A Business Process Management (BPM) Model That Would Resolve Boeing's Quality Problems
Forrest Breyfogle
I help organizations enhance their KPI metric reporting and improvement system (e.g., Lean Six Sigma) so the bottom line benefits. I have author of over 15 books on business management and process improvement.
In business process management (BPM), staying ahead of the competition and continuously improving processes are paramount. One robust framework gaining traction in recent years is the Integrated Enterprise Excellence (IEE) system, designed to help organizations navigate the complex landscape of BPM effectively.
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Wikipedia states that Business Process Management (BPM) is the discipline in which people use various methods to discover, model, analyze, measure, improve, optimize, and automate business processes. Any combination of methods used to manage a company's business processes is BPM. Processes can be structured and repeatable or unstructured and variable. Though not required, enabling technologies are often used with BPM.
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The Integrated Enterprise Excellence system is a set of steps and a philosophy that intertwines leadership and management with a structured, data-driven approach that provides, among other things, a methodology for preventing organizational problems like Boeing's door plug quality issue, as described by NBC News .
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?When building an aircraft, improving a process(es) is crucial whenever a non-conformance rate is unsatisfactory. However, this was not occurring at Boeing. A report stated that in one 365 calendar days, 392 nonconforming findings occurred on 737 mid-fuselage door installations (both actual doors for the high-density configurations and plugs like the one that blew out). Boeing was finding more than one serious defect each day!
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The Boeing CEO and other executives should have this unacceptable quality process-output non-conformance rate reported at their fingertips via a mouse click. However, like many, if not most, organizations, this form of data reporting probably did not exist in Boeing.
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The Integrated Enterprise Excellence (IEE) business management system ?addresses this metric-reporting issue. IEE? offers a comprehensive approach to achieving sustainable success with BPM and operational excellence. The IEE 9-step system provides a structured pathway to enhance operational efficiency, strategic effectiveness, and the bottom line.
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To see the application and benefits of IEE and its 30,000-foot-level metrics reporting (with its free app) to your data, as described below, contact Forrest Breyfogle at [email protected] . You can schedule a video meeting session with Forrest through the link: https://smartersolutions.com/schedule-zoom-session/ .
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The 9 steps of the IEE Business Process Management (BPM) model:
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1.????? Describe Vision and Mission: The foundation of any successful organization lies in a clear vision and mission. This step involves articulating what the organization aspires to achieve and the fundamental principles guiding its journey. It sets the manner for the organizational culture and provides a clear direction for all its members.
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2.????? Describe Value Chain: Understanding the organization's current functional processes (i.e., Operations, HR, IT, Safety, Maintenance, Sales, Marketing, etc.) and each functional-process-output metric ([e.g., non-conformance rates and on-time delivery], from a high-level process response reporting not bounded by the calendar year) is vital. With the IEE system, everyone authorized (CEO to line operator) from an organizational value chain can see documented processes and their current metric performance (e.g., non-conformance rates, on-time delivery, lead time, and customer satisfaction). In IEE, the tracking of functional-process-output metrics is at a high 30,000-foot-level level instead of a table-of-numbers or red-yellow-green scorecard. A published article and video in a link show the benefits of this form of reporting, "KPI Management: KPI Metric Reports that Lead to the Best Behaviors ." If Boeing were using the IEE system, everyone authorized would see their airplane's production quality (non-conformance rate) problems so that these issues could be promptly resolved by improving production processes (Step 6).
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3.????? Analyze Enterprise: A comprehensive analysis of the enterprise helps in determining the organization's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. This holistic view enables leaders to make informed decisions, considering internal and external factors that could impact the organization's performance. The tools used in this step include statistical hypothesis testing (e.g., is there a difference between departments to determine departments to benchmark or improve) and non-statistical tools. Assessments in this step include competitive analyses, voice of the customer feedback, and Theory of Constraints (TOC). A TOC assessment may determine that the organization's bottleneck is its sales and marketing process, not operational procedures. If Boeing were using the IEE system, examining its IEE value chain would show its high manufacturing non-conformance rate problems (e.g., door plug) that needed resolution by improving a manufacturing or supplier process(es) (Step 6).
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4.????? Establish SMART Financial Goals: Setting Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound financial goals is crucial. An example high-level economic metric response is EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) tracked monthly (not bounded by calendar year), where an organizational goal is to statistically increase mean monthly EBITDA by 3% in 9 months. This monetary goal is achieved through improving high-impact process procedures, as identified and shown how to improve from the following IEE system steps.
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5.????? Create Strategies: With a clear understanding of the organization's vision, mission, value chain, and financial objectives, the organization's next step is the development of targeted strategies. An effective strategy statement leads to work efforts that leverage strengths and opportunities while mitigating risks and weaknesses and aligning with the stated financial goal(s) of step 4.
