What does playing golf, driving to work, or writing a report have in common? They have a start and an end. They consume or transform inputs into outputs. They are repeatable and ongoing. In essence, they are all processes. As with all processes, they can be analyzed, measured, and improved to be the best as they can be at a given point in time.
Most all processes can be improved! Think of any organization that stands out in your mind about being the best at something. Why are they the best? What are they doing well? If you were able to pull back the curtain on the organization, you probably would find they not only have great processes, but they practice “business process management.” They focus on all the processes and activities that deliver value to their customers and optimize these processes for the good of the organization.
So, what is Business Process Management? Business process management provides governance over the organization’s processes. It is an enterprise-wide structured approach to managing the processes that create the products and services that provide value to the customer. A more detailed definition can be found in ABPMP International’s Guide to The Business Process Management Common Body Of Knowledge (BPM CBOK®). Accordingly, business process management “is a disciplined approach to identify, design, execute, document, measure, monitor, and control both automated and non-automated business processes to achieve consistent, targeted results aligned with an organization’s strategic goals.”
“Managing Sideways” does not mean that we stop managing our organizations. It means that must manage BOTH the organization and the process. The good news is, if we manage the processes well, the resulting cash flow makes it a lot easier and a lot more fun to manage our organization. The health of the process translates directly into the health of the organization. The comment “aligning activity with order-to-cash” refers to the fact that everything a business does is to make money based on supplying some type of good or service to a customer. All processes within an organization should support the transformation of an order through the collection of cash. As you probably know, processes lead to the customer whereas functions lead hierarchically to “the boss.”
The ultimate goal of any organization is to make the organization more efficient and effective, basically more productive. Business Process Management drives greater productivity (e.g., reduced costs, employee productivity, increased revenue, cost avoidance, etc.) by focusing on the entire process for optimization, not just pieces. The vehicle for increasing productivity is usually a project. The product of such a project will be a modified process, process automation, or both.
These essential elements – productivity, project management, product management, and process management – necessarily go together to realize business process management productivity gains.
The productivity triangle shows how all these pieces fit together.
In addition to productivity, business process management…
As a business analyst or project manager, it is key for us to understand business process management since so much of our project work involves business processes. We often find ourselves working on initiatives to improve a process or to develop software to support existing processes. If we do not understand the process, we may develop software that does not meet the needs of the stakeholders, miss requirements, include out-of-scope requirements, or just not understand the overall impact of the changes we are making to a process.
If you are interested in getting practical hands-on experience in business process management, go to www.watermarklearning.com to find out more about Watermark’s Business Process Management Certificate program. You may take all 3 classes, or alternatively, take 1 or 2 courses of interest.
Want to learn more? Here are some great resources and organizations.
How do you define success for your team? Take a moment to think about this…
Remote work has transformed how organizations operate, with virtual teams becoming the new normal across…
Effective leadership has never been more critical. Whether managing a team in a high-pressure corporate…
Remote work has transformed how organizations operate, with virtual teams becoming the new normal across…
The Business Analysis Body of Knowledge (BABOK® Guide v3) is a comprehensive guide to the…
A certified Business Analyst (BA) has successfully passed an International Institute of Business Analysis (IIBA.org)…