Implementing Business Excellence
Implementing Business Excellence
BUSINESS EXCELLENCE
A guidebook
guidebook for SMEs
Main contributors:
Acknowledgements ii
1. Introduction 1
2. Core values and concepts of high performing organizations 2
3. Are you ready for Business Excellence? 3
4. Deciding on which improvement initiatives to implement 6
5. Getting started – implementing six improvement initiatives 9
5.1 Leadership: Vision, mission and values 9
5.2 Strategic planning: SWOT analysis 16
5.3 Customer focus: Self-assessment tool for developing a customer
focused culture 18
5.4 Workforce focus: Suggestion scheme 22
5.5 Operations focus: PDCA cycle 28
5.6 Measurement, analysis and knowledge management: A personal
performance measurement system 31
6: Undertaking a business excellence assessment 35
- Step 1: Understand organizational profile 36
- Step 2: Assess current performance 36
- Step 3: Identify area for improvement and set improvement goal(s) 39
- Step 4: Develop an action plan 41
- Step 5: Implement actions 41
- Step 6: Monitor progress and evaluate performance 42
- Step 7: Continuously improve organizational performance 42
7. Further information 43
8. About the contributors 44
i
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We would like to express our appreciation to the numerous people who have
contributed towards the completion of this booklet:
Thanks to Steve George, www.baldrige.com for allowing us to use excerpts from the
“Baldrige Edge – Secure your job . . . Make it better . . . Advance your career” for the
performance measurement section of the report.
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1. INTRODUCTION
This guidebook provides some simple steps and tools to help your organization to
quickly improve its business capability and performance. This guidebook is a
continuation from the first guidebook titled “Understanding Business Excellence: An
Awareness Guidebook for SMEs”.
Figure 1 above, based on the mapping of revenue of business excellence award winners,
shows that revenue can be substantially increased through the application of business
excellence. Is this something your organization desires?
THOUGHT
“The business excellence framework is the answer…because the business excellence categories
address everything (e.g. leadership, planning, processes, people, customers, results) that is
important for sustainability”
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2. CORE VALUES AND CONCEPTS OF HIGH PERFORMING ORGANIZATIONS
There are eleven widely recognized embedded beliefs and behaviours found in high
performing organizations - otherwise known as the “Core Values and Concepts of
Business Excellence”1. These are:
The core values and concepts are embodied in business excellence models such as the
Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence (see Figure 2). These models are used to
assess how well the core values and concepts are integrated into an organization’s
systems and processes.
As shown in Figure 2, the Baldrige model is composed of seven categories. Six of these,
labeled 1 to 6, are called the ‘Process’ categories and the other is called the “Results”
category. The Process categories show what an organization does and the Results
category shows what an organization achieves.
1
For further information about the BE core values and concepts, please refer to the following APO’s
booklet: “Understanding business excellence: An awareness guidebook for SMEs”.
2
3. ARE YOU READY FOR BUSINESS EXCELLENCE?
Is your organization ready for business excellence? It is often difficult to obtain 100%
commitment to new initiatives – business excellence is no different.
Disagree
Disagree
agreement with the statements below
Highly
Highly
Agree
Agree
highly disagree)
INITIATING CHANGE
Leading Change
We have designated senior leaders who will
champion business excellence (BE).
Our senior leaders will provide the time,
passion, and focus needed to start the BE
journey.
Our CEO is fully supportive and ready to lead
the BE journey by example.
Creating a Shared Need
We have spoken to BE organizations and our
local BE administrative body on how to start
the BE journey.
Our senior managers can explain the 'reason'
for BE and why they support the need for
change.
Our senior managers fully understand what is
BE and their role to make it happen.
IMPLEMENTATION
Implementation Readiness
We have a clear plan on how to embed the
“Core Values and Concepts of BE” into our
organization.
We have identified our training needs and
considered BE self-assessments as part of the
implementation plan.
SUSTAINING CHANGE
Making Change Last
All our senior management team are going to
be held accountable for implementing at least
some part of the BE plan.
We have meaningful indicators and
assessment methods in place to assess our
organization’s progress in BE
3
If your organization disagrees or highly disagrees with a statement then consider how
you can improve your score. Here are some potential actions that you may wish to
undertake:
Leading Change
• Find out which organizations in your local area have won a BE award and arrange
a visit to learn from them.
• Conduct a teambuilding session with an emphasis on visioning, i.e., to project
what the organization wants to achieve within a particular period of time - for
example 3-5 years from now. Project what the organization can achieve with and
without BE in place.
• Organize meetings to discuss BE and what it means for each person, department
and the organization as a whole.
• Give all senior managers a copy of the APO’s booklet titled “Understanding
Business Excellence: An awareness guide for SMEs”.
Implementation Readiness
• Have a brainstorming meeting and consider whether the core values and concepts
are relevant to your organization and, if so, what needs to be done to embed
them.
• Ensure that your self-assessment process (which identifies your organization’s
strengths and opportunities for improvement) and action-planning process have
been planned and include a large proportion of your organization’s stakeholders
(senior managers, middle managers, employees and customers and suppliers as
necessary). This will lead to greater buy-in of business excellence.
• Recognize and reward senior managers and project teams that are successful with
BE projects. Celebrate success with thank you notes, team dinners, and bonding
activities.
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• Track all projects and actions that stem from the BE journey. Most importantly
record all costs/ benefits per action or project, collate these together and share
the information with all staff.
• Create and designate a BE corner in one of the conspicuous areas in the office
with bulletin boards of information and graphs showing the results achieved. This
is a simple but an effective way to motivate and engage staff as they can follow all
the BE activities and projects being undertaken and the impact they are having on
organizational performance.
Ideally your senior management team will be fully supportive of business excellence and
ready to work together to take the organization forward. However, in situations where
this is not the case, you can still consider starting your business excellence journey in a
department or part of the organization.
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4. DECIDING ON WHICH IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVES TO IMPLEMENT
Once your organization has started its journey it will need to determine which initiatives
to implement to improve performance. Examples of some common initiatives and the
business excellence categories they primarily relate to are shown in Figure 4. Brief
descriptions of these initiatives can be found in Figure 5. You will need to decide which
ones to proceed with based on your priorities, time and resources available.
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Initiative (approach, system, or technique)
1. Balanced Scorecard: Translates mission and vision statements into a comprehensive set of objectives and
performance measures that can be quantified and appraised. It provides a performance measurement
framework centered on four ‘perspectives’: Financial, Customer, Internal Business Process and Innovation,
Learning and Growth.
2. Benchmarking: A systematic process for identifying and implementing best or better practices. It is a
structured process to help organizations close the gap with best-in-class performers without having to “re-
invent the wheel”. It aims to find “secrets of success” and then adapt and improve them so that they lead to
maximum benefits for the recipient organisation.