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6.????? Identify High Potential Improvement Areas: This step involves pinpointing areas within the organization that offer the highest potential for improvement. Identifying these areas and their corresponding metrics to improve is crucial for developing an effective organizational?Enterprise Improvement Plan (EIP) ?so that efforts align with achieving step 4 financial goals. What to avoid is setting goals that can lead to evil, if not destructive, behaviors, as?Wells Fargo did with setting up fake accounts to meet a metric goal, resulting in three billion dollars of fines by the US government. If Boeing were using the IEE system, an EIP assessment would highlight the need to improve specific manufacturing processes to improve quality metrics, e.g., door-plug non-conformance rate. ?
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7.????? Execute Improvement Projects:?Implementing Lean Six Sigma and other improvement projects ?(e.g., a Lean Kaizen event) to enhance EIP metrics is a critical step. This process improvement effort provides the details for executing strategies and operational improvements to drive organizational growth and efficiency. If Boeing were using the IEE system, a team would be assigned EIP tasks to improve its non-conformance rate problems by executing process improvements in various areas of its manufacturing and supplier processes. After beneficial process improvement efforts, future non-conformance rates would decrease (hopefully to zero), e.g., door-plug non-conformance rate.??
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8.????? Assess the Impact of the Improvement Project: After implementing improvement projects, it's essential to?show the statistical significance of the project's 30,000-foot-level metric improvement, ?which, via an EIP, shows project-metric alignment with the financial goal established in step 4. This evaluation helps in understanding the effectiveness of the strategies and projects undertaken. If Boeing used the IEE system, successful process improvement projects from Step 7 would display significantly reduced non-conformance rates in its IEE value chain (Step 2).
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9.????? Maintain the Gain: The IEE system's final step is ensuring that the improvements made are sustainable. It involves establishing mechanisms to monitor performance and maintain the gains achieved through the previous steps. The collective tracking of organizational 30,000-foot-level functional metrics automatically updated in its corporate value chain (with access 24/7 by all authorized individuals) has many benefits.?Enterprise Performance Reporting System (EPRS) software ?is a means for accomplishing this task behind an organizational firewall.
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Step 9 loops back to step 3 so that the whole organization can experience continuous improvement from a high-level vantage point.
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The IEE system resolves the problems of performance measurement tracking, process improvement, and business management methodologies described in about 40 web pages referred to as "Forrest Favorites." Topics include highlighting issues and resolution to the described problems with red-yellow-green scorecards, table-of-numbers reporting, strategic planning, Key Process Indices (KPIs) reporting, Lean Six Sigma deployments, Lean Six Sigma improvement project selection, x-bar and R control charts, process capability Cp, Cpk, Pp, Ppk indices and p-charts.
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Comparison of IEE to other systems
?The IEE system has many benefits compared to other methodologies, as this table describes.
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More IEE Information and its Benefits to Business Process Management
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Next Step
To see the application and benefits of IEE and its 30,000-foot-level metrics reporting (with its free app) to your data, contact Forrest Breyfogle at [email protected] . You can schedule a video meeting session with Forrest through the link: https://smartersolutions.com/schedule-zoom-session/ .
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Excutive,| Fellow of AMPP & ASM & AMPP Corrosion Specialist, Cathodic Protection, Materials Selection/Design, Coating Specialist and Recipient of AMPP MP Award for 2023 & 2024 and ASM Materials Achievement Award for 2024
6 个月We've got too many chiefs in Boeing and not enough Indians, and that's just not working out. What we really need are engineers and a team that's all about innovative ideas, creativity, and strong engineering @leadership—so we can build amazing engineering projects and products that'll amaze the world.
USAF Vet | Author | Board Member | Former EY & IBM Exec. | 6 Sigma Master Black Belt w/ GenAI ML / Org Chg | Film & Music Producer
9 个月Considering Boeing's challenges, the adoption of a comprehensive BPM model like IEE could be valuable in restructuring Boeing's approach to quality and safety, aligning it with industry best practices and regulatory expectations. I attended Cascade HS in Everett, WA and lived just minutes from the Everett Boeing plant. My gymnastics coach was a top engineer at the company and he would take tours of the plant. This plant and its people are partially what inspired me to enter the Air Force and learn to fly. I recall one day -- the saddest day of "Coach Dan's" life -- when he came to the gym one day and announced that the company had eliminated his position. He gave me some sage advice, "Never trust any company and always have other options." Pilot friends of mine were horrified with the initial 737 Max software issues. Then I watched the recent Netflix movie about Boeing whose message proved to be prescient. Now more Boeing issues. Forrest's excellent BPM IEE model will have to be coupled with new leadership thinking, changes in incentives and culture change. I'm still in love with flight and the remarkable story of Boeing as an iconic American company -- and I hope they can turn things around.