I found this great review of this book: Business Process Improvement: The Breakthrough Strategy for Total Quality, Productivity, and Competitiveness (Hardcover) on Amazon.
- Streamlining suggests the trimming of waste and excess, attention to every minute detail that might lead to improved performance and quality.
- Streamlining provides a smooth flow.
- With streamlining, the process will operate with the least disturbance to its surroundings.
- The 12 cornerstones tools to streamlining:
- Eliminate bureaucracy
- Eliminate duplication
- Evaluate every activity in the business process to determine its contribution to meeting customer requirements.
- Simplify
- Determine ways to compress cycle time to meet or exceed customer expectations and minimize storage costs.
- Make effective use of capital equipment and the working environment to improve overall performance.
- Make if difficult to do the activity incorrectly
- Reduce the complexity of the way we write and talk
- Standardize – select a single way to do the activity
- Create a structure and policy that encourages supplier feedback and partnership
- Big picture improvement – look for creative ways to drastically change the process
- Automate and mechanize.
- Improvement of a process means changing a process to make it more effective, efficient, and adaptable.
- Preventing means you change the process to ensure that errors never reach the customer.
- Excelling means that the process works, it is stable, and meets customer requirements.
- Bureaucracy is bad, boring, burdensome, and brutal.
- Bureaucracy often creates excessive paperwork in the office
- Managers typically spend 40 to 50 percent of their time writing and reading job-related material; 60 percent of al clerical work is spent on checking, filing, and retrieving information, while only 40 percent is spent on important process-related tasks.
- Evaluate and minimize all delays, red tape, documentation, reviews and approvals
- Management reduces bureaucracy by starting with a directive. The directive informs management and employees that each approval signature and review active will be financially justified, that reducing total cycle time is a key business objective, and any non-value added activities will be targeted for elimination.
- A bureaucracy step should be left in only if there is a sizeable, documented savings from the activity.
- Duplication of data from different parts of the organization can produce conflicting data and lead to the unbalancing of the organization. For example sales may generate a monthly customer production ship forecast and production control distributes a completely different forecast.
- Accrual means the value of the end product exceeds the accumulated costs. Value added=value after processing – value before processing.
- Value added assessment is an analysis of every activity in the business process to determine its contribution to meet end-customer expectations.
- Value is defined from the point of view of the end customer or the business process.
- Waste occurs when activities exist because the process is inadequately designed or the process is not functioning as designed; activities not required by the customer or the process and activity that could be eliminated without affecting the output to the customer.
- Instability occurs as organization grow, processes break down and are patch for use, and become excessive complex.
- Errors occur when additional controls are put in place to review outputs rather than change the process.
- Communication breakdown exasperates failure when individuals in the process fail to talk to their customers and understand their requirements.
- Too much time is spent on internal maintenance activities such as coordinating, expatiating, record-keeping instead of on redesigning the process.
- Quality is possible and rework eliminated when the causes of the errors are removed.
- Combining operations, moving people closer together, or automation can minimize the moving of documents and information.
- Waiting time can be minimized by combining operations, balancing work loads, or automation.
- Identifying root causes reduces trouble-shooting.
- The increase in complexity results in increasing difficulties everywhere as activities, decisions, relationships, and essential information become more difficult to understand and more difficult to manage.
- Simplification starts by evaluating every element making it easier to understand and less demanding of other elements.
- When an organization fails to make continuous simplification efforts a major portion of the managing process, it invites difficulty and poor performance; simplification is achieved by combining similar activities, reducing the amount of handling (reduce delays caused by handoffs and decision making), eliminating unused data and copies, and refining standard reporting.
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