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Mithilesh Kumar Dubey, LPU                 Unit 7:  Basics of Business Process Reengineering




                          Unit 7: Basics of Business Process Reengineering


               CONTENTS

               Objectives
               Introduction
               7.1 Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
                   7.1.1   Concepts of Reengineering
                   7.1.2   Technological and Organizational Enablers of BPR
                   7.1.3   Examples of BPR

                   7.1.4   Issues in BPR
               7.2 BPR Approach
               7.3 Summary
               7.4 Keywords
               7.5 Self Assessment
               7.6 Review Questions
               7.7 Further Readings

               Objectives
               After studying this unit, you will be able to:

               •    Define Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
               •    Discuss the BPR approach
               Introduction
               Business Process Reengineering (BPR) is a concept that helps in bringing significant improvements in
               the key processes of an organization. It plays a vital role in the business world today.
               BPR is also known as Business Process Change Management and Business Process Redesign.
               Hammer and Champy in 1993 defined Business Process Reengineering as “the fundamental rethinking
               and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary
               measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service and speed.”
               Along with that, Davenport points the major variations between Business Process Reengineering and
               other kinds of organizational development approaches, when he describes, “Today organizations must
               seek not fractional but multiplicative levels of improvement – 10x rather than 10%.”


                Did you know?   BPR as a terminology and practice has  a tarnished history. In the  early 1990s,
                             reengineering became popular but the approach and methodology was not
                             understood completely nor appreciated. Most of the times, improvement projects that
                             were labeled “BPR” were poorly planned and executed. The term BPR itself was less
                             used or altered to ensure that they were not linked with the BPR of the past.  Despite
                             this kind of abuse of practice, the redesigning practice for business processes and its
                             associated technology is becoming more  popular today than before. Organizations
                             continue to fundamentally alter the way they conduct trade. Hence, reengineering
                             remains an effective  tool for organizations that strive to function as efficiently and
                             effectively as possible.




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