Process
Planning and Technology Development - Nobody Shapes
Nature the Way that We Do Background: Questions
for Thought: 2. Is
reengineering a new concept or has it been
around for a long time and just called by a
different name? 3. Is it
possible for a firm to be "in denial" when
it comes to process reengineering? Can you
think of any examples? Does this occur in
the private sector? The public sector? 4. Kelsey
Grammer plays Major General Partridge in the
video clip from Pentagon Wars and explains
how projects under his command have deviated
from the established processes set down by
the Military. Why would companies deviate
from an established process? At what time
does the basic process actually become the
exception? Can you think of any examples
from the real world? Private industry? The
Military? Government?
Often
a firm finds that the initial assumptions of
it processes for produces goods and services
are no longer valid. The world tends to be a
dynamic place and customer desires, product
technology, and product mix change.
Consequently, processes are redesigned or, as
it is sometimes called, reengineered. Process
reengineering is the fundamental rethinking
and radical redesign of a process to bring
about dramatic improvements in performance.
Effective process reengineering relies on
reevaluating the purpose of the process and
questioning both purpose and underlying
assumptions. Reengineering works only if the
basic process and its objectives are
reexamined.
1.
When is it time for a process to undergo
reengineering?