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BPM in marketing: meeting the challenge

The simplify, standardise, automate mantra implemented by business process analysts seems to be at loggerheads with the creative chaos found in marketing departments, but Jam Warehouse`s Alan Haefele argues that good BPM allows for better creativity.
By Alan Haefele, Senior business analyst for Jam Warehouse UK.
Johannesburg, 07 Dec 2005

Marketing departments are traditionally the realm of freewheeling creative personalities, thriving on caffeine and a certain amount of chaos. Business process improvements, on the other hand, are all about structure, predictability and - fine for the meticulous types in finance departments or production, but anathema to the marketers.

That, at any rate, is the conventional wisdom; but taking business process improvements to marketing`s final frontier can have liberating results.

Sometimes chaos is necessary and useful, but not nearly as often as some people might think. When you`re on deadline and it takes seven phone calls to find out where your artwork is, a little structure could make life a good deal more pleasant.

The mantra for business process analysts is "simplify, standardise, automate", but the benefits start much earlier, with acknowledgement and appreciation of existing business process. Sometimes marketers don`t think they have processes, but understanding and documenting what goes on when you create a new product, change a pack size or commission artwork has several benefits. It helps teams understand each other`s work better, it`s invaluable for training and it can suggest immediate improvements.

In most large organisations functions are well defined at the highest level, but underneath that things can get messy. Which files move where, how quickly do they move and who needs to approve what? Getting down to this level of detail can deliver real value.

One of the results is that it becomes much clearer exactly who is responsible for any particular process, and who is accountable for it. Quite often it turns out that two people are accountable, a less-than-ideal situation that is easy to fix... once you know about it.

When we`re examining a client`s business processes we also focus on who needs to be consulted at any point, and who needs to be informed. Again, this can expose communication gaps. Once we have all this information, it`s possible to automate the process in such a way that much of it needs no intervention. Automatic notifications when particular milestones are reached can be an invaluable project management tool.

Costs, time and errors

Implementing proper process management, far from limiting creative freedom, can extend it by eliminating time-wasting bureaucracy.

Alan Haefele, senior business analyst for Jam Warehouse UK

Apart from the project management advantages, there is also huge scope to save money by eliminating paper in as many places as possible. everything means no copying or courier costs, not to mention the saving in cost and effort that comes from managing rather than paper assets.

Streamlining and automating marketing processes through well-designed software systems can help eliminate mistakes too. Being first to market, especially with seasonal products, is very important in the FMCG sector. Sometimes one mistake, like a wrong barcode, can set the process back days. One of our clients estimated that just two days of Valentine`s sales were enough to pay for an entire process management system.

For marketing departments to get the most value of process enhancements, a process management suite needs to be able to do three major things. First, it needs to provide an effective digital assets library and management; second, it must enable good management of products and product development; and finally, it needs to provide rich and effective project management tools.

Dynamic environments

No business ever stands still, of course, and a good process management system should also be designed for flexibility. When a process changes, it should be easy for users to reconfigure the system without calling in outside consultants.

Creative workers do need freedom to work effectively. The good news is that implementing proper process management, far from limiting that freedom, can extend it by eliminating time-wasting bureaucracy.

In one of our projects we discovered that a product acquired 500 separate bits of information in the journey from design through manufacturing to transport and sale. Many of these separate bits were identical - barcodes and reference numbers, for example, needed to be entered every time the item moved to a new stage of the process.

Eliminating this kind of duplication by replacing all the paper forms with a single digital file brought the number of fields down to just over 200, which meant less time wasted and fewer opportunities to make mistakes. That in turn meant more time to devote to the real creative work.

In any industry or profession that`s been around for long enough, best practices develop and organisations that want to win must understand and implement these best practices. Marketing is no exception. For many companies, it presents a significant opportunity to wring competitive advantage out of business process optimisation.

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