Keywords: business process reengineering, business management strategy, role of information technology
Source: Wikipedia
Business process re-engineering is a business management strategy, originally pioneered in the early 1990s, focusing on the analysis and design of workflows and processes within an organization. BPR aimed to help organizations fundamentally rethink how they do their work in order to dramatically improve customer service, cut operational costs, and become world-class competitors. In the mid-1990s, as many as 60% of the Fortune 500 companies claimed to either have initiated reengineering efforts, or to have plans to do so.
Business Process Reengineering |
BPR seeks to help companies radically restructure their organizations by focusing on the ground-up design of their business processes. According to Davenport (1990) a business process is a set of logically related tasks performed to achieve a defined business outcome. Re-engineering emphasized a holistic focus on business objectives and how processes related to them, encouraging full-scale recreation of processes rather than iterative optimization of subprocesses.
Business process re-engineering is also known as business process redesign, business transformation, or business process change management.
Overview
Business Process Re-engineering (BPR) is basically rethinking and
radically redesigning an organization's existing resources. BPR,
however, is more than just business improvising; it is an approach for
redesigning the way work is done to better support the organization's mission and reduce costs. Reengineering starts with a high-level assessment of the organization's mission, strategic goals, and customer needs.
Basic questions are asked, such as "Does our mission need to be
redefined? Are our strategic goals aligned with our mission? Who are our
customers?" An organization may find that it is operating on
questionable assumptions, particularly in terms of the wants and needs
of its customers. Only after the organization rethinks what it should be
doing, does it go on to decide how best to do it.[1]
Within the framework
of this basic assessment of mission and goals, re-engineering focuses
on the organization's business processes—the steps and procedures that
govern how resources are used to create products and services that meet the needs of particular customers or markets.
As a structured ordering of work steps across time and place, a
business process can be decomposed into specific activities, measured,
modeled, and improved. It can also be completely redesigned or
eliminated altogether. Re-engineering identifies, analyzes, and
re-designs an organization's core business processes with the aim of
achieving dramatic improvements in critical performance measures, such
as cost, quality, service, and speed.[1]
Re-engineering recognizes that an organization's business processes
are usually fragmented into subprocesses and tasks that are carried out
by several specialized functional areas within the organization. Often,
no one is responsible for the overall performance of the entire
process. Re-engineering maintains that optimizing the performance of
subprocesses can result in some benefits, but cannot yield dramatic
improvements if the process itself is fundamentally inefficient and
outmoded. For that reason, re-engineering focuses on re-designing the
process as a whole in order to achieve the greatest possible benefits to
the organization and their customers. This drive for realizing dramatic
improvements by fundamentally re-thinking how the organization's work
should be done distinguishes re-engineering from process improvement
efforts that focus on functional or incremental improvement.[1]
History
Business process re-engineering (BPR) began as a private sector technique to help organizations fundamentally rethink how they do their work in order to dramatically improve customer service, cut operational costs, and become world-class competitors. A key stimulus for re-engineering has been the continuing development and deployment of sophisticated information systems and networks.
Leading organizations are becoming bolder in using this technology to
support innovative business processes, rather than refining current ways
of doing work.[1]
Reengineering Work: Don't Automate, Obliterate, 1990
In 1990, Michael Hammer, a former professor of computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), published the article "Reengineering Work: Don't Automate, Obliterate" in the Harvard Business Review,
in which he claimed that the major challenge for managers is to
obliterate forms of work that do not add value, rather than using
technology for automating it.[3]
This statement implicitly accused managers of having focused on the
wrong issues, namely that technology in general, and more specifically
information technology, has been used primarily for automating existing
processes rather than using it as an enabler for making non-value adding
work obsolete.
Hammer's claim was simple: Most of the work being done does not add
any value for customers, and this work should be removed, not
accelerated through automation. Instead, companies should reconsider
their processes in order to maximize customer value, while minimizing
the consumption of resources required for delivering their product or
service. A similar idea was advocated by Thomas H. Davenport and J. Short in 1990,[4] at that time a member of the Ernst & Young research center, in a paper published in the Sloan Management Review
This idea, to unbiasedly review a company’s business processes, was rapidly adopted by a huge number of firms, which were striving for renewed competitiveness,
which they had lost due to the market entrance of foreign competitors,
their inability to satisfy customer needs, and their insufficient cost
structure[citation needed]. Even well established management thinkers, such as Peter Drucker and Tom Peters, were accepting and advocating BPR as a new tool for (re-)achieving success in a dynamic world.[5]
During the following years, a fast growing number of publications,
books as well as journal articles, were dedicated to BPR, and many
consulting firms embarked on this trend and developed BPR methods.
