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Introducing the Dynamic Process Transformation Model
KEY INSIGHT: Recognizing that you have a dynamic process problem is half the battle.
Filippo’s Story
As I (Filippo) drove home from the Procter & Gamble HQ in downtown Cincinnati one evening in May 2003, I wondered why I wasn’t feeling happier. After all, that day marked the successful conclusion of a particularly difficult chapter in P&G’s effort to outsource part of its functional back-office operations. It had been a few years of organizational turmoil. First there was the aborted effort to sell functional services like IT, finance, and HR as a service to other multinationals. Next came the unsuccessful outsourcing of 6,000 employees to Electronic Data Services (EDS). All this uncertainty had been rough on the organization.
I had recently been brought in to drive closure, and we devised a new plan: to outsource two-thirds of the back-office operations to three separate services companies. Today, we had finally announced the largest of the three deals, this one with Hewlett-Packard Services. P&G and HP Services had revealed, earlier in the day, a ten-year $3Bn deal, wherein about 2,000 P&G employees across more than 70 countries would transfer to HP. It was hailed as the largest and best structured and executed Global Business Services outsourcing deal in the world.
I had recently taken on the role of Global Business Services (GBS) leader of P&G. The aforementioned aborted GBS projects had created significant turmoil. My first task in the new role had been to end that turmoil by developing a new strategy and successfully completing the outsourcing deals. Today marked the completion of the first major milestone. Except that something still bothered me.
The Landscape of P&G’s Functional Back-Office Operations
It might help for me to describe the context of this issue first. All companies have functional organizations like finance, sales, HR, IT, procurement, supply chain, and so on. They are the back-office backbone of the day-to-day business processes that deliver the company’s operations. P&G’s strong functions had historically helped it become a global powerhouse. The company restructure program, mentioned in the previous chapter, had taken that up a notch. By sweeping together the operational parts of all these functions into Global Business Services (GBS), we aimed to achieve even more efficiency.
In general, GBS groups focus on running many routine functional administrative tasks, leaving the business units more time to focus on customer or product-specific activities.6 GBS organizations deliver shared transactional services, such as managing orders or payroll to all the subsidiaries of the company. Thus, the term Global Shared Services, or alternatively, Global Business Services. P&G had in fact coined the term GBS.
So far this might seem like a rosy picture of P&G’s GBS. It is, except for the fact that earlier in the chapter I mentioned the intention to outsource most of it. It is legitimate to ask why a company might want to outsource such a great asset.
The Early Success of P&G’s GBS
My predecessor in the company, Mike Power, deserves credit for having pushed to create a GBS organization and to lead its initial phase. The first cost reduction benefits of the previously mentioned corporate restructure, which involved creating offshore service centers in Manila, Costa Rica, and Newcastle, were delivered under Power’s leadership. P&G’s GBS was a pioneer in many of these activities. Indeed, this is what convinced the government of Costa Rica to enter the shared services industry, a decision that would over time lead this industry to be among Costa Rica’s top economic drivers.
The new GBS operation, with its offshore centers, was an external success story that drew envy, and inquiries. Other multinational companies expressed interest in buying functional services (such as IT or finance) from P&G’s GBS. That led to the idea that perhaps the new organization could “monetize” itself by selling its services to others.
P&G’s GBS Goes on Sale
However, the idea of monetizing GBS further by selling its services to other companies quickly fell out of favor, since selling functional services was not core to P&G’s mission. It would be a distraction for a consumer goods company to enter that business. Over time, an alternative idea emerged. If P&G’s functional operations could be run in offshore countries, and if GBS operations were not core to P&G’s business, and furthermore, if GBS was in fact a monetizable asset, then perhaps it would be better to sell or outsource all of GBS to a services provider.
That led to the second project: to outsource all 6,000 GBS employees to a single provider.
It is hard for me to overstate just how much of a cultural change that decision was for P&G at the time. The company had historically been a lifetime employer. People started at the entry level and spent their entire career in the company, often leading to their children and grandchildren following in their footsteps. It was hard to imagine being outsourced to a supplier company, because it meant, in effect, moving to a new employer.
This project almost went through, with EDS being the chosen supplier. However, in a strange twist of fate, the deal fell through literally hours before being signed. EDS’s stock price fell dramatically that day for unrelated reasons, which made the sale price unviable. That was just as well, because there had been unease at the idea of selling the entire GBS organization to a single supplier.
