In many of the Business Process Projects I have been involved in, they have been focused on a specific area of the business. The reason is obvious, in that a potential problem has been identified, and hence the area of investigation is confined to that part of the business where the problem has surfaced.
I not sure how many Business Process analysts have been involved in Sales. But what I would like to do is share with a process that we used in Sales which is based on a premise that “pain flows through the entire organisation”. This consultative approach to selling was used to expand the number of contacts within a business that was directly or indirectly impacted by the issue raised by initial contact. It also provided a means of expanding the number of contacts within an organisation to justify the investment in your services. Likewise this can be used to expand the benefits gained from a business process improvement (business process re-engineering) project. The diagram links the impact of pain on the various organisations with in a company, providing a way of ensuring the process is improved from end to end.
There a few tools used to identify and analyse the impact of pain within an organisation:
One of the hardest problems of implementing a Business Process Project is showing the benefits that can be gained from looking at end to end processes that flow across departments within an organisation. The Pain Chain approach I believe is an excellent way of communicating the impact of process breakdown on other parts of the organisation. It is a good way of documenting your findings and supporting the recommendations on
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