However, the critics were fast to claim that BPR was a way to dehumanize
the work place, increase managerial control, and to justify downsizing, i.e. major reductions of the work force,[6] and a rebirth of Taylorism under a different label.
Despite this critique, reengineering was adopted at an accelerating pace and by 1993, as many as 60% of the Fortune 500 companies claimed to either have initiated reengineering efforts, or to have plans to do so.[2] This trend was fueled by the fast adoption of BPR by the consulting industry, but also by the study Made in America,[7]
conducted by MIT, that showed how companies in many US industries had
lagged behind their foreign counterparts in terms of competitiveness, time-to-market and productivity.
Development after 1995
With the publication of critiques in 1995 and 1996 by some of the early BPR proponents[citation needed],
coupled with abuses and misuses of the concept by others, the
reengineering fervor in the U.S. began to wane. Since then, considering
business processes as a starting point for business analysis and
redesign has become a widely accepted approach and is a standard part of
the change methodology portfolio, but is typically performed in a less
radical way as originally proposed.
More recently, the concept of Business Process Management
(BPM) has gained major attention in the corporate world and can be
considered as a successor to the BPR wave of the 1990s, as it is evenly
driven by a striving for process efficiency supported by information
technology. Equivalently to the critique brought forward against BPR,
BPM is now accused[citation needed] of focusing on technology and disregarding the people aspects of change.
Business process reengineering topics
The most notable definitions of reengineering are:
- "... the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary modern measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service, and speed."[8]
- "encompasses the envisioning of new work strategies, the actual process design activity, and the implementation of the change in all its complex technological, human, and organizational dimensions."[9]
BPR is different from other approaches to organization development
(OD), especially the continuous improvement or TQM movement, by virtue
of its aim for fundamental and radical change rather than iterative
improvement.[10]
In order to achieve the major improvements BPR is seeking for, the
change of structural organizational variables, and other ways of
managing and performing work is often considered as being insufficient.
For being able to reap the achievable benefits fully, the use of information technology
(IT) is conceived as a major contributing factor. While IT
traditionally has been used for supporting the existing business
functions, i.e. it was used for increasing organizational efficiency, it
now plays a role as enabler of new organizational forms, and patterns
of collaboration within and between organizations[citation needed].
BPR derives its existence from different disciplines, and four major
areas can be identified as being subjected to change in BPR -
organization, technology, strategy, and people - where a process view is
used as common framework for considering these dimensions.
Business strategy is the primary driver of BPR initiatives and the
other dimensions are governed by strategy's encompassing role. The
organization dimension reflects the structural elements of the company,
such as hierarchical levels, the composition of organizational units,
and the distribution of work between them[citation needed]. Technology is concerned with the use of computer systems and other forms of communication technology
in the business. In BPR, information technology is generally considered
as playing a role as enabler of new forms of organizing and
collaborating, rather than supporting existing business functions. The
people / human resources
dimension deals with aspects such as education, training, motivation
and reward systems. The concept of business processes - interrelated
activities aiming at creating a value added output to a customer - is
the basic underlying idea of BPR. These processes are characterized by a
number of attributes: Process ownership, customer focus, value adding,
and cross-functionality.
The role of information technology
Information technology (IT) has historically played an important role in the reengineering concept.[11]
It is considered by some as a major enabler for new forms of working
and collaborating within an organization and across organizational
borders[citation needed].
BPR literature [12] identified several so called disruptive technologies that were supposed to challenge traditional wisdom about how work should be performed.
- Shared databases, making information available at many places
- Expert systems, allowing generalists to perform specialist tasks
- Telecommunication networks, allowing organizations to be centralized and decentralized at the same time
- Decision-support tools, allowing decision-making to be a part of everybody's job
- Wireless data communication and portable computers, allowing field personnel to work office independent
- Interactive videodisk, to get in immediate contact with potential buyers
- Automatic identification and tracking, allowing things to tell where they are, instead of requiring to be found
- High performance computing, allowing on-the-fly planning and revisioning
In the mid-1990s, especially workflow management systems were
considered as a significant contributor to improved process efficiency.
