Your processes are broken… but you already have the data to fix them

By Alexander Rinke, Co-CEO and Co-Founder, Celonis.

  • Friday, 17th November 2017 Posted 7 years ago in by Phil Alsop
As Michael Porter once famously stated; “Operational effectiveness competition shifts the productivity frontier outward, effectively raising the bar for everyone.” This adage has never carried more weight than right now, in the digital age. Global players like Amazon have perfected processes, creating a need for businesses across all industries to transform their operations. Customer expectations are rising and to stay competitive, a company must deliver products and services within hours instead of weeks. Inefficiencies aren’t tolerated and business processes need to be faster, more efficient, and more agile. 

 

Almost every business pursuing this goal encounters a familiar pattern: flawed or inefficient processes are uncovered and management consultants get called in. Consultants are taught to survey the process in its existing state first, then map out the ideal process path and determine how to get from the former to the latter. Whiteboarding sessions commence and interviews are conducted, all with the objective of optimising core operations like purchasing, logistics and production. If root causes of process inefficiencies are eventually uncovered, consultants can develop a plan of action and execute.

 

However, there are problems with the traditional approach: it can take weeks, months or years to uncover these causes, scope creep is common, and root cause analysis may not be completely accurate. Even worse, because the existing process may not be up to date and because the traditional approach is built on so much subjective information, the “solution” might actually end up causing more problems.

 

Uncovering new insights 

Businesses and consultants are sat on a wealth of data that could help them to visualise and better understand their processes and pinpoint inefficiencies within them. Companies such as Vodafone, Cisco, and Siemens are already adopting technologies such as process mining, which uses big data analytics and machine learning to visualise and understand processes to pinpoint inefficiencies and provide proactive recommendations for improvement.

 

Tremendous amounts of data accumulate in businesses’ IT systems. This becomes much more valuable when information logs are reconstructed into a visual, real-time representation of how each task is being executed, acting as a real-time process MRI. The process mining technology works to reimage every variation of the process, and business leaders benefit from complete transparency on key processes like purchase-to-pay (P2P), logistics, accounts payable and IT service management.

 

Defeating an unknown enemy

Competition isn’t getting any less fierce and businesses are striving to squeeze out every last drop of operational effectiveness. Finding solutions to known problems is tough enough, but it’s nearly impossible for businesses to find solutions to problems they don’t know exist. Non-compliance wreaks havoc and it becomes common for business processes to deviate from the desired state more often than not.

 

Take purchase-to-pay processes as an example, which causes seemingly perpetual problems for procurement departments. Imagine that frequent price changes were causing delays in the process, a common issue whose scope of impact is nearly impossible to measure without someone knowing where to look and what to look for. It takes considerable time to manually correct each pricing change and in a large organisation, these often occur thousands of times. The value drain adds up quickly, and systemic issues that could have been averted become cash-draining headaches. 

 

Staying competitive in a digital age and keeping up with giants such as Amazon mean that best practices must be dictated by analysing data. Companies cannot continue to rely solely on subjective input from consultants when striving for continuous improvement. Instead, they must push themselves beyond outdated practices, creating unbiased visibility into their operations with technologies like process mining to improve margins, business agility and customer service. While many processes are not as efficient as they need to be for businesses to stay competitive, the data is already there, waiting to be used to fix them.