Just like Liam Neeson in the movie Taken, a process mapping pro needs to have a very particular set of process mapping skills.
Process Mapping is an essential part of any process improvement project but how do you know where to focus your improvement efforts if you don’t have your processes mapped?
These are the key elements to getting process mapping right...
To ensure that you are ticking all of these boxes and more, please take a look at this
To ensure success, the right person in your organisation needs to be responsible for creating the process maps. Getting the right person can be a tricky task, as you may not have the budget, or resources to have one full time employee doing this work, but it would help if the selected person or team have the following skills or characteristics...
Knowing exactly what you are looking for and how to find it is a skill more business improvement professionals need to have. Before embarking on any kind of process mapping project, you need to know:
One of the most important process mapping skills, is consistently creating the content at the level that is required for the project and required by the end users of the process maps. A process mapper needs to be able to traverse these different detail level requirements to deliver exactly what has been asked of them. This means that they will need to be able to create top level management business processes, as well as not being afraid to dive into the detail when necessary.
If the process maps are for improvement purposes, attention to detail is particularly important, as the more you are able to break activities down into their component parts, the greater the possibilities for adding and using data (required for process analysis and improvement).
3. A 'Never Say Die' Attitude
A process mapper should be tenacious and determined. Quite often when conducting process discovery sessions, there will be a burst of initial energy and output, however as times goes on, this energy may decrease or disappear altogether. It is the responsibility of the process mapper to finish what they started. There are two distinct phases in process map creation, the initial process discovery work, and then the inputting of this information in to a process library.
Determination and tenacity are crucial as once you have finished with the subject matter experts (SMEs), this information all needs collating and transferring into shiny process maps, which is a completely different skill to facilitating process discovery sessions.
The idiom 'herding cats' is often used when referring to the most difficult of jobs and while process mapping workshops don't have to be difficult, when you have a sceptical team it's important to make the experience as painless as possible by keeping the sessions 'high energy', not lingering too long on any one Activity, keeping the process relatively high level, having an end-point established and selling your team on the potential benefits moving forward - it also can't hurt to throw in a few pizzas along the way.
5. Organisation
It helps to be organised as a process mapper. A process mapper should be clear about their own working processes and have all the necessary collateral in place to keep them organised. I like to have a different folder for every one of my projects and keep them all separate.
I also try to keep printing to a minimum to decrease the amount of paper I need to carry around. For the 'always be prepared' process mapper, you can carry around packs of multi coloured sticky notes and a couple of Sharpies (just in case spontaneous process mapping happens to break out in your presence).
6. Getting the Right Knowledge Out of the Right People, for the Most Accurate Process Capture
One of the most necessary skills in process capture, is getting the right information out of the process experts in the process mapping workshops, but also the vision necessary to piece it all together when multiple job roles are concerned. This required vision and a lot of energy when sat at your desk creating the process maps! I find that black coffee and regular breaks help to keep you sane whilst dragging and dropping the days (and nights) away.
7. Positive outlook
It helps to have the end goal in mind at all times. There will be times when a process mapper is drowning in a sea of sticky notes, of every colour and size, but visualising the end goal and keeping in mind that your organisation or customer will be in a much better place as a result of the work you are carrying out will keep you going. The work is great fun, and is a transferable skill, which every organisation is in need of at some point!
The good thing about skills is that they can be acquired with training and the right knowledge. This
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