Also ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) vendors, such as SAP, JD Edwards, Oracle, PeopleSoft, positioned their solutions as vehicles for business process redesign and improvement.
Research and methodology
Although the labels and steps differ slightly, the early
methodologies that were rooted in IT-centric BPR solutions share many of
the same basic principles and elements. The following outline is one
such model, based on the PRLC (Process Reengineering Life Cycle)
approach developed by Guha.[13] Simplified schematic outline of using a business process approach, exemplified for pharmaceutical R&D
- Structural organization with functional units
- Introduction of New Product Development as cross-functional process
- Re-structuring and streamlining activities, removal of non-value adding tasks
Benefiting from lessons learned from the early adopters, some BPR
practitioners advocated a change in emphasis to a customer-centric, as
opposed to an IT-centric, methodology. One such methodology, that also
incorporated a Risk and Impact Assessment to account for the impact that
BPR can have on jobs and operations, was described by Lon Roberts
(1994).[14]
Roberts also stressed the use of change management tools to proactively
address resistance to change—a factor linked to the demise of many
reengineering initiatives that looked good on the drawing board.
Some items to use on a process analysis checklist are: Reduce
handoffs, Centralize data, Reduce delays, Free resources faster, Combine
similar activities. Also within the management consulting industry, a
significant number of methodological approaches have been developed.[15]
BPR success & failure factors
Over the past years, BPR projects and efforts have revealed some
interesting findings for both academics and practitioners. Some BPR
researchers have focused on key factors in the BPR process that enabled a
successful outcome. Many lessons were learned and many elements were
identified as essential to the success of a BPR activity. Some important
BPR success factors, which will be discussed in further details later,
include, but are not limited to the following:
- Organization wide commitment.
- BPR team composition.
- Business needs analysis.
- Adequate IT infrastructure.
- Effective change management.
- Ongoing continuous improvement
Generally, BPR does not only mean change, but rather dramatic change.
The constituents of this drastic change include the overhaul of
organizational structures, management systems, employee responsibilities
and performance measurements, incentive systems, skills development,
and the use of IT. BPR can potentially impact every aspect of how
business is conducted today. Change on this scale can cause results
ranging from enviable success to complete failure. In spite of the depth
of change involved in undertaking BPR efforts, a recent survey showed
that some 88 percent of CIOs were satisfied with the end result of BPR
efforts [16].
Successful BPR can result in enormous reductions in cost or cycle time.
It can also potentially create substantial improvements in quality,
customer service, or other business objectives. The promise of BPR is
not empty; it can actually produce revolutionary improvements for
business operations. Reengineering can help an aggressive company to
stay on top, or transform an organization on the verge of bankruptcy
into an effective competitor. The successes have spawned international
interest, and major reengineering efforts are now being conducted around
the world [17].
On the other hand, BPR projects can fail to meet the inherently high
expectations of reengineering. In 1998, it was reported that only 30
percent of reengineering projects were regarded as successful [18].
The earlier promise of BPR has not been fulfilled as some organizations
have put forth extensive BPR efforts only to achieve marginal, or even
negligible, benefits. Other organizations have succeeded only in
destroying the morale and momentum built up over their lifetime. These
failures indicate that reengineering involves a great deal of risk. Even
so, many companies are willing to take that risk because the rewards
can be astounding [17].
Many unsuccessful BPR attempts may have been due to the confusion
surrounding BPR, and how it should be performed. Organizations were well
aware that changes needed to be made, but did not know which areas to
change or how to change them. As a result, process reengineering is a
management concept that has been formed by trial and error or, in other
words, practical experience. As more and more businesses reengineer
their processes, knowledge of what caused the successes or failures is
becoming apparent [17].
To reap lasting benefits, companies must be willing to examine how
strategy and reengineering complement each other by learning to quantify
strategy in terms of cost, milestones, and timetables, by accepting
ownership of the strategy throughout the organization, by assessing the
organization’s current capabilities and process realistically, and by
linking strategy to the budgeting process. Otherwise, BPR is only a
short-term efficiency exercise [19].
Organization wide commitment
There is no doubt that major changes to business processes have a
direct impact on processes, technology, job roles, and workplace
culture. Significant changes to even one of those areas require
resources, money, and leadership. Changing them simultaneously is an
extraordinary task [17].
