Category: business process management
Videos/new BPM apps/presentation downloads/conference updates

My travels this last few weeks have included USA, UK, UAE and now India. The team are also hot footing around South Africa, Australia, Kuala Lumpur, Europe and the US through this month.
Not only has it been the significant contrast in weather (snow/cold > sunny/hot) it is the somewhat different approaches being adopted towards Outside In. This week sees me at the India Leadership event hosted by NASSCOM. I will be meeting with the press and continuing to learn about what is making India so successful. My talk will be accessible later, if you want a copy let me know, http://bit.ly/IndiaLeadershipForum
On the subject of talks and videos have you reviewed the latest videos of the key tools and techniques? Here they are (and they are available to download and distribute!)
Business Process Management – what is it? http://youtu.be/NO54KXxTp9I
Moments of Truth – what are they? http://youtu.be/OT_2cqMtrUw
Breakpoints and Business Rules? http://youtu.be/_8KSN_McWIg
Successful Customer Outcomes (SCO’s) http://youtu.be/u4keI_kmdxM
Voice of Customer? http://youtu.be/bTbHrxi1Vq4
There are links to resources, videos. events, reviews and much more. It is only version 1 so let us know your thoughts and how we can make it better for the community.
Apple version: http://bit.ly/12EFNCC
Android version: http://bit.ly/X0X4iw
Recent presentations..
Access my recent keynote for some pertinent insights (or Outside In depending on your view point)
http://bit.ly/OutsideInSteveTowers
The associated slide show is embedded however you can download that from here.
http://www.slideshare.net/stowers/steve-towers-nasscom-bpo-summit-2012-opening-keynote
Topical articles –
Brad Power – Working successfully with physical fragmented teams http://lnkd.in/nAwERk
Chris Taylor – Business process failure goes viral http://lnkd.in/iuG4UG
Dr. Mohan K. – Rethinking the function of Business functions http://lnkd.in/fU3UmB
Reint Jan Holterman – 5 steps on the Path to Success with BPM http://lnkd.in/pp4ZWV
* And lastly for now have you reviewed the all new classes? new case studies and coaching from been there and done it experienced mentors*.
http://www.bpgroup.org/certification-by-city.html
Considering training in Enterprise BPM/Outside In?If someone in your organization is considering certification do ask these questions of anyone offering the training:
1. Where have you done this?
2. What credentials can you claim in the community?
3. Who trained you originally in Outside In?
4. When did you start and who have you helped?
5. What references can you provide, at a CEO level for the successes you have achieved?
6. Are any of your people published, and if so what and when?
7. What is the size of your network?
8. Are your trainings and courses accredited, and if so by whom?
9. Are you helping to develop the community? If so how?
Ciao Steve
On banks, customer onboarding and Outside In

Process Excellence in Africa – keynote presentation
Highly recommended for any conference the next in the global series Europe with London in April. You can review that event here: http://bit.ly/PEXLondon2012
The following is Steve Towers presentation which examines how some organisations seem to defy the recession and achieve ongoing success for their customers, employees and shareholders.
It looks like magic until you know the trick!
BPMC Research Newsletter 12/2011 – from Finland and Janne Ohtonen
The Magic of Outside-In – evolving business for 21c.
Outside-In is a business imperative
- Competition is fierce and global.
- Customers have become rebellious.
- Customers are promiscuous
- Customers have expectations like never before.
- Customers demand choice, comprehensive information and the best price.
- Customer know more about your service and product than you do (the prosumer)
This is simply a collective delusion and is the root cause of why so many are failing the customer, the shareholder and their hardworking employees.
This thinking stems from a time when the world turned more slowly and is more appropriate to the 1950âs then this centuries new business reality. To orientate to long term business and customer success we need to look at the enterprise from the Outside-In (OI) rather than inside-out. It is now about understanding customer needs (not wants) and eradicating all the things that do not contribute to achieving Successful Customer Outcomes (SCOâs).

Enterprise BPM & Outside-In Resources – videos, presentations and upcoming conferences
HARVARD PERSPECTIVE:
https://businessprocess.box.net/shared/zqb1z083ubWHARTON PERSPECTIVE:
https://businessprocess.box.net/shared/tshqkxkdqeFOLLOWING BLOG/ARTICLES:
http://www.successfulcustomeroutcomes.net/MANAGEMENT GURUâS:
http://linkd.in/ManagementGurusTHE STATE OF THE BPM INDUSTRY
http://bit.ly/BPM_StateoftheIndustrySTEVE TOWERS PRESENTATIONS:
http://www.slideshare.net/stowers/IQPC BUSINESS EXCELLENCE SUMMIT
Delhi, India, September 22-23: http://bit.ly/IndiaBPM
IQPC BPM LEADERS MEETING
Amsterdam â October 20-21: http://bit.ly/rhqLHP
Leaders Blog http://bit.ly/p6AIuI
IT WEB ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Johannesburg â October 12-13: http://bit.ly/SouthAfricaBPM
STRATEGY DRIVEN PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT
London â December 5-8: http://bit.ly/StrategicTransformation
BPGROUP CONFERENCE IN ASSOCIATION WITH IQPC â PEX 2012
Lake Buena Vista, Florida – Jan 16-19: http://bit.ly/PEX2012
Links to Enterprise BPM and Process Transformation resources
If you have an additional link do let us know.
