Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business. Show all posts

Friday, October 05, 2007

CIO as Chief Process Officer

Michael Hammer quotes "CIOs don't typically lead corporate transformation, but they're well positioned to help guide business process and improvement changes, says Michael Hammer, original champion of the business reengineering movement. Hammer labels the CIO the enterprise's chief process officer"

“CIO as Chief Process Officer, Not Strategic Leader”



Bestseller Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution (HarperCollins, 1993). Companies could radically improve their performance if they rethought and rebuilt their processes, spurred the transformation of businesses around the world. A former computer science professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Hammer heads Hammer and Co., a management consultancy that specializes in business process.

Hammer sees the chief information officer well positioned in the enterprise to be a catalyst for corporate transformation. While he argues that process management improvements must be led by senior, business-line executives, he says CIOs can play a pivotal role as chief process officers.

A chief process officer, Hammer says, is an organization's chief of staff for process work, the center of its expertise and the keeper of its skills and methodology. Michael Hammer's interview with CIO contributing editor John McCormick, expands his idea and insights into how CIOs can be effective chief process officers. Edited version of their conversation continues here

CIO INSIGHT: We've been studying process management and process improvement for years, but it seems many companies flounder when trying to figuring out how to improve their processes. Why is that?

MICHAEL HAMMER: Many organizations have made a lot of progress. It's also important to distinguish between process improvement and process management. Without getting too technical, process improvement is not as hard to do because it doesn't involve much organizational change. Process management, on the other hand, involves a lot of organizational change, and that's fundamentally what makes it hard to do.

The issue with process management is that it requires new managerial responsibilities in the organization. Someone has to take responsibility for processes that cross organizational boundaries. The title we often use for this role is process owner. And the challenge is that the process owner takes authority away from functional managers.

That doesn't happen so much with process improvement because functional managers can make their own local improvements. But process management really entails a transfer of authority from functional managers to process owners, and that's a very difficult shift.

Because it involves so much fundamental change, this only can happen if it's driven from the top of the enterprise. This is not something that happens bottom up. And the problem is that in a lot of organizations the senior leadership is distracted by other things, unfamiliar with these ideas, and so is unready to do anything about them, or not focused on operational issues because they're accustomed to business being easy over the last several years.

In a variety of ways—not just because of the credit problem [collapse of the subprime mortgage industry]—it's a much tougher time in business. And I think this is directing more and more people to pay attention to operations generally and their cross-functional processes specifically.

CIO As a Catalyst Not a Leader CIOs usually have a pretty good view of the corporation and understand how processes work. Are CIOs better able to effect these types of business management changes compared with other executives?

HAMMER: In general—there are exceptions to everything—the CIO is not in a position to drive and lead this effort. It can only be done by a senior, business-line executive.

But the CIO is extremely well positioned to be what I call a catalyst, where the CIO—because IT sits outside the various functions—really has a bird's-eye perspective on the process issues in the enterprise.

In fact, a lot of these process issues often show up in systems terms. And the CIO can really be the catalyst to alert senior executive management to the problems with processes and to the opportunities that process management presents.

Once an organization gets going with processes, the CIO often becomes what I call the chief process officer. The chief process officer is not the boss of the process owners. The chief process officer is sort of the organization's chief of staff for process work, the center of expertise, the keeper of skills and methodology. And we see more and more organizations where the CIO takes on this additional role of chief process officer.

If you're the chief process officer—the change agent within the company that's bringing about these process management improvements—where do you start?

HAMMER: The first thing to do is to assess your readiness as an organization to proceed. Do you have the leadership? Do you have the right culture in the organization? And if not, you have to start working on those gaps.

What you need to do is identify your processes. If you don't know what they are, you're nowhere.

You also need to do a major assessment of those processes in terms of some key issues: What's the status of the design of that process? Do you have one? Is it a good one or not? What about the metrics? Do you have end-to-end metrics or not? Do you have a process owner or not? Do the people who work in the process understand it? Does your infrastructure, which includes your IT systems, support the process?

Based on that audit, you've identified what issues you need to work on. And so you say, "OK, I'm pretty good in process owner, not good in process metrics. Let me work on process metrics."

Process and Enterprise Maturity Model This audit is embedded in something you call the Process and Enterprise Maturity Model, a tool that helps companies plan and manage business transformations. Please explain PEMM ...

