Monday, November 7, 2011

CIOs have improved all of their processes...seriously?

Recently, I came across a Gartner report on Reimagining IT that talks about CIOs being freed up to focus on enterprise growth and strategic impact. Both of which have eluded CIOs for a number of years.

Yes, interesting that only now are CIOs able to focus on growth and impact. However, I found their strategies for impacting growth to be more interesting. Why? Well, "Improving business processes" was #1 for the last three years, but it dropped to #5 in 2011. What? Have we improved our business processes and no longer need to address them? I doubt it. And I see that the results confirm it. Plus, I think CIOs just don't want to say they're "working on improving processes," because it's potentially cliche or boring or dated. (Granted, some companies have done wonderful things to their processes and they are ready to move on. Congrats.)

Let's look at the top 3...

#1 in 2011: Increasing enterprise growth

OK, how are you going to do that if your processes are out of whack and you're fighting issues with your processes? Good luck. You need solid, yet flexible, processes that support innovation and growth. Good process drives growth. You can call it "increasing enterprise growth," but you know you're just improving your business processes to allow you to grow your enterprise.

And increasing enterprise growth isn't going anywhere. It's projected to be #1 in 2014 also.

What about #2? Attracting and retaining new customers

Customers are demanding better service. Great processes can give your employees the information necessary to better service customers, so they stick around. What processes do you have in place to attract and retain customers? Are you going to ignore your process and throw more people at a customer?

Reducing enterprise costs is #3

Seriously? It's fairly well known that companies have cut resources ("to the bone" as one colleague puts it). Now is the time to reduce costs through better processes! Let your employees do more with the resources they have by delivering information to them or automating non-value add work.

Include your employees in the process planning. They want to be involved. And they've likely got great ideas for improving the process!


So, there you have it. "Improving business processes" has been kicked to the curb, and replaced by three others that are really just disguising reasons to have better processes.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

The right organizations do understand BPM

Recently, I had the opportunity to meet with a group of people from a financial institution in Cincinnati. We discussed their current BPM (business process management) initiative and strategy. They get it!

To start, the project has executive support from both the business side of the organization and the IT side. They want it! And they have a backlog of processes that they want BPM to manage.

And the team implementing BPM has a strategy for implementing the processes. Included in that strategy is the ability to understand and monitor the processes after implementation. They'll extend control to the business while still providing the governance a BPM implementation needs.

I expect to hear great things from this organization in the future.

Cheers!

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Register number with the DO NOT CALL list

I received the following from my company's HR department today:

"Cell phone numbers have recently been released to telemarketing companies, and so it’s possible that you may start to receive sales calls. To prevent this, register your cell phone number with the National DO NOT CALL list which blocks your number for five (5) years. Dial 1 888-382-1222 from the cell phone number that you want to have blocked. Visit https://www.donotcall.gov/default.aspx for more information."

I registered my two numbers using the website.

Cheers!

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Snow days hurt when you only have a one-hour class

Sure, snow days are great. No class.

However, my BUS 102 class only meets once a week for one hour. So, we've got about 15 hours of class. Taking an hour away for a snow day hurts. The snow day was needed, because ice was covering everything in Butler Co. I did not want my students getting hurt.

Today, I'll be adjusting the schedule. I've been thinking about how to get all of the assignments in without driving my students crazy (or at least no more than I've already driven them!). And I think this snow day may help us all understand what "business writing" looks like. Who knows, maybe I'll use this same approach in the future even when there are no snow days.

Cheers!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

ReportViewer JavaScript Error Message: 'RSClientController' is undefined

This post saved me a lot of time today:
http://chrisghardwick.blogspot.com/2008/11/sql-server-reporting-services-2008-on.html

I was getting JavaScript errors on a page using the ReportViewer control, but I only received the errors when the site was viewed from the server. The page worked fine on my laptop while debugging the site.

Server was running Windows Server 2008 R2. I'm using Windows 7.

Had to add a Managed Handler to the site. Once added, refreshed page, and bam! it worked.