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Enterprise Resource Planning




                    notes          It involves a wide spectrum of activities procurement, order fulfillment, product development,
                                   customer service and sale.
                                   Thus,  Business  Process  Re-engineering  becomes  an  offshoot  of  Business  Process.  Hammer
                                   and  Champy  (1993)  argued  that  the  fundamental  reconsideration  and  radical  redesign  of
                                   organizational process, in order to achieve drastic improvement of current performance in cost,
                                   service and speed enjoys a fair measure of consensus. One can then assume that Business Process
                                   Re-engineering connotes the analysis and design of workflows and processes within and between
                                   organizations (Davenport and Short 1990).
                                   Business Process Re-engineering relies on a different school of thought. It believes in continuous
                                   process  improvement,  re-engineering  assumes  that  current  process  is  irrelevant  and  there  is
                                   need to commence another one. Such a clean slate perspective enables the designers of business
                                   process to focus on new process. This is to project oneself on what should the process look like?
                                   How do my customers want it to be like? How do best-in-class companies do it? What we might
                                   be able to do with no technology?
                                   Business Process Re-engineering in the actual sense, have mixed successes therefore, business
                                   process  re-engineering  projects  aimed  at  transforming  inefficient  work  process.  Henceforth,
                                   organizations such as banks and other financial institutions need to optimize results from this
                                   model in real business situations.
                                   The  need  for  businesses  to  improve  the  way  they  operate  by  increasing  the  efficiency  and
                                   effectiveness of their business processes is a well-proven and documented approach. The rapid
                                   developments in enabling technology and changing customer needs, demands and sophistication
                                   have continued to fuel the need for ever-changing process improvements.
                                   Based on this need, PricewaterhouseCoopers continues to offer its clients a superior business
                                   process improvement service, based on robust methodologies and tools and underpinned by
                                   a proven track record of results, locally and across the globe. Process re-engineering services
                                   include:

                                   1.   Process design and development
                                   2.   Process modeling
                                   3.   Process analysis
                                   4.   Process simulation
                                   5.   Process implementation support

                                   3.4.1 methodology


                                   PricewaterhouseCoopers’ approach to process re-engineering assignments is underpinned by
                                   our Process Improvement Through Benefits Management (PITBM) methodology.
                                   In our approach, project success is achieved through benefits realization. Quite often, change
                                   projects have focused on the traditional project measures of success - on-time, to cost and to
                                   specification. However, this perspective may be too narrow as, whilst the project may be a success
                                   using these traditional measures, it still may be a failure from a business viewpoint if the planned
                                   benefits from the change project are neither realised nor measured.
                                   The  PITBM  methodology  has  a  whole  lifecycle  approach  to  obtaining  beneficial  returns  on
                                   change and process improvement project investments by ensuring that the benefits realisation
                                   processes become an integral part of the organisational activities that remain in place after project
                                   completion. Benefits management addressed in this way is a business process and a management
                                   philosophy and not just a technique for investment justification.






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