HAMMER: There are two parts to it. One is the maturity of your enterprise. The other is the maturity of individual processes.

The first thing you do is set up the maturity of your enterprise. There are four things you look at there. Do you have knowledgeable, committed leadership at the executive level? Do you have a corporate culture that supports process? Do you have institutionalized expertise in the organization? Do you have a governance mechanism for managing process projects?

You use the model to identify any gaps and weaknesses. If you have them, you need to address them, because you won't get anywhere on your process without that.

That'll lead you, for instance, to say, "Gee, I need to strengthen my leadership." Then you, the CIO, would deal with your executive team, educating them, communicating with them, getting them to understand the problems that poor-performing processes lead to and so on.

Once you've made progress in understanding where you are enterprisewide, you can begin to use the process part of it—namely, looking at individual processes and asking yourself: Do we have owners for them? Do we have designs? Do we have metrics and so on? That gives you a plan for how you go about filling those gaps.

How and what exactly do you measure? That's always one of the toughest things for corporations to figure out. As you pointed out in previous works, a lot of companies do that poorly.

HAMMER: Yes. Metrics are a big problem because most metrics are functional, historical and financial. Those aren't the kind of metrics we need. We need real-time, or at least current, metrics, we need end-to-end process metrics, and we need metrics that measure much more than financial performance, but things like speed, customer satisfaction, quality and the like.

I wrote an article for the Spring 2007 [MIT] Sloan Management Review called "The Seven Deadly Sins of Performance Measurement and How to Avoid Them." It provides some guidance on how to develop metrics.

Basically you need to identify your key strategic business goals and which of your processes impact those goals.

So, for example, being first to market with new products is a strategic goal; the processes that impact that are things like product development. Speed or product development becomes the key metric you have to focus on to achieve your strategic objective. That's a real crude summary of what that article suggests.

Good and Bad of Metrics The Sloan Management Review article says many of the metrics we use are worthless ...

HAMMER: Organizations, to be blunt, really screw this up a lot.

It's mind-boggling how bad most organizations are with metrics. It's just shocking. You would think this is something they would have fixed a long time ago, but it's a persistent problem.

It seems that corporations consistently fall back into the seven deadly sins you define: vanity, or measuring just what you're good at; provincialism, or measuring just your department's part in a process instead of the entire process; narcissism, or measuring corporate goals instead of customer satisfaction; laziness, or not taking the time to figure out what should really be measured; pettiness, or measuring just small pieces of a process; inanity, or not considering the drain your measurement will have on the organization; and frivolity, or not taking measurements seriously.

HAMMER: They continue to make these same mistakes because those mistakes are a consequence of a lack of executive attention to the issue, complacency, not focusing end to end.

I know some organizations that have done a terrific job, but a lot still have a long way to go.

There's a number of business process management software tools on the market. Do they help, and if so, how much or how little?

HAMMER: My attitude about the business process management software is that it won't hurt, but it's not going to do you all that much good.

The critical elements in success with process are executive leadership, creativity to come up with new ideas, the management of change and the management of complex implementation. None of these have much to do with software tools. Yes, BPM software can help you model your processes, can help you in some cases simulate them, and in some case will allow you to create real-time support systems for your processes. It can't hurt. But it's not the difference between success and failure, not at this stage, at least.

Other software tools help organizations get a handle on their processes: knowledge management tools, business intelligence tools. Don't they all have a place?

HAMMER: Yes, but again, they are components that can support you in a process management effort.

My attitude is the same about them. They can't hurt unless you put too much attention on them and if you delude yourself into thinking they make the difference between success and failure.

Process First, Technology Second How important is making sure people are ready to adapt to the change? Obviously, that plays a huge role in any process ...

HAMMER: It does. The problem is, a lot of organizations don't want to bother with it. They think it's easy. They think it's not important.

What it really requires is sort of empathizing with people in the organization and what they're experiencing, communicating with them much more than you think you need to, listening to their concerns, giving them support during a transition, showing them you're absolutely committed, readjusting the reward system to encourage them. And, it's very doable. It just requires serious commitment.

Giving them the tools so they can do their jobs better.

HAMMER: Precisely. Training, education and tools.

If you talk to a group of CIOs who want to be catalysts for business process management, business process improvement, what are the two or three things you would tell them to do?

