Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Management Revolution
February, 2011
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
In addition to these benefits there are many external pressures that require that processes are documented. For
example:
Yet many organization resist documenting their processes. Why? Because of the pain that traditional methods
inflict. Process documentation is viewed as:
Time consuming, disruptive and hence expensive: Traditional methods are slow and distract team
members from normal productive activities.
Incomplete: Not all processes are documented and those that are, are difficult to find. Team members
are unaware that documentation for a process, or even the process itself, even exists.
Ineffective: The result is a binder of difficult to understand documentation, that no one looks at and
that quickly becomes stale.
Visual Process Management (VPM) is a revolutionary advance in the field of process documentation and
management that eliminates this pain. VPM creates a collection of hyperlinked visuals that functions like a web
site, called a VPM Collection.
A VPM Collection is a complete electronic model of an organization. It links every process with the position that is
responsible for executing it and managing it. It separates, complex processes into smaller components that are
easy to manage and understand and links them to each other. With a VPM Collection, every position in the
organization can immediately identify all of the processes they are responsible for and can view the
documentation for each one. Every process in the organization is systematically identified, documented and the
position that is responsible for executing or managing it can be immediately accessed.
VPM is made possible by the introduction of the visual processor. The speed with which the visual processor can
capture ideas in visual form makes it possible to create the flowcharts that document a process in real time while
interviewing the people that perform them, reducing the time and cost it takes to build a VPM collection many fold
compared to traditional methods. The visual processor also makes it possible to easily build the group of
hyperlinked visuals that makes up a VPM collection.
1. Live Documentation
VPM process documentation takes the form of an interactive collection of interlinked visuals stored on
a file server. Everyone in the organization has access to the collection and can easily find the processes
they are responsible for and navigate to the documentation. Updates made are immediately reflected
in the live collection.
2. Process Hierarchy
Instead of attempting to document a complex process with a single complex flowchart, VPM breaks it
into a hierarchy of processes and sub-processes that are hyperlinked together like a web site.
4. Process Accountability
VPM assigns responsibility for both the execution and the management of each process to a position
within the organization. The flowchart for each process is hyperlinked to a visual representation of the
organizational structure and vice versa.
6. Visual Grammar
When visuals, like flowcharts, are used to communicate to many different people across an
organization, standardized formatting is necessary. In VPM, the flowcharts and other visuals adhere to
the rules of visual grammar to ensure a common format and hence maximum comprehension by
everyone in the organization.
Live Documentation
VPM process documentation takes the form of an interactive collection of hyperlinked visuals. There are two
principal entry points (or home pages) to the collection: The master process tree and the organization chart. The
master process tree provides links to all of the master processes for the organization, and this is used to drill down
into details of each process. The organization chart links each position in the organization to the process that
position is responsible for. These dual entry points make it intuitively easy to find the information you’re looking
for, whether you are trying to find out “who does what” or “how this is done.”
Each member of the organization can use a visual processor to browse through the documentation, via either
entry point, to quickly find the information they need. Users with the responsibility to update the documentation
can modify it and everyone else will immediately see the updated results. The collection of visual document files is
stored on a file server, with shared access. Read/write permission can be implemented using the operating system
or a document management system like SharePoint which VPM fully supports. This contrasts with traditional
methods of publishing process documentation in printed form stored in a ring binder, where there is no clear
indication of all the processes a position is responsible for, or who is responsible for maintaining them, and there is
no easy way to find the processes unless you know their exact name. Too often traditional process documentation
is filed away, ignored and forgotten.
Process Hierarchy
Processes are naturally hierarchical. When most people describe a process they summarize multiple steps into one
summary step. For example, when closing the end of the month the controller might describe his process as:
Each of these steps actually represents a whole additional process. For example, the “Make entries for remaining
expenses” step is itself a process:
VPM reflects this natural hierarchy and uses hyperlinks to allow a viewer of the documents to click on a shape and
drill down to the sub process it represents, in much the same way as you’d navigate a web site.
The traditional way of documenting this process would be to combine all of the steps in all of the sub processes
into one large flowchart with many steps. The result is something that needs to be printed on a poster-sized sheet
of paper and is incomprehensible to 95% of the people that have the misfortune to look at it.
Using a hierarchy of linked charts allows people to focus on the key steps of the top-level process without being
distracted by the details, while still being able to drill down to the details as needed. The arrival of the visual
processor makes it possible to build and maintain a hyperlinked collection of visual documents to easily implement
this concept.
Most organizations have a relatively small number of master processes. A master process is one that stands alone
and is not part of any other process hierarchy. It stands at the top of a hierarchy and is sometimes called a top-
level process.
For example, a printing company has one master process for originating and fulfilling orders (the production
process), plus other administrative master processes like HR and Finance.
Each summary step is then used a starting point to drill into the details of the sub processes that it represents.
Processes are discovered and documented down to the level of detail desired, while building a flowchart for each
one, and then linked together into a collection.
This is an exhaustive and systematic process unlike the traditional method that depends on individuals within an
organization volunteering the processes they can recall.