Like any large and complex undertaking, implementing reengineering
requires the talents and energies of a broad spectrum of experts. Since
BPR can involve multiple areas within the organization, it is extremely
important to get support from all affected departments. Through the
involvement of selected department members, the organization can gain
valuable input before a process is implemented; a step which promotes
both the cooperation and the vital acceptance of the reengineered
process by all segments of the organization.
Getting enterprise wide commitment involves the following: top
management sponsorship, bottom-up buy-in from process users, dedicated
BPR team, and budget allocation for the total solution with measures to
demonstrate value. Before any BPR project can be implemented
successfully, there must be a commitment to the project by the
management of the organization, and strong leadership must be provided [20].
Reengineering efforts can by no means be exercised without a
company-wide commitment to the goals to be achieved. However, top
management sponsorship is imperative for success [21].
Commitment and leadership in the upper echelons of management are often
cited as the most important factors of a successful BPR project [22].
Top management must recognize the need for change, develop a complete
understanding of what is BPR, and plan how to achieve it [16].
Leadership has to be effective, strong, visible, and creative in
thinking and understanding in order to provide a clear vision to the
future [23].
Convincing every affected group within the organization of the need for
BPR is a key step in successfully implementing a process. By informing
all affected groups at every stage, and emphasizing the positive end
results of the reengineering process, it is possible to minimize
resistance to change and increase the odds for success. The ultimate
success of BPR depends on the strong, consistent, and continuous
involvement of all departmental levels within the organization. It also
depends on the people who do it and how well they can be motivated to be
creative and to apply their detailed knowledge to the redesign of
business processes [24].
BPR team composition
Once organization wide commitment has been secured from all
departments involved in the reengineering effort and at different
levels, the critical step of selecting a BPR team must be taken. This
team will form the nucleus of the BPR effort, make key decisions and
recommendations, and help communicate the details and benefits of the
BPR program to the entire organization. The determinants of an effective
BPR team may be summarized as follows:
- competency of the members of the team, their motivation [25],
- their credibility within the organization and their creativity [26],
- team empowerment, training of members in process mapping and brainstorming techniques [27],
- effective team leadership [28],
- proper organization of the team [29],
- complementary skills among team members, adequate size, interchangeable accountability, clarity of work approach, and
- specificity of goals [30].
The most effective BPR teams include active representatives from the
following work groups: top management, business area responsible for the
process being addressed, technology groups, finance, and members of all
ultimate process users’ groups. Team members who are selected from each
work group within the organization will have an impact on the outcome
of the reengineered process according to their desired requirements. The
BPR team should be mixed in depth and knowledge. For example, it may
include members with the following characteristics:
- Members who do not know the process at all.
- Members who know the process inside-out.
- Customers, if possible.
- Members representing impacted departments.
- One or two members of the best, brightest, passionate, and committed technology experts.
- Members from outside of the organization [21]
Moreover, Covert (1997) recommends that in order to have an effective
BPR team, it must be kept under ten players. If the organization fails
to keep the team at a manageable size, the entire process will be much
more difficult to execute efficiently and effectively. The efforts of
the team must be focused on identifying breakthrough opportunities and
designing new work steps or processes that will create quantum gains and
competitive advantage [16].
Business needs analysis
Another important factor in the success of any BPR effort is
performing a thorough business needs analysis. Too often, BPR teams jump
directly into the technology without first assessing the current
processes of the organization and determining what exactly needs
reengineering. In this analysis phase, a series of sessions should be
held with process owners and stakeholders, regarding the need and
strategy for BPR. These sessions build a consensus as to the vision of
the ideal business process. They help identify essential goals for BPR
within each department and then collectively define objectives for how
the project will impact each work group or department on individual
basis and the business organization as a whole. The idea of these
sessions is to conceptualize the ideal business process for the
organization and build a business process model. Those items that seem
unnecessary or unrealistic may be eliminated or modified later on in the
diagnosing stage of the BPR project. It is important to acknowledge and
evaluate all ideas in order to make all participants feel that they are
a part of this important and crucial process. Results of these meetings
will help formulate the basic plan for the project.
This plan includes the following:
- identifying specific problem areas,
- solidifying particular goals, and
- defining business objectives.