HAMMER: No. 1, educate yourselves about it. Make sure you really understand it, not just know a few catchwords.

Secondly, start working on getting the senior executive team comfortable with the concept, which often includes taking them on a visit to other companies that are doing well with it.

And, certainly, start pilot projects right away, because you need pilot projects to demonstrate to the organization that this stuff really works.

I'm reminded of an article you wrote about a retailer that wanted to find out how many people who went into its store bought something. They just hired a bunch of kids to count the people who went in and then count the ones who came out with something.

HAMMER: Right. They were measuring the percentage of customers who actually bought something.

There is a temptation among people in the IT world to look for technological solutions before they're needed.

Look, I used to be a professor of computer science at MIT, so it's not as though I'm afraid of computers. But I know people who will use a computer to do something as long as it's not too much more awkward than doing it manually. So somehow using a computer is a virtue in itself.

A good rule of thumb—it's not always doable—is try to implement new processes without technology, and afterward bring in technology to boost them rather than make them dependent on technology out of the box.

Isn't that almost the reverse of what companies do today?

HAMMER: Yes, but the companies that take the approach I just described are often very successful with it because it gets clarity about their processes. Otherwise, you end up with what I call paving the cow path; you're overlaying new technology on a bad process.

Which companies are the best at process management? You've mentioned some, such as Air Products and Chemicals, in your work. Could you name a couple more?

HAMMER: There are quite a lot. Naming 20 would be easy. Naming just two or three is hard. A few, off the top of my head: Shell; PepsiCo, especially in Latin America; and Tetra Pak, a company based in Europe that makes packaging equipment.

What characteristics make them successful?

HAMMER: Overwhelmingly No. 1 is executive commitment. Second is "thoroughgoing"—in other words, they did it by the book and they addressed everything that needed to be addressed. They didn't leave stuff out. Those probably are the two most important things

Empathezing with People How important is making sure people are ready to adapt to the change? Obviously, that plays a huge role in any process ...

HAMMER: It does. The problem is, a lot of organizations don't want to bother with it. They think it's easy. They think it's not important.

What it really requires is sort of empathizing with people in the organization and what they're experiencing, communicating with them much more than you think you need to, listening to their concerns, giving them support during a transition, showing them you're absolutely committed, readjusting the reward system to encourage them. And, it's very doable. It just requires serious commitment.

Giving them the tools so they can do their jobs better.

HAMMER: Precisely. Training, education and tools.

If you talk to a group of CIOs who want to be catalysts for business process management, business process improvement, what are the two or three things you would tell them to do?

HAMMER: No. 1, educate yourselves about it. Make sure you really understand it, not just know a few catchwords.

Secondly, start working on getting the senior executive team comfortable with the concept, which often includes taking them on a visit to other companies that are doing well with it.

And, certainly, start pilot projects right away, because you need pilot projects to demonstrate to the organization that this stuff really works.

Source: CIO Insight October 3, 2007

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Sunday, February 04, 2007

Jimmy Choos on sale for £90m

You're not really wearing a pair of shoes unless its fashioned by Jimmy Choo's (shoes) ... Former It girl is set to make £90m from the sale of Jimmy Choos must have A-list fashion accessory from London to Beverly Hills, Las Vegas and the likes of celebrities from Sarah Jessica Parker to Julia Roberts and BeyoncĂ© Knowles. Tamara Mellon observed that


“At the end of the day, the person who has the money has the control”


Judging by the latest reported developments at Jimmy Choo, the glamorous shoe business Ms Mellon founded in 1996, she is about to enjoy considerably more of both. Ms Mellon, a one-time It girl and Vogue accessories editor, stands to make a £90m fortune from the sale of her business, having appointed the investment bank NM Rothschild to evaluate a number of approaches which have come within the past month. One party is understood to have offered as much as £180m for the business.


Full article

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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

What are you in business for?

Are you clear about what you are in business for. Is it about profit, to create opportunities, deliver value! If you were to face the person next to you, eye-ball-to-eye start describing what your business product is and the type of services you provide in 2 minutes, then ask that person what they learned about you.

If you work at inspiring others to seek their full potential. Let someone you meet today inspire you.

