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Process Management Improves the Horizontal
Flow
By Jim Clemmer
"Major breakthroughs in time to market, investment, piece cost, and
quality come horizontally across the organization, not vertically through
individual, isolated functions. And it is our business schools that have
not taught how to manage process across functions." — Louis
Lataif, Dean of the School of Management, Boston University quoted in,
"MBA: Is the Traditional Model Doomed?", Harvard Business Review
A group of sailors were out in an old boat. The boat hit a rock and sprung
a slow leak. The group began to fight over whose fault it was that they
hit the rock. Then they argued over whose responsibility it was to fix
the hole. Those on the starboard side shouted that those on the port side,
where the hole was, should be responsible for fixing it. All the while,
the boat filled with water and floundered in the increasing heavy seas.
As the shouting and finger pointing grew, a large wave swamped the boat.
Everyone drowned at sea.
Our traditional functional or vertically managed organizations force the
people in them to act like those foolish sailors. Individual departments
such as accounting, production, sales, service, or development and areas
such as branch or field offices work to optimize their own performance.
Goals, objectives, performance measurements, and career paths move up
and down within the narrow walls of these functional chimneys or silos.
Managers and their teams focus on doing their own jobs or segment of the
production, delivery, or support process. Everyone focuses on a narrow
piece of the organization while losing sight of the big picture.
Functionally managed organizations reduce organization performance levels
while increasing cycle times and costs by: (1) fostering an "us-versus-them"
approach to communications and fighting for organizational resources,
(2) leaving unmanaged gaps between departments which disrupt cross-functional
work processes, (3) making improvements or changes in one department which
hurts the effectiveness of other departments in the process, and (4) losing
sight of customer/partner relationships and meeting everyone's needs.
With a narrow focus on their own departments or functions, people in a
vertically managed organization easily forget that they're all in the
same boat.
While our organizations have been organized vertically, their operations
depend on processes that flow horizontally. In the fifties, sixties, and
seventies, that didn't matter. Expensive layers of inspectors, coordinators,
expeditors, supervisors, and managers plugged and patched the leaks to
keep their organizations afloat.
In the eighties, manufacturers were forced by their superior quality Japanese
competitors to dramatically improve their production processes —
or sink. Many manufacturers made huge gains in quality, productivity,
cycle times, and cost reduction by rediscovering process improvement techniques
developed in America by such pioneers as W. Edwards Deming and Joseph
Juran.
By the late eighties, the same cost and service/quality pressures were
building in service organizations (and on the administrative side of manufacturing
companies). The problem was amplified by the Information Technology revolution
that was quickly gathering speed. Managers soon found that buying expensive
computer systems and sophisticated software was money down the drain if
all they did was automate existing processes. It just meant that things
got messed up faster.
The timing was perfect for Michael Hammer's Harvard Business Review article
"Reengineering Work: Don't Automate, Obliterate" published in
the July-August 1990 issue. A former MIT professor and Information Technology
specialist, Hammer "had been frustrated by how fixated many organizations
were on using information systems merely to automate the business processes
they already had in place." The decade of reengineering with all
its helpful uses and harmful abuses began.
Jim Clemmer is a bestselling author and internationally
acclaimed keynote speaker, workshop/retreat leader, and management
team developer on leadership, change, customer focus, culture, teams,
and personal growth. During the last 25 years he has delivered over
two thousand customized keynote presentations, workshops, and retreats.
Jim's five international bestselling books include The VIP Strategy,
Firing
on All Cylinders, Pathways
to Performance, Growing
the Distance, and The
Leader's Digest. His web site is www.clemmer.net.
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