Showing posts with label Industrial Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Industrial Management. Show all posts

February 20, 2025

21 February - India National Management Day


21.2.2025

All India Management Association (AIMA)All India Management Association (AIMA)


1h • Edited •  1 hour agoAIMA’s 

69th Foundation Day & 19th National Management Day being held at Hotel Le Meridien, New Delhi and celebrated by AIMA’s 68 Local Management Associations (LMAs) across the country. 


This year the event focuses on ‘India tomorrow: Unlocking industry, innovation, talent’ and will bring together delegates from Industry, Government, Media and Academia.   Some of the key speakers include, Dr Suneeta Reddy, President, AIMA and Managing Director, Apollo Hospitals; Mr Mohandas Pai, Past President, AIMA and Chairman, 3one4 Capital; Co-Founder & Chairman, Aarin Capital; Ms Preetha Reddy, Executive Vice Chairperson, Apollo Hospitals; Mr Sanjeev Bikhchandani, Founder, Info Edge India Ltd; Mr T V Narendran, Senior Vice President, AIMA and CEO & Managing Director, Tata Steel; Mr Nandan Nilekani, Co-Founder and Chairman, Infosys; Mr Vineet Agarwal, Managing Director, TCI Group (Transport Corporation of India Limited); Mr Yezdi Nagporewalla, Chief Executive Officer, KPMG India; Mr Sunil Mathur, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Siemens; Mr Dilip Shanghvi, Chairman and Managing Director, SUN PHARMA among others.      Managing India Award for ‘Director of the Year’ is also being presented to Ms Kiran Rao, Director and Producer, Laapataa Ladies. Besides this, AIMA Fellowship is also being presented to •           Dr. Bhimaraya Metri Director IIM Nagpur, Director, Indian Institute of Management Nagpur •           Prof Rishikesha Krishnan, Director, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore       Sponsors-  Apollo Hospitals; Hero Homes; Kirloskar Brothers Limited; Air India Limited; Tata Steel; TCI Group (Transport Corporation of India Limited); Triveni Turbine Limited; KPMG India; AmbujaNeotia Group; Areez Khambatta Benevolent Trust; CavinKare; The Dempo Group; JKCement; JK Paper Ltd.; Patton Group; Tata Chemicals; Manav Rachna Vidyantriksha; Nicco Engineering Services Limited; NTPC Limited; Radico Khaitan Limited; Hindustan Group of Institutions; MEPSC (Management & Entrepreneurship and Professional Skills Council); Jindal Steel & Power Ltd.; GAIL (India) Limited #FoundationDay #IndiaTomorrow

https://www.linkedin.com/video/live/urn:li:ugcPost:7298548587662036992/

October 17, 2024

Resource Based View Definition of Management - Narayana Rao K.V.S.S.

 

Management is doing things acquiring and using resources.  -  Prof. Narayana Rao K.V.S.S.  - 18.10.2024


A manager or an entrepreneur visualizes doing a thing, for example in business, it would be exchanging goods or services. He may produce the goods or services or he may procure them and offer to customers. To put the visualized idea into practice he requires resources. He has to acquire them and then use them to do business and pay for the services of each factor or resource used in the business. Theoretically, the entrepreneur only needs the idea which is acceptable to the resource providers. 

The manager makes resource requirement plan. Initially it is an unconstrained resource requirement plan. He will list all the ideal resources. But as he tries to acquire resources constraints become visible and the manager has to modify the resource requirements to use available resources or resources that he could acquire.


(C)  2024 Narayana Rao K.V.S.S.  


Earlier Explanation by me.


Definition of Management: Its Nature and Purpose


Management of an organization is the process of establishing objectives and goals of the organization periodically, designing the work system and the organization structure, and maintaining an environment in which individuals, working together in groups, accomplish their aims and objectives and goals of the organization effectively and efficiently (Narayana Rao). (3rd December 2008, Version 1 of this article)


Management of an organization is the process of establishing objectives and goals of the organization periodically, designing the work system and the organization structure, and maintaining an environment in which individuals, working together in groups in combination with capital equipment and current assets (working capital), accomplish their aims and objectives and goals of the organization effectively and efficiently (Narayana Rao). (24 January 2016).

The above definition was a modification of the definition given by Koontz and O'Donnell.

The definition implies the following.

(i) Management is a process.
(ii) Management applies to every kind of organization, government, profit making, or nonprofit making.
(iii) It applies to managers at all levels in the organization.
(iv) Management is concerned with effectiveness and efficiency.  Effectiveness is producing the product or service the customer wants in business context with the required functional benefits and product attributes at the price he is willing to pay. Efficiency is minimization of resources to produce the saleable output.

Weirich and Koontz

Weihrich and Koontz defined Management and explained it as follows in the tenth edition of their book Management: A Global Perspective (p.4).

"Management is the process of designing and maintaining an environment in which individuals, working together in groups, efficiently accomplish selected aims." This definition needs to be expanded:

1. As managers, people carry out the managerial functions of planning, organizing, staffing, leading, and controlling.
2. Management applies to any kind of organization.
3. It applies to managers at all organizational levels.
4. The aim of all managers is the same: to create a surplus.
5. Managing is concerned with productivity; this implies effectiveness and efficiency.



Functions of Management



The process of management can be better understood by breaking it down into the five basic functions of a manager – planning, organizing, staffing, leading and controlling. All the management concepts, principles, theories and techniques can be grouped under these five functions.

Professor Narayana Rao suggests planning, organizing, resourcingexecuting and controlling as the appropriate steps for operational approach.

The resource point of view is emphasized in the RBV Definition of Management.

No doubt planning is required to establish the feasibility of the idea and to make a list of resources required. After resources are acquired execution of processes has to be there and control has to be there to modify plans based on achieved results to reach the expected final result for a period.

Management - Definition and Process



Top 25 Management Theory Articles - Online

Marketing Communication: Channels and Promotion Tools
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/12/marketing-communication-channels-and.html

Organizational Buying Processes and Buying Behavior
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/12/organizational-buying-processes-and.html


Marketing Strategy - Marketing Process - Kotler's Description
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/12/marketing-strategy-marketing-process.html




Evolution of Management Thought and Theory - Review Notes
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/12/evolution-of-management-thought-and.html

Human Resource Management - Introduction

Marketing Strategy - Differentiating and Positioning the Market Offering


Philip Kotler - Keller Definition and Explanation of Marketing Management for 21st Century - 14th Edition
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2015/01/philip-kotler-keller-definition-and.html




Marketing and New Product Development - Kotler and Keller's Book Chapter Summary
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/12/marketing-and-new-product-development.html


Communication: Importance and Definition

Analyzing Competitors - Market Research and Analysis

Concepts and Techniques for Crafting and Executing Strategy - Summary of Chapters - Strickland



Management - Definition and Process

Work Analysis and Design -Bernardin HRM Chapter - Review Notes

Defining Marketing for the New Realities - Kotler - Keller 15 Edition - Summary

Market Segmentation and Selection of Target Segments

Supply Chain Management - Coordination



Selling Process - 10 Steps

Kotler and Keller - Marketing Management - Brief - All Chapters - Core Themes

Operations Strategy and Competitiveness - Review Notes

August 23, 2024

Management Science - JNTUK - Kakinada - Syllabus and Notes

 


Syllabus MANAGEMENT SCIENCE R13 Regulation B.tech JNTUK-kakinada Syllabus 


MANAGEMENT SCIENCE Syllabus 

Unit - I

Introduction to Management: Concept – Nature and Importance of Management, Functions-Evaluation of Management, Motivation Theories – Leadership Styles – Decision Making Process-designing Organization Structure – Principles and types of Organization.




