Tuesday, June 16, 2009

How can I make my business more efficient?

Gerald Bose, SCORE counselor and past vice president, shares his expertise in the area of Process Improvement.

Many organizations are seeking ways to reduce waste and become more efficient. The automotive and financial industries in the U.S., in particular, have realized significant process improvements throughout the 1990s. However, they grew complacent in the 21st Century and curtailed their improvement efforts. Today, companies like GM, Chrysler and Citibank face acquisition by competitors or bankruptcy.

Now, a variety of small businesses are successfully improving their processes and becoming more productive, agile and competitive.

A process is simply a series of steps and decisions performed in a way to accomplish a work product. Virtually everything we do in life involves processes. Examples of processes that can be found anywhere are: producing invoices, taking an order, preparing a lunch order or confirming customer appointments.

Process improvement is a series of actions taken to identify, analyze and improve existing processes within an organization to meet goals and objectives. This means setting aside past practices of assigning blame or being reticent to change because “we’ve always done it this way”. Sometimes the biggest change is to stop fighting fires or managing crises and learn to find ways to do your work better.

We need to find the root causes of problems in order to fix what is broken. Occasionally, Murphy’s Law will rear its ugly head and our process improvement efforts may actually make things worse. Don’t despair because Rome wasn’t built in a day. Sometimes, we have to take a step back before we can take two steps forward.

The basic process improvement model follows the proven Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) Cycle. First, identify the root causes of problems with the selected process. Plan how and what to do to improve the process. Often diagramming the steps and decisions involved can help visualize the problem better and pose viable solutions. Next, implement or Do the changes you planned in a pilot or on a smaller scale. Check to see that fixes are working and effective. Act to make the fixes standard and part of the revised work policy or repeat the previous steps to discover alternate solutions.

So, whether your business is in the start-up phase or has been an on-going entity for years, it can benefit from process improvement. Apply the key process improvement steps to a business function you believe needs tweaking to see what you learn. By continually improving your internal business processes your company will not only survive but it will thrive.

Richard Strug
Greater Princeton Area SCORE (Chapter 631)
Serving Mercer and Middlesex Counties

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