Everyone is very familiar with the Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle that is the basis of today’s Good Management Practice. So what is the difference between Good Management Practice and Best Practice?
ISO, the International Organization for Stadardization, has a comprehensive set of guidelines covering a broad range of good management practices, all of which include a component on Continuous Improvement.
21st CENTURY GOOD MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
- ISO 55000 Asset Management
- ISO 22301 Business Continuity
- ISO 31000 Risk Management
- ISO 20000 Supplier Management
- ISO 18000 Occupational Health & Safety
- ISO 9000 Quality Management
But Good Management Practice (GMP) is no more a key factor in business success than the Times Tables are in putting a man in space. It’s just a necessary interim first step. And if you can afford to pay a consultant you most likely are past that first step.
So what’s the difference between Good Management Practice and Best Practice?
Everyone is very familiar with the Plan-Do-Check-Act (or Adjust as I prefer) cycle that is the basis of today’s Good Management Practice. So what is the difference between Good Management Practice and Best Practice. Well do you realise the PDCA concept was first develop in the 1920’s by Walter Shewhart. Yes it’s nearly 100 years old, and the business world has moved on considerably since the 1920’s. Best Practice in the 21st century is about getting a return and advancement out of your systems, not just doing it right. And by advancement I don’t mean incremental improvement but game changing leaps.
The graveyard of ex-successful businesses is littered with the bones of incremental improvement based businesses like Nokia, Blockbuster, Polaroid, Pan Am, not counting those at the precipice today, such as Hertz, Macy’s, CBS, Barnes Noble, Kmart and even Coca-Cola and IBM aren’t sure things anymore.
To survive in the 21st century, business needs to change its headspace. The odds are you wouldn’t be in business today (post GFC), if you hadn’t already implemented Good Management Practices in most Systems Management areas. But my experience, in even leading businesses, is that they are often so bogged down in purely administrating their regulatory compliance that they don’t get to move into the area of best practice.
So let me put it unequivocally, Best Practice is about focusing on:
Realization, Optimization, and Innovation
I am not against PDCA, in fact it is the basis of modern scientific method. Realization, Optimization, and Innovation is an extension of PDCA. But that is the point. Although PDCA is a good practice, ROI builds on PDCA to be a better practice and therefore PDCA is NOT Best Practice. Although I should more correctly refer to ROI as Better Practice, to aid in communicating the concept I will continue to use the term Best Practice. Undoubtedly there will be better practices in the future.
So let’s look at some specifics about each of the ROI concepts and where people can find more information on them.
REALIZATION
Even though the framers of ISO 9000 thought it important enough to allocate Product Realization as a section in its own right, people still interpret it as Process Management. The definition of the word Realization is “the achievement of something desired or anticipated” i.e. achievement not expectation. Realization can only occurring in a real-time feedback loop scenario, otherwise it’s just a plan.
ISO9001:2015’s introduction of Risk is about modernizing quality management practices from the traditional process based mentality to a more outcome focused framework. Realization is about applying this “outcome focused“ aim to process management.
Where PDCA is a reactive sequential management process that provides a solution to a known issue, Realization is about proactive concurrent parallel systems (yes a tautology) that gathers intelligence, identifies drivers or influences, selects the best scenario to handle unexpected events and maximise outcomes. Those involved in integrated management system will quickly identify this as a risk eco-system.
Benefit Realization, originally championed by the UK government, is widely accepted in project management as best practice, (see PMI’s High Cost of Low Performance). Instead of the traditional view of documenting processes and recording outputs, realization is about continual real-time monitoring with inbuilt mitigations along the lines of automatic fault detection and correction but applied to human interaction systems. The New South Wales government in Australia put out an excellent series of papers on its application as applied to Finance & Services. http://finance.nsw.gov.au/content/benefits-realisation-management-framework.
OPTIMIZATION
Even without improvement very few systems achieve their existing full potential. Efficient utilisation of time and resources (which is also an outcome of Realization), and elimination of waste or excess is often easier and more rewarding than increasing throughput or performance, as it goes straight onto the bottom-line.
