| Strategic Reengineering |
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“Good, better, best Strategic Reengineering is about getting lasting results not quick fixes. It focuses on rebuilding enterprises, not downsizing. It espouses empowering people, not replacing them. Never let it rest Until the good becomes the better And the better becomes the best. ” —Elementary school rhyme It provides strategies for changing behaviors and paradigms, for creating a compelling vision that can enable employee trust and commitment to action, and for effectively managing change. The objective is to change behavior, to address organizational dynamics and culture to achieve enduring changes in business results. So what is Strategic Reengineering, and what results can it really achieve? How do you avoid it becoming an expensive failure? How does it work? How does it impact overall company strategy? What are the implications for the people in your organization? Strategic Reengineering Defined: Strategic Reengineering involves completely rethinking existing business methods, work procedures, and attitudes toward customers and suppliers. It usually starts from a “clean sheet of paper ”. It is not about marginal improvement it is about reinvention rather than evolution. Reengineering requires:
One or two core processes that are priorities for redesign are identified, and a vision of how to operate in the future is developed. A project team is created, which performs a detailed process mapping and analysis and a creative redesign, along with a staged implementation plan. Benefits of the new design are “sold ” to employees, and the project is set in motion. The process starts and ends with strategy. Processes are defined, and targets set, according to what the strategy sets out to deliver. Interestingly enough, the process also forces you to rethink and refine your strategy, as greater insight into customer needs and your own capabilities engender new opportunities. Successful reengineering does not stop with the “technical ” redesign of processes. You also need to understand fully the human side of reengineering; the impact of the process on the “social contract ” within your company; the key elements of change and transition management; the ways in which your organization can learn to adapt to the new realities, and the cultural factors that facilitate or impede this change taking place.
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