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Volume No. 3
First Things First
Here's a brief encounter I had while leaving Newark
International Airport following a recent business trip. Hard
to believe, but true.
After a long flight home from the West Coast, I took a short
train ride to the long term parking facility, located my car
(which is becoming more difficult with age it seems), and
proceeded to the parking exit. Note that it's been a while
since I've used the long term parking facility, as I
normally use a car or taxi service, so I was largely
unfamiliar with their new "high tech" customer solutions.
As I pulled up to the pay station (expecting the attendant to
inform me of my charge), she immediately looked at me with
the gaze of a very frustrated woman who's obviously done
this before. In a short tone, she barked out an instruction
suggesting that I had passed an automated ticket booth, from
which I should have inserted my ticket and noted the charge.
I complied with the instruction, quietly wondering why this
woman was in the booth at all, given the fact that the
machine and I pretty much had this thing licked. I concluded
of course that she must be there to collect the money, so I
proceeded to pay her. Not a good assumption as she pointed
me back to the machine to insert my payment. OK, I get it, I
interact with the machine for this too...no problem,
thinking that this is a pretty good solution. I wait for the
machine to give me my receipt, an obvious assumption given
how the first two steps went. Nope, wrong again. This time
she wants me to drive to her and pick up my receipt, at
which point she presses a button, lifts the gate, and I'm on
my merry way.
I can't help thinking about all the time and money went into
implementing this slick new solution, that probably cost an
arm and a leg, had little to no impact on cost savings,
destroyed customer satisfaction, and obviously put the
employee in a perpetual state of 'grumpy'. No – what this
was is yet another example of "technology for technology's
sake."
When I work with organizations on business improvement, one
of the most important themes I try to drill home is
PROCESS FIRST, then technology. You don't implement technology on top of a
broken process. Nor do you attempt to fix a broken process
with technology only.
The right path is to measure the effectiveness of the process
before you begin. Establish a baseline. Understand how the
process works today ('As Is' State). Look for places to
improve the process. Define changes. Examine the effect of
each potential change on overall performance. Then, and only
then, define the technology, systems, skills, and
organization needed to support the new process. Develop cost
benefits and business cases. Re-examine the degree to which
performance will be improved over baseline. And then you’re
almost ready for implementation.
It's a
simple principle, but one that often get overlooked. Try to
pay some attention to this in your everyday life and you'll
probably see many similar examples. Then, use these as
lessons learned, and start living by the mantra – "First
Things First" – process first, technology later.
Author:
Bob Champagne is a Vice President of Performance Management
Solutions with UMS Group, Inc., a privately held
international management consulting organization specializing in
Performance Management tools, systems, and solutions.
Included in UMS Group's product portfolio are a wide variety
of performance tracking, reporting, and benchmarking
solutions, as well as customized performance assessments and
diagnostic services. UMS Group has consulted with
hundreds of companies across numerous industries and
geographies. Visit UMS Group at
http://www.umsgroup.com
or contact us directly at 973-335-3555.
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