This is a fair question, businesses can be managed without taking a process approach. Indeed, traditionally management systems consisted of lots of text based policies and procedures – without a process in sight! However, now that most business management systems are software based, a process approach is far easier to manage and results in multiple benefits.
Firstly though, what is the process approach? In fact, what is a process?
To answer these questions, this article will cover:
A process is a series of actions or steps taken in order to achieve a particular end - a process is a transformation. It transforms inputs into outputs. For example, a process is the mechanism by which raw materials are converted into products, so baking a cake will involve taking various ingredients (inputs) and producing the cake (output) using the recipe (process).
Taking a process approach to business management means understanding your business activities as processes that link together and function as a system. This is basically thinking about how your organisation works (from end-to-end) to transform inputs into outputs.
Indeed the ISO (the International Organisation for Standardisation) defines a process as a "a set of interrelated or interacting activities that transform inputs into outputs."
This is easiest to envisage where a raw material is transformed into a finished product (as in the cake example above) but is in fact also the case for more intangible transformations. For example, this week I have been transforming my time and use of a computer into a Newsletter.
So now we come back to the question – why take a process approach?
And the answer is, because those organisations that perform the transformation of inputs into outputs (their processes) well, generally manage to meet or exceed customer expectation. And those that do it best are invariably the most successful.
In practical terms, the start point for taking a process approach is to document your business processes as process maps.
Process mapping is an exercise to identify all the steps and decisions within a process in diagrammatic form which:
Because a process map is visual – it is far easier to understand and follow than a page of text. If the process mapping is done well, the detail captured in the process maps will match the detail required by the intended audience.
The exercise delivers significant benefits to an organisation both in terms of the output – your end-to-end business processes captured as a process map – and through the doing of the actual activity.
The output of a process mapping exercise delivers a process model of your organisation. By this I mean, what your organisation does, captured in interconnected process maps.
If captured and presented in an effective Business Process Management system, which can easily be searched and reported upon, it will provide a blueprint for your organisation or a manual for how it works.
This will be invaluable in so many ways:
So, process mapping enables problem areas such as bottlenecks, capacity issues, delays or waste to be easily identified and then provides a solid basis from which to develop solutions and introduce and plan new improved processes.
Process mapping and a process approach enables an organisation to:
Completing the exercise of process mapping, in itself, delivers a great deal of benefits. Providing that those who do the work are involved in the process mapping, it promotes a process approach across the whole organisation. During the capture, people will start wondering why something is done that way and start thinking of ways to do it better.
People will think about what happens next to what they deliver and best of all, people will start thinking in process terms rather than departmental.
So adopting a process approach has multiple benefits both in terms of the adoption and what can be achieved with a process model of your organisation.
Triaster see the benefits that our customers derive from taking a process approach every single day. To start implementing the process approach in your organisation for free sign-up for our Process Library Free Plan today.
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This is an updated and refreshed edition of an article originally written in 2016.