Designing for customer needs frequently leads to higher-quality goods and services in addition to innovative outcomes. This is because an effective design process uncovers hidden customer needs. This discovery, and the subsequent solving of the problems that kept customer needs hidden, will lead to innovation. In this presentation, Juran Global CEO Dr. Joseph A. DeFeo focuses on the 4 steps to drive process innovation that every organization needs to embrace.
3. Learning Objectives
1. Understand the four factors to means to systematically
create process innovations.
2. Understand how a systematic design method can
enhance innovation.
3. Assure process capability of key operational processes—
before delivery of new designs.
4. A process must be:
Effective: Meeting the CTQ product/service goals
Efficient: Cost, resource consumption, zero waste
Timely: Takt time, cycle times, lead times, response times
Goal oriented
Simple and systematic
Capable and repeatable
Are Your Processes Capable of Meeting CTQs?
5. What is a Business Process?
Supplier(s) Customer(s)
The Business Process
A process is a systematic series of actions
directed to the achievement of a goal.
8. Strategic positioning within
organization and new product design
Improvement project driven
Financial/Business targets (revenue,
profit, market share, etc.)
Unmet customer needs
Reduce complexity and cost
New technology
Why Innovate Processes?
9. “Process innovation is the implementation of a new
or significantly improved production, delivery or
business process method. This includes significant
changes in technology, techniques, methods,
equipment, software and talented people.”
What is Process Innovation?
10. Methods to Design Business Processes
Initiate
Business
Process
Management
Select
processes
Identify
owners and
teams
Process control
Periodic process
review and
assessment
RCCA
Process
definition
Customer
needs and
process flow
Process
measurement
Process
analysis
Process design
or redesign
Action plan for
implementation
Plan
deployment
Phase One
Planning
Phase Two
Transfer
Phase Three
Operational
Management
11. Quality by Design Method
1. Evaluate Current Process Capability
2. Determine to Design or Redesign
Processes
3. Develop high-level process features and
goals
4. Develop detailed process features and
goals
5. Optimize Processes
6. Develop Process Capability
7. Publish final process designDeliver
Results
Design
Product
Define
Opportunity
Discover
Customer Needs
Develop
Process
12. Process Design Begins with Product DesignCustomers
Effect
Needs
(CTQs)
Goals
ProcessControl
Features
Effect
Control
Features
Goals
Needs
(CTQs)
Effect
Product
Functions
Goals
Product
Functions
Effect
Product
Features
Goals
Product
Features
Effect
Process
Features
Goals
Prioritized
13. Develop Process and Process Control Features
Process
Features
Effect
Control
Features
Goals
Product
Functions
Effect
Product
Features
Goals
Product
Features
Effect
Process
Features
Goals
Develop innovative
process features
14. Quality by Design Steps
1. Evaluate Current Process Capability
2. Determine to Design or Redesign
Processes
3. Develop high-level process features and
goals
4. Develop detailed process features and
goals
5. Optimize Processes
6. Develop Process Capability
7. Publish final process designDeliver
Results
Design
Product
Define
Opportunity
Discover
Customer Needs
Develop
Process
15. Step 1: Collect Known Baselines
– Confirm all product features and goals
– Identify operating conditions
• Outside organization
• Within organization
• Physical and human
– History of effectiveness and efficiency of:
• Existing processes
• Existing sourced processes
• Similar processes
• Competitive or other production processes
• Benchmarked processes
• Customer experience
• Professional literature
• Simulation and estimation
– Add innovative ideas for new processes
16. Regulators
Payers
Media
Public
Processors
Distributors
Consumers
Users
External Customers
Step 1a: Define the Target Customers
Internal Customers
Shipping
Management
Accounting
Legal
Governance
Downstream
departments
Potential
Purchasing
Sales
Operations
Customers are a Cast
of Characters
17. Example: Relocation Service Customers
Steps in the Process Internal Customers
(Relocation Company)
External
Customers
Obvious
External Customers
Less Obvious
Agreement Sales force who negotiate service
contract
Client contract administration Senior Management client
company
Selection Relationship manager who services
client and client contact. Also resolves
differences that may arise either within
own organization or with client
Client contact person identifies
relocating transferee.