Unit - II

Operations and Project Management: Work-Study-Statistical Quality Control Through Control Charts-Inventory Control-EOQ & ABC Analysis (Simple Problems) Project Management-PERT/CPM-Project Crashing (Simple Problem).


Unit - III

Functional Management: Concept and Functions of Finance, HR, Production, Marketing Management and Services – Job Evolution and Merit Rating – Product Life Cycles – Channels of Distribution – Types/Methods of Production.


Unit - IV

Strategic Management: Vision, Mission, Goals, Strategy – Corporate Planning Process – Environmental Scanning – SWOT analysis – Different Steps in Strategy Formulation, Implementation and Evaluation.


Unit - V

Business Ethics & Communications: Ethics in Business and Management – Ethics in HRM, Finance & Marketing Management – Business Ethics & Law


Unit - VI

Contemporary Management Practices: Basic concepts of MIS, MRP, Just- In-Time (JIT)System, Total Quality Management (TQM), Six Sigma and Capability Maturity Models (CMM) Levies, Supply Chain Management, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Performance Management, Business Process Outsourcing (BPO), Business Process Re-Engineering and Bench Marking, Balance Score Card.


Text Books


Kumar/Rao/Chhalill ‘Introduction to Management Science’ Cengage, Delhi, 2012.

Dr. A. R. Aryasri, Management Science’ TMH 2011



Reference Books

Koontz & Weihrich: ‘Essentials of Management’ TMH 2011

Seth & Rastogi: Global Management Systems, Cengage Learning, Delhi, 2011.

Robbins: Organizational Behaviors, Pearson Publications, 2011

Kanishka Bedi: Production & Operational Management, Oxford Publications, 2011.

Manjunath: Management Science, Pearson Publications, 2013.

Biswajit Patnaik: Human Resource Management, PHI, 2011.

Hitt and Vijaya Kumar: Strategic Management, Cengage Learning.

Dr. PG. Ramanujam, BVR Naidu, PV Rama Sastry : Management Science Himalaya Publishing House, 2013.

Syllabus MANAGEMENT SCIENCE R13 Regulation B.tech JNTUK-kakinada Syllabus 


MANAGEMENT SCIENCE Syllabus 

Unit - I

Introduction to Management: Concept – Nature and Importance of Management, Functions-Evaluation of Management, Motivation Theories – Leadership Styles – Decision Making Process-designing Organization Structure – Principles and types of Organization.


Unit - II

Operations and Project Management: Work-Study-Statistical Quality Control Through Control Charts-Inventory Control-EOQ & ABC Analysis (Simple Problems) Project Management-PERT/CPM-Project Crashing (Simple Problem).


Unit - III

Functional Management: Concept and Functions of Finance, HR, Production, Marketing Management and Services – Job Evolution and Merit Rating – Product Life Cycles – Channels of Distribution – Types/Methods of Production.


Unit - IV

Strategic Management: Vision, Mission, Goals, Strategy – Corporate Planning Process – Environmental Scanning – SWOT analysis – Different Steps in Strategy Formulation, Implementation and Evaluation.


Unit - V

Business Ethics & Communications: Ethics in Business and Management – Ethics in HRM, Finance & Marketing Management – Business Ethics & Law


Unit - VI

Contemporary Management Practices: Basic concepts of MIS, MRP, Just- In-Time (JIT)System, Total Quality Management (TQM), Six Sigma and Capability Maturity Models (CMM) Levies, Supply Chain Management, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Performance Management, Business Process Outsourcing (BPO), Business Process Re-Engineering and Bench Marking, Balance Score Card.



https://www.manaresults.co.in/syllabus-jntuk.php?subcode=RT22043



JNTUK R16 4-2 Management Science


OBJECTIVES:


To familiarize with the process of management and to provide basic insight into select contemporary management practices

To provide conceptual knowledge on functional management and strategic management.

UNIT-1


Introduction to Management: Concept –nature and importance of Management –Generic Functions of Management – Evaluation of Management thought- Theories of Motivation – Decision making process-Designing organization structure- Principles of organization – Organizational typology- International Management: Global Leadership and Organizational behavior Effectiveness(GLOBE) structure


UNIT-2


Operations Management: Principles and Types of Management – Work study- Statistical Quality Control- Control charts (P-chart, R-chart, and C-chart) Simple problems- Material Management: Need for Inventory control- EOQ, ABC analysis (simple problems) and Types of ABC analysis (HML, SDE, VED, and FSN analysis).


UNIT-3


Functional Management: Concept of HRM, HRD and PMIR- Functions of HR ManagerWage payment plans(Simple Problems) – Job Evaluation and Merit Rating – Marketing Management- Functions of Marketing – Marketing strategies based on product Life Cycle, Channels of distributions. Operationlizing change through performance management.


UNIT-4


Project Management: (PERT/CPM): Development of Network – Difference between PERT and CPM Identifying Critical Path- Probability- Project Crashing (Simple Problems)


UNIT-5


Strategic Management: Vision, Mission, Goals, Strategy – Elements of Corporate Planning Process – Environmental Scanning – SWOT analysis- Steps in Strategy Formulation and Implementation, Generic Strategy Alternatives. Global strategies, theories of Multinational Companies.


UNIT-6


Contemporary Management Practice: Basic concepts of MIS, MRP, Justin- Time(JIT) system, Total Quality Management(TQM), Six sigma and Capability Maturity Model(CMM) Levies, Supply Chain Management , Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Business Process outsourcing (BPO), Business process Re-engineering and Bench Marking, Balanced Score Card


TEXT BOOKS:


Dr. P. Vijaya Kumar & Dr. N. Appa Rao, ‘Management Science’ Cengage, Delhi, 2012.

Dr. A. R. Aryasri, Management Science’ TMH 2011.

REFERENCE BOOKS:


Koontz & Weihrich: ‘Essentials of management’ TMH 2011

Seth & Rastogi: Global Management Systems, Cengage learning , Delhi, 2011

Robbins: Organizational Behaviour, Pearson publications, 2011

Kanishka Bedi: Production & Operations Management, Oxford Publications, 2011

Philip Kotler & Armstrong: Principles of Marketing, Pearson publications

Biswajit Patnaik: Human Resource Management, PHI, 2011

Hitt and Vijaya Kumar: Starategic Management, Cengage learning

Prem Chadha: Performance Management, Trinity Press(An imprint of Laxmi Publications Pvt. Ltd.) Delhi 2015.

Anil Bhat& Arya Kumar : Principles of Management, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2015.

OUTCOMES:


After completion of the Course the student will acquire the knowledge on management functions, global leadership and organizational behavior.

Will familiarize with the concepts of functional management project management and strategic management.



https://www.jntufastupdates.com/jntuk-r16-4-2-management-science-material/  

February 21, 2024

Industrial Management - Business Management - Toyota Way of Management

 

Toyota Way is highlighted aspect of industrial management and business management practiced by Toyota.  Toyota uses full knowledge of industrial management, business management and industrial engineering. It highlights certain aspects for more focus and intensive application.


