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Tech Talk Articles from 11/22/93 | 1993 | Tech Talk | Search | MIT News | Comments | MIT

 

'Reengineering' is Central... (11/22/93)

MIT is about to embark on a "reengineering" effort that will initially design 
and implement significant changes in key administrative operations. 

The undertaking is a major component of the Institute's evolving plan to 
prepare the university for the future and to eliminate by the end of Fiscal 
Year 1997 the growing gap between income and expenses.

Senior Vice President William R. Dickson is leading the effort.

Mr. Dickson said that Dr. Michael M. Hammer, coauthor of the book 
Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution, will 
conduct a day-long workshop on November 23 for members of the Academic and 
Administrative Councils "to help us better understand how we begin the 
process."

Dr. Hammer is the originator and leading exponent of the concept of 
reengineering and the founder of the reengineering movement. The movement and 
his subsequent book grew out of a July-August 1990 Harvard Business Review 
article.

In that article, Dr. Hammer summed up the essence of reengineering (often 
referred to as BPR for business process reengineering) this way:

"At the heart of reengineering is the notion of discontinuous thinking-of 
recognizing and breaking away from the outdated rules and fundamental 
assumptions that underlie operations. Unless we change these rules, we are 
merely rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. We cannot achieve 
breakthroughs in performance by cutting fat or automating existing processes. 
Rather, we must challenge old assumptions and shed the old rules."

Dr. Hammer has first-hand knowledge of "the rules" at MIT. He is a former 
faculty member (1973-86) in the Department of Electrical Engineering and 
Computer Science and holds three degrees from MIT, the SB (1968) in 
mathematics and the SM (1970) and the PhD (1973), both from EECS. 

His co-author, James A. Champy, chairman of CSC Index, Inc., the management 
consulting firm that pioneered the development and practice of reengineering, 
also is no stranger to MIT. He is a member of the Class of 1963 and holds the 
SB and SM in civil engineering. From 1975 to 1978 he was executive vice 
president of the MIT Alumni/Alumnae Association and also a lecturer in the 
Department of Architecture.

The Hammer-Champy book defines reengineering in two words: Starting over.

It is, the authors say, "about beginning again with a clean sheet of paper. It 
is about rejecting the conventional wisdom and received assumptions of the 
past. Reengineering is about inventing new approaches to process structure 
that bear little or no resemblance to those previous eras.

"Fundamentally, reengineering is about reversing the industrial revolution. 
Reengineering rejects the assumptions inherent in Adam Smith's industrial 
paradigm-the division of labor, economies of scale, hierarchical control, and 
all the other appurtenances of an early-stage developing economy. 
Reengineering is the search for new models of organizing work. Tradition 
counts for nothing. Reengineering is a new beginning."

It is that complete "out-with-the-old" focus that differentiates reengineering 
from Total Quality Management (TQM), which is already being applied 
extensively at the Institute. TQM is used within the framework of existing 
processes and seeks steady incremental enhancements. Hammer and Champy 
describe TQM's aim as "to do what we already do, only to do it better."

Yet, TQM and reengineering share common themes. Both recognize the importance 
of processes and both start with the needs of the process "customer" and work 
backward from there.

"TQM and BPR really go together," Mr. Dickson said. "Both focus on customers 
and processes-a collection of business activities (tasks) that create value 
for a customer. In our case, the customers of our business processes are our 
students, faculty and staff. TQM is very useful for improving a process that 
is already well structured and customer focused. BPR, on the other hand, 
examines those processes that are overly complex and lack customer focus."

The "reengineering timetable" outlined by Vice President Dickson calls for:

* The workshop to be led by Dr. Hammer on November 23.

* The selection, by December 31, of an outside consultant to work with MIT.

* The appointment, also by year-end, of a "governance group" of senior members 
of the MIT community to guide the reengineering effort. The governance group 
will work with the consultant and others from the Institute to clarify the 
business case for reengineering, create a process map for MIT, formulate the 
reengineering strategy, recommend processes for reengineering and nominate 
members of cross-functional teams to reengineer a small number of business 
processes. These tasks should be completed in the spring of 1994.

The cross-functional teams will begin work on the selected processes in late 
spring. Based upon reengineering work at other organizations, each team will 
take about six months to reengineer its assigned process and to do an initial 
prototype of the new process. The members of the cross-functional teams will 
be drawn from across the Institute, not just from the process being 
redesigned, Mr. Dickson stressed. He also noted that the teams will be engaged 
in the reengineering project for as much as 80 percent of the their work time. 
"Their primary assignments will be the reengineering project."

Once the prototype of a reengineering process is successfully in place, the 
process will be implemented Institute-wide. Thus, the Institute will begin to 
see changes in the way business is done early in calendar 1995.

This timetable outlines the work on the first set of processes that will be 
reengineered. It can be expected that work will be required on additional 
processes and that additional teams will begin work later in calendar 1994.







Tech Talk Articles from 11/22/93 | 1993 | Tech Talk | Search | MIT News | Comments | MIT