Also resolves differences that
may arise either within own
organization or with relocation
company
Intake Intake clerks who prepare "file" of
new transferee entering system
Transferee and his or her family
members
Transferee new manager
Relocation Service personnel, in branch locations,
who work with transferee until property
is sold or taken into inventory to be
marketed at a later date
Current manager of transferee Appraisers, title company, banks,
inspectors, real estate brokers,
government agencies, etc.
Individuals who close the file after
property has been sold to outside
buyer
Real estate attorneys: Buyer and
seller
Resale department which maintains
and sells inventoried properties
Gardeners, painters, home
repair contractors
Closing Ancillary departments (e.g.,
transportation and home finding) that
provide additional services to transferee
New manager of transferee Movers, real estate
agents, banks, school
systems
Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable Accounts Payable, Internal
departments which support the
transferee and interface with
him/her
Transferee tax preparer
18. Step 1b: Define the Boundaries
START
Boundary
STOP
Boundary
Process
What must
suppliers provide?
The final
product
or service
19. Examples of Processes and Boundaries
Process Name Starting Point Ending Point
Mortgage Origination Obtain the Application Finalize and Close
Training Development Define the Learning
Objectives
Complete Participant
Manual
Billing/Payment Send Product or Provide
Service
Receive Payment
Employee Hiring Approval to Hire New Employee Starts
New Facility Design Capital Budget Approved Send Design to Contractor
Product Design Receive Design
Requirements
Send Detailed Design to
Design Review Team
Deal Approval Requests Quote
(Customer)
Approved Deal
How might different boundaries on the process affect the project?
20. Step 1c: Set Performance Goals and Targets
– Goals for a design project are much more
complicated and extensive than for DMAIC
– They must still be SMART
Customer and Quality
– Satisfaction, Loyalty
– No defects
Financial
– Revenue
– Cost
– Margin
21. Step 2: Select General Process Design
– Identify general anatomy
• Single unit
• Assembly tree
• Procession
– Identify
• Vendors/Suppliers/Partners
• In-house sourcing
• Selection of alternative plants,
service centers, offices, etc.
– Draw high-level first and then detailed
process flows
• SIPOC
• Detailed Levels 1, 2, etc.
23. Step 3: Identify High-Level Features & Goals
– Include in your design all departments and all suppliers with any
inputs for the product/service
• Remember customer inputs
– Create a Value Stream Map of the desired state
• Forecast demand Takt time
• Maximize yield
• Identify constraints
– Balanced flow
• Minimize lead time
• Minimize inventories
• Minimize eight deadly wastes
– Maximize yield of the process by minimizing the defects produced
24. Process Maps to
define the steps
needed to achieve
the outcome
Step 3: Construct High-level Flow
Detailed
Process
Measures
PS I O C
Suppliers Inputs Process Outputs Customers or
Internal
Customer
CTQs CTQs
Measures
25. SIPOC Example
SIPOC - Customer Complaint Process
SUPPLIER
INPUT
(use nouns)
PROCESS
(use verbs)
OUTPUT
(use nouns)
CUSTOMER
Consumer
Complaints &
Returns
Customer Dissatisfier captured
(Customer Service Rep)
Documentation of
Disasatisfaction
Customer Service Center
Customer Service Center Information about Dissatisfaction
Dissatisfier acknowledged and
verified
(Customer Service Rep)
Acknowlegement
Communication
Consumer
Operations
Customer Service Center
Operations
Transaction History
Dissatisfier researched
(Operations)
Root Cause Analysis
Operations
Customer Service Center
Operations Root Cause Information
Determine resolution
(Operations)
Problem Remedy and Service
Recovery Actions
Customer Service Center
Operations
Problem Remedy and Service
Recovery Actions
Resolution communicated
(Customer Service)
Resolution Communication Consumer
Operations
Problem Remedy and Service
Recovery Actions
Effectuate resolution
(Operations)
Completed Remendy and
Service Recover Actions
Consumer
Operations
Customer Service Center
Dissatisfier Information
Root Cause Information
Dissatisfier tracking and learning
(Customer Retention)
Analysis of Customer
Dissatisfiers
Company Management
26. Concepts for High-Level Design
Optimum
Alternative
Functions
Process Concept
Capability
Analysis
Concept
#1
Concept
#2
Concept
#3
Generate &
Evaluate
Concept
#4
27. Step 4: Identify Detailed Features & Goals
– Facilities, equipment, staffing, training, maintenance
– Standard Operating Procedures
– Standard Work and Visual Factory, including 6S
– Optimize
• Set targets and spec limits for inputs
– Conduct tests:
• Individual steps
• Individual transactions
• Sub processes
• Full pilot/prototype run
– Create Process Spreadsheet with detailed features and goals
29. Process Design Spreadsheet
.