Corporate Philosophy


Toyota Way 2001



Sharing the Toyota Way Values

The Guiding Principles at Toyota reflect the kind of company that Toyota seeks to be. The Toyota Way 2001 clarifies the values and business methods that all employees should embrace in order to carry out the Guiding Principles at Toyota throughout the company's global activities.


With the rapid growth, diversification and globalization of Toyota in the past decade, the values and business methods that had been passed on as implicit knowledge were identified and defined in 2001. Toyota is preparing to operate as a truly global company, guided by a common corporate culture.


In order to continue fulfilling its role as the backbone of all Toyota operations, the Toyota Way must evolve amid an everchanging business environment. Toyota will continue to update it in the future to reflect changes in the times.


The Toyota Way is supported by two main pillars: 'Continuous Improvement' and 'Respect for People'. We are never satisfied with where we are and always work to improve our business by putting forward new ideas and working to the best of our abilities. We respect all Toyota stakeholders, and believe the success of our business is created by individual effort and good teamwork.



Human Resources Development by the Toyota Institute

To promote sharing of the Toyota Way, the Toyota Institute was established in January 2002 as an internal human resources development organization.

Since 2003, overseas affiliates in North America (U.S.), Europe (Belgium), Asia (Thailand and China), Africa (South Africa) and Oceania (Australia) have established their own human resources training organizations modeled after the Toyota Institute.

https://www.toyota-global.com/company/history_of_toyota/75years/data/conditions/philosophy/toyotaway2001.html

Even when they highlight certain rules and principles, Toyota managers do take decisions and implement in deviation with them, if they are beneficial in the light of circumstances. They are very rational and apply all alternative decision making methods to problems.

Toyota makes efforts to adopt all new innovations in management and industrial engineering by monitoring developments in the subjects and acquiring understanding of them at various levels.


Industrial Engineering - Toyota Style Industrial Engineering

Toyota developed a version of industrial engineering which proved useful to them. They acknowledged the usefulness of industrial engineering and applied it rationally to their production system.

They monitor developments in engineering and industrial engineering and adopt them if appropriate. Toyota is presently updating its technologies, facilities, and processes to implement Industry 4.0 technology set.

https://nraoiekc.blogspot.com/2024/02/industrial-engineering-toyota-style.html


Free Download EBook (122 pages). 7800+ Downloads so far. MODERN INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING. IE OF PRODUCTS, FACILITIES & PROCESSES - Maximum Customer Value. Minimum Cost Value. Minimum Facilities and Minimum Use of Facilities.

https://academia.edu/103626052/INTRODUCTION_TO_MODERN_INDUSTRIAL_ENGINEERING_Version_3_0


https://www.linkedin.com/posts/jeffreyliker_lean-mastery-insights-from-the-toyota-way-activity-7155561764871397376-gfla


https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/toyota-way-reflection-linh-l%C6%B0%C6%A1ng


https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/leading-learning-toyota-way-tracey-richardson


https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/20140629161825-6736549-developing-leaders-the-toyota-way


https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/toyota-way-still-relevant-nathan-lugo-montanez-7di8e/?trk=article-ssr-frontend-pulse_more-articles_related-content-card


https://www.linkedin.com/posts/bob-emiliani-660a72170_the-toyota-way-rip-activity-7159149316933120000-6xDe/


https://bobemiliani.com/the-toyota-way-rip/

https://bobemiliani.com/revisiting-the-toyota-way-2001/


https://emielvanest.nl/has-toyota-lost-its-way/


https://global.toyota/en/company/vision-and-philosophy/toyotaway_code-of-conduct/


Quality

https://www.toyota-global.com/company/history_of_toyota/75years/text/taking_on_the_automotive_business/chapter2/section7/item6_a.html


https://www.toyota-industries.com/csr/reports/items/p40-41.pdf

https://cdn.toyotauk.com/toyotauk/public/documents/our-approach-to-quality.pdf

https://www.toyota-industries.com/csr/reports/items/25-28e.pdf

https://www.toyota-global.com/company/history_of_toyota/75years/data/company_information/management_and_finances/management/tqm/change.html








August 23, 2021

ASME Management Division

 


https://www.onlineengineeringprograms.com/mechanical/25-top-mechanical-engineering-profs


https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tjci21/current


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Society_of_Mechanical_Engineers


https://community.asme.org/manufacturing_engineering_division/b/weblog/default.aspx


OFFICIAL ASME GROUP

Management Division

The Management Division is concerned with the management of the engineering process at all of its levels.



















January 29, 2021

Technology Management - Case Studies

 

Lucas TVS 2011


Technology development


Technology development has been slow in the initial years and improved pace after 1990.  The in house R&D set up  way back in 1978.  Lucas TVS has continuously evolved and ventured into new technology and product domains from time to time. 


Technology Management

LUCAS TVS had more than 250 qualified and experienced staff in the Research and Development Division. The New Product Development Process of Lucas TVS is carried out on the basis of concurrent engineering, design for manufacture and assembly, design to target cost, design for reliability, meeting the requirements of TS16949. This NPD process has been developed with the help of Japanese consultants.  The  requirements of customers are transformed into new products by the Engineering R&D teams. 

Product design is carried out using 3D software such as Pro/E, Catia, Unigraphics as required by the customers for easy interaction and on-line design reviews, while designing Lucas TVS products for the engine and vehicle systems of the customers. Computer aided engineering is extensively used for product design and development, through computerized electromagnetic design, motor design, stress and fatigue analysis, optimization of design, reliability engineering, etc. Techniques like FMEA (failure mode and effect analysis) are used extensively to detect potential failures in design and process. Test facilities have been set up in-house.   Lucas TVS has set up an extensive benchmarking area for benchmarking of its products with competitors. This helps R&D engineers to keep track of latest techniques being used by competitors and continuously update product technology and quality. 

The Head (R&D) is primarily responsible for technology management function. He reports directly to the CEO. The role is at a higher level plays a crucial role in the decision making process. He is responsible for strategic technology planning, initiating new ventures, product upgradation and improvements and new product developments. He looks after the engineering & design function, new developments, tool design.  This helps to have an overall control over the major activities in a new product introduction set up. 

Lucas TVS employs the autonomous cross-functional team structure called- NPIT (New Product Introduction Teams) for new projects. In the NPIT, people from different functional areas form the team and the team is headed by a General manager designated for the new projects. The team is disbanded after successful implementation of the project. Technology absorption from TA/JV partners is done through short-term visits of Lucas TVS engineers to technology partners.


 The industry Lucas TVS operates being technology intensive, technology forms a part of the strategic plan. Both medium term and long term technology plans are prepared for product, process and businesses. Head (Business planning) is responsible for strategic planning & business development. 

He works in close coordination with Head (R&D), Head (Marketing) & Head (operations). This helps in integrating the business strategy, technology development strategy and operations strategy in a seamless manner. Specific targets for parameters such as Localization, Quality improvement productivity improvements etc are fixed up on yearly basis. 


Business Performance

 Lucas TVS has been showing impressing sales performance over the years. Lucas TVS ranks 2nd among the auto electrical component manufacturers in India. Exports contribute about 8% of sales as on 2007-08; it has grown by about 4 times in the last 5 years. Lucas TVS intends to improve it further by 2010. 

Lucas TVS has been able to develop several new products simultaneously (distributor, starters, alternators, sensors) for all the MPFI models for major customers within a short time span. The productivity has increased after the single piece flow concept was introduced by Lucas TVS.  


