1 / 21

Process Improvement at the University of York Session2a – Tim Franklin

Process Improvement at the University of York Session2a – Tim Franklin. Making it easy. Using our Vision, Strategy and Medium Term Planning to inform our business and process change agenda. Warning!. Some changes can / will be tactical but most should be strategic

ishi
Download Presentation

Process Improvement at the University of York Session2a – Tim Franklin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Process Improvement at the University of YorkSession2a – Tim Franklin Making it easy....

  2. Using our Vision, Strategy and Medium Term Planning to inform our business and process change agenda..

  3. Warning! • Some changes can / will be tactical but most should be strategic • If we make tactical decisions without the guidance of strategic oversight we will lose direction

  4. Take care...as the scope expands so does the risk! From JISC Infokit – process review

  5. Any change initiative should …. • Fit to the organisational strategy • Support one or more of the following: • Improved customer experience • Improved institutional value • Improved employee experience

  6. Why review processes? • Increase effectiveness • Reduce waste (rather than cost) • Enable scalability • Increase capacity • Enter new markets • Increase revenues

  7. Planning for Process Review Prioritising issues for review

  8. Prioritising issues for review.... • Focus on: • Customers • Innovation • Creativity • Processes • People • Developing teams of interdisciplinary change agents • Rather than: • Rules • Regulations • Policies • Procedures • Tasks • Individuals

  9. What ‘Business’ factors can we use to drive decision making (1)? • Focus on: • initiatives which will deliver change linked to strategic plans. • where change is most needed? • business critical activities? • areas of perceived ‘high wastage’ with potential for high levels of gain? • where user satisfaction is lowest? • statutory compliance?

  10. What ‘Business’ factors can we use to drive decision making (2)? • Focus on initiatives which will deliver benefits to one or more of the: • Customers of the institution • Employees of the institution • The Institution itself (in a corporate environment this would be represented by the shareholders) • For each initiative assess whether it: • is easy to deliver • will provide high levels of gain / added value • will require significant investment to implement • carries a high risk e.g. is it complex and the downsides of failure significant?

  11. Co-ordinating the process review agenda... • Top-down via: • MTP – both within and across departmental boundaries • SMG direction • Operations Group steer • Co-ordinated process review agenda and plan • Bottom-up via: • Development of teams of interdisciplinary change agents • Continuous development of candidate change ideas via Administrators’ Forum and other initiatives e.g. ‘Being the Best’

  12. For process change to be culturally enabled... • Train your teams • Empower your teams • Trust your teams • Monitor your teams

  13. Help your teams to... From JISC Infokit – process review

  14. Getting started on a process change initiative...

  15. Overview of the process of change... Effective change cycle

  16. Improving processes...

  17. University of York...A typical approach to process review 2 linked workshops

  18. Agenda (1) • Introduction • Introductions • Why are we here - background? • What is a business process? • What are the business drivers for this review • What is ‘in’ & ‘out’ of scope? • What are the problems we are trying to resolve? • Student / applicant view • Academic / departmental view • Support office views • Institutional view • What do the ‘customers’ want from the process – the desired outcomes? • Student / applicant view • Academic / departmental view • Support office views • Institutional view

  19. Agenda (2) • Is there common ground / what will be our measures of success? • Common core principles or desired outcomes • ‘Nice to achieve’ outcomes • Mapping the existing processes • Some ‘Blue Sky’ thinking and ideas for change - Are there other ‘good practice’ examples we can draw upon? • Developing the changes – new process design • Short-term / tactical quick fixes • Long-term / strategic • Planning the changes • Next steps

  20. Examples of initiatives already reviewed... • Admission process for students with disabilities • E-procurement • Postgraduate admissions - a case study of a University-led process improvement project • Student registration • Student acccommodation bookings • Timetabling • Transcripts production - a case study of a local department-led process improvement, in this case the Examinations and Graduation Office. • Further details are available at: • http://www.york.ac.uk/admin/po/processreview/casestudies.html

  21. For further details and /or an informal discussion.... • For further information visit our website at: • http://www.york.ac.uk/admin/po/processreview.htm • For help with getting started or simply to discuss your next project, please contact: • Tim Franklin or Sarah Starkey in the Planning Office or via the website at: • http://www.york.ac.uk/admin/po/processreview/contactus.html

More Related