3. Business Continuity Management (BCM): Prevents an emerging crisis from becoming an organizational and
personal disaster through ensuring processes and resources can operate in critical situations. It involves risk
identification and assessment, business impact assessment and analysis, and the development, training and
testing of business continuity plans.
4. Business Excellence Self-Assessment: A systematic and regular review of an organization’s activities and
results referenced against Business Excellence Award Models (such as the Baldrige Criteria for Performance
Excellence, EFQM Excellence Criteria)
5. Communication Platforms for staff and non-staff: Having appropriate channels of communication, such as
weekly and/or monthly report, business review meeting, internet, intranet, newsletter, employee forums and
information centre.
6. Corporate Governance Management: Involves accountability of management’s actions, transparency in
operations, independence in internal and external audits, and protection of stakeholders’ interests.
7. Corporate Social Responsibility Programme: A programme of activities designed to ensure the company is
socially and environmentally responsible when conducting its daily business.
8. Customer Relationship Management (CRM): A process to understand the customer groups and respond
quickly to changing customer desires. CRM data provides companies with insights into customers’ needs and
behaviors, allowing organizations to tailor products / services to targeted customer segments.
9. Customer Satisfaction Survey: Surveys conducted by the organizations to measure customer satisfaction.
10. Customer Segmentation: A subdivision of a market into discrete customer groups that share similar
characteristics
11. Employee Engagement Survey: Surveys conducted by the organizations to measure and monitor employee
engagement.
12. Employee Induction: Processes used to welcome new employees to the organizations and prepare them for
their new role.
13. Employee Performance Management: A systematic approach directed towards organizational performance
improvement through the alignment of individual performance with organizational goals. It aligns an
employee's individual goals with the organization's objectives, mission, and vision. It requires the development
of sound job descriptions, clear accountabilities, and growing employee competency levels. Examples of
techniques used are 360 degree feedback, appraisal and coaching systems and online evaluation.
14. Enterprise Risk Management: Processes, structure and culture whereby organizations methodically address
the risks attached to their activities with the goal of achieving sustained benefit within each activity and across
the portfolio of all activities.
15. Improvement Teams: A team that is formed to make improvement on the workplace and/or processes. It can
comprise members of a single department, cross functional, and/or include representatives of either or both
customers and suppliers. Membership can be voluntary or mandatory. Examples of tools used by improvement
teams are 7 basic quality tools (Cause and Effect Diagram, Check Sheet, Control Chart, Graphs, Histogram,
Pareto Diagram, Scatter Diagram) and 7 management tools (Affinity Diagram, Relations Diagram, Systematic
Diagram, Matrix Diagram, Matrix Data Analysis, Process Decision Programme Chart, Arrow Diagram).
16. Information Collection and Analysis: Concerned with the collection and analysis of information for
organizational management and improvement.
17. Knowledge Management: Method to acquire and share intellectual assets. It increases the generation of
useful, actionable and meaningful information and seeks to increase both individual and organizational
learning.
18. Leadership Development Programme: Programme to develop leaders, such as experience sharing,
leadership training, and apprenticeship.
19. Lean: Improvement approach that focuses on removing waste and improving flow. It requires an
understanding and analysis of how processes operate and contribute to the production of products and
services.
20. Managing by Walking About (MBWA): Listening, empathizing and staying in touch with the stakeholders
(e.g. customers, suppliers, and workforce) and taking necessary action to improve the situation.
21. Market Research: Helps to ensure that there will be a demand for the product/service and that the
requirements of the customer will be met. It can include experiments, surveys, product tests, advertising tests,
promotion tests, motivational research, strategy research, customer-satisfaction monitoring and many other
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techniques.
22. Performance Measurement: Measures are needed to measure the success of an organisation, processes,
people, programs, investments, and acquisitions.
23. Plan-Do-Check-Action (PDCA) cycle: An iterative four-step management process used to improve work
processes in the organization.
24. Process mapping and documentation: Activities involved in mapping and documenting what a work process
does, who is responsible, and to what standard it should be completed.
25. Quality Management System (QMS): A management system to direct and control an organization with regard
to quality. It includes a quality policy, quality manual, quality objectives, procedures, records and/or compliance
to quality standards, such as ISO9000, ISO/TS 16949, ISO 13485, and ISO/TS 29001).
26. Recruitment and selection: Process of recruiting and selecting appropriate employees for the organization.
27. Service and product innovation: Managing how to create, exchange, evolve and apply innovative ideas to
the production and delivery of products and services.
28. Service Standards: Defining the service standard that a customer is entitled to receive.
29. Six Sigma: A business improvement approach that seeks to reduce variation and eliminate causes of defects /
errors in processes by focusing on outputs that are critical to customers and a clear financial return for the
organization.
30. Strategy Plan: A practical, action-oriented guide, based upon an examination of internal and external factors. It
directs goal setting and resource allocation to achieve desired future results.
31. Strategic Alliances: Agreements between organisations in which each commits resources to achieve a
common set of objectives.
32. Succession Planning: A process for identifying and developing people with the potential to fill key leadership
positions in the organization.
33. Suggestion Scheme: A system in which employees are given an opportunity to give ideas and suggestions on
how to improve the organization, and are given rewards for useful suggestions.
34. Supply Chain Management: Synchronizes the efforts of all parties (e.g. suppliers, manufacturers, distributors)
involved in meeting a customer’s needs. It forges much closer relationships among all links in the value chain
in order to deliver the right products to the right places at the right time for the right costs.
35. SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats) analysis: A technique to understand an
organization’s strengths and weaknesses, and opportunities and threats. This information can then be used to
aid in strategic planning.
36. Training and Development: Initiatives to raise the competencies and capabilities of individuals and groups.
37. Vision, Mission and Values: Brief statements of the vision, mission and values of an organization, with the
intention of keeping employees aware of the organization's direction.
Figure 5: Brief descriptions of a range of improvement initiatives that can be used to improve
organizational performance
To help you to achieve some quick wins and set you on your way towards business
excellence, examples of six useful and easy to apply improvement initiatives are
provided in Section 5.
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5. GETTING STARTED – IMPLEMENTING SIX IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVES
Here we describe how you can create your organization’s vision, mission and values. In
this case the business owner or CEO should be leading this process and reading the
instructions below.
Let us use an example of a journey everyone has taken before. Imagine you are going to
take a holiday, and you have a vision of what the holiday is going to be like. Your vision
is that personal thing you want to get from a holiday. You probably have a picture in
your mind, a vision, of how you are going to feel: relaxed and warm, what you are going
to hear: the sound of waves and laughter, and what this perfect experience is going to
look like: blue skies and white sand - this is your dream. Could you draw what this looks
like, could you cut out pictures from magazines which reflect this vision? Is this a
destination you want to get to? Can you sell this to your family and friends? Can you
make them envious and dying to get there themselves?
