BPI (Business Process Improvement)
With Business Process
Improvement (BPI) you identify your true business processing needs and
compare these with the actual way things are done to form an idealised view of
how the business would best operate. This can provide: dramatic cost reduction,
improved quality, reduced cycle time, enhanced customer service. It challenges existing assumptions, paving the way for an improved design of business
processes.
Improvement is achieved through identify and assess the impact of redesigned
processes on the people, structure, culture, technology and physical
infrastructure of the organisation.
A BPI programme is
built on recognised principles of change management. Customers can receive short-term payback from “quick hit” changes identified early in
the programme; they can also receive the benefit of uninterrupted sequenced
longer-term change that becomes an integral part of their continuous
improvement initiatives.
Exploiting packages
Another
common way to achieve greater
benefit from business systems is to bring in packaged software solutions. This has two main advantages. Clearly there should be significant savings
in time, effort and cost - both to build the system and to maintain it. In addition, packages are normally the result
of intensive research and development, pulling together a range of best
business solutions for a range of businesses and industries. With the constant advances in the package
marketplace, packaged solutions can now meet the majority of business systems
needs in a majority of businesses - not only meet those needs but often they
offer better solutions than would be achieved by commissioning a custom
development to the organisation’s own specifications.
“Pure” BPR
BPI and packaged solutions are frequently
combined to bring about radical improvements in business processing. Traditionally, the idealised view of the
business processing plus the detailed specific requirements are used to select
appropriate packaged solutions. These
are then modified and customised to build best-fit practical solutions.
We call this a “pure” approach to BPI -
“pure” because the business processes are developed into an ideal form
bearing in mind the technological possibilities and absolute constraints, but
without being contaminated by assumptions or negotiable constraints.
Pure BPI often produces excellent
results. There are, however, some
potential drawbacks with this approach.
“Channeled” BPI
Getting the best value from a packaged
solution usually implies that the business adopts specific practices already
supported in the package. To implement
unsupported processing requires modifications and custom development. Each modification of a package detracts from
its value. Modifications cost time and
money, then leave the business with a partially unsupported solution. This is often compounded when upgrades become
available to the base package - it can prove costly if not impossible to apply
them, and eventually the package supplier will cease support altogether on the
previous versions.
No package solution will ever be able to
support fully all the process designs unless those designs were made with the
capabilities of a specific package in mind.
The selection process will identify the best-fit solution - but it is
unlikely to provide perfect results.
That is the rationale behind an alternative
approach when BPI is used with packages - it is called “Channeled BPI”. With channeled BPI you base your idealised
business process design on the known capabilities of a package. As no two packages are identical in their
capabilities, this implies that a strategic choice of package needs to be made
before the BPI is undertaken. That
choice would be made based on the business’s vision and key needs. The choice of an appropriate package supplier
will be fundamental to the success of the process. The BPI process is then channeled to exploit
the strengths and business processing capabilities of the package.
Typically, a BPI exercise deals with a
multi-functional, inter-departmental piece of the business. A package solution in such cases would
normally call for a high level of integration across functional modules. Leading packages of this nature, for example
SAP, Oracle and Microsoft Dynamics, have well developed business process options that are
already documented and modelled by the supplier. The package’s
detailed business process designs are used as a starting point for the
business process modelling - typically using package-specific modelling tools.
Channeled BPI is conducted in a similar
way to the pure approach, except that the capabilities of the package are used
as a constraint on the design. This has
two main advantages. Much effort is
saved as the details of business processes are already fully documented by the
supplier and only need to be selected and aligned with the specific business
needs. When the solution is then built,
the business process model can be implemented by configuring the standard
facilities of the package according to the rules in the package-based process
model. This dramatically reduces the amount of modification or custom programming required and should ensure
that the final solution is a perfect match to the process design.
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