Over 70% of the current sales turnover is realized from new products developed by in-house R&D. Lucas TVS was awarded the Golden Trophy for Technology Excellence by Automotive Component Manufacturers Association of India in 2007, among the automotive component manufacturers. 

 SAP-LAP analysis

Context

Technical collaboration on a select basis and emphasis on creation of a strong manufacturing base 

Situation

 Lucas TVS is a leader in auto electrical segment and has expanded its product portfolio gradually 

 A strong manufacturing base and has been able to achieve economies of scale

 Emphasis on In-house R&D, to achieve core competency in key technology areas


Process of Technology management

 Impressive track record in technology transfer, adoption and adaptation

 Emphasis of technology management in corporate strategy

 Strong In-house R&D and manufacturing facilities provide the strength for bargaining

 TA/JV has been a preferred route for acquisition of new product technology

 Cost control by effective implementation of localization programs within specified time frame

 Successful project management by forming NPIT (New product Introduction Teams)

 Continuous improvement of manufacturing technology by adopting techniques of TPM, TQM

Learning Issues:

 Lucas TVS has been able to achieve tremendous growth after forming strategic alliances / joint ventures in different areas

 It has been able to plan its Technology strategy well and has been able to align its technology strategy and business strategy.

 Technology forecasting and timely implementation of plans has helped Lucas TVS to stay ahead of the competition.

 Setting up of green field projects has also helped Lucas TVS to bring in new technology and induce a new culture for betterment of the company.

 A highly skilled and motivated workforce has contributed in a big way for success of Lucas TVS.

 Parallel strategy of TA/JV and in-house R&D has helped Lucas TVS to address varied customer expectations like low cost (optimized performance) or higher reliability and high performance

 Investing in R&D at an early stage has helped Lucas TVS to be able to benefit in terms of garnering high chunk of revenue from indigenously developed products

Recommended actions:


 Lucas TVS may explore the option of technology acquisition to develop capability in new technology areas

 With increasing demand in the automotive sectors, Lucas TVS may need to look at higher capacity production lines with minimum investment. 

 Need to continue to invest in R&D for traditional as well as future technologies Expected performance:


 With sustained focus, Lucas TVS can become an Indian multinational in next decade.


Sahoo, T., Banwet, D. K., & Momaya, K. (2011). Strategic technology management in the 

auto component industry in India: A case study of select organizations. Journal of Advances in 

Management Research,8(1), 9-29.



Analysis of Technology Management Using the Example of the Production Enterprise from the SME Sector☆

Elżbieta Krawczyk-Dembicka

Procedia Engineering

Volume 182, 2017, Pages 359-365

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877705817312481


Technology Management - Case Studies

https://www.macmillanihe.com/companion/Cetindamar-Phaal-And-Probert-Technology-Management/learning-resources/Case-studies/

Part of the book

Technology Management: Activities and Tools

Dilek Cetindamar, Rob Phaal, David Probert

Macmillan International Higher Education, 20-Jan-2016 - Business & Economics - 256 pages

The Technology Management (TM) discipline has a history of more than 50 years. It is inherently interdisciplinary and multifunctional, and when managed correctly it can deliver a decisive competitive advantage.

https://books.google.co.in/books?id=gG2eCwAAQBAJ



A simple case study on core concepts of technology management. HP is the firm under study.

Jul 24, 2009

https://www.slideshare.net/divi.lekha/a-case-study-on-technology-management


2005


https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/pdf/10.1287/ited.6.1.13


Phaal, R., Farrukh, C.J.P. and Probert, D.R. (2001), "Technology management process assessment: a case study", International Journal of Operations & Production Management, Vol. 21 No. 8, pp. 1116-1132. https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000005588





















June 5, 2017

System Improvement Process



The material is adapted from a manual of University of Michigan on ITS Process Improvement

Information Technology Systems/Processes Improvement Processes

Information and Technology Services (ITS) have to deliver value to customers internal or external. Since value is defined by customers, it is crucial that ITS keeps its customers as the central focus in all aspects of service delivery. This ensures a higher likelihood that services are accurately aligned to customers’ needs and expectations so they experience value at the point of consumption. It is prudent for ITS to follow a disciplined approach to process improvement management as a business tactic for responding effectively and rapidly to customers to ensure their best possible experience.


PROCESS IMPROVEMENT

What Exactly Is a Process?

A process is any orchestrated sequence of activities and associated tasks required to meets goals or objectives. Inputs to the process become outputs. Every ITS area uses numerous processes every day whether that area is business, managerial, administrative, human resources, financial, operational, technical, or any other.

A well-defined and designed process commands the flow of work and all its possible paths in meeting the goal or objective. Some of the tasks may be performed manually; some may require computer and system interactions; others may be completely automated. While the process user may be allowed some flexibility and creativity in how and whether they perform some of their tasks, the user never dictates the sequence of the process.

Some processes are formal and large in scale. They are publicly known, documented, supported, and widely used across the organization. A process can also be of a more intermediate size and specific to a particular group or team or role. Others in the organization may be aware the process exists, and it may be documented; but it is mainly understood and performed by a set number of users. Yet other processes are of much smaller scale or are even undocumented, shadow processes hidden from view. These processes are no less important than others and are sometimes critical; but they are conducted by just a few or even only one individual.

In short, a process is a process, no matter how large or small.  It is important to note the following key points.
Many ITS processes exist and they contribute in some way to a service provided to either an internal or external ITS customer.
Processes often have touch points, and there are potential implications for customers when issues with one process impacts the processes that touch it.

Why Improve a Process?

Process improvement refers to making a process more effective, efficient, or transparent. Process improvement is relevant to all ITS areas because processes naturally degrade over time for any number of reasons. An organization that conducts process improvement focuses on proactive problem resolution in order to avoid operating in crisis management mode when process degradation occurs. 

Process improvement helps an organization:

View process value through the eyes of the customer;
Define, manage, and measure a process in order to regularly evaluate it using data-driven information;
Break down process silos by contributing to an understanding of how processes interact and impact one another and customers;
Reduce unnecessary business costs.

Process improvement at ITS does not place blame for process degradation. The primary goal is to identify and understand issues in order to recognize solutions and implement improvements to stay aligned with customer needs and expectations.

Risks of Not Improving Processes

When key stakeholders are involved in process improvement, they can collectively focus on eliminating waste—money, time, resources, materials, and opportunities. We waste these precious elements when we fail to examine the processes we use to conduct our business. Work can be completed more cost effectively, quickly, and easily.

METHODOLOGY

Objective and Scope

The Process Improvement Methodology provides a set of phased activities for analysis of an existing process for the specific purpose of identifying improvement opportunities. The methodology further guides the user through process improvement implementation in conjunction with use of other ITS methodologies as appropriate. Finally, it provides direction as to appropriate process management and periodic process review and evaluations geared toward ongoing improvement.

Approach

The ITS Process Improvement Methodology described in this note is based almost exclusively upon Lean concepts with a hand off to Six Sigma.

What is Lean?
Lean is a management philosophy and practice that originated in the automotive manufacturing industry, specifically in Toyota Motors to implement cost reduction and match American car prices and productivity. Number of efficiency improvement practices were developed and implemented in Toyota Motors. Its practical solutions are logically translated to non-production processes and are now being successfully applied to many other areas including information technology, help desk and customer services, administrative operations, and more. Lean considers the flow of the beginning-to-end actions and all the interactions between them as a process value chain—or the “value stream”. Steps are classified from the customer’s point of view meaning that the value of each action in the stream is determined by whether it adds value from the customer perspective—value adding—or does not add value from the customer perspective—non-value adding. Steps that are required but irrelevant from the customer perspective represent a final classification—non-value adding but required.