Now try and do this with the vision of your future business. Can you picture an equally
appealing destination? Can you make your peers jealous? Can you, smell it, taste it, and
feel it? Can you share this picture with your people?
If as the business leader you are not clear about where you are going and what it looks
like, it is going to be very difficult to sell and communicate this to others.
Communicating your vision to others is not just about words and pictures, what is often
more important is the way you act, what you do and how you look. These are all an
integral part of communicating your vision. Help others to see what you see…create the
picture…walk the talk.
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Who is in control of your destiny?
Try this quick test to see whether it’s you, or whether it’s everything else that is in
control of your destiny. Be honest, how many times are you answering “No” to these
questions.
If you answered "No" to any of these questions, you may need to take some time to
consolidate your vision or get it into a form that can be easily communicated to others.
Maybe it is time to step back from the business for a few minutes and look at what you
really want to get out of it, what excites you about the future, where are you trying to
take the business. This is a personal thing that others need to support and get behind.
Be bold, allow yourself to dream.
We are often told not to use the ‘I’ word as it is exclusive. However, with a vision it is
your vision and your people want to get behind it. Your team will want to believe that
you are passionate about the future and you have the confidence and drive to get to
this better, brighter place. While it is important to involve other people for certain
decisions, sometimes you need to take the lead and make decisions. People are often
happier if someone else takes responsibility for the future, as long as they believe it
could actually happen and the person who has the vision is dedicated to achieving it.
Once the vision is set, it is time to get the team involved in setting the mission and the
tactics for achieving your compelling vision.
Just remember each person will have their own vision of their own future. This is fine,
as you cannot take away or replace someone’s personal vision. Vision is a very personal
thing – replace the word vision with the word dream then all of a sudden it feels a bit
more personal than that business thing called vision! Your people need to understand
your dream and believe that helping you to achieve your dream will also help them
achieve theirs. Allow people to dream - allow them to buy in to your dream to achieve
theirs.
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Take action
1. Create a passionate statement or picture that shows people how you see the
future.
2. Make it personal. If you are excited about what you believe in, others will follow –
they are putting their future in your hands. People feel a sense of security if you
are confident and you are prepared to LEAD the company to your desired vision.
3. If you already have a vision for the business do not be afraid of changing it if the
unexpected happens or external events force change. Following an old vision you
no longer believe in will show and will erode confidence. Just remember as a
leader you only have to be right most of the time!
4. Once you are clear, talk to people about your vision. Talk about it to your friends
and family and talk about it with your key people and staff. The more you talk
about it the more convinced you will be that it is achievable. The more you believe
in your vision the more likely it is to happen and the more likely people will help
you get there. However, don’t be afraid to change the vision once you receive
inputs from other members of your team but only do this if you passionately
believe in the new vision.
5. Just do it! - Don’t think about it too much, your dreams are in there they just need
a bit of encouragement to come out. Just remember your dreams/vision can’t be
wrong just different to others.
Allow yourself to dream. Use pictures and words – this is your dream, your vision the
more you share it the more likely it is to come true!
I have a dream...
One person may have vision, however it takes a group of people to have a mission that
will ensure a vision is achieved.
The mission is a cause which unites and inspires a group of people into action. A mission
should encourage ownership, passion and commitment. The language of a mission
needs to concentrate on ‘we’, we are/we do. The mission is a public thing that people
can communicate and support. The mission statement:
• Describes the purpose of the organization.
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• Identifies what the business defines as success.
• Informs and inspires employees.
• Defines what success looks like.
• Serves as a statement.
Developing a mission statement can be something that is easy to put off. However once
it is in place, you’ll soon see the fruits of your efforts as customer relationships blossom
and employees develop. In doing so, take great care to involve others in your
organization, for they are the ones you must count on to help you succeed. Do not
hesitate to involve an external business consultant or facilitator.
Do you have a mission? Please answer the questions below to understand more about
your mission statement:
If you have answered "No" to any these questions you may need to spend some time
developing your Mission. Much has been written about developing the company
mission and many consultancy and senior management hours have been spent
developing company mission statements. However all too often the mission statement
is put on the wall and forgotten and not used to guide strategy and is never revisited if
things change.
The mission statement is put in place as a guide and focal point for the strategy of the
business. Measures and targets are then put in place to make sure the mission and
vision are being achieved. How do you know whether you are on the right track if you
do not know where you are going or what business you are supposed to be in?
Take Action
1. Sit down with your leadership team and, with your dream/vision in mind; start to
develop your mission. Look at using the following language:
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• We aim to be the market leaders in XXX delivering more quickly than all our
competition.
• We aim to be the first to market and meet all the latest needs of our
customers.
• We want to be more professional than companies 100 times our size without
losing the personal touch and flexibility of an excellent small business.
• We aim to offer a five star service for a three star price.
• We will be closer to our customers than any other business they deal with.
• We aim to make our customers look and feel good.
• We aim to make things happen where others would talk about it.
• Succinct; to the point - clear and understandable to everyone who reads it.
• Focused on the customer and specific to your type of business.
• Directional, i.e., explains what you are trying to accomplish.
• Written in active voice, e.g., "deliver high-quality services," not "the delivery of
services of high quality"
• Created through a process that involves multiple individuals and levels within
the organization, not "handed down from on high" (be careful there is still real
meaning to the mission statement after extensive consultation)
• Take into account all the views of all those with a vested interest.
3. Keep it fresh – It is often thought that a mission statement is carved in stone and
cannot be changed. This is not the case; there are often real reasons for changing
the mission statement.
Work with your leadership team to develop the mission that people will follow.
Get across what you sell/make/deliver. Mission: Why you do what you do; the
organization’s reason for being, its purpose. It says what, in the end, you want to
be remembered for.
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5.1.3 Our values – what is important in our business
Once we set out on a business excellence journey, as well as knowing where we are
going, we have to understand the values we are going to operate by. We need to set
some ground rules and guiding principles which we all understand, which will make the
journey more enjoyable and ensure we get to our destination without having to make
too many sacrifices. Setting values defines the working environment and helps build a
culture for achieving success. The values should be designed to ‘add value’ to the
company’s proposition to its customers. Values should create ‘value’ to the customer
and the people within the company.
The clearer you are about your values and the better they are communicated and
understood the less time you are going to spend putting in place procedures and
controls to make sure things happen in a certain way. The phrase "do as I say not as I
do" does NOT work when it comes to values; the leadership has to lead by example.
Values are the building blocks for developing a successful culture within the business.
Answer these questions to see whether you have the foundations for a successful
culture.
Take Action
1. Do an internal survey of your senior management team and staff to find out what
is important to them and what they believe is important to the business.
Examples of questions:
• List five things that are the most important to our business.
• List three areas that our business is different from our competitors.
• What are the top three negative comments from our customers?
• What are the top five problems within the business?
• In general do you believe the leadership practice what they preach?
