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MIS 2000 Information Systems for Management Bob Travica. Class 6 Organization in Process View. Updated September 2014. Outline. Organization and process Concept of Process Business (Organizational) Process Management in process view Operational & strategic processes Process Design
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MIS 2000 Information Systems for Management Bob Travica Class 6 Organization in Process View Updated September 2014
Outline • Organization and process • Concept of Process • Business (Organizational) Process • Management in process view • Operational & strategic processes • Process Design • Process Performance • Process optimization • IS, Process Design & Performance • Summary PRoc & Roll Organization in Process View
Organization • Most apparently, organization* is a collection of people with particular expertise, which delivers a certain product (good or service). • From process perspective taken in this course, organization is a set of business processes that altogether deliver a certain product. • Processes contain data – some managed via IS, some manually. Organization Management Process Marketing Process Production Process Supply Process Sales & Delivery Process Research & Development Proc. HR Process IS Development & Maintenance Process Accounting Process Organization in Process View
General Concept of Process • Process is a set of activities connected from a start to an end point. • Process is similar to procedure, but usually larger in scope and it contains procedures. • An example of process with typical components: Start STUDENTS’ Study Process Think + Make notes Pick a class Do readings Decision activity (point) No Activity Yes Learned enough? Have a drink + Be happy! Flow End Organization in Process View
Business or Organizational Process • Definition: Business process is a set of activities connected from a start to an end point, which deliver a product of a measurable value to a customer (internal or external). Value Start End Deliverable Customer PRODUCTION PROCESS IN FACTORY (scheduling, assembly, quality control) Good for market (External) Buyer Utility/Price, Timing, Quality HR PROCESS IN ANY ORG. (hiring, professional development, pay, wellness) (Internal) Employee Services for employees Timing, Quality Organization in Process View
Operational and Strategic Processes • Strategic processes happen in some intervals (e.g., setting long-term goals, activities leading to materializing the goals). Resemble a big game plan. • Operational processes make regular, everyday work. Resemble moves (step patterns) in a game. Organization in Process View
Management in Process View • From the BP perspective, management is focused on managing processes • Management goals are • (a) meet business process performance standards goals • (b) to raise these standards. • Better process performs better • Process performance influence organizational performance(financial outputs, innovation, customer service) • IS are an instrument for the process improvement. Organizational Performance Process Performance Process Design Information System Organization in Process View
Design of Business Process • Design aspects: How does a process look like? • CCCFIS: Composition, Coordination, Complexity, Flexibility, and IS. • 1. Composition: What is the arrangement of process steps? • Start • Flow of steps • Activity (data-transformation steps • or matter-related) • Decision (choice-making step) • Loop (repeating steps) • End Open Order Fill Order Rush order? yes no Deliver overnight Deliver regularly Send Invoice Payment received on due tae? no yes Send Payment Reminder * * Close Order Process diagram for Customer Order Fulfillment (simple form) 8 of 19
C C C F IS P Design of Business Process: Composition • 1. Composition: What components do make a process? • Ask: • Are the steps defined accurately: activity names, decisions? Activities apply to data(order, invoice) and objects (delivery items). • Do the flows make sense? Do loops (if any) make sense? • Are all components included? • Composition errors are marked red in this diagram. Get Order Fill Order Rush order? yes no Deliver overnight Deliver regularly Send Invoice Close Order Fulfill Customer Order Process Organization in Process View
C C C F IS P Business Process Design: Coordination Reduces coordination • 2. Coordination: Dependencies between process steps and their contribution to the process deliverable. • Ask: • What are dependencies between activities in time (below) and quality of deliverables? • Dependencies are: • Sequential (A finishes, B starts) • Parallel (A & B at the same time; saves process time).* Open Order Check Old Orders Fill Order Rush order? yes no Deliver overnight Deliver regularly Send Invoice Payment received on due tae? no yes Send Payment Reminder Close Order Fulfill Customer Order Process 10 of 19