Lean applies particular tools and measures to look for common types of process flow waste and then visually illustrates where that waste decreases value and adds unnecessary business cost. Blockages to flow either temporary or for  longer periods are specially targeted to develop lean systems that less work in the system.   Eight areas of waste are explored as opportunities for process improvement. They are commonly known as correction, extra processing, inventory, excess motion, overproduction, transportation, waiting, and underutilized resources. These waste classifications have been redefined and adapted to the different industries as they are applied. Once waste is identified, criteria related to the overall health and maturity of the process are considered in selecting solutions to improve the process by eliminating the waste. The improved process is presented as the new proposed value stream.

Why Lean?

Lean applies practical solutions to practical problems that can exist in any flow of work. Practical solutions are sometimes obvious fixes that can be quickly implemented. However, Lean is not about sudden, major overhauls of a process. Once reasonable quick fixes are made, Lean prefers a planned, managed approach of incremental process changes over time to large one-time changes. The continuous improvement is based on involvement of front line people actually doing the value adding work.  This means a better chance for long-term success.

What Lean is Not
There is a great misconception that Lean means reducing waste by eliminating employees. It is already mentioned that lean focuses  on the amount of work that is flowing in the system. Systems are termed bulk when lot of work is fed into the system but there are lots of delays for individual pieces of work. In a lean system the amount of work in the system is small but flows at a rapid rate without delays. The fallacy that process improvement eliminates employees does a huge disservice to the point of getting rid of waste. To the contrary, an important reason for reducing process waste is to free up staff to develop and use their skills in more meaningful ways that actually increase their income and value. In fact, companies who use process improvement to eliminate headcount historically fail at becoming mature, successful, process-based organizations. Why? Because employees know best where process waste exists and typically come up with the best ideas for improving processes. A wise organization retains these employees and explores opportunities for increasing revenues and provide continued employment. to capable people.

Six Sigma

Six Sigma is a business management strategy that was originally developed by Motorola. Its main focus is to eliminate defects by reducing variation in the process output by redesigning products and processes. As with Lean, many of the same tools can be used to analyze non-production processes. It is important to exhaust the Lean approach first, however, because to begin with Six Sigma may cause missing the obvious. Six Sigma-based process adjustments may seem right at first but over time may prove not permanent or even have inadvertent negative impacts on other connected processes.

Lean is often described as an inch deep and a mile wide. Conversely, Six Sigma is an inch wide and a mile deep. Lean is intended to review the entire process to identify and eliminate waste within the process, whereas Six Sigma focuses on individual sources of defects to determine the root cause and improve the process to reduce or eliminate those defects.

Note:  Lean and Six Sigma concepts are often combined as they share the common goal of delivering and continuously improving business processes. Both Lean and Six Sigma focus on defining success from the customer’s perspective and require a complete understanding of the business process in order implement improvements.


Process Improvement Methodology Description





Stages

These are the four major supported stages reflected in the Process Improvement Methodology:
1. The first is to Identify the process and its elements. Specific phases involve defining the scope of the process to be analyzed, as well as documenting and analyzing the current state.
2. Next is to Improve the process by identifying and presenting recommendations on specific trouble areas and designing a roadmap to support improvement implementation.
3. It is important to then effectively Manage the improvement implementation and subsequent process operation using a clearly defined, approved approach.
4. Finally, in order to maintain process health and recognize ongoing improvement opportunities, it is essential to Measure key elements.


The stages of process improvement are supported by six methodology phases that are equally important and necessary.

Methodology phases

Scope
It is critical to clearly define the reach and impact of the process. Understanding all process stakeholders and customers and where analysis focus must be directed drives the entire process improvement effort. The Scope phase identifies the start and end points of the effort. It includes an assessment of the organization’s readiness to conduct the process improvement action. There are two entry points to the phase. An initial process improvement begins here, or a continual improvement effort enters here from the Review & Evaluate stage.

Identify Process for Analysis
Critical need, priority efforts, and business impact significance determine the selection of a process to be addressed. Analyzing a process enables us to understand activities, their relations, and metric values. If a process occurs often enough to be observed and documented and if the process improvement team can complete at least one improvement cycle within 90 days, it is a viable candidate for analysis. The process must be clearly defined.

Conduct Readiness Assessment
A process improvement project must be backed by stakeholders who bring sufficient energy, cooperation, and resources to the effort. The Readiness Assessment is completed concurrently with the project scoping effort via interviews with the stakeholders who have identified the process of concern.  It is more of an internal, informal assessment as opposed to the more formal Project Charge. At any time during the scope phase, the Readiness Assessment can be evaluated and the determination whether to proceed can be made.

Form Process Improvement Team
A team consisting of five to seven members is ideal. More team members can slow progress, and too few may not provide the input and manpower to complete tasks in a reasonable timeframe. A team leader must be appointed and will schedule and conduct meetings and manage the process improvement effort. Team members must be closely involved in the process and participate in discussions, decisions, data collection, and data analysis activities. Team members are expected to attend meetings and complete preparatory work as assigned. The time requirements of a team member are dependent upon the process being analyzed.

Document Charge & Scope
The Project Charge document contains standard, key elements found in the scoping of a project effort. These include:
Process statement; background, objectives, scope, impacts, dependencies, assumptions and constraints
High-level requirements
High-level deliverables
Timeline
Level of Effort

Obtain Charge & Scope Approval
Obtaining charge and scope approval starts with providing the charge document to key stakeholders for their review. Provide reviewers with an opportunity to provide feedback. It is beneficial to provide an opportunity for discussion. Be sure there is awareness and consensus on the charge and scope.

Document & Analyze
The Document & Analyze phase involves gathering pertinent information about the process and how it operates in its current state. It includes modeling of the process, identifying roles and organizations involved, and setting baselines measures.

Conduct Project Kickoff
Develop project kickoff meeting material (methodology overview, project approach, timing, etc.). Conduct the project kickoff meeting.

Conduct Process Discovery
This stage reveals why and for whom the process exists, what need it is intended to serve, and how it operates in its current state. Comprehensive process discovery may involve several techniques that lead to scope validation or reveal the need to change scope:
Capture High-Level Process (SIPOC)—A SIPOC is a visual tool used to illustrate the high-level flow of a process, customers of the process, and what the customers expect of the process. Diagram the suppliers, inputs, process, outputs, and customers.
Review Existing Process Documentation—Locate existing documentation about the process for general information purposes. Gather awareness of process detail prior to interviews.
Conduct Interviews & Summarize
o Develop interview questionnaire. This ensures consistent and key points are covered in the interviews. Determine how interview information will be captured and summarized.
o Determine the personnel to interview in conjunction with the assigned Subject Matter Experts (SMEs). Talk with Process Manager(s), other key personnel who perform the process, personnel who integrate with the process, customers of the process (if appropriate), and so on.
o Schedule and conduct the interviews.
o Summarize and analyze the results.
Shadow Process Performers—Observe process personnel as they perform the process (or portions of the process). Validate that the process model contains all the pertinent activities and interfaces. Discover other steps involved, other people involved, other tools or interfaces used that are not captured in the model(s).
Conduct Survey & Summarize—When conducting interviews and modeling the process, keep in mind the RACI matrix. A RACI matrix is a representation of the key activities and decision making authorities occurring in a process, set against all the people or key roles performing the process. Identify the key activities that are being performed. Determine for each activity who is Responsible, Accountable, Consulted and Informed. Much of the information for the RACI matrix can be gathered during the modeling sessions.

