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Minimize numerical involvement

Too many cooks spoil the broth

Minimize the number of departments, groups and persons involved in a business process

Reijers, H., & Liman Mansar, S. (2005). Best practices in business process redesign: an overview and qualitative evaluation of successful redesign heuristics. Omega, 33(4)

category: Organization
class: Resource Rules
frameworkAspect: Org-.structure
perspective: organizational/resource

Description

Performance considerations

Employing this approach should mitigate coordination issues. Time saved on coordination can be allocated to case processing. Decreasing department count could reduce shared responsibilities, akin to the split responsibilities approach. Yet, it might hinder expertise development (quality concern) and routine efficiency (cost concern).

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Foundational free Patterns

Distinguish case types

Determine whether activities are related to the same type of case and, if necessary, distinguish new business processes

Establish a case-based mindset

Remove batch-processing and periodic activities from your business process

Fail Early

Order knock-outs by least effort and highest termination probability first.

Outsource activities

Delegate and optimize your operations

Parallelize activities

Consider whether activities may be executed in parallel

Split responsibilities

Avoid shared responsibilities for tasks by people from different functional units

Green Variant

Offer a green alternative with the same outcome, utilizing different steps, resources, or partners, while retaining the previous existing process

Tailored privacy settings

Offer customers the possibility to choose among privacy settings

Workload-based task assignment

Allocate tasks based on individuals' incomplete workload

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Reduce touchpoints

Reduce the number of contacts with customers and third parties

Deploy extra resources

If capacity is insufficient, consider increasing the available number of resources

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