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2. Survey your customers to see whether your values are being delivered and if they
are significant to them. What do your customers value?
Examples of questions:
• List five things you want our business to be passionate about?
• List three reasons you think our business is different to other suppliers?
• If you were to pick fault what would be the three main things we could do
better?
• In general do you believe we practice what we preach?
3. Survey your suppliers to see what they think your business values are.
Examples of questions:
• List five things you want our business to be passionate about?
• List three reasons why you feel our business is different to other businesses?
• What are the three negative things you would say about us as a customer?
• In general do you believe we practice what we preach?
4. Once the questions are answered, see whether there are any common values. Are
your team’s values similar to your customers and suppliers? If things don’t look
as they should start with yourself, are you walking the talk, are you practicing
what you preach?
If not, you will have to change – actions speak louder than words.
If you are not sure whether you are walking the talk, with values in hand, ask
people whether you deliver what you expect from others. Are you open and
honest, and do you allow time for planning and business development. Do you
deliver on time and respect others opinions?
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5.2 Strategic Planning – SWOT analysis
Here we describe how you can carry out a SWOT analysis as part of your organisation’s
strategic planning process.
SWOT analysis is a useful tool for strategic planning. SWOT is an acronym for Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats (See Figure 6). SWOT analysis identifies the
internal factors (strengths and weaknesses) and external factors (opportunities and
threats) that affect an organisation. Executives and managers can use it to consider how
their organisation can build on its strengths and take advantage of its opportunities,
while minimising its weaknesses and avoiding threats. Figure 7 provides examples of
Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.
Positive Negative
to the organisation’s
advantage?
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Items Examples
Strengths • Technological skills
• Product quality
• Customer loyalty
• Leading brands
• Access to valuable distribution networks.
• Exclusive access to natural resources
Weaknesses • Lack of important skills
• Poor product quality
• Low customer retention
• Weak brands
• Lack of access to distribution networks
• Lack of access to natural resources
Opportunities • Changing customer demand
• Technological advances
• Loosening of regulations
• Removal of trade barriers
• Changes in population age
Threats • Changing customer demand
• Closing of geographic markets
• Technological advances
• New regulations
• New trade barriers
• Changes in population age
• Development of substitute products/services
Figure 7: Examples of Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats
1. Identify suitable people to be involved in the SWOT analysis (such as, a person who
knows the organisation very well as he / she has been with the organisation for many
years, a critical and analytical person who can analyse the situation faced by the
organisation, and a person who is well-versed with the industry and competitors).
2. Set up a meeting / workshop to carry out the SWOT analysis.
3. Identify and/or brainstorm key strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats
based on relevant and updated data.
4. Based on the SWOT now consider what are the top five critical success factors (If
there are more than five factors this may mean that you are more likely to be
paralysed by the burden of ‘too much to think about’.) If you’re struggling to find
those critical success factors, take a five-year perspective and consider your top
strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats – such as:
• What issues affect your ability to carry out your mission?
• What product and service features or new products or services are customers likely
to want in the future?
• How will you retain a smaller pool of customers, if your market shrinks?
• If you do not change anything, where will you be in 5 years?
5. Discuss, analyse and/or report the findings.
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5.3 Customer Focus – Self-assessment tool for developing a customer focused
culture
Here we describe a self-assessment tool and some best practices that can help your
organization become more customer focused.
Organisations with a strong customer focus have been shown to exhibit the following
characteristics:
The following self-assessment tool, see Figure 8, is useful for assessing how “Important”
various customer focus characteristics are to your organization and your level of
“Capability” (or performance) with respect to each characteristic. Differences between
“Importance” and “Capability” can then be addressed.
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2. All team members complete the self-assessment, the data is collected, and the
average response is recorded.
3. A consensus meeting is held. Here a discussion should be held on those questions
where there is the largest variation in response. Those that responded differently to
the average should be asked to explain their reasons why. After the discussion the
team can re-evaluate the score for the question.
4. An action planning meeting is held. The purpose of this meeting is for team
members to consider how the gaps between “Importance” and “Capability” can be
addressed. The majority of time should be spent on the characteristics which had
the largest gaps.
5. Action plans are implemented.
6. Repeat the assessment in one year’s time.
19
17 We routinely survey our customers on the quality of products/services provided.
18 We actively encourage customer feedback.
19 Our customers can talk with senior managers if they choose to.
20 Our customer self-service systems (e.g. voice mail, web) do not prevent customers from
accessing a “real” staff member.
ANALYSIS & UNDERSTANDING
21 We have a continuously updated customer knowledge base that provides all critical
business information about our customer relationships.
22 We place vital importance on understanding the impact customers have on our business.
23 Our customer information/data is available and updated after changes for immediate
use.
24 We analyse all sources of customer information to determine key customer
requirements.
25 We are able to differentiate our customers by their needs.
26 We conduct well-defined market tests for new product/service offerings.
27 We conduct regular, competitive/comparative analysis of product and service delivery
processes and systems, which we use to understand customer expectations and
requirements.
28 Our sales force keeps customer contact information constantly and accurately updated.
29 Our customer information allows us to understand the value of our customer
relationships in multiple dimensions (e.g. value, profitability, breadth of products, and
length of time).
30 We have the appropriate customer information to support our customer-focus
strategies.
INTEGRATION & DEPLOYMENT
31 Personnel have appropriate access to customer information (information needed to
properly service customer needs).
32 We ensure that all customer-related information is readily communicated to all
appropriate areas of the organisation that it will impact on.
33 Customer information (e.g. name, address) is consistent in all the systems where we
maintain customer data.
34 Different areas of our business have easy access to information about what new business
opportunities are being pursued with existing customers.
35 Customer expectations about the organisation match with customers’ experience.
36 We track and remember which products and features a customer chooses, and use the
information the next time we deal with that customer.
37 We design products and services to meet customer needs.
38 Cross -functional groups meet on a formal regular basis to address customer strategy
and service delivery.
39 We keep customers informed of all matters that will affect them, including following up
on enquiries or complaints.
40 We have a well-defined and well-enforced process for how we interact with our
customers, including service standards and a “service promise”.
PEOPLE
41 Our performance appraisal process is linked closely to improving customer relationships.
42 We link staff satisfaction indicators with customer satisfaction information.
43 We recognise/reward behaviours that enhance customer satisfaction.
44 Staff are empowered to be flexible to meet the needs of the customer in different
situations.
45 Our employees are regularly evaluated on the level of service provided to their
customers.
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46 Our organisation ensures that the right resources are available to deliver the standards
of service promised to customers.
47 All employees understand their role in delivering service standards.
48 Our employees are trained and their skills developed to provide excellent customer
service.
49 Our staff have the right skills to implement customer-centred initiatives.
50 We believe that if we have satisfied “internal” customers we will find it easier to create
satisfied “external” customers.