The business needs analysis contributes tremendously to the
reengineering effort by helping the BPR team to prioritize and determine
where it should focus its improvements efforts [21].
The business needs analysis also helps in relating the BPR project
goals back to key business objectives and the overall strategic
direction for the organization. This linkage should show the thread from
the top to the bottom of the organization, so each person can easily
connect the overall business direction with the reengineering effort.
This alignment must be demonstrated from the perspective of financial
performance, customer service, associate value, and the vision for the
organization [17].
Developing a business vision and process objectives relies, on the one
hand, on a clear understanding of organizational strengths, weaknesses,
and market structure, and on the other, on awareness and knowledge about
innovative activities undertaken by competitors and other organizations
[31].
BPR projects that are not in alignment with the organization’s
strategic direction can be counterproductive. There is always a
possibility that an organization may make significant investments in an
area that is not a core competency for the company and later outsource
this capability. Such reengineering initiatives are wasteful and steal
resources from other strategic projects. Moreover, without strategic
alignment, the organization’s key stakeholders and sponsors may find
themselves unable to provide the level of support the organization needs
in terms of resources, especially if there are other more critical
projects to the future of the business, and are more aligned with the
strategic direction[17].
Adequate IT infrastructure
Researchers consider adequate IT infrastructure reassessment and composition as a vital factor in successful BPR implementation [23].
Hammer (1990) prescribes the use of IT to challenge the assumptions
inherent in the work process that have existed since long before the
advent of modern computer and communications technology [32].
Factors related to IT infrastructure have been increasingly considered
by many researchers and practitioners as a vital component of successful
BPR efforts [33].
- Effective alignment of IT infrastructure and BPR strategy,
- building an effective IT infrastructure,
- adequate IT infrastructure investment decision,
- adequate measurement of IT infrastructure effectiveness,
- proper information systems (IS) integration,
- effective reengineering of legacy IS,
- increasing IT function competency, and
- effective use of software tools are the most important factors that contribute to the success of BPR projects.
These are vital factors that contribute to building an effective IT infrastructure for business processes [23]. BPR must be accompanied by strategic planning which addresses leveraging IT as a competitive tool [34]. An IT infrastructure is made up of physical assets, intellectual assets, shared services [35], and their linkages [36].
The way in which the IT infrastructure components are composed and
their linkages determines the extent to which information resources can
be delivered. An effective IT infrastructure composition process follows
a top-down approach, beginning with business strategy and IS strategy
and passing through designs of data, systems, and computer architecture [37].
Linkages between the IT infrastructure components, as well as
descriptions of their contexts of interaction, are important for
ensuring integrity and consistency among the IT infrastructure
components [33].
Furthermore, IT standards have a major role in reconciling various
infrastructure components to provide shared IT services that are of a
certain degree of effectiveness to support business process
applications, as well as to guide the process of acquiring, managing,
and utilizing IT assets [38].
The IT infrastructure shared services and the human IT infrastructure
components, in terms of their responsibilities and their needed
expertise, are both vital to the process of the IT infrastructure
composition. IT strategic alignment is approached through the process of
integration between business and IT strategies, as well as between IT
and organizational infrastructures [23].
Most analysts view BPR and IT as irrevocably linked. Walmart, for
example, would not have been able to reengineer the processes used to
procure and distribute mass-market retail goods without IT. Ford was
able to decrease its headcount in the procurement department by 75
percent by using IT in conjunction with BPR, in another well-known
example [39].
The IT infrastructure and BPR are interdependent in the sense that
deciding the information requirements for the new business processes
determines the IT infrastructure constituents, and a recognition of IT
capabilities provides alternatives for BPR [33].
Building a responsive IT infrastructure is highly dependent on an
appropriate determination of business process information needs. This,
in turn, is determined by the types of activities embedded in a business
process, and their sequencing and reliance on other organizational
processes [40].
Effective change management
Al-Mashari and Zairi (2000) suggest that BPR involves changes in
people behavior and culture, processes, and technology. As a result,
there are many factors that prevent the effective implementation of BPR
and hence restrict innovation and continuous improvement. Change management,
which involves all human and social related changes and cultural
adjustment techniques needed by management to facilitate the insertion
of newly-designed processes and structures into working practice and to
deal effectively with resistance [41], is considered by many researchers to be a crucial component of any BPR effort [42].
