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The Oliver Wight Class A Standard for Business Excellence is the definitive, comprehensive statement of excellence in business today. Oliver Wight's Class A Standard is the accumulated practice and experience of Oliver Wight Consultants around the world. It reflects the effort and achievement of thousands of client companies who have used the standard, and the benchmark capability it enables, to differentiate their business. The Seventh Edition will be the standard of business excellence for all businesses. The standard will take the reader through an understanding of business maturity and how to drive increase maturity with corresponding sustainable business benefit. Using the Oliver Wight Proven Path, a journey of "Milestones" focused on strategic priorities that drive you through a series of defined Maturity Transitions, people, behavior and processes all become more aligned and focused. Updated content will include new information on collaboration, segmentation, value chain, analytics, optimization, and planning. Please note: Previous editions of this book were titled The Oliver Wight Class A Checklist for Business Excellence.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017
Cover
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright
Preface
Introduction
Winning with Class A
Scope of the Standard
The Chapters
Performance Measurements
The Importance of People
Celebration
Milestones on the Journey to Excellence
Foundation
The Journey to Excellence
The Integrated Business Model
Delivering Business Transformation
Chapter 1: Managing the Strategic Planning Process
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Understanding and Analyzing the Internal and External Environment
Vision, Mission, and Values
Strategic Plan
Bringing the Future into Today
Strategy Deployment
Evaluation and Control
Business Strategy Management Process
Risk Management
Performance Measurement
Behaviors and Competencies
Chapter 2: Managing and Leading People
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
Leadership
People in Teams
Talent Development and People Retention
Communication
Organization Design Development and Planning
Business Improvement and Learning
Consistent Working Practices
Management of Health, Safety, Environment, and Community Relations
Performance Measurement
Chapter 3: Driving Business Improvement
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
Insights
Ownership and Involvement
Continuous Improvement
Velocity Throughout Business Processes
Responsiveness to Customer
Process Variation
Knowledge Capture and Management
Asset Management
Business Transformation and Innovation
Behaviors and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Chapter 4: Integrated Business Planning
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Shaped to Organizational Needs
Process Structure and Elements
Insights and Knowledge
Integration and Optimization
Technology Enabled
Behaviors and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Chapter 5: Managing the Products and Services Portfolio
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
Product and Portfolio Management and Marketing
Managing and Optimizing the Portfolio
Managing Programs and Projects
Team-Based Project Management and Concurrency
Program and Project Resource Planning
Managing Technology and Innovation
Behavior and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Chapter 6: Managing Market Demand
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
Modeling and Analytics
Market Segment Planning
Customer Collaboration
Market Segment Plan Execution
Demand Review Preparation
Demand Execution
Technology
Behavior and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Chapter 7: Managing the Supply Chain
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
Supply Chain Model
Supply Chain Planning and Synchronization
Collaboration
Data Sharing and Analytics
Network Management
Organization Design
Behavior and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Chapter 8: Managing Internal Supply
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
Internal Supply Planning
Supply Execution
Internal Supply Modeling
Driving Internal Supply Improvements
Acquisitions, use and Care of Assets, and Working Environment
Behaviors and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Chapter 9: Managing External Sourcing
Purpose
Positioning
Chapter Content
Driven by Strategy
Integration
External Sourcing Roadmap
Total Cost of Ownership
Continuity of Supply
Supplier Analysis, Selection, and Business Agreements
Supplier Relationships
Behaviors and Competencies
Performance Measurement
Oliver Wight Biography
End User License Agreement
Figure I.1
Figure I.2
Figure I.3
Figure I.4
Additional clarification can be obtained from the Oliver Wight International website (www.oliverwight.com), where a glossary and the definitions to support Performance Measurements can be found.
Cover
Table of Contents
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Class A Business ExcellenceFor
Managing the Strategic Planning Process
Managing and Leading People
Driving Business Improvement
Integrated Business Planning
Managing the Products and Services Portfolio
Managing Market Demand
Managing the Supply Chain
Managing Internal Supply
Managing External Sourcing
Seventh Edition
Cover design: Wiley
Copyright © 2017 by Oliver Wight International, Inc. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.Published simultaneously in Canada.
