Why do you believe that system
management is new to management?
System management shows how
to create and define a best practice ‘map’ for any or all management systems,
and how to identify and define its influencing factors of success. This allows manager to create an operational
best practice map with measurable metrics and indicators of success. Once that is done, the model itself provides
a foundation of a perfect ‘learning organization’ that can review and improve
on its practices over each performance cycle.
There is nothing in existing management practice that shows how to
provide this kind of structure, evaluation, and learning for the management
structure overall.
Why do you call it a “fundamental” body
of knowledge for all managers?
Much of current management
literature is focused only on one-to-one interactions with
individuals--“supervision“-- or generic group practices like “motivation”,
“goal-setting”, “employee engagement”, or “encouraging the heart.” Another approach puts its focus on generic
organizational frameworks that provide a cookbook of advisory or prescriptive
tactics under headings like “Baldrige”, “ISO”, or “The House of Lean." It is a great omission of current management
knowledge that there is firm structure for defining, analyzing, standardizing,
or implementing best practices for the specific practice areas of individual
managers – either for a program office or for specific management functions like
governance, strategic planning, budgeting, quality control, and project
management.
Isn’t systems management mentioned in a
lot of management books?
Yes, many books use the plural
word ‘systems’ with the same meaning as an organizational environment. One business book says that “systems thinking
is more of a concept than a tool,” and describes the system as ALL the factors
that surround a process. Another calls
systems “a set of inter-related processes.”
Either definition will blind managers to the possibility of documenting
and improving a SINGLE area of management practice with specific goals – the
real definition of a system. When
systems are looked at one at a time, it is possible to define and map their
primary activities and success factors, and this kind of documentation of
systems redefines management.
What is the difference between a process
and a system?
A business process uses a
specific set of sequential steps, each of which can be defined, to produce a
specific output with a definable set of output requirements. A process is often completed by a designated
work team, and is designed to be done the same way with the same sequential
steps time after time. A system is more
easily seen as a project, in that it produces a valuable output but will have a
production cycle that may not be rigidly sequential, that is more changeable
because of intervening factors in each cycle, and that may produce a number of
outputs all of which cannot be defined in advance. A system is less likely to follow a single
predictable path and may have to obtain its result using personnel that are not
a designated work team.
Given all those differences, what makes
you think that a system can be mapped?
All human knowledge is based on
science, which itself is based on observation of repetitive cycles and learning
about the factors that drive success in any given cycle. If you start with the premise that each
management system is cyclical and has quantifiable goals, then we can define
and predict the principal activity groups (or milestones) that are necessary to
achieve those goals. We can also then define the measurable attributes of
success in each group. Using cause and
effect analysis, we can further break down the influencing factors (or
“causes”) of success, and the metrics or indicators that can be seen when those
practices are followed. Even though the
operational best practices of system are not sequential with specific
assignable steps, the system map does provide a documented operational plan
that can be evaluated and improved.
Can you explain the concepts of “native
systems” and “design systems” that you refer to in your book?
Often times groups of people
develop a habit, understanding, or “culture” about the way things are done
around here, and this is the native system.
Like standing in line at the grocery store, people make things work
based on assumptions of what is considered fair or right. The same is true in larger organizations, so
the way that we operate a program office, develop a budget, or decide on projects
is often a combination of guess work and detective work. The idea of design system is a deliberate
decision of a leadership structure that for critical management outputs, there
should be a focused effort to define how it will work best, to let everyone
know about that operational plan, to evaluate its operation at the end of each
cycle, and to innovate and improve based on learning. This mirrors the practices recommended by the
Framework for performance excellence of the National Quality Award that management
systems should have a documented approach and deployment combined with periodic
learning and innovation.
The book title mentions Lean. Does that mean if follows established process
improvement methodology?
System management shows
leaders how to achieve superior leadership results by applying a Lean DMAIC
(Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control) structure to leadership
systems and program office operations.
It shows leaders how to align and evaluate these systems using a Lean
approach, and how to evaluate and score the maturity of management practices
through the American Society for Quality System Management Standard
(http://asq.org/gov). It offers analytic
skills to eliminate duplication and waste of executive and senior management time,
and reduce the wait time and non-value add in dependent processes.
Explain how lean system management
provides an agile framework for organizational change.
Lean system management presents
a structured framework for defining and controlling organizations, along with a
system maturity standard that allows regular measurement of the maturity and
capability of defined management systems.
In this way it provides an agile framework for the organization-wide
practice of quality (which we will refer to as “Performance Excellence”), and
enables the use of a system maturity scorecard, showing the capability and
maturity of quality management function throughout the organization. It also allows and enables an
organization-wide scorecard on the practice of quality at the process level,
through use of the Process Management Standard (See Measuring Maturity, Quality Progress,
Sept. 2016 --
http://asq.org/quality-progress/2016/09/process-capability/measuring-maturity.html).
What do you think of Richard's view of system management? Do you agree with his views on why performance excellence is currently not sustained by many organizations?
What do you think of Richard's view of system management? Do you agree with his views on why performance excellence is currently not sustained by many organizations?
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