REVIEW AND IMPROVE
51 We systematically review and improve our customer service processes.
52 We learn from our mistakes, we correct them - and avoid making them again.
53 We analyse customer information against historical data to determine trends, to identify
improvement opportunities and to monitor effectiveness of new initiatives.
54 We actively seek/research best-practice systems/processes to establish targets and
benchmarks for improvements to our products/services, processes and delivery.
55 Our organisation has a process that identifies the source of problems associated with
customer service.
56 The organisation adapts continuously to satisfy customer needs.
Figure 8: Customer focussed self-assessment tool
Examples of good to best customer focus practices are shown below. These should be
considered for implementation in the action planning stage of the self-assessment.
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m) Continuously invest in new technology and training to improve services,
capabilities, and frequently review the product range.
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5.4 Workforce focus – Suggestion scheme
Here we describe how organizations should invest in its most important resource, the
workforce, by introducing an employee involvement process. In this case, the business
owner or the CEO takes and shows deep interest in motivating, empowering and
developing its people to get involved in the decision making process for improvement
initiatives in the organization through an employee suggestion scheme (SS).
Have you encountered a situation at work or at a social event where the boss or the
leader is the ‘know-it-all” person who gives orders to other people and dominates with
his/her strong commanding voice/gestures? These individuals will give orders and
expect others to follow. If you have experienced these situations, do you feel happy
with this work culture, relationship and communication style?
Gone are the days when authoritarian leadership styles are in popular use or considered
as good practice. This holds true for all types of organizations, big or small, public or
private. Nowadays, successful organizations are those that establish a partnership
between the workers and the business owner / Chief Executive Officer (CEO). This is
achieved through work force involvement and empowerment.
The business owner / CEO should encourage staff participation in making decisions
concerning the organization. With the involvement, the employees get to fully
understand how their job role contributes to the achievement of the organizations’
goals.
There are two approaches the business owner can adopt to motivate people to
participate in decision making – a top-down approach and a bottom-up approach.
A top-down approach is when orders are issued from the top level of the organization.
A positive example of this approach is when people in the organization have to follow
and to participate accordingly in a clearly defined and well communicated strategic
plan. A company / business strategic plan sets the overall roadmap of your business
direction and success. This contains the company’s short and long-term plans which
need the participation of all units in the organization and of everybody in the business.
On the other hand, another similar example may be seen in a negative context as
practised in a traditional organization. That is, when the company’s strategic plan is not
shown to people and they do not participate in crafting the vision, mission as well as the
strategic plan. Another example is when a company policy is issued without due
consultation with the people in the organization. An example is issuing a policy that
workers cannot bring their “packed lunch” anymore; instead everyone has to buy their
lunch at the canteen. In this approach, all orders come from the top. In this case,
communication is a one-way process as orders from the top should be adhered to by
everyone without question.
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A bottom-up approach provides opportunity for the employees to communicate their
own ideas to management, and in turn, receive an appropriate response from
management. An example of this approach is when an employee proposes and
implements improvement efforts directed toward enhancing productivity, safety,
reducing costs, faster delivery, customer satisfaction and employee morale. In this case,
the business owner allows the employee to grow, professionally and personally, by
expressing himself and his creativity at work. People feel a sense of belonging to the
company when their ideas, opinions are heard and considered by management.
Consequently, this leads to employee commitment, support and participation in
company programs.
When people are encouraged to share ideas, opinions and to participate in important
decision making activities in the organization, people feel empowered. They feel a sense
of responsibility for their work and are strongly motivated to do their best. Given this
situation, employees acquire a sense of pride in workmanship which may lead to
opportunities for product and service improvement and a greater dedication to quality.
In turn, people that are motivated and satisfied in their work are more likely to provide
customers with a high level of customer service. This in turn leads to product loyalty. As
a result, it is the company business performance that benefits.
A Suggestion Scheme (SS) is one of the Kaizen or basic productivity and quality
improvement tools that fosters two-way communication between management and
employees. SS is an individual-oriented approach as it solicits creative ideas from
individual employees. As a Kaizen tool, the SS encourages total employee participation
through the generation of creative ideas. It is the senior management team’s
responsibility to design and to implement a plan for a vibrant suggestion scheme that
will entice total employee involvement.
Important elements for the successful implementation of the SS are: (1) management
support and commitment; (2) employee motivation and willingness to participate; (3)
knowledge and skills necessary to bring out creative ideas to address productivity and
quality improvement concerns.
A bakery receives many customers daily at its reception area. Various transactions take
place in this area–the placing of orders, picking-up of orders and bill payment. With no
systematic process to guide the customers on making their transactions, customers
experience irritation with each other and with the staff on the disorganised
environment.
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Improvement Idea:
The customers will, upon entering the bakery have to take a customer number which
the store clerk will follow in serving customers in an orderly, organized fashion.
Benefits:
Employees should be encouraged to contribute their creative ideas that will lead to
productivity and quality improvement. Creative improvement ideas are usually based
on concerns that are related to: productivity, quality, cost, delivery, safety and
improving employee morale. On the other hand, unacceptable ideas are those that
pertain to: personal problems, complaints on management policies and decisions,
salaries and wages and those improvements that require a very large investment.
An SS Committee should review and submit shortlisted suggestions for approval by the
business owner or the CEO. Suggestions that are submitted must be duly acknowledged
to recognize the improvement effort of the individual employee. Whether the
suggestion is considered for approval or not, the employee deserves to receive
feedback. This instance proves to the employees that no matter how small their ideas
might be their ideas matter and are recognized.
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4. It is important to devise a suggestion form and acknowledgment form for the
received suggestion, and a feedback form to communicate status of the
suggestion. Sample forms are provided in Figures 9-11.
5. The SS Committee defines the rules on acceptable and unacceptable ideas.
6. Evaluation criteria should be designed to guide the SS Committee in reviewing
and evaluating suggestions.
7. A reward and recognition scheme should be devised to encourage participation
and assist in sustaining the program.
Suggestion Form
Division/section: ____________________
(Note: please feel free to draw illiustrations and use additional sheets if necessary)
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Acknowledgment of Receipt
Thank you for your suggestion dated ______ We are now evaluating your suggestion
and will let you know the results on or before_______
The SS Chairman
Feedback Form
Thank you very much for your suggestion dated______ and submitted_________
However, we regret to inform you that your suggestion cannot be considered due to the
following:_____________________________
We deeply appreciate your concern for the improvement of our organization. Your
record will be kept for possible consideration in the future. We look forward to receiving
more suggestions from you.
The SS Chairman
In the process of participation in the SS, the employee is able to develop professionally
as technical or job skills are further honed to respond to the challenges for
improvement of the work environment through the contribution of creative ideas. SS
encourages creativity and the clear articulation of ideas through writing the suggestion
for improvement. It is important that the supervisor provides guidance to the staff in
writing appropriate and clear suggestions.