One of the most overlooked obstacles to successful BPR project
implementation is resistance from those whom implementers believe will
benefit the most. Most projects underestimate the cultural impact of
major process and structural change and as a result, do not achieve the
full potential of their change effort. Many people fail to understand
that change is not an event, but rather a management technique.
Change management is the discipline of managing change as a process,
with due consideration that employees are people, not programmable
machines [43].
Change is implicitly driven by motivation which is fueled by the
recognition of the need for change. An important step towards any
successful reengineering effort is to convey an understanding of the
necessity for change [21].
It is a well-known fact that organizations do not change unless people
change; the better change is managed, the less painful the transition
is.
Organizational culture is a determining factor in successful BPR implementation [44].
Organizational culture influences the organization’s ability to adapt
to change. Culture in an organization is a self-reinforcing set of
beliefs, attitudes, and behavior. Culture is one of the most resistant
elements of organizational behavior and is extremely difficult to
change. BPR must consider current culture in order to change these
beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors effectively. Messages conveyed from
management in an organization continually enforce current culture.
Change is implicitly driven by motivation which is fueled by the
recognition of the need for change.
The first step towards any successful transformation effort is to convey an understanding of the necessity for change [21].
Management rewards system, stories of company origin and early
successes of founders, physical symbols, and company icons constantly
enforce the message of the current culture. Implementing BPR
successfully is dependent on how thoroughly management conveys the new
cultural messages to the organization [45].
These messages provide people in the organization with a guideline to
predict the outcome of acceptable behavior patterns. People should be
the focus for any successful business change.
BPR is not a recipe for successful business transformation if it
focuses on only computer technology and process redesign. In fact, many
BPR projects have failed because they did not recognize the importance
of the human element in implementing BPR. Understanding the people in
organizations, the current company culture, motivation, leadership, and
past performance is essential to recognize, understand, and integrate
into the vision and implementation of BPR. If the human element is given
equal or greater emphasis in BPR, the odds of successful business
transformation increase substantially [46].
Ongoing Continuous Improvement
Many organizational change theorists hold a common view of
organizations adjusting gradually and incrementally and responding
locally to individual crises as they arise [21] Common elements are:
- BPR is a successive and ongoing process and should be regarded as an improvement strategy that enables an organization to make the move from traditional functional orientation to one that aligns with strategic business processes [47].
- Continuous improvement is defined as the propensity of the organization to pursue incremental and innovative improvements in its processes, products, and services [21]. The incremental change is governed by the knowledge gained from each previous change cycle.
- It is essential that the automation infrastructure of the BPR activity provides for performance measurements in order to support continuous improvements. It will need to efficiently capture appropriate data and allow access to appropriate individuals.
- To ensure that the process generates the desired benefits, it must be tested before it is deployed to the end users. If it does not perform satisfactorily, more time should be taken to modify the process until it does.
- A fundamental concept for quality practitioners is the use of feedback loops at every step of the process and an environment that encourages constant evaluation of results and individual efforts to improve [48].
- At the end user’s level, there must be a proactive feedback mechanism that provides for and facilitates resolutions of problems and issues. This will also contribute to a continuous risk assessment and evaluation which are needed throughout the implementation process to deal with any risks at their initial state and to ensure the success of the reengineering efforts.
- Anticipating and planning for risk handling is important for dealing effectively with any risk when it first occurs and as early as possible in the BPR process [49]. It is interesting that many of the successful applications of reengineering described by its proponents are in organizations practicing continuous improvement programs.
- Hammer and Champy (1993) use the IBM Credit Corporation as well as Ford and Kodak, as examples of companies that carried out BPR successfully due to the fact that they had long-running continuous improvement programs [50].
In conclusion, successful BPR can potentially create substantial
improvements in the way organizations do business and can actually
produce fundamental improvements for business operations. However, in
order to achieve that, there are some key success factors that must be
taken into consideration when performing BPR.
BPR success factors are a collection of lessons learned from
reengineering projects and from these lessons common themes have
emerged. In addition, the ultimate success of BPR depends on the people
who do it and on how well they can be committed and motivated to be
creative and to apply their detailed knowledge to the reengineering
initiative. Organizations planning to undertake BPR must take into
consideration the success factors of BPR in order to ensure that their
reengineering related change efforts are comprehensive,
well-implemented, and have minimum chance of failure.
