BPR Tools
BPR Tools
BPR Tools
Payoff
Methodologies and tools can be used to structure, assess, and resolve the issues that
business process reengineering (BPR) raises. This article discusses how to realistically
define a BPR project and choose methodologies and tools that help ensure the project's
success.
Problems Addressed
Sometimes called process redesign or process innovation, business process reengineering
(BPR) is now firmly entrenched as a buzzword, if not a concept, in the minds of US
managers. Yet there remain disagreements as to what BPR is and how best to accomplish
it.
BPR is used in this article to mean the rapid and radical redesign of strategic, value-
added business processesand the systems, policies, and organizational structures that
support themto optimize workflows and productivity in an organization. Business
process reengineering has these characteristics:
BPR is process-oriented.
Because of the broad scope, ambitious reach, and the profound changes BPR projects
cause, they are among the most difficult that a company can undertake. Three out of four
BPR projects are reported to be unsuccessful. That is why there is heightened interest in
approaches to BPR that offer better odds of success. In particular, companies have sought
methodologies and tools to facilitate well-disciplined and organized ways of structuring,
assessing, and resolving the issues that BPR projects raise.
Methodologies refer to systematic approaches to conducting a BPR project. An
effective methodology is like a road map. It helps the company select a destination and then
find the best way to get there. Tools are the manual or automated aids to doing the work of
the project.
Permit (ideally) iterative, top-down refinement from the BPR project goals to the
solution. For example, if the solution includes a computer system, the refinement
should end with a working system.
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Produce an acceptable return on investment .
Project Management.
These tools are used for planning, scheduling, budgeting, reporting, and tracking
projects. Some tools, such as Texas Instruments' IEF/Project Manager, are integrated with
other categories of tools, such as modeling, analysis, and systems development. Other
project management tools, such as Harvard Project Manager or Microsoft Project for
Windows, are standalone.
Coordination.
These tools are used to distribute plans and to communicate updated details of
projects. The primary subcategories are E-mail, scheduling applications, shared
spreadsheets, bulletin boards, and groupware. Some of these tools, such as Microsoft
Excel or Lotus 1-2-3, support a single subcategory. Others, such as Lotus Notes or
WordPerfect Office, support multiple subcategories.
Modeling.
These tools are used to make a model of something in order to understand its
structure and workings. Most of the tools in this category are integrated Computer-Aided
Software Engineering (ICASE) toolsets for integrated analysis, design, and development
of computer systems. These include Texas Instruments' IEF, KnowledgeWare's IEW,
Popkin System ARchitect, and S/Cubed DAISYS. There are also useful partial solutions,
including spreadsheets.
Manually transcribing data from one tool to another. This option places the least
constraint on tool selection , but is tedious and error-prone.
Selecting one vendor's integrated toolset. Integrated tools cover several, but not all, of
the potential BPR tool applications.
Selecting nonintegrated tools from one or more vendors that support common data
formats like SYLK or dBASE in order to move data from one to another.
Selecting nonintegrated tools and using the capabilities of the operating system
platform (e.g., Microsoft Windows) for cutting and pasting data among the tools.
Many tools, especially the integrated ones, are fairly expensive, and the initial purchase
price is only the beginning. Experience shows that the total tool cost can easily be 10 to 15
times the initial purchase price over the first five years of use.
Role of Consultants.
If IS selects a consulting firm's methodology and proprietary toolset, it is generally
committing to heavy dependence on the consultant's personnel. IS should also consider
whether it is possible to continue using the tools without using the consultant. The flip side
of this issue is whether the company is using consultants with someone else's tools and
thus investing in training the consultant's people. Each company contemplating a BPR
project should find its own answers to these questions.
Preparation. The purpose is to mobilize, organize, and energize the people who will
perform the reengineering project.
Vision. The processes to reengineer are selected and the redesign options capable of
achieving breakthrough performance are formulated.
Solution. The purpose is to define the technical and social requirements for the new
processes and develop detailed implementation plans.
