers.
Innovation: Leadership through imaginative change
for competitive advantage.
Productivity: Improve drastically effectiveness and
efficiency.
Business Process
Reengineering
Principles of Reengineering
DIMENSIONS
OF BPR
FIVE KEY
PRINCIPLES
OF BPR
Foster
Enlighten
Business
Business
Processes
Processes&&
Functions
Functions
Customers
&
Info. Tech.
Entail
Culture
Competitors
Values
Valuesand
and
Beliefs
Beliefs
Management
Management&&
Measurement
Measurement
Systems
Systems
Demand
Jobs
Jobs, ,Skills,
Skills,&&
Organizational
Organizational
Structures
Structures
Markets
Principles of Reengineering
Seven rules of doing work proposed by Hammer relating to who does the work, where
and when it is done and information gathering and integration.
Rule
Principle
Have those who use the output of the process perform the
process
Put the decision point where the work is performed and build
control into the process
Eliminate multiple
- reviews & approval
Combining duplicate activities
Put processes in parallel
Implement demand pull
Outsource inefficient activities
Eliminate movement of work
Organize multifunctional teams
BENEFITS OF REENGINEERING
Failures
An estimated 50-70% of all reengineering projects have
failed
Those that succeed take a long time to implement and
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realize
Synthesis of 3 concepts
Technology
Business processes
Clean-sheet-of-paper approach
The Fad That Forgot People, Davenport, T.H., Fast Company, November 1995.
The Fad That Forgot People, Davenport, T.H., Fast Company, November 1995.
Reality Bites
Massive layoffs labeled reengineering
Alienation of good employees
Treated as interchangeable cogs in corp. machine
25 yr old MBAs making $80K as BPR experts
The Fad That Forgot People, Davenport, T.H., Fast Company, November 1995.
BPR is Not?
BPR may sometimes be mistaken for the following four tools:
1. Automation is an automatic, as opposed to human, operation or
control of a process, equipment or a system; or the techniques and
equipment used to achieve this. Automation is most often applied to
computer (or at least electronic) control of a manufacturing process.
2. Downsizing is the reduction of expenditures in order to become
financial stable. Those expenditures could include but are not limited
to: the total number of employees at a company, retirements, or spinoff companies.
BPR is Not?
3. Outsourcing involves paying another company to
provide the services a company might otherwise have
employed its own staff to perform. Outsourcing is readily
seen in the software development sector.
4. Continuous improvement emphasizes small and
measurable refinements to an organization's current
processes and systems. Continuous improvements origins
were derived from total quality management (TQM) and Six
Sigma.