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The entire process of giving suggestions is a learning opportunity for the employee and
leads to professional and personal growth. In this manner, the organization
demonstrates its concern for the development of its people. The process of developing
and submitting suggestions may result in the identification of training and development
needs of employees which the organization should address. How and what the
employee writes as part of the suggestion can provide an indication of what
competency areas need to be developed.
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5.5 Operations focus – Plan Do Check Act (PDCA) Cycle
This section describes how you can continuously improve your organisation’s
operations resulting in quality products and services by adopting the Plan-Do-Check-Act
(PDCA) Cycle.
As shown in Figure 12, the PDCA Cycle is best illustrated by the four (4) repetitive steps.
ACT PLAN
CHECK DO
P means Plan, which emphasises the need to plan as planning increases the likelihood
that a project or action is the appropriate one to undertake and it will be undertaken
successfully. As we plan, we also assess our current situation, identify problems and
plan for appropriate solutions to address it, identify opportunities, know our direction,
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and analyze our needs, customer requirements, and evaluate the impact of the business
environment on the work we do.
D means Do. This is executing what you have planned by implementing changes or
improvement, or even trying out implementation like a pilot-test.
C means Check. This means reviewing, checking, analyzing and monitoring whether you
have accomplished your objectives.
A means Act. This means you have to implement, make improvements or take actions
on the basis of what you have obtained as a result of your review and analysis. If you
have successfully accomplished your objectives, then you need to set the practice into
place, standardize and institutionalize it. If things did turn out well, you have not
accomplished your objectives, and then you have to go back to the PDCA cycle again
using a new plan.
Practically, in everything that we do, in everything that we manage at work and even at
home, the PDCA can be effectively and repetitively applied.
The PDCA can be used in: (1) developing a productivity project, improvement plan or
program, (2) working on a problem situation on the job – in particular, it could be used
by a quality circle or improvement team to solve productivity and quality-related
improvement concerns, (3) in project management, (4) in the adoption of a quality
management system, and (5) in implementing a training and development plan or
program.
Developing a culture of continuous improvement and BE can take a long time. It is,
therefore, imperative that the organization is well guided as it traverses along the road
to continuous improvement. In this case, a well-thought out, organizational productivity
improvement plan should be formulated to guide how this can be realized. Consider you
are at the stage of developing and implementing your organization’s productivity
improvement plan. In this case, you use the PDCA as a framework for the continuous
improvement of your organizational processes.
PLAN
To apply the PDCA, the Plan stage unfolds with an assessment or the conduct of a
productivity diagnosis of your organization to be able to identify the gaps in your
organization’s performance as compared with other similar organizations or
competitors as well as how you meet customers’ requirements. It is also important to
note that this should also be aligned to your strategic and operational plans. To carry
out the plan for this stage, appropriate technical interventions should also be identified
on the basis of the assessment results. For example, is it 5S, a suggestion scheme or
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improvement teams that can help address your improvement concerns? This should be
decided upon based on the gaps identified. Specific performance targets should be set.
It is an assumption at this stage that a project team has already been organized to steer
development and implementation of the plan.
DO
Once requirements for the Plan are prepared, the organization is now ready to go right
ahead to the Do stage. At this juncture, the project team should coordinate with all
offices or units and assist with the implementation of the plan.
CHECK
The implementation of the plan at the Do stage should be monitored by the project
team to keep track of its progress.
ACT
In case the objectives have been met, then the improvement is standardized. On the
other hand, if objectives have not been met, the productivity committee will provide
recommendations in the form of corrective actions.
The entire cycle gets repeated as part of the continuous improvement cycle.
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5.6 Measurement, Analysis and Knowledge Management – A Personal
Performance Measurement System
In the real world, measurement is usually erratic and inconsistent. Most businesses
focus almost exclusively on financial measures, on budgets and costs and headcount
and revenues, with a constant eye on stock price. Some measures of quality, cycle time,
and service are usually tracked, but they tend to be important only to a few
departments, such as production or sales, and not to the entire organization. Whether
your organization has a balanced performance measurement system or the more
common piecemeal approach, you can create a personal performance measurement
system that will help you understand and improve the processes that you are
responsible for.
1. Determine your areas of focus. You measure what you want to manage and improve.
Start by figuring out how your work supports your organization’s mission, vision, and
strategic plan. Identify which key processes you contribute to, who your key customers
are, and what they require. Determine the requirements and key performance
indicators (KPIs) of your department, work unit, and/or team. If you have a performance
appraisal and/or career development plan, list which areas you can measure your
performance on.
2. Identify what is required of you for each area. Most requirements fall into one of
four areas: quality (defects, error rate, etc.), delivery (speed, cycle time), cost (labour
cost, material cost, product/service cost), and value (customer satisfaction, staff
satisfaction, community satisfaction). What does your organization, manager,
customers, and coworkers require?
WHY THIS MATTERS: Being guided by data rather than opinions and assumptions is like
being a one-eyed man or woman in the land of the blind: You will have a distinct
advantage. By relying on data to track and improve your performance, you will
consistently get better results—and be able to prove it—than those around you. That
will come in very handy at performance review time.
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3. Select performance indicators and goals. How can you measure your performance
on each key requirement? As you select performance indicators, consider: (a) How you
can link performance indicators to your team, work unit, department, and organization;
(b) whether improving performance on the performance indicator will accurately reflect
your performance; (c) your ability to collect the data (for example, getting satisfaction
data from your customers may help you evaluate service levels but it can be difficult to
acquire); (d) your ability to compare your performance to relevant benchmarks; and (e)
the correlation between improving your performance and improving performance on
the performance indicator. For each performance indicator, set goals for the next six
months and year.
Name of the The title of the measure. A good title is self-explanatory, avoids jargon and explains what the
measure measure is and why it is important
Type of Record here the type of measure. There are three types of measures:
measure Key Result Indicators (KRIs). These include measures like customer satisfaction, net profit
before tax, profitability of customers, employee satisfaction, return on capital employed. The
common characteristic of these measures is that they are the result of many actions. They give
a clear picture of whether you are travelling in the right direction. They do not however tell you
what you need to do to improve these results. Thus KRIs provide information that is ideal for
the governance board, therefore to those not involved in day to day management.
Performance Indicator (PI). These tell you what to do. PIs lie beneath KRIs and could
include: profitability of the top 10% of customers, net profit on key product lines, % increase in
sales with top 10% of customers, no. of employees using a suggestion scheme.
