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Magnitude of Change

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Title: Magnitude of Change


1
Magnitude of Change
  • Yet another independent variable?

2
Yet another independent variable?
  • In describing the SD landscape, we have relied to
    date on five distinct independent variables
  • (1) Clarity of the goal, Wysocki
  • (2) Clarity of the solution, Wysocki
  • (3) Criticality (what will be lost if we fail?),
    Cockburn
  • (4) Size (number of people involved), Cockburn,
    Berg
  • (5) Urgency (you need it when?), Berg
  • We say these dimensions are independent variables
    in the sense that they point towards the type of
    SD methodology that is most appropriate.
  • In this sense, methodology type is the dependent
    variable.
  • Magnitude of Change (the degree of changed
    involved in implementing the new system), is
    perhaps yet another independent variable
  • What follows is based on the work of Alan Dennis.

3
Business Analysis Process
  • Understand the As-Is business process
  • Identify opportunities for improvement
  • Define the To-Be business process

If the magnitude of change is small (the to-be is
not much different than the as-is), then more
time is spent on step 1 and less on steps 2 and
3. If the magnitude of change is large (the to-be
is radically different from the as-is), then more
time is spent on step 3 than on step 1.
4
Three Magnitudes of Change
  • Business Process Automation BPA
  • Very little change to the business process
    typical of automating a paper-based system
  • The bulk of the BPA projects were done by IBM in
    the 1950s
  • These days these are used to teach undergraduates
    the SDLC
  • Business Process Improvement BPI
  • Incremental change to the business process take
    the time to streamline things a little bit at a
    time making sure youre not disrupting things
    beyond control
  • Tom Davenport
  • Business Process Reengineering BPR
  • Throw the old one away! Start from scratch.
  • Michael Hammer

5
BPA
  • Focus is on taking advantage of computer
    technologies to gain efficiencies, while leaving
    unchanged the basic manner in which the
    organization operates
  • Projects in this category perform all three steps
    in the business analysis process, with an
    emphasis on step 1, understanding the as-is
    system, so as not to disrupt the business process
  • Common tools
  • Problem Analysis
  • Root Cause Analysis

6
BPA
  • Problem Analysis
  • Ask users to tell you what the problems are and
    to make recommendations
  • For example, provide more space for such and
    such field, or generate a new type of report,
    or put this and that on the same screen so we
    can see it
  • Increased efficiency and ease of use
  • Root Cause Analysis
  • Focus on problems, not solutions list them then
    rank them
  • Starting at the top, with the most important
    problem on the list, generate possible
    root-causes to this problem
  • Investigate each possible root-cause starting by
    the most likely one or by the easiest one to
    check, until the true root cause is identified
  • A decision tree or a fish-bone is often used to
    map the analysis
  • Challenge the obvious

7
BPI
  • Target moderate changes to the organizations
    operations to take advantage of new opportunities
    offered by technology and/or to copy what
    competitors are doing
  • Can improve efficiency (doing things right) and
    effectiveness (doing the right things)
  • Spend some time on business analysis step 1
    (understanding the as-is), but not as much as you
    would if this were a BPA project . . . not
    looking to faithfully replicate the as-is, merely
    to improve it
  • Common Tools
  • Duration Analysis
  • Activity-Based Costing
  • Informal Benchmarking

8
BPI Duration Analysis
  • Detailed examination of the time it takes to
    perform each process and its sub-processes.
  • First, compute the time it takes to do a basic
    process
  • Second, compute the time it takes to do each of
    the sub-processes that make up the basic process
    under review
  • Third, compare the sum of sub-processes times to
    that of the basic process.
  • If the sum is less, then there are inefficiencies
  • If the difference is significant, its time for
    an overhaul of the basic process
  • The problem is coordination
  • Process integration get less people involved
  • Increased efficiency and effectiveness
  • Process parallelization dont make people
    dependent on each other
  • Increased efficiency

9
BPI
  • Activity-Based Costing
  • Similar to Duration Analysis, but focused on
    costs rather than time
  • Identify the most costly processes and find ways
    to reduce these costs
  • Informal Benchmarking
  • Study the competition, especially the industry
    leaders
  • Visit them informally as if you were a customer
  • Good for customer-facing processes

10
BPR
  • Obliterating the current way of doing business
    and making major changes to take advantage of new
    ideas and new technologies
  • Spend very little time on business analysis step
    1 (understanding the as-is) . . . goal is to
    focus on new ideas and new ways of doing
    business
  • Common Tools
  • Outcome Analysis
  • Technology Analysis
  • Activity Elimination

11
BPR
  • Outcome Analysis
  • Focus on the fundamental outcomes that provide
    value to the customer
  • Look at the big picture
  • See the business process from the customers
    perspective
  • Technology Analysis
  • Focus on the way in which technology is changing
    the way we do business
  • List potential technologies
  • List ways to use each technology listed
  • Activity Elimination
  • Question everything, every single activity in a
    given business process gets reviewed
  • Focus on one activity at a time and ask for ways
    of doing away with it entirely

12
Project Characteristics
BPA
BPI
BPR
Potential business value
low-moderate
moderate
high
Cost
low-moderate
high
low
Breadth of analysis
narrow
narrow-moderate
very broad
low
low-moderate
very high
Risk
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