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XONITEK - Endicott - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
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Process
Mapping with Flowcharts By Steven Bonacorsi
A flowchart is an outline or schematic drawing of the process your team is trying to measure or improve. It can also be a picture of an ideal process that you would like to use. Process mapping with flowcharts can help people:
Process mapping is especially useful in the measure and analyze phases of Lean Six Sigma methodology.
Top-down
flowchart There are several kinds of flowcharts. The simplest is the top-down flowchart.
What can it do for you?
How
do you make one? 1. List the most basic steps of the process. Limit these to no more than five or six major steps.
2. Write the major steps across the top of a board, flipchart or piece of paper in the order that they occur in the process.
3. Under each major step, list the sub-steps that make up that element of the process. List them in the order that they occur.
Again, limit yourself to no more than five or six sub-steps
for each major step.
Now what? The picture you have created will
show only the useful work that goes into the process.
The top-down flowchart can be used for planning new processes as well as examining existing ones. It helps keep people focused on the whole process instead of getting lost in details. Details can be worked out by the team members responsible for that part of the process.
Another flowchart is the deployment chart. While the top-down flowchart tells the what, the deployment chart shows both what and who.
What
can it do for you?
How
do you make one? 1. List the major steps of the process in the order in which they occur. This might be the output of your work with a top-down flowchart or you might use some other technique to create this list.
2. Across the top of your board, flipchart or paper write the names of the people or organizations involved in the process.
3. Under the name of the person or organization responsible for the first step in the process, draw a box and write that step in the box. If more than one person or group is responsible for a step, extend the box so it is also under the name of that person or group.
4. If any of the other people or groups help or advise the ones with primary responsibility for that step, draw an oval under the names of those people or groups.
5. Connect the ovals to the box with the process step in it.
6. After the first step is complete, put the second step under the people responsible for it.
7. Connect the first step to the second step, and then add ovals for any helpers or advisors in the second process step. Keep going this way with all the steps in the process.
Now
what? The completed chart tells not only how the process operates at each step, but who is involved and what responsibility they each have.
Ask:
The deployment chart can be as simple (just major steps) or as involved (sub-steps and sub-sub-steps) as you need to make it.
Detailed
flowchart Generally top-down and deployment charts are enough to examine a process, but sometimes teams need more detail to see where problems are occurring.
What can it do for you?
To construct a detailed flowchart, various symbols can be used to represent process steps.
1. Draw the first symbol, and then write a description of the process step inside the symbol.
2. Draw the second symbol. Write the description. Connect the two symbols with an arrow showing the direction of flow.
3. Continue this way until you have completed the process or the part of the process you wanted to examine.
Note: Each symbol should represent only one action or one
yes/no decision. This is what gives the detailed flowchart its detail. It is
also what makes the creation of detailed flowcharts so time consuming.
Look at the completed flowchart.
Ask:
A detailed flowchart can be a powerful tool for examining a process that has built up needless complexity, but be warned. Creating all this detail is time-consuming.
Before you begin, ask:
Steven Bonacorsi is a Certified Lean Six Sigma Senior Master Black Belt instructor and coach. Mr. Bonacorsi has trained hundreds of Master Black Belts, Black Belts, and Green Belts. He has also trained Project Sponsors and Executive Leaders in Lean Six Sigma DMAIC and Design for Lean Six Sigma process improvement methodologies. Leading some of the largest deployments in the world, he has saved hundreds of millions with his project team’s results.
Contact him at bonacorsisd@xonitek.com. |
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