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). Key performance indicators are a set of measures
focussing on those aspects of performance that are the most critical for the current and future
success of the organisation. They have six characteristics:
• measured frequently e.g. daily or weekly
• acted upon by CEO and senior management team
• all staff understand the measure and what corrective action is required
• responsibility can be tied down to an individual or team
• significant impact (on more than one objective)
• has a positive impact (on other performance measures)
Purpose If a measure has no purpose, why introduce it? Example purposes: 1. To enable you to monitor
the rate of improvement thereby driving down the total cost. 2. To ensure that enquiries from
the public are responded to within a specified time-frame. 3. To stimulate improvement in a
suppliers performance. 4. To increase the use of a product or service. The purpose of a KRI is
to provide the governance board with overall performance information.
Relates to Identify the business objectives that the measure relates to. As with purpose, if the measure
being considered does not relate to any business objective, why introduce it?
Benchmark What is best practice performance for this measure? Have you managed to find a benchmark?
The benchmark should help you set an appropriate target.
Target Targets specify the levels of performance needed and the timescales within which they need to
be achieved. Example targets: 1. X% improvement year on year. 2. Y% reduction during the
next 12 months. 3. Achieve Z performance by the end of next year.
Current Record your current performance here.
performance
Formula How something is measured will affect the way people behave. An appropriately defined
formula should drive people towards good business practice. Beware of the formula that
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stimulates behaviour you do not want.
Frequency The frequency with which performance should be recorded and reported is a function of the
importance of the measure and the volume of data available
Who This box should identify the person who is to collect and report the data
measures?
Source of data This box should specify where to get the data from. If you want to see how performance
changes over time, then you must get data from the same source each time.
Who acts on This box should identify the person who is going to act on the data.
the data?
What do they Without some action here, the measure is pointless. You may not be able to detail the action to
do? be taken if the performance proves either acceptable or unacceptable as the detail may
depend on the context at the time. You can define, in general, the management process to be
followed in the case of acceptable or unacceptable performance. Example. 1. Set up a
continuous improvement group to identify reasons for poor performance and to make
recommendations as to how it can be improved.
Notes and Any specific features, outstanding issues, specific problems, to do with the measure.
comments
Target 75% by 1 Jan 2014; 85% by 1 Jan 2015; 90% by 1 Jan 2016
Formula The total number of calls closed out for the week, divided by the total calls
received by the customer service centre for the week.
Current performance 70%
Frequency Measured weekly and reported monthly
Who measures? Latoya Maher, Call Centre Senior Operator
Source of data FCR weekly report from Call Centre business objects reports folder on O: drive
Who acts on the data? Latoya Maher, Call Centre Senior Operator
What do they do? Update FCR trend with weekly report data and circulate graph to Operations
Division management team. If two successive weekly figures trend downwards,
an improvement request shall be raised in the Process Improvement System.
Notes and comments 1. Check weekly data files for correct dates
2. Check raw data if first report produces unexpected result based on present
trends.
3. In case of problems contact Johnny West of IT before proceeding
5. Analyze data to identify and act on opportunities to improve. After a few months of
data collection, start looking for cause-and-effect relationships and other correlations in
your results. Once you’ve nailed down an area for improvement, develop a 90-day
action plan to improve performance.
6. Refine your system. Set times to review your personal performance management
system to assess how well it is working and, if needed, make changes to improve it.
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It is hard to measure pieces of a process and, in most cases, that’s what you are looking
at. Quality and cycle time measures are easiest to identify: error rates, defects,
mistakes, complaints, the time it takes to complete a step, etc. Start with a few
measures. Collect the data and plot the data and see what it tells you. As you gain
confidence, add more measures to better understand what is working and what needs
to be improved.
Trend charts make measurement actionable by showing levels and direction (see Figure
15). Rather than numbers on a page, trend charts visualize performance.
7.5
7.0
6.5
6.0
5.5
5.0
4.5
4.0
The purpose of the chart is to visualize what’s going on in the area you are measuring. If
you want to get noticed at work, start posting charts like this about your process
measures on your walls. And if you want to get recognized, improve the process to
move those trend lines in a positive direction.
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6. UNDERTAKING A BUSINESS EXCELLENCE ASSESSMENT
Assessments not only identify an organization’s progress but, more importantly, identify
an organization’s strengths and areas for improvement. From this information, senior
management can make sensible decisions on the actions needed to achieve the desired
results. Generally, organizations scoring at least 600 from 1000 points on the BEMs
assessment are deemed to have reached a state of excellence or world-class
performance. Figure 16 shows the seven steps that can be adopted to improve
organizational performance towards achieving BE.
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Step 1: Understand organizational profile
The first step is to create and/or review your organizational profile to ensure all
members of your senior management team have the same understanding of the
business, its direction and the market it is operating in. The organizational profile
provides the context for the way your organization operates. Proposed contents of the
organizational profile are summarized in Figure 17.
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No Item Starting Progressing Advanced Excellent
1 Leadership We don’t have a vision, We have a vision, mission, strategic Our vision, mission, strategic direction Our vision, mission, strategic direction and
mission, strategic direction and direction and performance and performance expectations are performance expectations are communicated and
performance expectations or expectations that we are happy with communicated and known by most known by all employees and regularly reviewed.
they are out of date. We rarely but these are only known by a few employees. We regularly review the We address and minimise the negative
review the negative staff. We sometimes review the negative environmental and environmental and community impact of our
environmental and community negative environmental and community impact of our products, products, services, processes. Our leadership
impact of our products, community impact of our products, services, processes and sites. approach is regularly reviewed for effectiveness.
services, processes and sites. services, processes and sites.
2 Strategic We do not have an overall We have a strategic plan but use an We have a strategic plan and use a We have a strategic plan and use a formal
Planning strategic plan. We don’t have informal approach to its development formal approach to its development – approach to its development – therefore we
missions, plans and – therefore we don’t conduct a therefore we conduct a thorough conduct a thorough review of our strengths and
performance targets cascaded thorough review of our strengths and review of our strengths and weaknesses based on relevant information from
to our departments, teams, weaknesses based on relevant weaknesses based on relevant our customers, competitors and on potential and
and employees. information from our customers, information from our customers, emerging markets. All our departments, teams,
competitors and on potential and competitors and on potential and and employees have missions, plans and
emerging markets. Most of our emerging markets. All of our performance targets aligned to our key strategies.
departments, teams, and employees departments, teams, and employees Our strategic planning approach is regularly
have missions, plans and have missions, plans and performance reviewed for effectiveness.
performance targets that are aligned targets aligned to our key strategies.
to our key strategies.
3 Customer We do not clearly define who We have segmented our customers We have segmented our customers We have segmented our customers and identified
Focus our customers are (from which and have a basic understanding of and identified their specific needs their specific needs (based on thorough research)
market segments) or clearly their specific needs (based on (based on thorough research) for most for all of our products and services. We seek,
identify their needs. We do not anecdotal information) for some our of our products and services. We seek, monitor and record customer complaints and take
have a system for monitoring products and services. We have a monitor and record customer fast appropriate action to correct problems. We
and recording customer basic customer complaint system in complaints and take appropriate ensure that the same problems do not occur again
complaints – we deal with place but do not proactively action to correct the problems but do and we check the customer is satisfied with the
them as they happen. encourage or record all complaints. not check if the customer is satisfied resolution process. Our customer focus approach
with the resolution process. is regularly reviewed for effectiveness.