This systematic approach not only ensures that nothing that is missed, but also provides context for every process
in your organization. Instead of a random collection of isolated processes, you can instantly see how each process
fits within the organization and how they interact together.
1.) It allows any employee to identify the processes they are responsible for and to locate their
documentation.
2.) It allows anyone in the company to look at a process and identify who is responsible for carrying out the
work and who is responsible for managing the process and keeping the documentation up to date.
Since VPM is concerned not just with processes, but with those responsible for them, organizational information is
also included in the collection of interlinked visuals.
So, in addition to identifying top-level master processes, VPM begins by building a functional organization chart.
This chart includes a shape for each distinct position. It may also include names of specific employees associated
with these positions.
Each position in the org chart is hyperlinked to another visual, unique to VPM, called a job map. Clicking on the
Bindery Operator position, for example, will give you this job map:
This means that a bindery operator can find her position in the organization chart, click on the hyperlink to open
the bindery operator job map, see all the processes she is responsible for and then click on the hyperlinks and view
at the flowcharted documentation for each process.
The first shape in each flowchart for the processes she is responsible for is hyperlinked back to its parent process,
so by following this link she can also see how her processes fit in to the overall process. She can follow these links
all the way to the top-level master process and see how her work fits in with the rest of the organization and how
it contributes to the company’s productivity.
Each flowchart describing a process is also hyperlinked to the job map of the position responsible for it via the title
block.
This means that someone browsing through the process hierarchy can immediately see who is responsible for
executing and managing each process.
The arrival of the visual processor makes capture a process in one pass. By allowing the interviewer to create a
flowchart of the process during the interview, no notes are necessary. Instead the final flowchart can be created
and approved in a single interview. VPM employs this method and gains up to a five fold increase in the rate of
process capture compared to traditional methods.
Visual Grammar
When we write we follow accepted rules:
Following these rules makes written communication universally accessible. I can pick up a document written by
someone else and immediately read and comprehend it. I don’t have to think about the way it’s formatted. I can
just focus on the content.
The same is not generally true of visual documents. Search for “flowchart” in Google image search and you get the
following results:
All visuals created as part of VPM follow the same standards, or Visual Grammar. There are two rules that apply to
all visuals:
For example VPM flowcharts use the same color, same font and same size for each equivalent shape. Only the
start and end shapes have a different outline to indicate their status as starting and ending points. Shapes with
hyperlinks to sub processes are blue. Shapes that represent a decision are dark gray.
To be effective, a visual must be viewed as a whole and so it should fit on a single page or a screen. Because of
their interlinked nature, VPM visuals are best viewed on screen with a visual processor. There may be cases,
however, when printing is necessary. In these cases visuals can be scaled down to fit on a single page but not by so
much that the text in the shapes is no longer readable, otherwise, the visual fails to communicate at all.
1. A decision symbol immediately introduces two directions of flow in the flow chart, breaking the left to
right rule and making the chart harder to follow.
2. Most consumers of flowcharts don’t know the convention of the diamond as a decision and the change in
symbol outline is just a distraction for them.
3. Many creators of flowcharts don’t know this convention either and so they use diamonds and other
shapes inconsistently, resulting in confusion not information.
A split path is immediately understood without special training by virtually everyone. It is intuitive and does not
have to be learned.
Compare these two flowcharts of the same process below.
In any case the process for implementing VPM follows these steps:
These steps require a facilitator who is certified in VPM. SmartDraw Software or its partners can provide a
facilitator, or a person within the organization can be trained and certified by SmartDraw Software to be a
facilitator.
The job maps for each position are then created automatically using a SmartDraw command.
The Facilitator interviews the people responsible for the sub processes, either in front of a projected image of the
flowchart for the process, or using GotoMeeting to share a desktop image of the flowchart, using the one-pass
method. Steps that require further expansion are again hyperlinked to sub processes using a SmartDraw
command, until every process that contributes to the master process has been documented.
Assigning Responsibility
As the Facilitator creates each flowchart, he assigns responsibility to the position that manages it, and the position
that executes it by linking fields in the title block to the job maps for those positions. SmartDraw also automates
this. Typing the <enter> key in those fields displays a list of positions to select from.
Managing Collections
SmartDraw manages the group of hyperlinked documents that make up a VPM collection using the Collections
feature. SmartDraw can treat of the files in a folder and its subfolders as a single Collection. Collections can be
moved and printed as a single unit. Moving documents within the hierarchy of the collection also maintains their
hyperlinks.
The collection can be deployed on a file server or SharePoint. Access control can managed using Windows groups
or using SharePoint. Users than manage processes should have read/write access to the documents that describe
them, so that they can update them when changes occur. Other users should have read-only access.
SmartDraw should be installed on the PCs of everyone in the organization documented. SmartDraw has a browse
mode for navigating collections and enforces the read-only access where needed. Installing SmartDraw also allows
each user to realize the benefits of the program for other uses: Project management, creating visual presentations
and communicating more effectively.