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Enough to spill your cornflakes

Something not so inspiring for everyone else except this lucky chap - Times Business News reported today that John Tiner, chief executive of the FSA (Financial Services Authority), will be paid £33,000 a month to do nothing for six months after he announced his surprise resignation yesterday. Mr Tiner was paid a total of £573,000 last year, including basic pay of £400,000. Enough to make you spill your cornflakes.

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Saturday, January 13, 2007

Are you ready to change

I was recently asked to explain what hybrid coaching-consulting could offer, well at the root of (consulting & coaching) for change examines not only what one does, and why one does what one does, but who you are, and who you want to be. More so to change/learn, people need to embed new insights into deeper, often automatic, thinking processes. This requires them to pay attention to how they think as well as what they think. To change, people need to turn thought into action.

In theory learning will only last if the underlying emotional commitment is there – ‘do I really want to change?’ ‘what are the benefits for me?’ As people engage with new learning they will need to listen to their emotions and look at their attitudes, beliefs and values. Coaching is a powerful tool, that can help you crack open your most pivotal business issues and dilemmas, to achieve a breakthrough. The question is "are you ready to change ... "

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Friday, January 05, 2007

Management Consulting top Career Choice

Top Consultants Survey ...Management Consulting still a top careers choice among MBA students McKinsey, meet Google, the new runner-up in the race for the most desirable place to work for MBA students.

McKinsey remains the most popular place to work for MBA students in the 2006 University Survey MBA Edition, but the upstart web-wizard Google shot top the ranking from 129th to 2nd place this year.

Google is now a serious threat to McKinsey's 12-year reign as the most desirable employer among MBA students. Goldman Sachs is a very close third - only 0.01 percent behind Google. General Electric and Johnson & Johnson - two consumer brand household names - retain their top 10 positions, landing on 8th and 9th respectively. Other, more traditional MBA employers round out the Top 10: Bain & Co. (4), The Boston Consulting Group (5), Citigroup (6) and Morgan Stanley (10).
Key findings of the survey include:

New Top Industry: Management consulting grabbed first place again after spending one year as the runner-up. Financial Services dropped to second place.

Moving West: The West Coast is regaining its position as a business hub. Nike (12) and Walt Disney (14) break into the Top 15 for the first time while Starbucks (22), Microsoft (16), Harrah’s Entertainment (40) and Intel (25) are among West Coast companies that moved up on the ranking this year.

Men want family: For the first time, work-life balance is the top career goals among male MBAs (48%). Moving up from fourth place, it passed build sound financial base (37%), influence corporate strategies (31%) and reach managerial level (27%).

More than work: Overall, work-life balance is strengthening its grip on the top spot for career goals, some 50% of the respondents chose it as a major career goal followed by build a sound financial base (37%) and influence corporate strategies (28%). This global trend is picking up speed again as the economy is getting better and students enjoy more job security.

New Goals: Students were for the first time asked to rank "manage projects", "contribute to society" and "become a specialist" as career goals. "Manage projects" and "contribute to society" were the most important goals of the new alternatives, finishing 7th and 8th - ahead of more traditional goals such as "start a business" and "develop new products".

More Money: MBAs want $88,000 in annual salary at their first job after graduation - a $6,000 jump compared to last year. Expected annual salary five years after graduation rose to $167,000 - a $10,000 increase from last year.

Money-Makers: Venture Capital is back in the top spot as the industry with the highest salary expectations ($103,200). Investment management finished 2nd ($98,100) followed by management consulting ($97,600).

Focus on Health: Health insurance is the second most important factor when students decide to accept or reject an offer from employers. Only annual base salary is more important.

IDEAL Image: Industry leadership, attractive location and financial strength are the three most important characteristics that MBA students associate with their top employer. Innovation is more important to men, while women value a strong corporate culture more.

IDEAL Offers: Competitive compensation is by far the most attractive offer an employer can make. Women however, value flexible working conditions more than men while men value long-term compensation potential more.

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Thursday, December 28, 2006

European CEOs rank top headaches

Top Consultants: In an age of increasing globalisation, significant sourcing of products and services from remote low cost countries is conducted by over half of European companies, according to leading international procurement consultancy Efficio. Over half (53%) of the European companies surveyed by Efficio say they spend up to a fifth (20%) of their total spend with low cost countries - more than double since 2000 (22%). 12% spend up to 40% of their total spend with countries such as Eastern Europe, South America, India, the Far East and China, whilst 8% earmark more than 40% of their total expenditure. Read Full Article

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