Mapss Process Mapping Course
Mapss Process Mapping Course
• Name
• Where you work
• Current Role
• Your view of Process Mapping
• Expectations
•
•
Agenda
Morning
•
MAPSS Project - overview
• This project is one of 2 process mapping projects being supported by the Department of
Health across England.
• The objectives of the project are to:
– To deliver as set of agreed symbols for mapping social care
– Produce a public domain user guide for process mapping
– Develop public domain training materials
– Produce a range of ‘As is’ and ‘To be’ process maps
– To map cross-agency flows, inc. data flows for Caldicott purposes
– Develop a business case for national co-ordination roll out and to
– Explore options for future repository support, possibilities include SCIE,
Dept of Health and ADSS IMG. Thereby establishing a shared
knowledge base.
• The project will help to address the requirements set out in the DoH guidance note
‘Information for Social Care’ as will as helping CSSRs across London to develop
best practice approaches and benchmarking capabilities for delivering customer
focussed social services.
The project plan
Phase 1 Phase 2
Obtain funding
&
agree PID
Refine manual
Prepare manual
Prepare Prepare
Training Day Training Day process maps
process maps
• The relationship between the two is the agreement to share all the
deliverables and lessons learnt from the process mapping
• Lessons learnt and findings will be disseminated and shared via the
DoH Website.
• We are linking with LEAP and IDEA to build on investments already
made
Course Outline
Introduction Building
Introduction
to Tools & Building Uses &
to Tools & Process Uses &
Process Techniques Process Applications
Process Techniques Maps Applications
Mapping Maps
Mapping
Practical 1 Practical 3
Practical 2
Module 1
Introduction to Process Mapping
Module 1 Module 2 Module 3 Module 4
Introduction Building
Introduction
to Tools & Building Uses &
to Tools & Process Uses &
Process Techniques Process Applications
Process Techniques Maps Applications
Mapping Maps
Mapping
Practical 1 Practical 3
Practical 2
What is a Business Process?
A process is...
• A series of related activities that “flow” through an organisation
• Not limited to a single function or department
• Something that can be viewed from end to end
Process
Trigger Policy development Value-Added
Assessment
Input Output
Customer Service
Order Fulfilment
Application Procedure
Customer
Functional View v Process View
Functional orientation
Process orientation
Problems with Functional working
• Bottlenecks
• Repetition
• Bureaucracy
• No ownership
• Management frustration
• Too many steps
• Customer forgotten
• Opportunities for error or even corruption
•
From Functional to Process View
P P
R R Requisition to Payment C
u u
e P e P u
r r
c a c a s
c c
e y e y Contact to Cash t
h h
i m i m o
a a
v e v e m
s s
i n i n Recruit to Retire e
i i
n t n t r
n n
g g s
g g
Continuous
Continuous Improvement
Improvement
Identify
Identifyand
and
understand
understand Analyse
Analyse&& TO-BE
TO-BE Implementati
Implementati
Best AS-IS
AS-ISDesign
Design Evaluate Design on
Best Evaluate Design on
Practices
Practices
APPROACHES
B B
P B T
I P
R
Deliverables
✔An action plan for implementation containing
Turn TV On identified and prioritised suggestions for
improvement.
✔Documented differences between existing work
flow and Best Practices.
Does picture Is TV
No ✔Identified problem areas using root cause
come on? plugged in?
analysis Yes
✔Documented existing work flow with
No
highlighted problems.
Problem Causes
Yes Best Practices vs. existing workflow
Cross-functional process map
PROCESS
1.
1 5
Plug in TV Suggestion for improvement - Quick Fix
Importance
2. Simplify........
GAP: ---------------------------------------
Call TV re
---------------------------------------
Is picture 6.
Does
x picture x x
---------------------------------------
Yes No
3. Eliminate.......
x ---------------------------------------
Performance
No
Yes
Process mapping symbols
System Activity
Action/Process
Direction of Flow
End
On Page Connector
No
Decision
Yes
Off Page Connector
Required information for process mapping
Prepare
Practical 1 Practical 3
Practical 2
‘As-Is’ Process Design
Plan and
schedule Document “As-Is”
Select a resources Select process and Core team
process (process owners, Technique opportunities for reviews output
rooms, dates, times,
materials, agendas, improvement
etc..)