Loaddatabaseengine
Loaddatabasestructure
Burnindatabase
Runsetupquery
MoldTemperature
MoldSpeed
MoldPressure
Score* Detailed Product Features Weight
6.5 2.1 Meg query 0.305 9 9 1 9 28
4.1 Mega Hard database engine 0.193 9 9
3.0 500 Meg data storage 0.141 9 9 18
1.7 Carbon composite case 0.081 9 3 9 21
1.7 Auto web access option 0.078 0
1.4 0.3 mm pitch connectors 0.064 0
1.2 AHP Validation Rules 0.059 0
1.2 ICD10 & CPT coding 0.059 0
0.4 Quarterly code update 0.020 0
4.5 4.0 1.6 2.7 0.7 0.2 0.7
Unit of Measure MIPS Mbit MIPS Sec o
C rpm Bar
Target 14 537 14 0.11 180 120 90
USL 0.13 185 125 92
LSL 13.5 467 13.5 175 115 88
Maximum allowable defect rate (ppm) 4 4 4 1,000 5,000 5,000 5,000
* Raw score from Detailed Design analysis. Weight normalizes sum to 100.
Goal
Detailed Product Features to Process Features
What impact does each process feature
have on each detailed product feature? Total
Relationship
Total Ranking
30. Managing Development of Process Features
Approaches to consider:
Divide work by clusters of needs
Divide work by functions
Work as a team on each division
Assign sub-teams to each major division
Consult subject matter experts
Assure integration before proceeding
̶ Do the parts work well together?
̶ Does the net final result . . .
• Meet customer needs?
• Beat the competition?
• Meet business goals?
31. Step 5: Optimize Features & Goals
Effectiveness:
– DPU and FTY
– Tolerances
– COPQ
– Review and adapt:
• Criticality analysis
• FMEA
• Fault tree analysis
• Value analysis
Timeliness:
– Minimum lead time
– Optimal service levels
Efficiency:
– Optimal process load
– Optimal line balance
– Minimize change over
– Minimum inventories
– Minimum staffing
32. Design Considerations
Constraints include:
– Capital cost
– Available space
– Safety concerns
– Environmental impact and projected effluents and
emissions
– Waste production
– Operating and maintenance costs
Designs have objectives and constraints, and even a
simple process requires a trade-off among such factors
33. Step 6: Establish Process Capability
– Pause and complete Development of Controls before Design
Verification Test
– Complete Design Verification Test
34. Step 7: Set & Publish Final Process Design
– Complete Process Design Review based on Design
Verification Test
– Complete and publish all documentation
– Plan for transfer to operations
35. 4 Steps for Successful Design Innovation
1. Be systematic – record information on spreadsheets.
- Apply new and proven tools.
- Include cross-functional staff in design review.
2. Focus on the user or the customer.
- Discover hidden customers and hidden needs.
3. Confront contradictions or challenges directly.
- Do not take “no” or “can’t” for an answer.
4. Design WORKFLOWS to deliver benefits that meet
customer and business needs.
37. More Resources
business innovation
business process improvement
continuous improvement
dmaic
juran quality handbook
lean manufacturing
lean six sigma
lean transformation
operational excellence
process innovation
quality assurance
quality control
quality improvement
management consulting firm
iso 9000 2015
six sigma certification
what is lean
what is six sigma
Click any link for more information
39. We hope to see you in our future
webinars!
If you would like a copy of this
presentation or would like to
discuss this topic with your
organization, contact me at:
jdefeo@juran.com
Thank You and DO NOT FORGET!