1 | BP Group website | http://www.bpgroup.org |
2 | BP Group on Linkedin | http://bit.ly/joinbpgroup |
3 | Coaching in Customer Expectation Management & BPM | http://www.bpmbox.com |
4 | Certified Process Professional web | http://www.certifiedprocessprofessional.com |
5 | Enterprise BPM Outside-In blog | http://www.successfulcustomeroutcomes.net/ |
6 | BPGroup blog | http://bpcommunity.blogspot.com/ |
7 | BP Group slideshows | http://www.slideshare.net/stowers/ |
8 | http://twitter.com/#!/stowers | |
9 | Videos on the theme of Enterprise BPM & Outside-In | http://bit.ly/SteveTowersYoutube |
10 | Resources and people involved in BPM & Outside-In | http://www.oibpm.com |
11 | BPM & Outside-In consultancy website | http://www.towersassociates.com |
12 | Outside-In. The Secret of the 21st century successful companies | http://bit.ly/OutsideInApple |
Part 2 of 4: There are four distinctly Outside-In ways that you can rethink process and in doing so achieve Triple Crown benefits.
Identify and aligning to Successful Customer Outcomes
âBusinesses can be very sloppy about deciding which customers to seek out and acquireâ Frederick F. Reichheld
The six questions we ask ourselves in this iterative process are:
I. Who is the customer?
At first glance should be an easy answer however it is not as obvious as it seems. The ultimate customer for any profit making enterprise is the person, or company who provides the revenue by purchasing the products or services we produce. It is a matter of fact that in our inside-out legacy world we have created multiple customer-supplier relationships which include internal âserviceâ providers such as Information Services, Human Resources and so on. In mature Outside-In organisations the internal customer ceases to exist as we progressively partner to align to Successful Customer Outcomes and artefacts such as Service Level Agreements become a thing of the past.
II. What is the Customers current expectation?
The 2006 book âCustomer Expectation Management â Schurter/Towers reviewed in detail the of creating and managing customer expectations and how through clear articulation companies such as Virgin Mobile in the US redefine their market place. In the context of the SCO map we need to understand the customers (as identified in the answer to question 1) current expectation. This often reveals both a challenge and opportunity. Customers will tell it as it is, for instance in an insurance claim process âI expect it is going to take weeks, with lots of paperwork and many phone callsâ. That should tell you the current service is most likely poor and fraught with problems, delays and expensive to manage however this presents the opportunity. If that is a market condition (all insurance claims are like this) then moving to a new service proposition will be a potential competitive differentiator.
III. What process does the customer think they are involved with?
In the inside-out world we see process in a functional context. Therefore insurance claims are dealt with by an insurance claims department. Customer Retention is the baby of you guessed it, the Customer retention department and marketing is done by the marketing people. This split of responsibility is a legacy of functional specialisation created by relating to business as a production line. Adam Smith wrote in âThe Wealth of Nationsâ (1776) of an English pin factory. He described the production of a pin in the following way: âOne man draws out the wire, another straightens it, a third cuts it, a fourth points it, a fifth grinds it at the top for receiving the head: to make the head requires two or three distinct operations: to put it on is a particular business, to whiten the pins is another … and the important business of making a pin is, in this manner, divided into about eighteen distinct operations, which in some manufactories are all performed by distinct hands, though in others the same man will sometime perform two or three of themâ. The result of labor division in Smithâs example resulted in productivity increasing by 240 fold. i.e. that the same number of workers made 240 times as many pins as they had been producing before the introduction of labor division. The insights form Smith underpinned the industrial revolution however using this principle to organise ourselves in the 21st century is to a very large part the wrong approach. That is precisely what the answer to the question will tell us â âsorry sir you are talking to the wrong department, let me transfer youâ. Or even getting stuck in automated response system hell âpress 1 for this, 2 for that, 3 for the other and 4 if you have missed the first three options.â These are features of the labor division mindset. Ask a customer what process they think they are and you will frequently be surprised by the answer.