That is the point where I took up the Global GBS leader role. The GBS organization felt a bit battered by the twists and turns of the previous years, and it was important for the company to drive all this to closure. Probably a better idea would be to selectively outsource to a few suppliers, each of them best-of-breed in their respective functions. In other words, utilize a combination of the three best providers in IT services, HR services, and facilities services. It was very important to quickly execute this and to drive this uncertain era to a successful close.
My Dilemma Becomes Clearer
This final plan was executed on a war footing. I will not elaborate on the selection of the best-of-breed suppliers, as it is not important for this book, which is about process transformation. By the time the dust settled six months later, we had selected HP for IT services, IBM for HR services, and Jones Lang Lasalle for facilities management services.
On the day in May 2003 that we selected HP, I had a feeling of unease as I drove home from the office. That was the largest and most complex of the outsourcing deals, and it marked the end of a prolonged period of uncertainty.
As I parked my car at home and sat there in silence for a few moments, I finally realized why I wasn’t feeling happier. Perhaps these outsourcing deals were solutions to a symptom, not to a root cause. The root of the issue was simple—the functional operations that comprised GBS were not unique to P&G’s business. The journey from GBS being viewed as a global competitive advantage four years earlier, to being thought of as nonstrategic, had been brutally short. It seemed to me at the time that my predecessors had taken all the right steps in the GBS journey to centralize and standardize operations and to reduce costs via offshore centers. Yet if GBS was not distinctive to P&G business operations, that meant it was fundamentally a commodity. Therefore, nothing prevented our future from being a series of painful outsourcing deals until there was nothing left of GBS. And given the unique capabilities that GBS could bring to the business, was this the best outcome for P&G? If not, what could we do to change that?
Analyzing My Dilemma Eventually Leads to the Idea for Dynamic Process Transformation
I did not at that point have a good answer to my dilemma, and I wouldn’t fully develop one for some time. In fact, as I reflect today on my statement of the dilemma, it strikes me that it was too narrowly focused on GBS. The issue was actually bigger than GBS.
The strategic question was whether P&G’s business processes were fully optimized at the end of this episode of outsourcing. Or was outsourcing just one step in an ongoing journey to achieve enduring competitive advantage via Dynamic Process Transformation?
Perhaps my question should have been—were the business processes that were run by P&G’s GBS, including those which were now operated via outsourcing, so good that they could not be transformed further? In today’s world, in which the capacity of digital technology to keep transforming even efficient operations is recognized, this might seem like a silly question. Yet that question is still worth asking today.
What I Did Not Realize in May 2003
As I drove home that evening in May 2003, I had started to realize that P&G’s business processes needed to keep transforming over time and that the GBS organization could perhaps be an important lever for the company along that path. In hindsight, the P&G GBS of 2003, which included outsourcing some services, was at Stage 2 of maturity. What I did not yet realize was that this spectrum had four stages and that over time we would discover the secret sauce to moving the organization through those stages. I had no way of knowing that over the next several years the P&G GBS organization would play a leadership role in this. I couldn’t predict that it would soon be considered the best in the world in its lane, be awarded multiple times by the industry, and be the subject of case studies in the Harvard Business Review. There was no inkling that information technology would drive the fourth industrial revolution and that organizations such as GBS were uniquely positioned to put together three key ingredients: enabling technologies, process management expertise, and transformation management skills. I did not yet understand the potential of dynamic business processes or that we would be constructing a road map of how to achieve them reliably. However, I had identified the dilemma facing us, and that was a major step toward making the rest of the journey.
Driving Dynamic Business Processes by Using GBS
I learned over time that the GBS framework offered a way to deliver dynamic business transformation. Fast-forward to today, the GBS construct has matured into a full industry. The role of GBS as a leader in transforming processes is generally accepted. This is based on a strong foundation of results. GBS organizations, when set up correctly, deliver annual productivity savings of greater than 15%.7 More than 9 out of 10 enterprises, across all industries and company dimensions, use shared services already.8 In most large and medium-sized organizations, the GBS scope of work cuts across almost all, if not all, functions.9 The GBS global market size is currently $110Bn10 and growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 17%.
Next, combine this potent GBS construct with a codified model for building Dynamic Process Transformation, and things get even more interesting! The codified Dynamic Process Transformation model is a big deal. That’s because there is strong consistency across functional business processes between industries. Processing a payment follows a similar course whether done at Walmart or at Tencent or by the French government. Between the proven GBS construct and the codified Dynamic Process Transformation model, the opportunity for creating enduring competitive advantage is virtually limitless.