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Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor the authors shall be liable for damages arising herefrom.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Names: Wight, Oliver W. | Oliver Wight International, inc., author.
Title: The Oliver Wight Class A standard for business excellence / Oliver Wight International, Inc.
Description: Seventh edition. | Hoboken, New Jersey : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., [2017].
Identifiers: LCCN 2017007061 (print) | LCCN 2017015847 (ebook) | ISBN 9781119404477 (pbk.) | ISBN 9781119404484 (epdf) | ISBN 9781119404491 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Industrial productivity—Measurement. | Strategic planning. | Total quality management. | Manufacturing resource planning. | Production control.
Classification: LCC HD56.25 (ebook) | LCC HD56.25 .O38 2017 (print) | DDC 658.4/013—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017007061
Welcome to the seventh edition of The Oliver Wight Class A Standard for Business Excellence.
The seventh edition continues our focus on Business Excellence. It describes the distinguishing characteristics of the high-performing companies, how these attributes were achieved and, important, how they are sustained. The answers were gathered from the accumulated experiences of the Oliver Wight global group and their relationships with thousands of successful businesses. The outcome is a new standard for evaluating business excellence at your company.
For those executives challenged to raise their companies' level of performance, doing so starts with a commitment to a long-term journey, strategically focused and supported with a series of improvement programs. Each program has a milestone marking its achievement. Collectively, they lead to The Oliver Wight Class A Standard for Business Excellence.
In the l970s, Ollie created the first checklist. The test of what to include remains the same; in the hands of educated users, do they produce the desired results? Only proven, practical solutions become standards.
Many folks have contributed to the know-how in this book. Deserving special recognition are:
Andrew Purton as its champion
Lloyd Snowden, the driving force
Lloyd Snowden, Andrew Purton, Jim Correll, Jon Minerich, Mike Reed, and Susan Hansen provided the global leadership.
Each chapter had contributors: Paul Archer, Debbie Bowen-Heaton, Les Brookes, Stephen Bucksey, Zoe Davis, Eric Deutsch, Paul Ducie, Michael Effron, Todd Ferguson, Mike Gray, David Goddard, Susan Hansen, Don Harding, Stuart Harman, Anne Hilton, Robert Hirschey, Robert Howard, Dawn Howarth, Rod Hozack, Anne-Marie Kilkenny, Stewart Kelly, Donald McNaughton, Peter Metcalfe, Jon Minerich, Andrew Purton, Mike Reed, Timm Reiher, Jerry Shanahan, Lloyd Snowden, Jason Stanton, and Andrew Walker.
For those executives eager to take up the challenge of raising their companies' performance to heights of excellence, this standard will show them the way.
—Walt GoddardChairman Emeritus,Oliver Wight International, Inc.
This seventh edition of The Oliver Wight Class A Standard for Business Excellence follows the same structure as the previous edition but has transitioned from a checklist format to focus solely on the characteristics of Business Excellence—the Standard. This is in recognition that, for most businesses, the quest to attain the Business Excellence standard is a transformational journey, not a single initiative but a series of improvement programs known as Class A Milestones to facilitate the journey. The milestones are based on the elements in the Standard required to support the business objective to be achieved. Oliver Wight has created a series of workbooks designed to define typical Class A Milestones. The Standard and the workbooks answer the what required for Business Excellence. The how is answered through the Oliver Wight Proven Path for Business Transformation, which is founded on best-practice education, facilitated workshops to apply best practices to specific businesses, and implementation coaching.
The Journey to Business Excellence is demanding, and this latest edition has been updated to address changes in business practices since the sixth edition was updated in 2010. Moreover, the changes in business expectations continue apace. Companies holding back from keeping up with the pack may be found wanting in the race to win in business.
Every company that achieves a Class A Milestone is rewarded with bottom-line results and an energized and empowered workforce—life gets better, if for no other reason than completing the day with a feeling of accomplishment. Achieving a Class A Milestone takes more than just this Standard. Having worked with companies on Class A since 1978, we recognize what is required to be successful. It isn't as simple as buying a book and then setting out to meet the requirements. The seven steps for success are:
The
Standard
—describes the Business Excellence benchmark.