Document & Analyze Current State

This phase models the current state in detail and establishes its current baseline and measurement with an eye toward showing current process value vs. waste. Analyze current state process against identified issues, concerns, and pain points. Look for areas of inefficiency. Document the findings. Documenting and analyzing a process may involve several techniques:
Create Process Maps & Documents—A process flow diagram or process map is a valuable tool for understanding the process with a visual representation. Value Stream Mapping helps identify opportunities to enhance value, eliminate waste, and improve the flow of a process. Description documents for each of the process maps are beneficial to various target audiences.
o Conduct modeling sessions with the SME(s) (for example white board sessions). The sessions are iterative as process detail is uncovered and modeled, and reviewed for accuracy. Create a Process Description document, one that captures process details that the model does not capture.
o Identify the organizations that perform the process, key activities performed, roles, authorities and people involved in the process (key stakeholders, customers, people who execute the process, etc.), tools used, interfaces with other processes, etc.
o Determine timing/constraints of the process. Identify measures currently used to manage the process.
o Determine process risk areas.
o Determine whether other models would benefit the analysis or communication of the process and its pain point issues.
Validate Process Maps & Documents—Review documentation captured about the process and verify current state evaluation measurements.
Establish & Analyze Initial Baseline (VSM)—See Critical to Quality Trees (CTQs) and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for guidance. Focus on areas of inefficiency and pain points for places to measure. Identify and capture baseline measures of the current state process. While conducting interviews, determine whether a survey of process personnel is needed. If a survey is needed: Develop the survey questions; Conduct the survey; and summarize the survey results. Qualtrics, an online survey tool available to all ITS employees, is one option to consider.
Benchmark Current State—Identify points of reference for measurement. This often involves reviewing industry standards to compare current findings with those of similar relevant businesses.

Present Current State Findings
Review, summarize, and document all the analysis findings and share these results with key stakeholders. Share how the existing process really operates and whether the current state is in line with the original goals and objectives of the process. Demonstrate, where feasible to do so, the business cost of conducting the process in the current state. Indicate obvious areas of waste where there may be improvement potential for reducing cost and/or increasing value to process customers.

Redesign
This phase selects the specific improvements to the process that will be proposed, documents what this process will look like, identifies additional process controls and measures, and outlines a roadmap to move the process to the proposed state. The results of this phase determine whether a process improvement recommendation will be fully undertaken.

Identify Process Improvement Opportunities
Identify a variety of ways to improve the process; big, small, or techniques that overlap others. Brainstorm with colleagues, and consult SMEs. Look at root causes and consider practical applications to the obvious problems (Lean). Recognize where root causes are not understood and whether a final recommendation for more in-depth analysis is warranted (Six Sigma).

Document Future State
Determine the proposed future state process from the set of potential process improvements. Document the proposed future state process in models and related process description documents, as appropriate. Document process control, measurement, and management components.

Conduct Readiness Assessment
Determine whether the participants in the process are ready to implement the proposed changes. Considerations are:
What is the organization’s willingness to adopt the process changes?
Do the recommended improvements require significant change by those performing the process?
What is the organization’s ability to do the work to implement the process?
What is the willingness to assign an active Processes Owner?

Presentation Recommendations
Typically, the Process Analysts would present the final recommendations to the key stakeholders. Keep in mind that stakeholders tend to prefer a high-level view over minute details. Prepare your presentation from a high-level perspective, but be prepared to answer questions in depth.
Scope and Objectives—Include a reminder of the scope and objectives that were agreed-upon earlier to provide context for the rest of the presentation.
Current State Findings—Provide a brief review of the major findings obtained during the Document & Analyze phase. Include a maturity level assessment.
Future State Recommendations—Focus the presentation on future state recommendations, providing rationale for each. Identify those that require approval before continuing to implementation.
Roadmap activities and estimates—Provide clear steps for implementing recommendations. Target maturity level—Indicate the estimated maturity level for the target state using the Process Maturity Assessment. The target level may not necessarily be the optimized level.
Next Steps—List next steps and action items.

Document Lessons Learned
The team may wish to conduct a review of their analysis effort for purposes of honing individual or group skills or for suggesting Process Improvement Methodology refinements. In cases where improvement recommendations will be implemented, use this step to make plans for taking future process improvement cost-savings measurements where possible to do so. Here the purpose is to measure the effectiveness of the methodology itself. Measuring for purposes of evaluating the process in question is not included here but is addressed in the Review & Evaluate phase.

Implement
This phase takes an approved process improvement effort through the steps needed to deploy the recommendation. It is a best practice to capture the process as you are implementing it to provide an audit trail, using the following deliverables:
Process Summary—This document, owned by the Process Manager, governs the scope, use, execution, change control, and continual review of an ITS internal process. It provide key information for anyone needing to learn about the process. The Process Summary template guides you through creating this document.
Process Flow—A flow document communicates the sequence of process activities. Flows range in complexity from  simple and high level to technically detailed. Two type of flows are appropriate for accompanying  a process summary. The preferred tool for creating these flows is Microsoft Visio.
o At minimum, a high-level swimlane diagram is required. This is a flow chart using lanes to illustrate who or what is working on a particular subset of a process. It primarily maps the hand-off points and provides a high-level understanding of time to complete the process.
Swimlane Diagram Template
KS Visio Stencil and Shapes

o To  effectively demonstrate the complete workflow and handoffs of activities and tasks—particularly useful for process performers and process analysts—a detailed process model is warranted. The Process Improvement Methodology specifically points to Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN).  See the Supporting Tools section below for BPMN Visio tool information.

Define Implementation Scope & Obtain Approvals

As with the process analysis effort, the first step of defining the scope is critical. This may have been clearly defined during the redesign phase; however, those closely involved in the process and who have a major stake in its effectiveness must determine what to implement when and how. You may need to take a phased approach.

Acquire appropriate approvals needed for moving forward.
Follow Appropriate Methodologies to Execute Process Improvement Effort
Select the appropriate methodology to follow based on the project needs.
Project Management—This is the standard methodology adapted for ITS to manage projects. For project management support, contact the ITS Project Management team.
SDLC System Development Lifecycle—This is the process for creating or modifying software or information systems as well as the models used to develop these systems.
Iterative—This is an approach to software developments and updates that has been adapted for ITS. This framework results in frequent deliveries of small amounts of scope over short time frames and requires frequent customer feedback.
Performance Support—Defines the design process for developing instructional support materials, such as job aids, communications, course materials, simulations, and related deliverables.
DR/BC—This is the methodology for maintaining the ITS Disaster Recovery/Business Continuity strategy.
Infrastructure—This is the methodology used to maintain the technical infrastructure that supports the services that ITS provides.
Service Lifecycle Framework— Not a pure methodology, but a framework intended to assist staff involved in planning, deploying, running, and  improving ITS services. The brings together existing ITS documentation, methodologies, and processes to create a general framework for how to approach the aforementioned phases. Principally, it is offered to fill the gaps encountered with transitioning new services into production while extending the concepts into the other service lifecycle phases in order to maintain a holistic view of services.

