
Continuous Process Improvement (CPI)
What is Continuous Process Improvement (CPI)?
Continuous process improvement (CPI) is the act of implementing improvements to a product, service or process. These changes can either be incremental (over time) or breakthrough (all at once).
The key here is continuous – CPI isn’t a one-time initiative. You don’t just optimize a certain process once, pat yourself on the back, and call it a day. Once you succeed with a process improvement initiative, you need to periodically look back and see whether there are any changes you could make. Think, adopting new hardware, software, methodology, etc.
Continuous Process Improvement (CPI) Techniques
If you’re familiar with other process management terms, you might be a bit confused where CPI stands. Here’s how it’s different from other methodologies:
Business Process Improvement (BPI) – As the name suggests, BPI is the act of improving a process. Continuous process improvement involves carrying out a BPI initiative whenever it’s needed.
Business Process Management (BPM) – BPM is a methodology that helps you manage processes. While Continuous process improvement is an essential part of BPM, a company that does CPI doesn’t necessarily employ BPM.
Kaizen – Kaizen is more related to company culture rather than process improvement. It involves building a culture of innovation and contribution, which allows for continuous process improvement.
Enforcing continuous process improvement in your company is up to you. You’ll need to ensure that your employees are motivated enough to carry out BPI initiatives (we’ll explain how to do that in a bit). To help you with actually improving processes, you can use one of the many continuous improvement tools, one of which is:
Business Process Mapping
Chances are, you don’t really know every one of your business processes by heart. To get a better idea of the hows and whys of the process you’re working on, you’ll need to create a business process map. The simplest way is to create a flowchart including different process steps. So, for example, here’s a process map for employee onboarding:
Deming Cycle (PDCA)
The Deming Cycle, also known as PDCA, is a concept introduced by Dr. Edwards Deming. There are 4 steps to it:
- Plan – Identifying a goal or purpose, formulating a theory, defining success metrics, and putting a plan into action
- Do – Implementing the plan on a small scale to prove or disprove it’s validity
- Check – Measuring and monitoring outcomes to test the validity of the plan. This allows for identification of potential problems and areas for improvement
- Act – Taking the knowledge gained from the previous steps and putting it to use. This can either mean implementing it on a wider scale or restart the cycle and apply the lessons learned to change the plan for the better
Creating the Culture for Continuous Process Improvement (CPI)
If you, the manager, personally lead every single process improvement initiative, you’re not likely to make any lasting change. More often than not, it’s the employee that knows how to work with the process best, not their supervisor. You want to empower them with the tools and ability to carry out process improvement when need be.
The key to establishing a culture of continuous process improvement is to make it a part of company culture. It should start top-down from the organization – the C-suite should encourage the management to make suggestions on process improvement. This, in turn, will trickle down from the management to shop-floor employees.