The
Proven Path
—a proven approach to delivering business transformation. This includes the
why
we need to do this;
what
we are going to do, in prioritized sequence, to support a journey; and the
how
to implement sustainably.
Milestone Workbooks—describe the
what
for a specific milestone along the journey.
Education—explains the
what
and the
how
, in detail, for each element of the
Standard
associated with a milestone.
Application Workshops—address the
how
to apply these practices tailored to your specific business and organization requirements.
Coaching—supports your people on the
how
to handle the specific issues and challenges of milestone activities and the crucial change management requirements.
Celebration—recognition for the successful completion of a milestone.
The Standard encompasses all business sectors and business processes. Manufacturing and service sectors are growing closer together in their characteristics. In many ways, the new best-practice manufacturing companies may be considered service companies but whose service is to sell products. Business differentiators have moved to managing products and services, managing the supply chain (often without manufacturing any of the product), managing the procurement of externally sourced items, and developing more effective relationships with employees, suppliers, customers, and consumers. All these dimensions are extensively covered, alongside the more traditional foundation elements you would expect to find in the Standard for Business Excellence. Further technology advances now permit dynamic business management, where business performance, including financials, can be reviewed daily and where agility permits the business to respond and move with market forces in days, not weeks or months.
At the start of each chapter, a Purpose statement describes the purpose and scope of the chapter process. There is also a Positioning statement in recognition that we are not attempting to describe the characteristics of every transition in maturity. This Standard consists of defining characteristics, competencies, and performance requirements of a business positioned toward the top of Phase 2 of the Business Maturity Map (see Foundation, Figure I.1). Many good practices developed in Phase 1 are now assumed rather than expressed while, in other cases, there is a transition of processes and roles from Phase 1 to Phase 2. The Phase 1 characteristics and performance requirements are captured in the respective Phase 1 Milestone Workbooks, not in this Standard. Please read the Positioning statement so that you are orientated to understand which characteristics, behaviors, capabilities, performance levels, and organizational challenges have already been addressed in Phase 1 before reading the new or continued requirements of Phase 2.
The chapter structure in the Standard is aligned with the Integrated Business Model. It begins with “Managing the Strategic Planning Process” as the driver of the business, followed by the two enabling disciplines of “Managing and Leading People” and “Driving Business Improvement.” Chapters 4 through 9 address the core processes, commencing with Integrated Business Planning.
Managing the Strategic Planning Process:
The business Vision and Strategic Plan need to be explicit so that your people have clear direction for their plans and activities. This chapter will challenge your process for longer-term planning of the business. It will demand the setting of business priorities and clear communication when deploying your plans and your Business Excellence program throughout the business.
Managing and Leading People:
People are the ultimate differentiator as business gets more competitive and markets more demanding. This chapter will require you to think through your business values and how you are organized for the tasks ahead; that you are clear about the company culture and behaviors that you need; and that you have active development programs designed to improve the competencies of your people for the new challenges ahead. It will also challenge your processes for knowledge management and your culture of Leadership and Teamwork.
Driving Business Improvement:
This articulates the maturity of your business improvement processes. It then challenges how you prioritize your Business Improvement programs to achieve the early gains in areas that create a solid foundation for the future. You'll be challenged to walk before you try to run and to give value to those everyday issues that are at the heart of excellence in business.
Integrated Business Planning:
Integrated Business Planning (IBP) is the business management process driving in strategy deployment and optimized business performance and, thereby, directs revenue and earnings-generating activities.
At the foundation of IBP is Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP), originally developed by Oliver Wight as a vehicle to engage the Senior Management Team in integrated management of the Supply Chain.
The IBP process is becoming the unique and, increasingly, the de facto best-practice approach to deploy business strategy and manage integration with day-to-day activity; it is the prime tool for keeping all parts of the company on a common agenda and set of priorities; and it manages the entire business through one set of numbers—dynamically tuned to the latest market situation that ensures timely actions to maintain management control of business performance. IBP provides long-term visibility and, through modeling and rigorous risk management tools, enables optimized outcomes with suitable contingency planning.
