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The Secret Weapons That Lean Provides for BPM

Ever notice that executives can call attention to a problem but they don’t know what it takes to get it fixed?  In contrast, workers have lots of ideas of how to fix things, but they don’t have the authority to get improvements made.  And conversations between the two groups are too constrained or conflicted to drive corrective action.  To make matters worse, neither group seems to know the whole process and be able to determine how changing one part might impact another.  In short, we have trouble finding both the forest and the trees.

And, when technology is driving a solution, IT sometimes focuses on capturing the process to meet the complexity of the software.  It is possible to forget about analyzing and improving the operations.  Once there is a process understanding and improvements that support the employees, there is a foundation where automation can have significant value.

Lean is a methodology that enables constructive conversations across levels and functions that are anchored in procedural details as well as whole process understanding.  Executives, managers, and workers are able to understand problems, eliminate waste and increase speed. It has been used by Toyota for years.  James Womack and Daniel Jones studied the Toyota Production System (TPS) and coined the term “lean” for this method in their book The Machine That Changed the World.  Now organizations are applying these lean tools in manufacturing, service and office settings with great success.  Typical results show dramatic reductions in time while significantly boosting quality.

The secret weapons that Lean provides to BPM are (1) data boxes and a (2) process time line that shows the flow of work and information in the work process. (See the example below of the swim lane value stream map that has 4 data boxes and a process time line.)

And what is a data box?  It's a box that shows current data at that step in the value stream.  Usually a data box contains 2-4 critical pieces of information, but what data is captured depends on what is relevant to the process.

In the Sales Compensation map example, each data box contains the same information.
Several possible data elements that could be used and their definitions are listed below.  The first four are used in the Sales Compensation map.

 


Secret Weapon


The process time line runs along the bottom of the value stream map.  It shows how long each step takes and the length of time between each step.  Add all the times in the process time line from beginning to end of process to calculate the lead time (or cycle time) for the whole process.

Data boxes and process time lines are critical indicators in business process management.

 

Published BPMInstitute.org
http://www.bpminstitute.org/articles/article/article/the-secret-weapons-that-lean-provides-for-bpm.html