The most essential principle of continuous process improvement is defining how work is being done. That means high-quality process mapping and modeling.
Every business process is made up of a myriad of sub-processes and tasks. That’s why process decomposition – breaking a business process down into all of the sub-processes that constitute it – is so important.
Process decomposition is the practice of documenting all the sub-processes and tasks that make up a higher-level business process. For example, take a seemingly simple business like processing an invoice.
Processing an invoice is made up of several sub-processes and tasks involving multiple actors, actor actions, handoffs, system interactions, etc.
In this process decomposition diagram, processing an invoice can be decomposed into four sub-processes:
Decomposing a process into all of its granular levels is incredibly important for several reasons:
Under a continuous improvement lens, business process decomposition is important because it delivers the insight needed to make informed decisions when considering the right process improvement strategies to apply.
Before deciding how best to improve your processes, you need to analyze your business processes and determine where there are inefficiencies, where they are error-prone, and where there might be waste.
There is no way to do that without first having a clear and accurate picture of what that process and all of its sub-processes look like.
Automation is one process improvement strategy that an organization may want to apply to improve their workflows in terms of higher efficiency and cost reduction.
Business process decomposition is so integral to automation because it’s not the end-to-end business processes that are automated—it’s the sub-processes and tasks of those higher-level processes that are converted into bots.
Without process decomposition, finding automation candidates and knowing what to automate is like trying to find a needle in a haystack and will most likely elicit the same success rates.
Adding quantitative values to your processes is critical in understanding where your processes need attention and modifications.
To quantify the value of your processes, you need to decompose them into fine, granular detail, so every sub-process and process step – where appropriate – can have a value applied to it. Only then can you simulate and predict where the process needs to be changed and what modifications will yield the desired improvements.
Typical values you can plug into your business processes for simulation and predictive analytic purposes include:
For more detailed examples on how to decompose processes, where and what types of values to enter to quantify your processes and even a free template to get you started, download the Process Decomposition Template for free!