Set Up Process
The set up process includes:
Secure Process Roles—Confirm commitment of involvement from those who perform roles pertaining to the process including the Process Owner or Process Manager, Business Process Analysis, SMEs, the Service Management Manager, and Process Performers.
Obtain & Prepare Tools—Some process changes may require software or equipment. Obtaining and preparing the tools that are necessary to implement the process may be conducted during the set up process.
Prepare Production Turnover Plan—Establish a plan for expanding the process to production.
Decide Process Verification & Review Schedule—Determine appropriate timing for reviewing the process and verifying its effectiveness. This must be an ongoing effort to enable continual improvement.
Determine Process Change Controls—As needs arise to change the process, it must be done in a managed and deliberate way. The change must be agreed upon by key stakeholders, and the process changes must be documented.
Update Process Maps & Documents—As changes are applied to the process, it is important to update process maps and their companion documents accordingly.
Plan Training & Education—Before implementing the revised or new process, those who perform process activities must learn the new steps, tasks, or operations. Be sure to design training or performance support materials. Performance support refers to just enough information for someone to perform a specific task when needed.
Establish Measurement Criteria
Identify Key Performance Indicators—These are quantifiable measurements that reflect critical success factors. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) must be determined before the measures are required.
Define Critical Success Factors—A Critical Success Factor (CSF) is a required element for a project to achieve its goals. These may be defined by the Operational Level Agreements used by the Service Level Manager.
Choose Quantifiable Measures (financial, customer priorities, operational)—Careful selection of process metrics enables management of the process.
Identify Soft Measures—Select appropriate aspects to observe and collect related or descriptive feedback. This contributes to the evidence that you collect to evaluate the effectiveness of the process. For example, anecdotal feedback, verbal comments, perceptions, complaints, and concerns.
Establish Process Use Requirements
Identify Required Compliance—Make sure that the process factors in requirements for any policies and regulations that are required by law.
Identify Best Practices—As you implement the process, apply known best practices and communicate them to all involved in process operations.
Identify Task-Level Requirements—Implementation requires detailed task-level instructions and specific requirements for some steps. Be sure that any required steps are clearly defined.
Confirm Measurement Criteria with Stakeholders
Review the strategy for measuring process performance with those who have key roles. Relate these measures to the goals and objectives.
Create Process Verification & Review Plan
Develop an action plan for ongoing review of important aspects of the process.
Deploy Process
Provide the process owner and participants with all the materials needed to implement the redesigned process. This includes training materials, performance support, and communicating the new process changes.
Operate
Operate oversees the day-to-day activities of the production process. It generates process verification activities.

Govern & Manage Process

In order for a process to be successful, there must be governing and managing elements in place, such as:
Monitor Process Compliance
Provide Process Production Support
Ensure Appropriate Process User Training
Address Process User Performance Issues
Execute Process Verification Action Plan
Deploy the action plan for ongoing review of important aspects of the process.
Collect & Validate Data
Gather and review data required to measure the process. Review the measures to ensure valid results.
Analyze Data
Analyze and discuss with other process performers and process team members as appropriate.
Summarize Findings
Prepare a summary of findings for purposes of formal process review and evaluation.
Review & Evaluate
Review and evaluate takes the process improvement effort full circle to look at whether the process is meeting goals and objectives and whether additional improvements and/or analysis may be needed.
Review Process Verification Findings against Goals & Objectives
Compare the measurements with the expected results with the goals and objectives for the process. This is completed on a regular basis to be sure the process is meeting the desired outcomes.
Assess Process Maturity
Each process analysis effort requires periodic decisions about the measures, process, storage, analysis, reporting, and feedback. A process may be categorized according to its maturity as initial (chaotic), repeatable, defined, managed, or optimized.
Benchmark Against Baselines
Compare the industry benchmarks to the process baselines to identify gaps and areas for improvement. Now is a good time to create a new Value Stream Mapping and compare it to any original that was created prior to the improvement effort.
Identify Process Needs & Changes
Determine whether the process requires updates, analysis, or additional effort.
Prepare Process Improvement Plan
Collect, consolidate, and summarize review findings. Identify areas that require updates. If the process requires a review for potential analysis, include rationale and objectives.
Communicate Findings & Plan with Process Stakeholders
Provide the process improvement plans to process stakeholders. Indicate whether the process is operating at optimal capacity or if review and analysis is required.
Obtain Approval
If additional process analysis is needed, be sure to get approval from key stakeholders to scope the project. If approval is not obtained, continue process operation until it is again time to conduct process verification for ongoing process review and evaluation.

.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Process improvement is a specific discipline and requires its own methodology. Some process improvement efforts are significant projects that require project management support.

The ITS Enterprise Project Office can also recommend strategies for managing process improvement efforts where full project management support is not necessary.

SUPPORTING TOOLS
Business Process Modeling tools are used to document processes in detail. They are often used in both BPM and Enterprise Business Architecture.  The most sophisticated of these tools provide the ability to incorporate process models with business strategy. An example of a full-fledged Business Process Modeling tool is the ARIS Business Process Analysis Tool by IDS Scheer. The simplest of these tools, which can be used for less complex modeling, is Microsoft Office Visio.
Business Process Management description
Business Process Modeling Notation description
Process Modeler 5 for Microsoft Visio™
Other tools that are used within BPM are event processing, optimization, and simulation tools.




REFERENCES
 :
What is Service Management? —March 31, 2010 presentation by Andrea Stevens that describes the service management approach, rationale, and plans.
Business Process Analysis Overview & Key Findings Report—A summary of the research findings and includes long- and short-term recommendations for how process improvement efforts could be accomplished at ITS.
BPM Basics for Dummies—A free book by Software AG that provides core concepts about Business Process Management, and a guide for implementing BPM. It also includes a list of resources for additional details.
The Complete Lean Enterprise—A book by Beau Keyte and Drew Locher on Value Stream Mapping for administrative and office processes.

Lean Six Sigma-Continuous Improvement Roadmap—A visual tool, created by Lean Office instructor Don Lynch, Ph.D., for identifying organizational continuous improvement and process learning stages.
BPMN Method & Style—A book by Bruce Silver that provides a levels-based methodology for BPM process modeling and improvement.
Metrics for IT Service Management—A book by the IT Service Management Forum that considers the design and implementation of metrics in service organizations.
Continual Service Improvement—A book by the Office of Government Commerce that describes best-practice processes for IT Service Management.
Cynthia Karen Swank. The Lean Service Machine. Harvard Business Review. October 2003—Article describing lean operations in Jefferson Pilot Financial.
Guidelines for Using Process Mapping as an aid to Process Improvement
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=imsefacpub



Industrial Engineering Knowledge Revision Plan - One Year Plan


January - February - March - April - May - June



July - August - September - October - November - December


Updated on 3.9.2024,  7 June 2017, 1 July 2014

April 19, 2017

Productivity Management - A Top Management Challenge


Productivity Management - A Top Management Challenge


Managers have important role to play in increasing productivity. All management activities are applicable to the process of productivity improvement. Planning, Organizing,Resourcing, Executing and Control have to be done in the productivity improvement process.


The boundaries of productivity move outward or production from the same resource input will increase, when engineers and managers innovate and implement more effective and efficient ways of producing goods and delivering services and when designers and engineers create new and better products and services. For example, in the United States, Wal-Mart contributed to a retail-productivity boom in the late 1990s through managerial innovations that increased the sector’s competitive intensity.

