Title: CHAPTER TEN
1CHAPTER TEN
BUSINESS MODEL ANALYSIS
2 CHAPTER TEN
introduction
Business model analysis is the work of
analyzing existing business models to learn more
about the business. Business model analysis is
about reaping value from models, using the models
to discover new insights.
3 CHAPTER TEN
introduction
a customer at our restaurant claimed he became
sick after eating at the restaurant. The
restaurant settled the suit for 3.4 million.
4 CHAPTER TEN
introduction
The restaurant attorneys want to reduce the
risk of being sued the business processes and
business rules are already modeled for other
purposes The models are useful for determining
what to do about the risk of lawsuits.
5 CHAPTER TEN
introduction
They consider the menu creation process and
introduce a new activity into the process to
review new menu items for legal risk. They
examine the new server hiring process and decide
to add some new training for servers, so the
servers can explain food preparation to customers.
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introduction
Much can be learned about a business by
analyzing its business models. There are several
different techniques for business model
analysistechniques appropriate for different
business situations. This chapter explains how
to analyze a business model.
7 CHAPTER TEN
introduction
In chapter 7 we were concerned with improving
the model The business model analysis described
in this chapter is analysis with the purpose of
improving the business being modeled
8 CHAPTER TEN
analysis techniques
There are four different analysis techniques,
several to wring insight from an existing
business model. All four techniques are about
business change
9 CHAPTER TEN
introduction
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analysis techniques
The table is not intended to be exhaustive.
There are other model analysis techniques not
listed and not described in this
chapter. Simulation is one way to realize the
model analysis techniques.
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improvement analysis
No business is perfect there are always
opportunities to make business processes faster,
to improve the accuracy of decisions, or to
change the organization structure in ways
that improve customer satisfaction.
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improvement analysis
Even when a business is well designed for a
particular environment, it never stays that way.
The business environment continually changes. A
business that fit the environment yesterday will
fail to fit today. Business improvement is a
never-ending task.
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improvement analysis
Improvement analysis is not about improving the
model
14 CHAPTER TEN
improvement analysis
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improvement analysis
Can some of the handoffs be eliminated? Why are
all the activities performed? Are they all truly
necessary? These questions can be answered by
analyzing the motivation behind each activity.
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improvement analysis
The restaurant has some financial objectives and
tactics to achieve those objectives. One such
tactic is avoiding unnecessary investments Many
of the activities and gateways in the business
process are performed solely to realize this
tactic
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improvement analysis
18 CHAPTER TEN
Business process simplification
Business process simplification is performed
for a business reason, either to reduce the cost
of the business process, improve the quality,
reduce the end-to-end cycle time, or for some
other reason. Model simplification is an
important objective but different from our focus
now business process simplification.
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Business process simplification
Model simplification is an important objective
but different from our focus now business
process simplification. Chapter 7s focus was
about creating a better model. Our focus now is
creating a better business.
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Business process simplification
Often a business process will have some
activities and gateways that are not justified by
any courses of action. The process includes
activities that are performed for no apparent
reason, no reason beyond tradition we have
always done it this way.
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Business process simplification
We see no vestigial activities or gateways in
the procurement process. Every gateway realizes
some course of action so does every activity.
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Business process simplification
There are five activities and two gateways in
the procurement process to achieve the tactic of
avoiding unnecessary investments. Of the 13
model elements in the end-to-end process, more
than half are there solely for that purpose.
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Business process simplification
The restaurant general manager decides himself
whether the equipment is needed. Once he decides
to purchase, the procurement specialist
determines whether there are cheaper alternatives
and then purchases the equipment.
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Business process simplification
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Business process simplification
- Instead of being realized by six activities and
two gateways, the same tactics could be realized
by a single gateway
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Business process simplification
27 CHAPTER TEN
Course of action valuation
- A course of action is a set of tactics that the
business will maintain while performing the
business process. It is a strategy - Some strategies might sound good in theory but in
practice are not worth the effort of the business
process activities that implement them.
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Course of action valuation
- With the model, we know what courses of action
are realized by which activities and gateways. - We could then determine the value of maintaining
or improving the strategy
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Course of action valuation
- We can measure the cost of a course of action by
summing the costs of all the activities and
gateways that realize that cost. - Then the total cost of efforts toward the course
of action can be weighed against the benefits. - This improvement approach is called
- course of action valuation.
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Course of action valuation
- Is the tactic Find Cheaper Alternative useful?
- On every procurement we save 100-200
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Course of action valuation
- Yet, the activity Research Equipment Alternatives
consumes 3.2 hours of work. - the total amount of time for the business
process could be calculated through simulation
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Course of action valuation
- The simulation reveals that the simplified model
takes 2.7 days more than the original process - WHY?
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Course of action valuation
- Because if the owner of the task is engaged in
many business process then the current activity
will wait in queue. - The more activities the higher the waiting and
the higher the delay for the process
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Course of action valuation
- Does the value of pursuing this course of action
really justify the cost and time to pursue it? - The restaurant might be better served by letting
the restaurant general manager make the purchase
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Course of action valuation
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Course of action valuation
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Course of action valuation
- But there are some costs of making the change
- the costs of training the general managers
- the cost of changing the application that
supports todays process
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Course of action valuation
- And there are risks as well
39 CHAPTER TEN
Impact Analysis
- The attempt to understand the impacts of a
proposed change before acting on the change is
called impact analysis. - Impact analysis is looking before leaping.
- What unintended consequences will result?
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Impact Analysis
- When a single change is made to a business, many
consequences can occur. - A new governmental regulation, seemingly simple,
can lead to three new policies, a new
organization to monitor compliance, and 13
changes to business processes.
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Impact Analysis
- A small business process improvement can lead to
one organization being underutilized and another
far too busy.
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Impact Analysis
- a change could be initiated by the organization
or by the environment
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Impact Analysis
- When an organization initiate a change
- a change could have unforeseen impacts
- avoiding making a bad change
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Impact Analysis
- When change is enforced
- The business must comply with a new regulation.
- Impact analysis allows the business to
understand the consequences before they happen,
and prepare for those consequences.
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Impact Analysis
- Businesses are complex, with many organizations,
rules, and processes that interrelate in hundreds
of ways. - Without models, even the most thoughtful and
thorough executives will miss some impacts.
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Impact Analysis
- Example
- Reducing risk of lawsuit
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Impact Analysis
- The analysis begins by considering the existing
- motivation model.
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Impact Analysis
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Impact Analysis
- Innovative menus are just too important.
- In this situation the cure is worse than the
disease.
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Impact Analysis
- Instead the task force adopts a new business
policy to govern this strategy. - Legally Safe Menus All menus must be reasonably
safe from lawsuits.
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Impact Analysis
- This policy is the basis for several business
rules that check aspects of legal safety. - For example, a new business rule is created to
ensure that all meat is sufficiently cooked.
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Impact Analysis
- Rule
- Meats Sufficiently Cooked It is obligatory that
each menu item is thoroughly cooked if the menu
item contains meat.
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How to perform impact analysis
- Impact analysis takes time.
- Consider the change and then examine model
elements one by one to see which are affected by
the change. - When a model element is affected by a change, the
impact can have one of several different results.
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How to perform impact analysis
- policy or business rule may be required as
illustrated by previous example
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How to perform impact analysis
- A business process activity might be eliminated
- or modified.
- For example, if pagers are to be installed, the
host still greets and seats customers but now
does so differently because a pager system is
used.