Critique
Many companies used reengineering as an pretext to downsize their
companies dramatically, though this was not the intent of
reengineering's proponents; consequently, reengineering earned a
reputation for being synonymous with downsizing and layoffs.[51]
In many circumstances, reengineering has not always lived up to its expectations. Some prominent reasons include:
- Reengineering assumes that the factor that limits an organization's performance is the ineffectiveness of its processes (which may or may not be true) and offers no means of validating that assumption.
- Reengineering assumes the need to start the process of performance improvement with a "clean slate," i.e. totally disregard the status quo.
- According to Eliyahu M. Goldratt (and his Theory of Constraints) reengineering does not provide an effective way to focus improvement efforts on the organization's constraint[citation needed].
Others have claimed that reengineering was a recycled buzzword for
commonly-held ideas. Abrahamson (1996) argued that fashionable
management terms tend to follow a lifecycle, which for Reengineering
peaked between 1993 and 1996 (Ponzi and Koenig 2002). They argue that
Reengineering was in fact nothing new (as e.g. when Henry Ford
implemented the assembly line in 1908, he was in fact reengineering,
radically changing the way of thinking in an organization).
The most frequent critique against BPR concerns the strict focus on
efficiency and technology and the disregard of people in the
organization that is subjected to a reengineering initiative. Very
often, the label BPR was used for major workforce reductions. Thomas
Davenport, an early BPR proponent, stated that:
"When I wrote about "business process redesign" in 1990, I explicitly said that using it for cost reduction alone was not a sensible goal. And consultants Michael Hammer and James Champy, the two names most closely associated with reengineering, have insisted all along that layoffs shouldn't be the point. But the fact is, once out of the bottle, the reengineering genie quickly turned ugly." [52]
Hammer similarly admitted that:
"I wasn't smart enough about that. I was reflecting my engineering background and was insufficient appreciative of the human dimension. I've learned that's critical." [53]
See also
- Business Process Management
- Business Process Improvement
- Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN)
- Kaizen
- Process improvement
- Workflow
References
This article incorporates public domain material from the United States General Accounting Office document "Business Process Re-engineering Assessment Guide, May 1997".
- ^ a b c d e f Business Process Re-engineering Assessment Guide, United States General Accounting Office, May 1997.
- ^ a b Hamscher, Walter: "AI in Business-Process Reengineering", AI Magazine Voume 15 Number 4, 1994
- ^ (Hammer 1990)
- ^ (Thomas H. Davenport and J. Short, 1990)
- ^ Forbes: Reengineering, The Hot New Managing Tool, August 23, 1993
- ^ (Greenbaum 1995, Industry Week 1994)
- ^ Michael L. Dertouzos, Robert M. Solow and Richard K. Lester (1989) Made In America: Regaining the Productive Edge". MIT press.
- ^ Hammer and Champy (1993)
- ^ Thomas H. Davenport (1993)
- ^ Johansson et al. (1993): "Business Process Reengineering, although a close relative, seeks radical rather than merely continuous improvement. It escalates the efforts of JIT and TQM to make process orientation a strategic tool and a core competence of the organization. BPR concentrates on core business processes, and uses the specific techniques within the JIT and TQM ”toolboxes” as enablers, while broadening the process vision."
- ^ Business efficiency: IT can help paint a bigger picture, Financial Times, featuring Ian Manocha, Lynne Munns and Andy Cross
- ^ e.g. Hammer & Champy (1993),
- ^ Guha et al. (1993)
- ^ Lon Roberts (1994) Process reengineering: the key to achieving breakthrough success.