The methodology is customized to the needs of each BPR project, because that is what
generally happens in practice. An individual project might skip, rearrange, or recombine
tasks to meet its needs or give greater or lesser emphasis to some tasks. For example, in an
ideal project, stages 1 and 2 (preparation and identification) consider all key processes
within a company and conclude with a step that sets priorities for the processes to
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reengineer (see Exhibit 2). Then stages 3, 4, and 5 (vision, solution, and transformation)
are executed repeatedly for each process (or group of processes) selected for reengineering.
Case Example: ABC Toy Company
============================================================================
Goals
------------------------------------
Regain Capture Maintain
Market 70% Gross ROI
Share Share Profit 20%
Process
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Develop Product 0 8 5 5
Manufacture 9 9 7 7
Fulfill Orders 8 9 9 9
Service Customers Request 6 8 5 5
Maintain Customer Accounts 3 3 3 3
Develop Human Resources 4 6 4 4
Compensate 3 5 3 3
Fund 3 3 3 3
Comply 1 1 1 1
Acquire Customer Orders 7 7 8 8
==============================================================================
Resources
---------------------------
Full-Time
Equivalent Cost ($)
Process
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Develop Product 15.0 2,500,000
Manufacture 375.0 29,300,000
Fulfill Orders 22.5 2,500,000
Service Customer Request 9.0 700,000
Maintain Customer Accounts 8.5 1,000,000
Develop Human Resources 11.5 1,350,000
Compensate 6.5 1,060,000
Comply 7.0 825,000
Acquire Customer Orders 36.0 5,000,000
==============================================================================
Factors
-----------------------------------------------
Time Cost Risk Social Priority
Process
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Develop Product Med. $$ High Easy 5
Manufacture Long $$$$ Med. Hard 4
Fulfill Orders Med. $$ Med. Med. 1
Service Customer Request Short $ Low Easy 2
Maintain Customer Accounts Short $ Low Easy
Develop Human Resources Long $ Med. Hard
Compensate Med. $ High Hard
Fund Med. $ Med. Easy
Comply Med. $ Med. Med.
Acquire Customer Orders Med. $$$ High Med. 3
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KEY:
0= No Impact
10= Maximum Impact
==============================================================================
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Sometimes, depending most often on who is sponsoring the BPR project, the scope of
the project is not the entire company. It may be a business unit, a division, or even a
functional department. (Actually, the scope must be the processes within the department or
whatever other unit is involved.) Alternatively, the specific processes to be reengineered
may have been preselected. In these cases, the way in which the reengineering team is
organized, and the way in which it uses the methodology, will differ from the model.
The methodology does not require a specific consulting involvement. A BPR project
team should include both insiders, who have knowledge of current practices and an
understanding of company culture, and outsiders who have the creative naivete to ask why
things are done a certain way. Project teams also need leadership and facilitation. If they are
going to use a methodology, the project team members must be trained. Rapid Re does not
require that companies retain Gateway or any other consultants to work on a BPR project.
The process is designed for use by managers and professionals found in all kinds of
settings in US companies so it is accessible to the layperson.
For the same reason, the methodology requires few tools. It can be used with a pencil,
paper, a flow charting template, and a few paper forms. Spreadsheets can be used for all of
the quantitative tasks, as well as for the presentation of qualitative data in tabular form.
Project management systems can be used not only for planning and tracking the BPR
project, but also for simple process flow diagrams. The methodology can be used with any
or all of the categories of BPR tools. Flexibility is essential if the methodology is to be
useful in a broad range of environments.
The overhead associated with the methodology is low and it is easy to learn, requiring
only two or three days of training. The fully worked-out example in Exhibit 2, the ABC
Toy Company, illustrates its use.
Who is sponsoring the project? Is it being driven from the top down or bottom
up?
How much of their time can they spend on the project? For how long?
What is the state of the team's readiness to do the work of the BPR project?
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What kind of support will the team members need?
How will the organization ensure a transfer of know-how to its own staff? How
will it wean itself from dependence on the consultants?
It is only within the constraints set by the answers to these questions that an
organization can realistically define a BPR project and choose the methodologies and tools
that help ensure its success.
Author Biographies
Mark M. Klein
Mark M. Klein is senior vice-president and managing director of management
consulting services at Gateway, a Swiss Re company, and coauthor of the The
Reengineering Handbook (New York: AMACOM, 1994).