Is GBS the Only Model to Drive This Evolution?
At this point it may be fair to ask about the linkage between the GBS organization structure and dynamic business processes. Is a GBS organization structure essential? After all, the examples of Amazon, Zoom, and the Cincinnati wine store don’t involve a P&G GBS-like structure.
I want to be crystal clear on this: Dynamic business processes don’t necessarily require a GBS structure. However, for medium to large companies that start out with legacy functional structures (as opposed to being digitally native), GBS can be a huge enabler. There are only three ingredients needed for dynamic business processes: the three drivers of Open Market Rules, Unified Accountability, and Dynamic Operating Engine. A highly mature GBS organization will operate on Open Market Rules. It will be organized for Unified Accountability of end-to-end business processes. And it will run its day-to-day operations using a methodology based on the Dynamic Operating Engine. So yes, in the right context, a strong GBS organization or a GBS-like structure can accelerate the delivery of dynamic business processes. But make no mistake, organizational structures don’t deliver business outcomes by themselves. At best, they facilitate them.
The rest of the book describes how to go about designing and delivering the road map to dynamic business processes. But first, we must better understand what problems must be solved as an organization sets out to embrace dynamic business processes. For that, see the next chapter.
The Need for a Dynamic Process Transformation Model
There is a basic dilemma around business process transformation that most leaders confront. They absolutely want their operations to become more adaptable and more strategic; that’s not the question. It’s just that the path from “good” to “great” is unknown, and the costs and benefits unclear. Examples that describe the flexibility of Silicon Valley company operations tend not to be useful because those operations were designed from scratch. The challenge for companies that carry legacy business processes is very different. The question is not so much whether a company should transform its business processes for ongoing business value, but whether it is able to, and how. We need a road map to execute Dynamic Process Transformation that begins from a complex and muddy starting point and that delivers predictable outcomes.
The Model for Dynamic Process Transformation
All organizations fall somewhere along a defined spectrum of maturity of business processes. This spectrum can be divided into four distinct stages of maturity ranging from Stage 1—default business processes, through to Stage 4—responsive business processes. It follows that we need to pinpoint our start and end points on this spectrum. Therein lies the first problem. In this evolving industry of business process transformation, there isn’t a reliable way to measure our start and end points. We will address this via the four stages in the Dynamic Process Transformation model.
Next, we need to know which levers to pull to travel from the starting to the ending maturity stage. We refer to these levers as the drivers of dynamic business processes. They are the same three drivers—Open Market Rules, Unified Accountability, and Dynamic Operating Engine—that were introduced in the previous chapter.
The four stages of maturity help us measure progress from current to future state, while the drivers specify the levers you pull to make progress. The combination of the two provides a road map for evolution to Dynamic Process Transformation. Figure 2, provided at the beginning of Part 1 of this book, lays out the model in a matrix format with the three drivers as rows and the four maturity stages as columns. At each of the four stages of maturity, there are specific actions that need to be taken for each of the three drivers. The 4x3 matrix lays out what needs to change in the business process design if organizations are to evolve in maturity. Those four stages of maturity are described in the following paragraphs; the individual cells in the 4x3 matrix will be expanded on in the remainder of the book.
The Four Stages of Maturity of Business Processes
The good news for leaders looking for a road map to dynamic business processes is that each of the four stages of maturity has distinct characteristics. Moreover, there are clear steps that can take our organization up the maturity levels.
STAGE 1: Default Business Processes
Every business has business processes, whether deliberately designed or not. And all businesses measure the performance of their business processes. For instance, every organization measures its sales, profits, payroll, orders, and so on. Key performance indicators within finance, sales, marketing, supply chain, information technology, and others, foster predictable outcomes at appropriate costs. This is the starting point for all organizations—that is, measuring key performance indicators of key business processes and holding functional leaders accountable for delivering those metrics. As the saying goes, you get what you measure.
The Stage 1 (default) of the Dynamic Process Transformation model acknowledges this starting point. During Stage 1, the organization benefits by standardizing, stabilizing, and measuring functional performance for ongoing improvement. Many organizations view this as an acceptable long-term stage. If the business strategy demands that every ounce of available focus be placed externally, and if there is no disruptive threat on the horizon, then this may just be a good enough stage for the moment. It may also be fine for businesses whose products and services have demand inelasticity. If greater process effectiveness doesn’t impact market share significantly, then Stage 1 maturity is a good enough parking spot.
