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Process Mapping

Process Mapping. BA 339 Mellie Pullman. Objectives. Service Process Differences Little’s Law Process Analysis & Mapping. Measuring Process Flows. Capacity of a system = capacity of the most constraining resource. We also called it a ‘bottleneck.’

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Process Mapping

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  1. Process Mapping BA 339 Mellie Pullman

  2. Objectives • Service Process Differences • Little’s Law • Process Analysis & Mapping

  3. Measuring Process Flows • Capacity of a system = capacity of the most constraining resource. • We also called it a ‘bottleneck.’ • The flow rate of a process is the minimum of: • Supply rate • Demand rate • Capacity rate

  4. Example: Bank Clearing House Receive Checks 1000 checks/hour Sort Checks by Bank 800 checks/hour Ship Checks 1200 checks/hour • What is the capacity of the system to process checks?

  5. Measuring Process Flows • Little’s Law • Relates number of items in the system to arrival rate and length of time in the system. • Formula: I = T x R I = average number in the system T = average throughput time R = average flow rate into the process • Assumes system is in a ‘steady state’

  6. Example: Bank Clearing House Receive Checks 1000 checks/hour Sort Checks by Bank 800 checks/hour Ship Checks 1200 checks/hour • If the rate of checks into the system is 600 checks per hour (supply), what is the flow rate? • There is an average of 200 checks in the system, what is the throughput time of checks? • How can we reduce the throughput time of checks?

  7. Applications of Little’s Law • Manufacturing • Waiting lines • Invoice processing • Legal office transactions • Accounts receivable processing • Restaurant & Theme Park Design • Many others!!!!

  8. Sell-by-Dating for Fresh Beverages • Your store sells 20 bottles of “Fresh Local Beverage” per day, • The producer says that product has a shelf life of 30 days (your warehouse & store), • What is the maximum inventory that you should hold to insure fresh beverages?

  9. Process Flow Mapping & Analysis • Purpose: to describe a process visually to find ways of improving the current process. • Find repetitive operations • Identify bottlenecks • Describe directions and distances of flows (people, material and information) • Create better value & reduce waste

  10. Detailed Process Map Identifies the specific activities that make up the process. Basic steps are: Identify the entity that will serve as your focal point: • Customer? • Order or item? Identify clear boundaries, starting and ending points, and line of visibility between customer and order. Keep it simple • Does this detail add any insight? • Do we need to map every exception condition?

  11. Transportation Operations Process Input Output Delays Storage Inspections Classifying Processes

  12. Mapping Symbols or Operation (task or work activity) Inspection Decision point (typically requires a “yes” or “no”) Document or order created Delay Storage Move Materials or employees activity

  13. Distinguish between Value-Add and Non Value-Add Process Step • Value Add (VA) • Business Non-value-add (BNVA) • Non-value-add (NVA)

  14. Value Add Steps • Work that contributes what your customers want out of your product or service • Cooking a meal • Measuring & Cutting Material • Assembling • Does it meet these criteria? • Adds a desired function, form, or feature to the product or service • Enables a competitive advantage (reduced price, faster delivery, fewer defects) • Includes an activity that a customer would be willing to pay for or would not prefer our competitors is he/she knew we did this task.

  15. Business Non-Value Add • Activities that your customer doesn’t want to pay for (it does not increase value in their eyes) but are required for some reason • Accounting, legal, regulatory • Is task required by law or regulation? • Does task reduce financial/liability risk? • Does task support financial requirements? • Does process break down if task is removed?

  16. Non-value Add • Work that does not add value in the eyes of the customer and that they would not want to pay for it (nor is it required for BNVA) • Rework, multiple signatures & copies, counting, handling, inspecting, set-up, downtime, transporting, moving, delaying, storage.

  17. Process Chart (supplements Map) O= operations; I= inspections; S= storage; D=delay; TP= transportation of people TI= transportation of inventory or materials

  18. Linking Processes to Value with Metrics • Possible Measures or Metrics: • Link desired customer value to process • Time (measure distance traveled and task time) • Cost • Quality • Flexibility • Sustainability • Set standards • Guide design of new or redesign of existing process

  19. Including Time & Quality Measures

  20. Process Flow Analysis Might Change: • Raw materials • Product (output) design • Job design • Processing steps used • Management control information • Equipment or tools • Suppliers • i.e. Anything but customers may be changed!!

  21. Steps in process flow analysisusing the systems approach • Select a process to study • Find a group of “different eyes” to analyze & improve the system • Decide on the objectives of the analysis • improve cost, quality, flexibility, responsiveness (service), sustainability (ergonomics, recycling, reduce energy) • Define customers and suppliers • Flowchart the existing transformation process • Develop improved process design • Implement the new process design

  22. Questions to ask to improve process flow • Whatdoes thecustomer need?, operations are necessary? Can some operations be eliminated, combined, or simplified?…. • Whois performing the job? Can the operation be redesigned to use less skill or less labor? Can operations be combined to enrich jobs? …. • Whereis each operation conducted? Can layout be improved? …. • Whenis each operation performed? Is there excessive delay or storage? Are some operations creating bottlenecks? ….. • Howis the operation done? Can better methods, procedures, or equipment be used? ….

  23. In Class Exercise:Process Flow Diagrams & Value-adding activities • Do a process flow diagram and process chart for Pizza Delivery (show operator & customer perspectives) • Evaluate value-adding and non-value adding activities (V,B,N). Justify your decision. • How would you modify or delete non-value added activities?

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