Managing the Products and Services Portfolio:
In every business sector, product life cycles are shortening. Portfolios should represent the optimization of products and services, including appropriate introduction of new and carefully planned phase-out of old. This chapter challenges how well and how fast you align your portfolio and monitor the performance of products and services. Your clear Technology Roadmap supports this and, when applicable, includes prototyping to increase the speed to market. The portfolio is managed to ensure margin development, but when this becomes a problem, the Strategic Plan, Product and Portfolio Roadmap, and processes are challenged to introduce changes to enable sustainable positive margins. It expects the deployment of the latest practices in program and project management supported by computer-aided risk management and decision making to anticipate and avoid adverse consequences.
Managing Market Demand:
Greater understanding of customer and consumer needs and of what is happening in your marketplace, when applied effectively, leads directly to increased predictability throughout the business horizon. Knowing your market enables better planning of your position, with more successful order-winning plans and activities. These plans are directed by the Strategic Market Roadmap which, in turn, drives Market Segmentation Roadmaps to address the needs of homogeneous customer and consumer groups specifically. This chapter challenges your development of analytics and predictive modeling and how close you are to real demand knowledge. The chapter ensures a focus on demand plan creation and accuracy and how professionally you control supply and demand in the very short term through a demand-sensing capability and execution of sales activity driving a demand-led Supply Chain.
Managing the Supply Chain:
As the latest technology extends our target market, the increasing challenge to business is how to deliver the portfolios of products and services to the point of use. This chapter challenges how well your Supply Chain Roadmap and delivery capability are optimized through a collaborative supply network and segmentation. Advanced Planning techniques are deployed to achieve Agile customer service and Class A business performance.
Managing Internal Supply:
Business today has moved to the management of a fully integrated and collaborative Supply Chain. Excellence in core supply activities is vital to ensure requests from customers and consumers are satisfied and, at the same time, meet the challenge of global cost competition. This chapter challenges every aspect of your Internal Supply capability, its adoption of excellence, and how quickly it must respond to changes in demand, market, and competitive pressures.
Managing External Sourcing:
The optimization of products and services, and ever-more sophisticated market dynamics present new challenges to make/buy decisions. They also impact External Sourcing Roadmaps that align with Supply Chain decisions on segmentation and collaboration. Technology offers new procurement approaches that have major potential for saving, and this has significantly advanced the use of Total Cost of Ownership in critical decision making. This chapter sets new standards for assessing excellence in your procurement processes and ensures the values of the business are maintained externally through an ethical approach to supplier selection and management.
Performance Measures are identified within each chapter, but we have not always specified absolute requirements or metrics. At the level of business maturity represented by the Standard, we expect Performance Measurement to be relevant to delivery of your strategy and, thereby, specific to each business. Typical performance measures are identified and defined in the individual workbooks for the appropriate milestone.
Class A starts with people. To be more effective and productive, you must implement new practices (people, processes, and tools) into the company. Your people create the processes but, to be effective, it is crucial that the required behaviors are recognized and designed into new practices. Your people also select or design the tools to enable these new practices. Fundamentally, all users and participants must then be educated (why) and trained (how) on their use, but sadly there is often under-investment in this crucial internal education and training activity. Without the disciplined integration of people, processes, and tools, your designed practices will not drive the desired improvement.
You will also be challenged to manage integrated processes rather than perform in functional silos. These processes will need people to work together in a team-based culture of multiple disciplines and functions, and your people will face ever-more complex tools with which to run the business. People are your biggest business differentiator now and will be more so as your excellence program matures. Treasure, develop, and educate them. They are the future.
Milestone programs will not only substantially improve business performance but will act as catalysts for Business Transformation. It is important at the completion of key milestones on the business journey that Leadership steps back and celebrates contributions and successes. By taking the time to celebrate the completion of a milestone, the company can both recognize the magnitude of the improvement journey to date, and satisfy and leverage the need for recognition. It is like any sporting event—it may be fun to play the