Pushing out the productivity boundary or frontier will require a willingness on the part of managers and the organization to make significant changes in business processes and organizational structures, as well as trade-offs between mature businesses with healthy cash flows, on the one hand, and disruptive (often digital) business models, on the other, with the potential for self-cannibalization even as they offer a transformative productivity potential. This is a management  decision based on foresight and vision.

Digital business models have transformative productivity potential.

Labor productivity management may be become critical for world economic growth in the coming years.  In the world as a whole, the United Nations forecasts an average of just 0.03 percent annual growth in the number of employed persons during the next 50 years, compared with 1.8 percent in the last 50. Thus, for global economic growth to match its historical rates, virtually all of it must come from increases in labor productivity. But labor productivity improvement requires capital deepening as capital equipment productivity increase.


Research related to Productivity Management


Stefan Bender, et al.

MANAGEMENT PRACTICES, WORKFORCE SELECTION AND PRODUCTIVITY, 


NBER Working Paper 22101, March 2016

Abstract

Recent research suggests that much of the cross-firm variation in measured productivity is due to differences  in  use  of  advanced  management  practices.  Many  of  these  practices  –  including monitoring,  goal  setting,  and  the  use  of  incentives  –  are  mediated  through  employee decisionmaking  and  effort.  To  the  extent  that  these  practices  are  complementary  with  workers’ skills,  better-managed firms will tend to recruit  higher-ability workers and adopt pay practices to retain  these employees. We use a unique data set that combines detailed survey data on the management practices of German manufacturing firms with  longitudinal earnings records for their employees to  study  the  relationship  between  productivity,  management,  worker  ability,  and  pay.    As documented  by  Bloom  and  Van  Reenen  (2007)  there  is  a  strong  partial  correlation  between management  practice  scores  and  firm-level  productivity  in  Germany.  In  our  preferred  TFP estimates only a small fraction of this correlation is explained by the higher human capital of  the average  employee  at  better-managed  firms.  A  larger  share  (about  13%)  is  attributable  to  the human  capital of the highest-paid workers, a group we interpret as representing the managers of
the firm.  And a similar amount is mediated through the pay premiums offered by better-managed firms.  Looking  at  employee  inflows  and  outflows,  we  confirm  that  better-managed  firms systematically  recruit  and  retain  workers  with  higher  average  human  capital.    Overall,  we conclude  that  workforce  selection  and  positive  pay  premiums  explain  just  under  30%  of  the
measured impact of management practices on productivity in German manufacturing.




http://www.mckinsey.com/global-themes/employment-and-growth/a-productivity-perspective-on-the-future-of-growth


Research on Productivity by McKinsey Company



Well-managed firms have higher productivity. Our research further indicates that more than 80 percent of all productivity variation occurs within a given sector for a given country and that there’s a “long tail” of persistently badly managed firms in all countries and across all sectors.


The possible solutions our research suggests include transplanting superior management practices between countries by rotating key managers, both inside companies and outside them. Rotation boosts productivity performance over time by ensuring that a larger number of operations benefit from the leadership of more productive managers. The weak managers are to be identified and have to be developed in better managers. They may be even demoted to their earlier roles where they were more effectve.

http://www.mckinsey.com/global-themes/china/why-management-matters-for-productivity


February 21, 2017

Japan Petroleum Exploration Co., Ltd.
JAPEX named “the Excellent Enterprises of Health & Productivity Management ~White 500~”

Japan Petroleum Exploration Co., Ltd. (JAPEX) was selected as one of “the Excellent Enterprises of
Health & Productivity Management ~White 500~” which is a program conducted by the Ministry of
Economy, Trade and Industry (METI)and Nippon Kenko Kaigi to award large enterprises to pursue efforts for health and productivity management.  “The Excellent Enterprises of Health & Productivity Management ~White 500~” is a new program established in fiscal 2016, which is going to certify 500 excellent enterprises  by 2020 in view of making excellent practices for health and productivity management collaborating with their insurer such as health insurance society. Health and productivity management is a practice in which enterprises focus on and strategically carry out efforts with regard to their employees’ health from a management perspective. By the establishment of this program, enterprises are expected to recognize their own efforts  objectively and improve their top managements’ awareness to health and productivity management.
JAPEX positions  HSE (health, safety, and environment) as the priority of the core CSR themes, and we have been promoting to secure occupational HSE collaborating with the human resource department, health insurance society, and occupational health staffs. In recent years, we have conducted follow up programs after medical checkup or stress check test, support programs for prevention or improvement of lifestyle related diseases or smoking-cessation, health seminars to help keeping and promoting employees’ health. Moreover, we also have strived to optimize employees’ working hours and secure their work-life balance through recommending days to have paid leave, holding time management seminar and others.  JAPEX continues to promote measures concerning employees’ health as a company-wide important priority and will pursue to further increase our corporate value.

Management practices and productivity among manufacturing businesses in Great Britain: Experimental estimates for 2015
https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/labourproductivity/articles/experimentaldataonthemanagementpracticesofmanufacturingbusinessesingreatbritain/experimentalestimatesfor2015

Productivity in the Modern Office: A Matter of Impact
May 08, 2013
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/productivity-in-the-modern-office-a-matter-of-impact/

Margret Borchert, Stefanie Klinkhammer, Eva Koch

Strategic Productivity Management in Small and Medium-Sized Service Enterprises Using the Service Navigator

Enterprise Modelling and Information Systems Architectures, Vol. 7, No. 1, November 2012

In general, traditional productivity expresses the ‘yield of the combination of operational factors’ (Gutenberg 1958, p. 28) and addresses the question of how usefully the resources of an enterprise are combined and used. Unproductive activities and thus a low productivity are linked with inappropriate use of resources, which may result in competitive disadvantages for an enterprise. For this reason, productivity is one of the most important performance parameters for enterprises (Nachum 1999, pp. 939f. Fricke 1961, p. 135).


The performance result (output) can be conceived as the products or services produced by an enterprise within a specific period (Corsten and Gössinger 2007, p. 132; Lasshof 2006,
p. 27; Chew 1988, p. 112). Hence, the output is the result of a transformation process and reflects the (quantitative) yield of the transformation process (Lasshof 2006, p. 27; Gerhardt 1987,
pp. 73f.). The input is transformed into the desired performance result during the operational
production process.

Customer satisfaction and the perceived service quality are therefore measures of effectiveness
that are relevant for productivity. However, these measures have not been identified as outputs
in the traditional definition of productivity.



Traditional Productivity  Output/Input

Strategic Productivity
x  Cause-Effect Relationships among Inputs, Processes and Outputs
x  Consideration of Efficiency and Effectiveness Parameters
x  External (e.g. Customer Satisfaction, Service Quality)
x  Internal (Parameters related to Processes,People, Partnership and Leadership)
https://www.emisa-journal.org/emisa/article/view/94/69

Productivity Management from a Super Competent Perspective
Laura Stack , 2009
http://www.theproductivitypro.com/FeaturedArticles/article00136.htm

Organizational Linkages
Understanding the Productivity Paradox
NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS
Washington, D.C.
1994
https://www.nap.edu/read/2135/chapter/1

Top Management Challenges


This article is part of #AtoZChallenge 2017 for Blogging Posts. My Theme for the Challenge is Top Management Challenges - Full List of Articles  http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2016/12/a-to-z-2017-blogging-challenge-top.html


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