- ^ A set of short papers, outlining and comparing some of them can be found here, followed by some guidelines for companies considering to contract a consultancy for a BPR initiative:
- ^ a b c (Motwani, et al., 1998)
- ^ a b c d e f (Covert, 1997)
- ^ (Galliers, 1998)
- ^ (Berman, 1994)
- ^ (Campbell & Kleiner, 1997)
- ^ a b c d e f g (Dooley & Johnson, 2001)
- ^ (Jackson, 1997)
- ^ a b c d (Al-Mashari & Zairi, 1999)
- ^ (King, 1994)
- ^ (Rastogi, 1994)
- ^ (Barrett, 1994)
- ^ (Carr, 1993)
- ^ (Berrington & Oblich, 1995)
- ^ (Guha, et al., 1993)
- ^ (Katzenbach & Smith, 1993)
- ^ (Vakola & Rezgui, 2000)
- ^ (Malhotra, 1998)
- ^ a b c (Ross, 1998)
- ^ (Weicher, et al., 1995)
- ^ (Broadbent & Weill, 1997)
- ^ (Kayworth, et al., 1997)
- ^ (Malhotra, 1996)
- ^ (Kayworth, et al., 1997)
- ^ (Weicher, et al., 1995)
- ^ (Sabherwal & King, 1991)
- ^ (Carr, 1993)
- ^ (Towers, 1996)
- ^ (Covert, 1997)
- ^ (Zairi & Sinclair, 1995)
- ^ (Campbell & Kleiner, 1997)
- ^ (Campbell & Kleiner, 1997)
- ^ (Vakola & Rezgui, 2000)
- ^ (Gore, 1999)
- ^ (Clemons, 1995)
- ^ (Gore, 1999)
- ^ [1]
- ^ (Davenport, 1995)
- ^ (White, 1996)
Further reading
- Abrahamson, E. (1996). Management fashion, Academy of Management Review, 21, 254-285.
- Champy, J. (1995). Reengineering Management, Harper Business Books, New York.
- Davenport, Thomas & Short, J. (1990), "The New Industrial Engineering: Information Technology and Business Process Redesign", in: Sloan Management Review, Summer 1990, pp 11–27
- Davenport, Thomas (1993), Process Innovation: Reengineering work through information technology, Harvard Business School Press, Boston
- Davenport, Thomas (1995), Reengineering - The Fad That Forgot People, Fast Company, November 1995.
- Drucker, Peter (1972), "Work and Tools", in: W. Kranzberg and W.H. Davenport (eds), Technology and Culture, New York
- Dubois, H. F. W. (2002). "Harmonization of the European vaccination policy and the role TQM and reengineering could play", Quality Management in Health Care, 10(2): pp. 47–57. "PDF"
- Greenbaum, Joan (1995), Windows on the workplace, Cornerstone
- Guha, S.; Kettinger, W.J. & Teng, T.C., Business Process Reengineering: Building a Comprehensive Methodology, Information Systems Management, Summer 1993
- Hammer, M., (1990). "Reengineering Work: Don't Automate, Obliterate", Harvard Business Review, July/August, pp. 104–112.
- Hammer, M. and Champy, J. A.: (1993) Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution, Harper Business Books, New York, 1993. ISBN 0-06-662112-7.
- Hammer, M. and Stanton, S. (1995). "The Reengineering Revolution", Harper Collins, London, 1995.
- Hansen, Gregory (1993) "Automating Business Process Reengineering", Prentice Hall.
- Hussein, Bassam (2008), PRISM: Process Re-engineering Integrated Spiral Model, VDM Verlag [2]
- Industry Week (1994), "De-engineering the corporation", Industry Week article, 4/18/94
- Johansson, Henry J. et al. (1993), Business Process Reengineering: BreakPoint Strategies for Market Dominance, John Wiley & Sons
- Leavitt, H.J. (1965), "Applied Organizational Change in Industry: Structural, Technological and Humanistic Approaches", in: James March (ed.), Handbook of Organizations, Rand McNally, Chicago
- Loyd, Tom (1994), "Giants with Feet of Clay", Financial Times, Dec 5 1994, p 8
- Malhotra, Yogesh (1998), "Business Process Redesign: An Overview", IEEE Engineering Management Review, vol. 26, no. 3, Fall 1998.
- Ponzi, L. and Koenig, M. (2002). "Knowledge management: another management fad?", Information Research, 8(1).
- "Reengineering Reviewed", (1994). The Economist, 2 July 1994, pp 66.
- Roberts, Lon (1994), Process Reengineering: The Key To Achieving Breakthrough Success, Quality Press, Milwaukee.
- Rummler, Geary A. and Brache, Alan P. Improving Performance: How to Manage the White Space in the Organization Chart, ISBN 0-7879-0090-7.
- Taylor (1911), Frederick, The principles of scientific management, Harper & Row, New York]
- Thompson, James D. (1969), Organizations in Action, MacGraw-Hill, New York
- White, JB (1996), Wall Street Journal. New York, N.Y.: Nov 26, 1996. pg. A.1
- Business Process Redesign: An Overview, IEEE Engineering Management Review