IV. What do we do that Impacts customer success?
Often we ask customers to do numerous many activities which appear sensible to receive service or indeed buy products. Relating back to the insurance claim we can see rules and procedure around how to make claims, the correct way to complete forms, the process of collating the information, the timeframes within which to claim, the way we can reimburse you and more. Often times these restrictions that we impose made sense at some time in the past however they may no longer be relevant.
The situation is compounded by the way internal functional specialism focus on project objectives. Richard Prebble, a respected New Zealand politician writes in his 1996 book âIâve been thinkingâ of the inability of organisations to think clearly of the amount of work they create and in fact âthey spend a million to save a thousand every timeâ.
His story of the challenge within large organisations is typical “The Post Office told me they were having terrible problems tracking telephone lines … They found an excellent program in Sweden which the Swedes were prepared to sell them for $2m …. So the managers decided to budget $1m for translating into English and another $1m for contingencies. But, as the general manager explained, it had turned out to be more expensive than the contingency budget allowed and they needed another $7m. “How much”, I asked, “have you spent on it so far?” “Thirty-seven million dollars” was the reply. “Why don’t we cancel the programme?” I asked “How can we cancel a programme that has cost $37m?” they asked “Do you believe the programme will ever work?” I asked “No, not properly” “Then write me a letter recommending its cancellation and I will sign it” The relief was visible. I signed the letter, but I knew I needed new managers.”
This type of inside-out thinking causes companies to create apparently sensible checks and controls within processes that actually manifest as customer inconvenience, cost and delay. Are you making the customers lives easier, simpler and more successful?
V. The Successful Customer Outcome â what does the customer really need from us?
At this point we should have enough information to objectively create several statements that articulate the SCO. These statements should be specific, measureable, attainable, relevant and time-bound (SMART). Usually there will 6-10 such statements which become the actual key performance measures as move the process Outside-In. For example a North American business school completed the SCO map and created these statements from the customer perspective for an âEducation loan applicationâ process:
a. I need to receive my financial assistance
b. I need to receive aid before the semester starts
c. I need to attend the classes I have chosen
d. I do not want to call to chase progress
e. I need to receive the correct amount
f. I do not want to have to fix your mistakes
There is no ambiguity here and we avoid a common mistake of using management weasel words such as âefficient, effective, timelyâ which may mean things internally but to a customer are of little help. Creating SCO statements that may be used as measures for process success is a key aid on the journey to Outside-In.
VI. And now we reach the core of the onion. What is the one line statement that best articulates our Successful Customer Outcome? This one-liner embodies the very nature of the process and sometimes the business we are in. In âThrive- how to succeed in the Age of the Customerâ McGregor/Towers (2005), Easyjet (Europeâs second largest airline) is used as an example in this quest. Their simple âBums on Seatsâ SCO sentence works both from a company perspective (we must maximise utilisation, offer inexpensive seats, get people comfortably and safely to their destinations) and the customers needs âI need a cheap safe seat to get me to the sunshine quickly without a fussâ.
The company one liner will become part of a series which are measureable through the SCO statements and can be tested and revised depending on evolving customer expectations and needs. It may in fact ultimately replace the inside-out strategic process and provide the organisation with its Raison d’ĂȘtre.
Of course when we start the journey it is often sufficient to create SCO maps to help grow understanding and even if the actual SCO Map is subsequently replaced (as we take a broader view) the improvement in understanding around the customer is invaluable.
In the third part of this four part series we will review “Reframe where the process starts and ends”
Join us on LinkedIn www.linkedin.com/groups?mostPopular=&gid=1062077
Visit additional resources www.oibpm.com
Become a Certified Process Professional www.certifiedprocessprofessional.com
Part 3 of 4: There are four distinctly Outside-In ways that you can rethink process and in doing so achieve Triple Crown benefits.
In the first two articles in this four part theme we reviewed ‘Understand and applying Process diagnostics‘ and the ‘Successful Customer Outcome‘ map. We now move our attention to the third way we can rethink process forever
Reframing process for an Outside-In world
A fundamental principle of Outside-In is the understanding of where your process starts and ends.
In the 20th century many techniques and approaches developed to better understand and create processes. In its earliest form pioneering work undertaken by the United States Airforce created modelling approaches based on the Structured Analysis and Design Technique (SADT) that produced iDEF (Integrate DEFinition Methods). iDEF became recognised as a global standard as a method designed to model the decisions, actions, and activities of an organization or system[1]. iDEF as a method has now reached iDEF14 [i] and embraces a wide range of process based modelling ideas. Concurrent with the development of iDEF technology providers created proprietary modelling approaches, and subsequently developed into modelling language standards, used by many organisations to represent their systems and ways of working. The convergence of business process modelling and business process management (BPM) has now produced a rich set of tools and techniques
able to model and ideally manage an organisation. In fact one of the more accepted definitions of BPM (based on the British Journal of Management[ii]): “Business process management (BPM) is a management approach focused on aligning all aspects of an organisation with the wants and needs of clients. It is a holistic management approach”
Until a few years ago process management approaches looked within the boundaries of the organisation and the combination of modelling and management approaches were adequate to understand the enterprise. The impact of process management in improving organisation performance has been profound however we now face a different reality driven by the customer.
