Processes: Doing more harm than good?
Processes should not end up affecting productivity and stifling creativity
One would think that with the rise of technology, productivity would increase too. However, as Robert Solow, Nobel laureate in economics pointed out, “You can see the computer age everywhere but in the productivity statistics.” If one looks deeply, one can see overwhelming processes trying to drive technology and derail productivity at many levels. So, it can be safe to say that maybe, most organisations should take a close look at the processes they have in place; processes designed to make the organisation run more efficiently and effectively, but might be far from doing so.Let’s face it-we cannot really ignore the importance of processes in organisation. As small enterprises grow, the need to have the right processes in place increases, mainly to encourage efficiency within the organisation. Procedures, interface structures, decision approvals and reports ensure that the organisation runs like a well-oiled machine. However, when these processes remain static in their archaic model and do not change with the organisation, the technology and the people within it grow, then productivity levels hit a plateau causing the proverbial ‘productivity paradox’. So it is important to ask, “How much process is too much?”In order to cater to today’s complex business environment, most organisations look at establishing processes to establish quantifiable accountability, standardise tasks and make the overall functioning easy and efficient to competently manage business requirements. Having smart processes in place ensures business predictability, continuity and the added advantage of having valuable data insights that enable companies to ramp up easily when needed by leveraging central knowledge repository.However, processes become painful when they, instead of enabling employees to execute their tasks effectively, act as deterrents. If employees have to spend hours securing permissions for executing tasks, attend unnecessary meetings, or complete redundant processes, then there’s a problem at hand. Instead of actual work, the employees then become slaves to everything marked ‘urgent’ and work that can be completed in time comfortably is a last minute scramble.In other words, having processes that impede rather than enable employees stand in the way of organisational productivity. Here are some of the ways on how processes can kill productivity:
- Responsibility without authority–empowering people and still expecting them to get several approvals and sign-offs signal lack of trust and don’t help in getting anything done
- Process comes before people–standardisation is essential for business. However, it must not be forgotten that people, not processes, make and run a company. Processes cannot solve problems, people can.
- Counterproductive meetings–Yes meetings are important but not for every small reason. In fact, meetings are rated as one of the top productivity killers at work.
- Redundant processes can limit vision, which, in turn, does not help organisations grow
- A completely process-dependent management can lack perspective and openness, which negatively impacts innovation and productivity
First Published: May 14, 2015, 07:52
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