Automation and Continuous Process Improvement Cross Functional
The BPM support model in which a small number of people in a central unit do all of the process improvement work must ultimately fail; there is no way for it to survive its own success. Although it is very useful to have a central support group (an Office of BPM), it won't, by itself, ensure widespread and continuous improving of processes. Success for a central group that starts out doing all of the improvement work will mean many requests for support from across the organization. Whatever the size of the central group, there will come a time when process improvement projects are on hold waiting for available resources. At this point the central process group is now the bottleneck preventing the improving of your processes! Dependence on a central group just doesn't scale. In the Toyota Motor Corporation manufacturing plants in Japan, staff submit some 600,000 improvement suggestions each year. Even more remarkable is the fact that 98% of these are implemented. This is approximately one realized improvement per month per employee. Everyone working at those factories knows that process improvement is part of their role and they rise to the challenge. Staff need to know five things: it is important, it's worthwhile, they are empowered to make change, their efforts will be respected and the suggestion process is simple. A small central group (or even a larger group) of process specialists cannot successfully do all the work. Improving processes part of everyone's job. Create an environment where noticing ways to improve processes is a common part of each day's activities, and continuous process improvement will be effective and sustained.
Process analysis and improvement should be everybody's job.
How can we make this happen in our organizations?
Roger Tregear
Roger is a Consulting Associate with Leonardo. He delivers consulting and education assignments around the world. This work has involved many industry sectors, diverse cultures, and organization types. Roger briefs executives, coach managers, and support project teams to develop process-based management. Several thousand people have attended Roger's training courses and seminars in many countries - and Roger frequently presents at international business conferences. Roger has been writing a column on BPTrends called Practical Process for over 10 years. This led to the 2013 book of the same name. In 2011, he co-authored Establishing the Office of Business Process Management. He contributed a chapter in The International Handbook on Business Process Management (2010, 2015). With Paul Harmon in 2016, Roger co-edited Questioning BPM?, a book discussing key BPM questions. Roger's own book, Reimagining Management, was published in 2016.
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Source: https://blog.leonardo.com.au/5-ways-to-foster-continuous-process-improvement-in-your-team
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