Process Analysis WSD
Process Analysis WSD
Harsh V Bhasin
Process Strategy Process Analysis Process Performance Supply Chain Strategy and Quality Location Constraint Management Inventory Management Process Layout Forecasting Lean Systems Sales and Operations Planning Resource Planning Scheduling
Process Analysis
Process analysis is the documentation and detailed understanding of how work is performed and how it can be redesigned.
2 Define Scope
1 Identify Opportunity
3 Document Process
4 Evaluate Performance
Suggestion system: a voluntary system by which employees submit their ideas on process improvements. Design team: A group of knowledgeable, teamoriented individuals who work at one or more steps in the process, do the process analysis and make the necessary changes. Metrics: Performance measures that are established for a process and the steps within it. Flowcharts: A diagram that traces the flow of information, customers, equipment, or materials through the various steps of a process.
Service Blueprint: A special flowchart of a service process that shows which steps have high customer contact (line of visibility).
Service Blueprint
Process Charts
Process chart: An organized way of documenting the activities performed by a person or group of people at a work station, with a customer, or on materials. Five categories of process charts:
1. Operations that change, create or add something. 2. Transportation (materials handling): Moving something. 3. Inspection: Checking or verifying something. 4. Delays: Time spent awaiting further action. 5. Storage: When something is put away until a later time.
Summary
Activity Operation Transport Inspect Delay Store Number of steps 5 9 2 3 Time (min) 23 11 8 8 Distance (ft) 815
Step description
Enter emergency room, approach patient window Sit down and fill out patient history Nurse escorts patient to ER triage room Nurse inspects injury Return to waiting room Wait for available bed Go to ER bed Wait for doctor Doctor inspects injury and questions patient Nurse takes patient to radiology Technician x-rays patient Return to bed in ER Wait for doctor to return Doctor provides diagnosis and advice Return to emergency entrance area Check out Walk to pharmacy Pick up prescription Leave the building
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
0.50 10.0 0.75 3.00 0.75 1.00 1.00 4.00 5.00 2.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 2.00 1.00 4.00 2.00 4.00 1.00
Evaluating Performance
Checklist: A form used to record the frequency of occurrence of certain service or product characteristics related to performance. Histogram: A summarization of data measured on a continuous scale, showing the frequency distribution of some quality characteristic (the central tendency and dispersion of the data). Bar chart: A series of bars representing the frequency of occurrence of data characteristics measured on a yes-or-no basis. Pareto Chart: A bar chart on which factors are plotted in decreasing order of frequency along the horizontal axis.
Bar Chart
The manager of a neighborhood restaurant is concerned about rising customer complaints. He would like to present his findings in a way that his employees will understand.
Harsh V Bhasin
Pareto Chart
Example 5.1
Scatter-diagram: A plot of two variables showing whether they are related. Cause-and-effect diagram: A diagram that relates a key performance problem to its potential causes.
Sometimes called the fishbone diagram.
Graphs: Representation of data in a variety of pictorial forms, such as line charts and pie charts.
Late baggage to aircraft Late fuel Late food service Contractor not provided updated schedule
Materials
Procedures
Checklist
Tally //// /// //// //// //// //// //// //// //// / //// // Total Total 4 3 36 7 50
Headliner Defects
Pareto Chart
100
30 20 10 0 D A B
60 40 20 0
Defect type
Cumulative Percentage
80
Number of Defects
Cause-and-Effect Diagram
People
Other Process
First
Second Shift
Third
Ideas for process redesign and improvement can be uncovered by asking six questions about each step in the process and about the process as a whole. 1. What is being done? 2. When is it being done? 3. Who is doing it? 4. Where is it being done? 5. How is it being done? 6. How well does it do on the various metrics of importance?
Answers to the previous six questions are challenged by asking still another set of questions.
Why is the process even being done? Why is it being done where it is being done? Why is it being done when it is being done?
Brainstorming is letting a group of people, knowledgeable about the process, propose ideas for change by saying whatever comes to mind.
Benchmarking
Benchmarking is a systematic procedure that measures a firms processes, services, and products against those of industry leaders.
Benchmarking focuses on setting quantitative goals for improvement.
Competitive benchmarking is based on comparisons with a direct industry competitor. Functional benchmarking compares functional areas in the firm with those of outstanding firms in any industry. Internal benchmarking involves using an internal unit with superior performance as the benchmark for other units.
Benchmarking Steps
Planning: Identify the process, service or product to be benchmarked and the firm(s) to be used for comparison. Determine the performance metrics and collect the data. Analysis: Determine the gap between the firms current performance and that of the benchmark firm(s). Integration: Establish goals and obtain the support of managers who must provide the resources for accomplishing the goals. Action: Develop cross-functional teams of those most affected by the changes, develop action plans, implement the plans and monitor progress.
4. 5. 6. 7.
Not Connecting with Strategic Issues Not Involving the Right People in the Right Way Not Giving the Design Teams and Process Analysts a Clear Charter and Then Holding Them Accountable Not Being Satisfied Unless Fundamental Reengineering Changes Are Made Not Considering the Impact on People Not Giving Attention to Implementation Not Creating an Infrastructure for Continuous Process Improvement.
Harsh V Bhasin