Connect
to redesign/
design
Conduct focus phase if
group mapping applicable
Modeling Techniques for ‘As-Is’ Process Design
Practical 2
Workflow Modelling Exercise
• Add the boxes in the appropriate columns and flows between them
Case Management Process
1st Draft
Statement of Need
Statement of Services to meet
Care need
Screen Planning
Contact Statement of services
arranged
Unmet needs
Full
Assessment Purchaser
Monitor
Services
Review
END
Needs
SERVICE
Advantages of Workflow Modelling
• Simple to understand
• Identifies Processes
• Identifies dependencies
• Highlights the number of ‘hand-offs’
• Finds ‘black holes’
• Easy to document metrics
• Can show by person, department, geographical location etc.
•
Flowcharts
Start/En
d
Decisio
n Turn T
Activit
y
Does p
Cross-Functional Flowcharts - ‘Swim Lanes’
Publication Proce
Publication Proce
er
Cross-Functional Flowcharts - ‘Swim Lanes’
Hints:
Practical 2
A basic process mapping example - sending a fax
Depicts a Depicts an
Depicts a action
Sender decision point -
Depicts the step taken generated by or
always has yes/ Yes goes right
start of the by the related to the
no outputs
process actionee system
Compose
Do you want to
Start fax on Yes
save a copy? Save copy of
computer
fax to database
No goes down
No
Represents
readable data
such as
printed output
Print fax
Refers reader
to a follow-on
process map
Defines area of
responsibility
for actionee See
Send fax to Send a copy
Depicts a
Yes Process
recipient to CEO?
functional area no.2
or actionee e.g.
department
No
Recipient
Recipient
receives fax End
Depicts the
end point
of the
process
Adding Metrics
Non-rejected claims 72
Cycle Times
Non-Investigated 13
Investigated/Assessed (5%) 29
Processing Costs per claim
Analyse the results
Non-Investigated 80 13
Investigated/Assessed 400 29
Summary - Module 2
Practical 1 Practical 3
Practical 2
Using Microsoft VISIO 2000
Practical 2
Your task ...
Practical 2
Identify opportunities for improvement
• Process opportunities
• Technology opportunities and issues
• Short-term fixes or urgent action items
•
Identify opportunities for improvement
Process opportunities
Once we have our process maps, we can begin to analyse them for
process opportunities for improvement.
Specifically, we can improve the work flow by using the following
analysis techniques:
• Loops
• Hand-offs
• Repetition/Duplication of effort (within a process or across divisions)
• Black holes
• Unused data stores
• Temporary data stores
• Overlapping processes WHY
• Processes which have many steps ?
• Sequential steps which could be done in parallel
• Omission of critical steps
• Unnecessary paperwork
• Unnecessary delays
• Insufficient linkages between other processes, divisions,
customers or suppliers
Why-Why Diagram
Wh
Wh
y? Wh y?
y?
Wh
y?
Cause and Effect Diagram
O
Effect,
Problem
or
Objective
Infl
Housemates
Critical Analysis
Customer
Needs & Executive
Executive
Wants Vision
Vision
Opportunities
Opportunities Implementation
Implementation
Visioning
from
from ‘As-Is’
‘As-Is’ &
& Change
Change
Workshops
Analysis
Analysis Planning
Planning
Best
Best Practices
Practices
Experts
Experts
Benchmarks
Benchmarks
Goals
Goals
PIs
PIs
Design Principles
• Work Backwards
• See the business through the customers eyes
• Focus on the logical workflow first
• ‘What’ first, then who, where, when and how
• Look at I.T. as an enabler
• Assume ‘Paradise Principle’ to start with
• Minimise hand-offs
• Use ‘Triage’ principle
• Integrate tasks / activities
• Place decision making close to the customer / transfer
• Simplify
• Test using PIs and metrics
• Have a single point of contact - Ownership
Identify opportunities for improvement
Technology opportunities and issues
Once we have our process maps, we can begin to analyse them for
“Quick-wins”. These opportunities represent…
x x x
x
Importance
x x x
x
x x
Ease of implementation
Summary - Module 4