STAGE 2: Intentional Business Processes
Over time, the inevitable demands of productivity and performance will require you to be more deliberate about improving business processes. Customer orders that require manual labor for their processing may be fine when the business is small, but automation becomes inevitable as that business grows. Similarly, having one system for employee time sheets managed by HR, and running a totally different system managed by finance to deliver the resulting pay slips, may be fine up to a point, but the calls for “connection” between these two business processes will get louder as the workforce grows. At Stage 2, there must be close collaboration, and deliberate streamlining and automation, across functional silos. The need for greater productivity and employee effectiveness demands it. However, at Stage 2, the ownership of work may still reside within the respective functions—within HR, finance, procurement, sales, and so on.
Interestingly, most companies fall into this stage. Multinational companies may have a patchwork of different business processes and IT systems that either evolved within various countries or were introduced through company acquisitions. The challenge for these organizations is to standardize business processes across different units. To deliver the next level of performance, these processes must evolve from fragmented to standard systems. This is often done via a series of arduous, expensive, and episodic transformations, made even more unpalatable by the 70% failure rate of transformation projects.
Stage 2 is characterized by intentional designs to overcome challenges like the above. There is also a growing focus on driving continuous improvement and productivity. And, although business processes are still managed by their respective functions, there is good collaboration to improve business processes end-to-end.
STAGE 3: Integrated Business Processes
The prior stage, Intentional Business Processes, is sufficient to support the efficiency needs of even large corporations for a while. What eventually breaks the dam on Stage 2 is the need for significantly improved cross-functional efficiency and effectiveness. At Stage 3 the functional silo structure must be broken. The trigger for change could be proactive or reactive. Perhaps functional budgets have been cut to the bone and cannot be reduced further within each functional silo. Or perhaps the business wants to pursue a lean operation as part of its corporate strategy (e.g., Everyday Low Price at Walmart). Whatever the immediate cause, we must make our operations leaner and more responsive. A small percentage of professionally managed companies, operating near the top of their industry ranks, currently perform at this stage.
Although not strictly necessary, most companies at this stage of maturity have some type of GBS structure. That structure helps eliminate functional silos by managing business processes across them. GBS structures can also help establish accountability for end-to-end business process outcomes. So, for instance, consider the Stage 2 siloed structure of having order management done by the sales function, delivery of products run by the supply chain, and cash receivables operated by finance. Creating an end-to-end business process of “order-to-cash” within GBS optimizes work across all three functional silos. Today, end-to-end process management such as procure-to-pay, hire-to-retire, concept-to-product, deployment-to-retrograde, market-to-prospect, molecule-to-shelf, and so on, have become de facto best practices for mature GBS operations. The existence of a GBS leader, one who can help design these processes without the influence of historical boundaries of functional silos, is a huge enabler. Structures like GBS can help integrate and stitch together business processes across historical boundaries.
STAGE 4: Responsive Business Processes
The major difference between the Integrated Business Processes of a Stage 3 and the Responsive Business Processes of a Stage 4 has to do with adaptability to change. The ability to organically evolve business processes in response to customer, economic, competitive, and similar factors makes this stage a truly worthwhile goal.
At Stage 4, your internal operations become your ongoing competitive advantage. Amazon.com, with its advantage in automation and analytics in online selling, its superiority in warehousing and transportation, and its relentless pursuit of ongoing efficiency, is a prime example, to use a bad pun. At Stage 4, business processes aren’t just enabling the business, they are creating new business possibilities. This requires leadership mindsets and skills, in addition to operational excellence.
Stage 4 delivers more than just streamlined and dynamic operations. It also fosters “living” transformation, which sets up an ongoing spiral of speed, efficiency, and effectiveness. It addresses the biggest challenge faced by business operations, which is to ensure that business processes do not become obsolete over time.
These four stages of maturity, along with the three drivers of change mentioned in the previous chapter, provide the map of Dynamic Process Transformation. But as with any map, the real work is in the actions of going from one point to another. Part 2 of this book will begin to address that. However, even before that, there is a first step: deciding whether to make the journey. We return to Filippo’s story to examine his realization that P&G needed to embark on that odyssey.