Quoting from Introduction to Process Optimization:
“Optimization is a fundamental and frequently applied task for most engineering activities. However, in many cases, this task is done by trial and error (through case study). To avoid such tedious activities, we take a systematic approach to this task, which is as efficient as possible and also provides some guarantee that a better solution cannot be found. The systematic determination of optimal solutions leads to a large family of methods and algorithms. Moreover, the literature for optimization is dynamic, with hundreds of papers published every month in dozens of journals.”
As mentioned Optimization acknowledges PDCA as a common method, but Process Optimization seeks to provide “a better solution”. In principle it takes a mathematical modelling approach to identifying key influencing factors and their optimum values. Although the document quickly descends into technical examples, the 1st two sections I believe are reasonably easy to understand. It also refers to a number of modelling programs you can look at, so I can’t be accused of self-promotion.
Optimization, being systematic requires subject matter expertise, which is probably why it is being shunned by “generalist” consultants. To assist those interested in pursuing Optimization as a best practice, here’s a link to selection of books on Process Optimization modelling in a wide range of specific subjects: http://bookstore.siam.org/search.php?search_query=optimization
INNOVATION
Innovation is synonymous with improvement best practice. There seems to be a miscomprehension that ISO9001 proscribes PDCA but Continuous Improvement encompasses both incremental and innovative improvement. Innovation is something new, not just incrementally improved. At the heart of innovation is creativity, inspiration and diversity, the antithesis of continuous improvement which is introspective. Where would Apple, Virgin or Dyson be today if they looked at the world from a “Continuous Improvement” perspective.
The debate between the practicality of incremental improvement verses the disruptive paradigm change of innovation, I will defer at this moment, as both have merit.
I believe innovation is widely avoided as a method of continuous improvement due to a lack of understanding of its mechanics and the lack of an obvious framework. I have plans to do an article on my vision of an innovation management framework in the new year. The West Australia Dept of Agriculture has done some great work on combining the two into a single strategy they refer to as CI&I, Continuous Improvement and Innovation (see https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/improvement-tools-continuous-improvement-and-innovation).
At its heart Innovation is a cultural issue needing desire to propagate. The most succinct bit of advice on enabling innovation came from Charles Harary talking about Entrepreneurship, but it can easily be applied to developing Innovation within an existing business: “Ask for advice. Ask for connections. Ask for money. Be creative. Just ask, and you may just receive what you need.” (Read more: http://insights.wired.com/profiles/blogs/five-secrets-of-successful-entrepreneurs#ixzz3JepMN27c).
INCONCLUSION
Even though Best Practices are clearly mapped out in the gambit of ISO System Management standards, they are continually being dumbed down into 20th century failed practices.
Moving to 21stcentury best practices of Realization, Optimisation and Innovation, the ISO standards would then be interpreted that:
- Asset Management is NOT just managing assets BUT realizing value out of assets
- Business Continuity is NOT just about good governance BUT leaving a legacy to those who follow
- Risk Management is NOT just about reducing risk BUT reducing uncertainty on objectives
- Supplier Management is NOT just about fiduciary duty BUT achieving the value for money promise
- Occ Health & Safety is NOT just about regulatory compliance BUT securing a safe and healthy environment
- Quality Management is NOT just getting it right BUT wowing the customer.
So why not take another look at those standards with a 21st century hat on and ask yourself: Are our systems really supporting us to be here in 20 years?
Bio:
Greg Carroll - Founder & Technical Director, Fast Track Australia Pty Ltd. Greg Carroll has 30 years’ experience addressing risk management systems in life-and-death environments like the Australian Department of Defence and the Victorian Infectious Diseases Laboratories among others. He has also worked for decades with top tier multinationals like Motorola, Fosters and Serco.
In 1981 he founded Fast Track (www.fasttrack365.com) which specialises in regulatory compliance and enterprise risk management for medium and large organisations. The company deploys enterprise-wide solutions for Quality, Risk, Environmental, OHS, Supplier, and Innovation Management.
Mastering 21st Century Risk Management” which will be available from the www.fasttrack365.com website in a couple of weeks. Meanwhile a recent Webinar on the topic can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQoJj6FBxrY&feature=youtu.be in which we show how emerging best practices provide a good picture for how enterprise risk management should look in the 21st century.