In a previous post I said that it should go without saying that you have to showcase your initial BPM project if you want to drive adoption across the entire organization. I focused on metrics. Although other areas of the business might not understand the functional process implemented, they will find interest in how you are measuring the process for improvement. This can correlate to other areas of the business as well.
Today I want to address the folks out there who don’t feel comfortable showcasing their project because they don’t have the biggest ROI numbers yet. Maybe it has only been in production for a couple of weeks. What else can you focus on?
The Before and After
What did the process look like before the solution and how has it changed? Were there lots of manual hand-offs, faxes and emails? Did participants have to log onto four different systems just to review a work item? Was there inconsistency in the way people executed the process? How much time did managers spend building and running reports before status meetings? What does it look like now?
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Wesley Chung, Director of European Delivery | July 14th, 2008
Process People: We frequently hear from Lombardi that BPM has everything to do with organizational culture. Can you give us one concrete example that you commonly see which demonstrates this cultural shift?
Wesley Chung: Yes, it’s very much a cultural thing, and I would say that a big part of that is trusting the [BPMS] system. Many organizations still rely on old-fashioned, manual status reports to track the success of a process because they don’t have any other way to know that people are getting their work done. A traditional status report provides a way for them to monitor that. Without a product like Teamworks, there’s no way to efficiently and effectively monitor that people are accomplishing their tasks in-line with the business process. It’s how things have always been done. Ultimately, they need to be willing to trust the tool if they want to change how they manage a process. The other major cultural challenge is that managers have to learn new concepts and completely alter their methodologies for managing processes.
Process People: So what is one example of a cultural difference between managing processes manually and managing them with a product like Teamworks?
Wesley Chung: The difference is really about managing exceptions. An exception is an instance where a process was not followed in the normal case, where someone in the organization didn’t do what they were supposed to do and the process did not turn out as expected. Once managers see that the process team can provide them with some automated reports and the managers realize that they can trust the system, then they can start thinking about managing the exceptions instead of managing the processes that were carried out properly.
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Driven 2008 has come to a close, and we’re really thrilled with this year’s event. Many of the conference attendees stayed for the Lombardi golf tournament yesterday, which took place on the beautiful Fazio Canyons golf course at Barton Creek Resort and Spa. The weather was perfect and the golf was great.
On that note, I thought it might be timely to provide a quick recap of a session that Toby Cappello hosted on Wednesday. The session was called: “The Monday Morning Quarterback Discusses 10 Painful Lessons Learned.” Toby started things off with a golf analogy - one which he lived up to on the course yesterday!
The analogy went something like this: “BPM is like golf - you need to build muscle memory if you want to develop consistency and achieve success.”
In all honesty, I can’t really think of any other combinations of a technology (BPMS) and a discipline (BPM) that fits so perfectly with this analogy. It cuts to the core of Lombardi’s methodology. In fact, if you break it down even further you’ll see more uncanny parallels that help to visualize what exactly you’ll need to do to achieve success with BPM.
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