ComputerHunter.org

 

First Things First -- Process BEFORE Technology


Here's a brief story I encountered while leaving Newark International Airport following a recent business trip. Hard to believe, but true.

After a long flight home from the West Coast, I took a short train ride to the long term parking facility, located my car (which is becoming more difficult with age it seems), and proceeded to the parking exit. Note that it's been a while since I've used the long term parking facility, as I normally use a car or taxi service, so I was largely unfamiliar with their new "high tech" customer solutions.

As I pulled up to the pay station (expecting the attendant to inform me of my charge), she immediately looked at me with the gaze of a very frustrated woman who's obviously done this before. In a short tone, she barked out an instruction suggesting that I had passed an automated ticket booth, from which I should have inserted my ticket and noted the charge. I complied with the instruction, quietly wondering why this woman was in the booth at all, given the fact that the machine and I pretty much had this thing licked. I concluded of course that she must be there to collect the money, so I proceeded to pay her. Not a good assumption as she pointed me back to the machine to insert my payment. OK, I get it, I interact with the machine for this too...no problem, thinking that this is a pretty good solution. I wait for the machine to give me my receipt, an obvious assumption given how the first two steps went. Nope...wrong again. This time she wants me to drive to her and pick up my receipt, at which point she presses a button, lifts the gate, and I'm on my merry way.

I can't help thinking about all the time and money went into implementing this slick new solution, that probably cost an arm and a leg, had little to no impact on cost savings, destroyed customer satisfaction, and obviously put the employee in a perpetual stae of 'grumpy'. No...what this was, is yet another example of "technology for technology's sake".

When I work with organizations on business impovement, one of the most important themes I try to drill home is PROCESS FIRST, then technology. You don't implement technology on top of a broken process. Nor do you attempt to fix a broken brocess with technology only.

The right path is to measure the effectiveness of the process before you begin. Establish a baseline. Understand how the process works today ('As Is' State). Look for places to improve the process. Define changes. Examine the effect of each potential change on overall performance. Then, and only then, define the technology, systems, skills, and organization needed to support the new process. Develop cost benefits and business cases. Re-examine the degree to which performance will be improved over baseline. And then your almost ready for implementation.

It's a simple principle, but one that often get overlooked. Try to pay some attention to this in your everyday life and you'll probably see many similar examples. Then, use these as lessons learned, and start living by the mantra- "First Things First"- process first, technology later.

For the past 18 years, Bob has served in a variety of capacities, ranging from Internal Auditing and operations management, to business process consulting and executive change management. He has worked for over 50 clients across numerous functional areas and process disciplines. His clients cover multiple industries spanning North America, South Africa, Europe, and the Pacific Rim.

Bob currently serves as Chairman and CEO of e Performance Group International, LLC, a company that delivers a unique web based platform for online benchmarking and best practice sharing for business professionals and executives.

In addition to his role at ePGI, he continues to provide private consulting, executive workshops, and selective speaking engagements to industry leaders worldwide in the area of benchmarking, business improvement and best practice adoption.

Bob can be contacted at rchampagne@epgintl.com or by calling directly @ 908-656-1179.







Google News - Top Stories

Times Online

Democratic faithful, Obamaniacs, descend to fill 75000 seats in Denver
New York Daily News - 39 minutes ago
BY JO PIAZZA and MICHAEL SAUL DENVER - It was a long, hot day waiting in the cheap seats Thursday for the Democratic presidential nominee, but the masses riding an Obama high didn't seem to notice the sweat.
Video: Final Preparations Underway for Obama Speech AssociatedPress
What Obama plans to say in tonight's speech Detroit Free Press
The Associated Press - FOXNews - Chicago Sun-Times - TIME
all 785 news articles


Daily Star - Lebanon

Putin Suggests US Provocation in Georgia Clash
New York Times - 1 hour ago
By ANDREW E. KRAMER MOSCOW - As Russia struggled to rally international support for its military action in Georgia, Vladimir V. Putin, the country’s paramount leader, lashed out at the United States on Thursday, contending that the White House may have ...
Putin: US orchestrated conflict in Georgia The Associated Press
US Promises Consequences for Russian Actions in Georgia Voice of America
Times Online - Reuters - United Press International - Xinhua
all 560 news articles


Washington Post Staff Writers
Washington Post - 1 hour ago
Republican officials said yesterday that they are considering delaying the start of the GOP convention in Minneapolis because of Tropical Storm Gustav, which is on track to hit the Gulf Coast, and possibly New Orleans, as a full-force hurricane early ...
McCain camp: GOP convention might be delayed if Gustav hits USA Today
Gustav preparations continue in South Mississippi Biloxi Sun Herald
The Times-Picayune - NOLA.com - United Press International - MarketWatch - Media General Washington Bureau
all 54 news articles


Boston Globe

Freep.com exclusive: Why attorney Parkman parted ways with Kilpatrick
Detroit Free Press - 28 minutes ago
By JIM SCHAEFER • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • August 28, 2008 Jim Parkman, Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick’s former attorney, said today he would never plead the mayor to a felony, which is probably why the lawyer is no longer on the legal team.
Kilpatrick Poses Quandary for Obama in Mich. Washington Post
Trying to stop removal hearing, Detroit mayor sues The Associated Press
DetNews.com - WOOD-TV - WXYZ - New York Times
all 1,331 news articles


ABC News

A Georgia School System Loses Its Accreditation
New York Times - 1 hour ago
By ROBBIE BROWN ATLANTA - A county school system in metropolitan Atlanta on Thursday became the nation’s first in nearly 40 years to lose its accreditation, and the governor removed four of its school board members for ethics violations.
Judge: Yank Clayton school board members Atlanta Journal Constitution
Group: Troubled Ga. district loses accreditation International Herald Tribune
News/Talk 750 WSB - ABC News - The Associated Press - WABE
all 432 news articles

Google
 

Copyright © 2006 Computer Hunter - A Division of Arthur´s Job Base