As a consequence both disciplines now present a series of problems that include
(a) understanding the beginning and end of the process,
(b) the techniques used to model process are inadequate and focused on the wrong things
Strangely customer involvement in a process often appears as an afterthought and the actual representation systems (left to right, top to bottom) create an illusion that fosters the belief that âthe customer isnât my jobâ.
Letâs deal with each in turn by example:
a. The beginning and end of process
To aid the discussion letâs look at two airlines, British Airways and Southwest, and weâll review how they âthinkâ about their business through the eyes of process. If you sit down with British Airways executives and asked the question âwhere does your process start and end?â the response reflects the main source of revenue, seat sales.
So the answer âthe process is from the ticket purchase to the collecting the bags off the carouselâ is no great surprise. In fact that is the way we have mostly thought about process in that it starts when it crosses into organisation, and finishes when it leaves. We can easily model that, identify efficiency improvements, improve throughput and optimise apparent value add.
As far as British Airways is concerned what you do outside of that process is no concern of theirs, after all they are an airline and thatâs what they do. Now letâs change our perspective and visit Love Field in Texas and meet the executive team of Southwest. Ask the guys the same question âwhere does your process start and end?â and the answer is a whole different viewpoint.
The process begins when the potential customer thinks of the need for a flight, and only ends when they are back at home following the journey. The scope of this process is defined by the phrase âthe customer experience is the processâ. Thatâs an Outside-In perspective and creates opportunities across the whole customer experience.
More than that it raises the prospect of additional revenue streams, spreads the risk associated with a dependency on seat sales, reinforces the customer relationship and develops an entirely different way of doing business. So letâs ask another question of our friends at Southwest âguys, what business are you in?â, and the answer changes everything you ever thought about airlines forever âweâre in the business of moving peopleâ.
Downstream Southwest may well turn the industry further on its head as they move from being the low cost airline to the âno cost airlineâ and give their seats free of charge. What would that do to your business model if 95% of your revenues, as with British Airways, comes from seat sales?
The business challenge for Southwest becomes one of controlling the process to benefit and maximise the customer experience. That involves partnering, sharing information and doing all necessary to make customers lives easier, simpler and more successful.
Now how do you model that?
b. The techniques used to model process are inadequate and focused on the wrong things
We have reviewed the ultimate cause of work for all organisations is the customer. Organisations exist to serve the customer though the provision of products and services and in this way develops revenue that goes to the profit and onward distribution to the stockholders.
In other organisations without the profit motivation, for instance the public sector, then the effective delivery of services is measured by citizens and stakeholders. Accordingly it stands to reason that everything happening within the organisation should be organised and aligned to deliver customer success and anything that isnât is potentially âdumb stuffâ. The techniques we use to âcaptureâ process are however not suitable to understanding the causes of work and focus attention instead on the visible tasks and activities that are perceived to create value for customers. In the context of the enlightened customer[iii] this is at best misleading and at its worst actually part of the broader problem. In Outside-In companies the focus has shifted to understanding the causes of work, and then engineering those causes to minimize negative effects.
Once more to go Outside-In we need a perspective shift and we can achieve this by identifying those three causes of work and then set out to reveal them and their negative impact.
How big is the size of the prize? Efficiency and productivity gains of 30% to 60% are common. Cost reduction of services by 50% is not unusual.
Cause elimination is a seek and destroy mission. Itâs the challenge to weed out the âdumb stuffâ in our organizations.
By truly fixing the Causes of Work, rather than messing around with the Effects (a bit like moving the chairs on the deck of the Titanic) we will all find our customers and employees life simpler, easier and more successful. Are you ready to challenge your assumptions and start eliminating those causes of work? Fix the Cause, remove the effect.
[1] http://www.idef.com/IDEF0.htm
[i] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IDEF
[ii] Understanding Business Process Management: implications for theory and practice, British Journal of Management (2008) (Smart, P.A, Maddern, H. & Maull, R. S.)
Join us on LinkedIn www.linkedin.com/groups?mostPopular=&gid=1062077
Visit additional resources www.oibpm.com
Become a Certified Process Professional www.certifiedprocessprofessional.com