C C C F IS Business Process Design: Complexity P Open Order • 3. Complexity: The scope of business process. • Ask: • What is the number process steps (activities and decisions) • Number of loops? (2 in the diagram) • Depth of process - are there sub-processes? (not here if the delivery step is handled by a another company) Fill Order Rush order? yes no Deliver overnight Deliver regularly Send Invoice Payment received on due tae? no yes Send Payment Reminder Close Order Fulfill Customer Order Process Organization in Process View
C C C F IS Business Process Design: Flexibility P • 4. Flexibility: The extent of variation in a process. • Ask: Are there alternative steps? • How many versions of process are there? • Fulfill Customer Order Process analyzed in previous slides is a routine process (operation) with low variability coming just from the way delivery can be done. There are two versions of the process determined by two different delivery steps, so flexibility is 2 (very low). variation high low Strategic (Make Long-Term Plan, Develop New Product) Routine operations (e.g., Process Customer Order, Register Course) 12 of 19
C C C F IS Business Process Design: IS P • 5. IS Properties: Coverage and characteristics of an IS built into a business process. * • Important aspects: • The portion of process IS covers (system’s “footprint”) • What IT are used (computers, mobile devices, networks) • Characteristics of user interface screens • Characteristics of databases (local vs., distributed) Organizational Performance Process Performance Process Design (IS part) • Information System • Functionality, • Non-functional characteristics • Technological properties Organization in Process View
Process Optimization • How to optimize (improve) a process: • Composition: Correct and complete • Coordination: Enhance, think parallel coordination • Complexity: Simplify • Flexibility: Apply appropriate variation • IS as process optimizer: IS helps with optimizing the aspects above. Organizational Performance Process Performance Process Design (3C+F) • Information System • Functionality • Non-functional characteristics • Technological properties
Process Performance Measurement • Process performance can be assessed by this metrics: • CVTCIS: Customer Value, Time, Cost, and IS Performance. • Filtering criterion: Does a process serve useful organizational purpose? • There are odd processes surviving from the past. They may perform well but have no real purpose. • 1. Customer Value – Characteristics of the process deliverablethat matter to the customer (external or internal); see slide 5. CONS-UMER Inventory Manager Manuf. Manager Inventory Manager Delivery Manager 15 of 19
CV T C IS P P Process Metrics: Time & Cost • 2. Time: What is the total time between the start and end point of • a process? • sum up execution times of all steps • for parallel steps, take time of the longest step • 3. Cost: What is the amount of expenditures in monetary figures? • sum up costs for labor, materials, IS, other technologies, • overhead 16 of 19
CV T C IS IS Performance P • 4. IS performance influences process performance (performance booster): Non-functional characteristics of IS that reflect on process time and cost. • The most important IS characteristics is IS speed, which depends on many factors (speed of data processing, transfer, and retrieval; size of main memory) • Another important characteristic is the IS reliability (small down time, recovering capability, security of data) Organizational Performance Process Performance Process Design • Information System • Functionality • Non-functional characteristics • Technological properties
Relationships between Process Performance Organizational Performance Process Performance Organizational Performance Process Design Information System • The better a business process performs, the better the organizational performance. For example a faster and less costly process, improves the income to cost ratio (or decreases costs while usually enlarging the income). * 18 of 19
Summary 1/2 • Organization is a whole consisting of business processes that altogether deliver a certain product (good or service). • Business process is a set of activities connected from a start to an end point, which deliver a product of a measurable value to a customer (internal or external). BP can be inside and outside of organizations. BP works with data and physical objects. • The goal of managing organizations from the process perspective is to improve process performance and design, which leads to higher organizational performance. • There are operational and strategic processes. Organization in Process View
Summary 2/2 • Process design refers to process composition, coordination, complexity, flexibility, and IS (CCCFIS). Process design can be optimized with help of IS. • Process performance can be measured in terms of customer value, time, cost, and IS performance (CVTCIS). • IS is (a) part of organizational design (IS footprint), (b) helps optimize process design (optimizer role), and (c) influences directly process performance (performance booster). • Process performance influences organizational performance. Organization in Process View