4 Measurement, We do not track daily We track daily operations and overall We track daily operations and overall We track daily operations and overall
Analysis, and operations and overall organisational performance using a organisational performance using organisational performance using a full range of
Knowledge organisational performance partial set of accurate and relevant generally accurate and relevant information (financial, customer satisfaction,
Management using adequate information. information addressing some of our information addressing most of our employee satisfaction, environmental, suppliers,
There is no formal effort or needs. We do have some systems and needs. We have clear systems and and key processes). We have clear systems and
approach to identify and share methods in place to identify, share methods in place to identify, share and methods in place to identify, share and implement
best practices throughout our and implement best practices but the implement best practices but the best practices throughout our organisation using a
38
organisation. effort is sporadic and ad-hoc. effectiveness of our approach is not variety of means – team meetings, benchmarking
monitored. studies, best practice database – and deployment
is monitored. Our measurement, analysis, and
knowledge management approach is regularly
reviewed for effectiveness.
5 Workforce Little thought has been given Some of our work systems and jobs Most of our work systems and jobs are Our work systems and jobs throughout our
Focus to how our work systems and are designed to encourage individual designed to encourage individual organisation are designed to encourage individual
jobs are designed to initiative, innovation, rapid response, initiative, innovation, rapid response, initiative, innovation, rapid response, co-operation
encourage individual initiative, co-operation and effective co-operation and effective and effective communication. All of our
innovation, rapid response, co- communication. Some of our communication. Most of our employees training and education needs are
operation and effective employees training and education employees training and education regularly assessed and acted upon in order to
communication. We do not needs are assessed and acted upon needs are assessed and acted upon in develop their knowledge, skills and capabilities to
formally assess our employees but the system is not strongly aligned order to develop their knowledge, meet the current and future needs of our
training and education needs. to our strategy and the future needs skills and capabilities to meet the organisation. Our workforce focus approach is
of our organisation. current and future needs of our regularly reviewed for effectiveness.
organisation.
6 Operations We have not mapped out our We understand how most of our key We understand how most of our key We fully understand how all our key design and
Focus key design and production/ design and production/ delivery design and production/delivery production/delivery processes operate and how
delivery processes and processes operate and for some we processes operate and for most we they all interact (through process flow charts,
developed clear procedures have developed clear procedures and have developed clear procedures and procedures and systems). We continuously review
and systems for their systems for their operation. We systems for their operation. We and improve all our processes to improve internal
operation. We do not continuously review and improve continuously review and improve most and external customer satisfaction (both of which
continuously review and some of our processes – our of our processes and measure internal are regularly measured). Our operations focus
improve our processes. measurement of internal and external and external customer satisfaction. approach is regularly reviewed for effectiveness.
customer satisfaction is ad-hoc.
7 Results We have some financial results We have business results covering We have business results covering We have business results covering all stakeholder
but few, if any, other most stakeholder areas (customer most stakeholder areas (customer areas (customer focus, product and service
stakeholder results (relating to focus, product and service focus, product and service performance, market results, human resource
customer focus, product and performance, market results, human performance, market results, human focus, organizational effectiveness, governance
service performance, market resource focus, organizational resource focus, organizational and social responsibility) and for most of these our
results, human resource focus, effectiveness, governance and social effectiveness, governance and social performance is improving over time, and we are
organizational effectiveness, responsibility) and for most of these responsibility) and for most of these performing better than most of our competitors
governance and social our performance is improving over our performance is improving over and other organizations we benchmark against.
responsibility). time. time, and we have above average
performance for most metrics in
comparison to our competitors and
other organizations..
Figure 18: BE maturity grid for the Baldrige CPE
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Step 3: Identify area for improvement and set improvement goal(s)
Areas for improvement can be broken down further into the category items as shown
by Figure 20 or even to a more detailed level. Such charts are useful for visually showing
the largest opportunities for improvement.
40
Figure 20: Examples of potential main areas for improvement
The following are some tips on how to identify your areas for improvement and address
them:
• Consider all possible areas for improvement and priorities, and decide on the
specific improvement areas that are important to focus on.
• Identify stakeholders (e.g. employees, customers, suppliers) that are affected
by the improvement area. Get buy-in and involvement from them.
• Identify inputs, processes and outputs involved in the area of improvement
(use flow-charts so that everyone has the same understanding of how the
process operates).
• Measure performance, diagnose and analyze the situation. Identify possible
root causes of the situation.
• Consider what actions and resources are required to improve performance
and consider what the expected future performance would be if changes are
made.
• Get buy-in, resources, and support from top management to implement
actions.
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Step 4: Develop an action plan
An action plan needs to be developed with the support of key stakeholders and process
owners. The action planning process should be integrated into your strategic planning
process to ensure that the actions can be resourced and implemented. Otherwise,
resources may have already been committed to other projects if the strategic planning
process is separate to the action planning process.
In some cases you may decide to introduce a new initiative to address one or more of
the opportunities for improvement. Examples of such initiatives were shown in Figure 4
and 5. The following are a list of things that should be considered when deciding on
implementing a new improvement tool or initiative such as six sigma, balanced
scorecard, or benchmarking:
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Step 6: Monitor progress and evaluate performance
Action plan review meetings should be held regularly with those responsible for action
plan implementation. At these meetings progress against the action plan can be
assessed and the results achieved reviewed. If category leaders have been assigned it
will be these individuals that attend this meeting.
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7. FURTHER INFORMATION
For further assistance on implementing BE, you should contact your local national
custodian for Quality, Productivity and/or BE. For more information on your local
National Productivity Organization (NPO), including contact address, please link to:
http://www.apo-tokyo.org/04npo_list.htm
The prime links for you to obtain information about BE are as follows:
• Business Performance Improvement Resource (http://www.apo.bpir.com)
• Baldrige Performance Excellence Program (http://www.nist.gov/baldrige/)
• European Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM)
(http://www.efqm.org/en/)
• Singapore Quality Award (SQA) (http://spring.gov.sg/BE)
For further information on the Asian Productivity Organizations (APO), link to:
http://www.apo-tokyo.org
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8. ABOUT THE MAIN CONTRIBUTORS
Dr. Robin Mann is Founder and Head of the Centre for Organizational Excellence
Research (COER), www.coer.org.nz, Massey University, New Zealand; Commercial
Director and Founder of BPIR.com - a leading internet resource for sharing best practice
and benchmarking information; Chairman of the Global Benchmarking Network; and
Advisory Board member at the Hamden Bin Mohammed e-University in Dubai. Robin
has served as Chief Expert on Business Excellence for a number of Asian Productivity
Organization projects.
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