Business Process Redesign: A Critique of Process Innovation by Thomas Davenport as a Case Study in the Literature

1993 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 285-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane Craig ◽  
Philip Yetton
Author(s):  
M. Hughes

Competitive pressures and improvements in information technology constantly force organisations to re-evaluate their business strategies (Porter, 2001; Venkatraman, 1994). Although public-sector organisations may not operate in a competitive environment, changes in management philosophies are causing public-sector organisations to think and act more like private-sector organisations (Gulledge & Sommers, 2002). Electronic government is one means by which governments can offer more effective and efficient services (Layne & Lee, 2001). This article investigates the evolution of e-government in Ireland. A case study is presented detailing how the Irish government’s e-government strategy was devised and implemented. The success of this implementation yields valuable insights into the identification and management of critical concerns during the evolvement and attainment of business-process redesign in e-government. Cumulatively, these lessons provide a road map for the successful attainment of citizen-centric e-government.


2011 ◽  
pp. 217-226
Author(s):  
Martin Hughes ◽  
Murray Scott ◽  
Willie Golden

Competitive pressures and improvements in information technology constantly force organisations to re-evaluate their business strategies (Porter, 2001; Venkatraman, 1994). Although public-sector organisations may not operate in a competitive environment, changes in management philosophies are causing public-sector organisations to think and act more like private-sector organisations (Gulledge & Sommers, 2002). Electronic government is one means by which governments can offer more effective and efficient services (Layne & Lee, 2001). This article investigates the evolution of e-government in Ireland. A case study is presented detailing how the Irish government’s e-government strategy was devised and implemented. The success of this implementation yields valuable insights into the identification and management of critical concerns during the evolvement and attainment of business-process redesign in e-government. Cumulatively, these lessons provide a road map for the successful attainment of citizen-centric e-government.


2011 ◽  
pp. 284-313
Author(s):  
Victor Portougal

This case study is intended as a tutorial. The case solution is given up to the endof the business process redesign stage. The SAP implementation (quite similarto that described for EA Cakes Ltd.) is left to the readers of the book (or tothe students, if the book is used in education). The main lesson of this case isthe following: though the company does not look like EA Cakes Ltd., and thegoals of the production planning systems are different, nevertheless, analogousSAP solutions can be used to give computer support to the production planningstaff.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 178
Author(s):  
George Tsakalidis ◽  
Kostas Vergidis

The elaborate analysis of a business process (BP) typically informs its potential for business process redesign (BPR), but the latter is usually conducted in a non-systematic way. The purpose of this paper is the introduction of the Business Process Redesign Capacity Assessment (BP-RCA) framework that assesses the redesign capability of BP models, prior to their implementation. This study combines key redesign features introduced by domain experts, to a conceptual framework that takes into consideration an inclusive set of BPR components in three consecutive phases, towards facilitating organizations in the practice of redesign decision making. In this paper, an illustrative case study is used to present the initial phase (selection) of the framework. To assess the usability of the BP-RCA, the authors reviewed twelve established redesign initiatives from literature which proved to implicitly follow similar steps to the proposed framework. The findings indicate that the BP-RCA framework provides a systematic exploration of fundamental redesign aspects and can be used as a reliable measurement of the redesign capacity of candidate BP models. The framework also provides practitioners with the necessary methodology for increasing the BPR effectiveness, the robustness of the varying initiatives and the overall innovativeness of businesses.


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