General process content analysis comprises a
set of procedures for collecting and analysing
descriptors of all business processes within a
given suite and making inferences about the
characteristics and meaning of the actions realized
and the objects created or modified by these
processes within the context of the suite. Action-
based content analysis focuses on the action verb;
the corresponding object-based based content
analysis focuses on the object noun. This paper
deals with content analysis of the action verb.
For example, the process “Negotiate purchase order
conditions with supplier” indicates the action of
“negotiating”. We search the process suite being
analyzed to find all negotiation processes. If many
processes concern “negotiate”, a general negotiation
protocol needs to be established, specifying the
necessary authority for workers to set conditions and
make decisions, and training them how to negotiate
(e.g., with customers, suppliers, sub-contractors,
potential employees).
Our action-based analysis encompasses the
following steps:
(a) Create a Pareto list of action verbs
(1) Standardize process descriptors in terms of
verb, noun and prepositional phrases.
(2) Compile a list of verbs.
(3) Check for operational synonyms for each verb
(e.g., approve / authorize; evaluate / rate) and
combine these verbs.
(4) Count of the number of processes in which
each verb occurs.
(5) Order the verbs in descending count order.
(6) Using the Pareto principle, determine which
verbs are common to a significant number of
processes (= “significant action”).
(b) Carry out the following action-based analyses:
(7) Management area: determine to which
management domain each significant action
belongs (plan/execute/control). This
influences factors such as the action time
window, the vocabulary of a procedure or
specification, and the category of both
managers and workers involved.
(8) Significant actions: identify significant actions
to be the focus of business process manage-
ment. This pinpoints areas for creating pro-
cedures and standards for process execution
and quality related to the significant actions.
(9) Cross-functionality: note which actions occur
in several functionalities. The corresponding
processes will require operational consistency
between organizational units or sub-units.
3 ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE
We illustrate the process through a hotel front desk
(HFD) process suite. The suite comprises 136
processes (cf. Karni and Meiren, 2005). A number of
these processes, categorized by function, are detailed
in Table 1 (lefthand column). The suite includes 32
distinct actions (Table 2). The eight most common
verbs, covering 88 processes, are: (1) provide
information (35 processes); coordinate (10); handle
(10); manage (8), issue (7); create (6); charge (6);
and maintain (6). When the set of 136 processes is
grouped by verb and ordered is descending verb
frequency, we obtain an action viewpoint of the
same suite (Table 1 – righthand column).
Juxtaposition clearly shows the contribution of the
action viewpoint in helping to grasp the “totality” of
the process suite. Action-based analysis provides the
following insights:
(1) Plan/execute/control: The eight most frequent
verbs encompass two areas: execute (provide
information, coordinate, handle, manage, issue,
create, charge); and control (maintain data bank). As
expected, the HFD is operations-intensive; BPM
support is required up front and must be harmonized
with the activities of the front desk staff.
(2) Control: The following procedures and
specifications should be established for the
significant actions:
Provide (information to guest): specify a
comprehensive database for all information to
be provided to staff and guests; “advertise”
information services offered; set up a procedure
to ensure continued updatedness of the data
Coordinate (with other hotel departments): set
up a procedure to ensure coordination and
cooperation between hotel departments; set up a
procedure for collaborative processes and
progress reporting of guest request
implementation
Manage (lobby): formulate a clear guide for
lobby administration; set up a procedure to
coordinate with further hotel departments (e.g.
advertising, event hosting, maintenance)
Issue: provide computerized and/or hard-copy
templates for clarity, completeness of recording,
and transparency towards the customer
Create (reservation): establish a procedure to
ensure that all reservation channels and methods
of confirmation are consistent and coordinated;
set up a procedure to ensure that all reservation
data is unified within the reservation database;
organize training for frontal or distance
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