Organization as a System: A 10-Step Process


Table of Contents


Introduction

Deming first called attention to the importance of linking a system for production with a system for improvement and tying them to a common aim for the future. He referred to this as "viewing production as a system."  Dr. Thomas Nolan, of Associates in Process Improvements, Silver Spring, MD and Dr. Paul Batalden of the Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Dartmouth Medical School, are responsible for creating this document based on the work of Dr. Deming. This exercise  has helped many leaders view their organization as a system. This document is used with permission.

All the tools and methods of quality improvement revolve around a basic understanding of "production as a system." Whether the organization produces cars, bank deposits, surgery or education, the principles are the same. Therefore, it is important to read through this section in its entirety being mindful that this will later be part of your project.

Deming defined a system as a group of interdependent people, items, processes, products, and services that have a common purpose or aim. A system that is capable of continual improvement can be illustrated as:

OAS Diagram

To understand an organization as a system of production we must consider:

This can be depicted as:

OAS

By defining a system in this way, we can link the means of production with the aim or purpose of the organization in order to continually improve. "Aim" means the connection to the underlying social or community need. The aim also considers the environmental issues that may effect the future of the organization. General systems theory, originally proposed by Von Bertalanffy and then by others in biology, psychiatry, management, and engineering, is all related. An "open system" is a system that permits continued access from "outside" of the system itself.

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Step 1: Outputs

The question we seek to answer is: What do you produce? or What do you make?

Tips:

The answer to this question helps begin the knowledge building activity by focusing on what care, service,or products the hospital produces.

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Step 2: Customers

The question we seek to answer is: Who uses or receives these services or products?

Tips:

The answer to this question is a clarification of the identity of those who benefit from what you make.

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Step 3: Environment / Community Need

The question we seek to answer is: What is the underlying need that those customers have for what you make?

Tips:

The purpose of this question is to help you gain insight into the underlying need for what you do.

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Step 4: Customer Knowledge

The questions that must be answered here are:

Tips:

The answers to these questions help develop further insight into the ways in which improvements in what is done can be guided by the specific quality concerns of those who benefit from what you do. The intention here is to build further knowledge of the customers that you serve.

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Step 5: Processes

The question we seek to answer here is: What methods or activities do you use to make your service or product?

Tips:

The answers to these questions reveal that there are several processes at work to generate what you produce. Some of them are linked to each other. Some of these linked processes form a "core" that represents the basic work of the organization as it constitutes the "mainstay" of what is regularly produced. Further, it will be clear that some other processes are linked in a supportive way to that "main" or "core" process.

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Step 6: Inputs

The question we seek to answer here is: What comes into your process and is changed by the regular actions of the process to create the services or products?

Tips:

The answer to this question builds knowledge of the needs, skills, materials or goods that regularly enter your system and which form the beginning point for your work.

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Step 7: Suppliers

The question we seek to answer is: Who or what specific people, departments, or organizations provide the inputs?

Tips:

The answer to this question identifies those you depend on for what you do.

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Step 8: Vision

The question we seek to answer is: Based on what you know about the need for what you do, and your knowledge of the customers, what is the vision for the future in your organization?

Tips:

The ingredients of your shared view of the future for your organization underlie what will be needed to build a shared sense of that future. The shared sense of the future is what every worker needs in order to align what they do and how they might improve what they do with the future of the organization.

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Step 9: Plan to Improve

The question we seek to answer is: Based on your vision for the future, on your knowledge of the needs, on your knowledge of the customer, and on information from employees involved and knowledgeable about your work, what is strategically important to improve?

Tips:

     Remember that you answer this type of question each time you build a capital or operating budget.
     Limit number of responses to an important few; certainly less than five.
     Sometimes it is helpful to think of these as "themes" of improvement.
     Sometimes it is helpful to think of these as the names of major "gaps" against which the next layer of the organization will be asked to "plan."

The answers to this question provide the near-term focus (12-18 months) for work on the improvement of what you do. They integrate the improvement efforts of the organization.

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Step 10: Design and Redesign

The final question we need to answer is: What specific process(es) will offer you the greatest leverage in securing the strategic improvements you seek to make?

Tips:

     Be as specific as you can.
     Limit the number of processes to 3-8.
     In keeping with your strategic priorities for improvement, you may identify some processes that simply need to be stabilized so that they are more predictable.

The answers to this question offer greater precision for the immediate improvement plans and recognize that improvement will occur either by designing some new processes or by re-designing existing processes.

Now examine the arrows in the diagram that you first saw in the Introduction. These must be managed in an organization. Who assures that customer knowledge is gathered and translated into a vision? Who monitors the involvement and feeds it back to enhance the vision?

OAS Diagram

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