Business maturity assessment model: a practical approach for identifying opportunities for sustainability improvement.
Paunescu, Carmen
1. INTRODUCTION
Organizations today need performance measures to drive long-term
strategies and organizational change, to manage resources, and to
operate processes effectively and continuously improve. They should give
consideration to both their results as well as their processes.
Organizations increasingly recognize the need for a consistent process
orientation and require appropriate comprehensive frameworks, which help
to scope and evaluate their process management initiatives (Jeston &
Nelis, 2008). In order for an organization to determine its overall
progress in the long term, it should perform a continual assessment of
its strategy, functions and operations and determine its maturity level.
The concept of process maturity is continually being used in many
aspects of organizations as a means of assessment or as a part of a
framework for improvement. Recently, a number of models to measure the
maturity of Business Process Management (BPM) have been proposed. A
maturity model can be used as a benchmark for comparison and as an aid
to understanding business processes. By understanding a maturity model,
organizations can use this to help not only assess their current
maturity level but also help efficiently advance them to a higher level
of maturity. The subject of measuring an organization's maturity
has been made the purpose of many academic papers lately (Morsal et al.,
2009; Curtis & Alden, 2007; Rosemann & De Bruin, 2005; Fisher,
2004; Harter et al., 2000 to name a few). International standards
provide also different models for assessing an organization's
maturity level (ISO 9004 and ISO/IEC 15504). The common base for the
majority of these models has been the Capability Maturity Model (CMM)
developed by the Software Engineering Institute at Carnegie Mellon
University. The CMM framework, for example, includes 18 key process
areas--such as quality assurance, configuration management, peer review,
defect prevention, and training--against which five levels of process
maturity can be achieved, namely: initial, repeatable, defined, managed,
and optimized. The international standard ISO/IEC 15504 also known as
SPICE (Software Process Improvement and Capability dEtermination) helps
to determine organization's level of maturity in relation to
people, process, technology, and measurement. The maturity levels 0 to 5
in the model are described as: incomplete, performed, managed,
established, predictable, and optimizing. Building on this approach,
Fisher (2004) refers to "five levers of change" against which
the organization's progress can be assessed and advanced, as
follows: people, process, technology, strategy and controls. When the
organization achieves consistent alignment across all five levers, then
it is operating at a level where it can achieve optimal results. The
five "states" of process maturity that the companies are
expected to traverse are: siloed, tactically integrated, process driven,
optimized enterprise, and intelligent operating network.
Some shortcomings of existing BPM maturity models are the
complexity and intricacy of dimensions used for measuring
organization's process maturity and the lack of actual applications
of these models, and particularly the lack of sufficient depth in the
assessment levels.
The research project, which underlies this paper, develops and
tests an ISO 9004-based maturity assessment model for process
optimization and sustainability improvement in Romanian organizations.
The proposed maturity model, that companies from different industries
might use, aims at assessing an organization's strategies and its
operations. The use of such an assessment tool should enable the
organization to identify specific areas for improvement or optimization
and to establish any action plans needed for the organization's
further development. The paper summarizes the interim results of an
ongoing research on organization maturity assessment and BPM, conducted
in Romanian firms in 2008. Multiple managers, responsible for quality
and other executives in 1182 organizations completed the Maturity
Assessment Survey (MAS). The MAS was designed to identify the degree to
which Romanian organizations are sustainable and offer continued
satisfaction to their stakeholders, and to help organizations identify
areas in which they can improve. The paper identifies five core
components that shape process maturity at strategic level and other nine
key constructs that drive process maturity at operational level. A
correlation analysis was employed in order to show the degree to which
the research variables identified determine process maturity level in
Romanian companies and drive their sustainability improvement. The
developed maturity model provides solid information for researchers
interested in testing the validity of the instrument in other
organizations, internationally, with the purpose to increase their
performance and achieve sustainability. However, in future research it
is important to provide advanced empirical evidence to substantiate our
beliefs.
2. BUSINESS MATURITY ASSESSMENT MODEL
2.1 Conceptual Model
We draw from the BPM literature to identify and define the key
constructs of an organizational maturity assessment model for process
optimization and sustainability improvement. The proposed model is
multi-dimensional and integrates a number of distinct variables that
correlate each other (Figure 1). The key constructs of the proposed
maturity model are defined as follows: (1) Strategic level:
organization's context; strategy development and deployment;
process management; results measurement and analysis; and learning,
improvement and innovation, and (2) Operational level:
organization's environment (opportunities, changes, trends, and
risks) and data collection; strategic planning (and resources
allocation); risk identification and management; human resources management; process responsibility and authority; key performance
indicators; learning; improvement; and innovation.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
The underlying assumption of the theoretical model is that the
constructs represent independent variables and the dependent variable is
organization's process optimization and sustainability improvement.
A further assumption is that higher maturity in each of these constructs
will be reflected in higher levels of sustainability for organization.
2.2 Sampling
The data were collected, based on the Maturity Assessment Survey
(MAS), from multiple members from 1182 Romanian organizations, through
face-to-face interviews (100%), during October 2007 and May 2008. The
reporting companies represented a range of various industries, including
commerce and sales (46%), real estate (15%), consulting (10%),
distribution and transportation (7%), banking and insurance (6%), IT
(6%), telecommunications (3%), advertising (2), and a mix of other
industries (5%). The companies had been in operation for a significant
number of years (Mean = 8.5). As regards the organization size, 26%
companies employ less than 10 employees (n = 305), 34% of them employ
between 10 and 49 employees (n = 397), 23% organizations employ between
50 and 249 employees (n = 274), and 17% organizations employ more than
250 employees (n = 206). Of the 1182 responding organizations, 787 (65%)
achieved profitability in the last three consecutive years of operation
or more. The sample consisted of 615 men (52%) and 567 women (48%),
while 30% were general managers (n = 360), 19% quality managers (n =
225) and 51% were from various executive positions (n = 597: sales and
marketing managers, financial managers, operations managers, HR
managers, product and account managers, etc.). The mean age of
respondents was 37 years.
3. FINDINGS
The Cronbach's Alpha score was 0.883 for constructs identified
at strategic level and 0.789 for operational constructs, over 0.7, which
meets the reliability requirements of the analysis. The Pearson
correlation analysis showed that strong positive correlations between
the components of the organization's maturity model account for a
higher level of maturity and sustainability improvement of
organization's processes. As required actions for improvement or
optimization that Romanian organizations might consider to increase
their business process performance and attain a higher level of
maturity, the research results revealed the following: determination of
organization's future capabilities needed for sustainability, based
on external and internal environment analyses; consideration of the need
for natural resources critical to development and achievement of
performance and life cycle management; assessment of the threats and
opportunities of emerging market or product opportunities that
organizations may consider offering; identification and management of
the risks associated with the technological trends, the risks associated
with relevant needs of society (job fluctuation, immigration, etc.), and
the risks associated with availability of natural resources; development
of a skills qualification system to promote self-development and human
resource learning; and development of more reliable performance metrics for all strategic, operational and support processes.
4. CONCLUSIONS
The research results show that generally, the organizations in
Romania are aware of and understand their core competences and
competitive priorities that drive their success on the market.
Consequently, they consider the needs and interests of various
stakeholders concerned with the business outcomes, are
improvement-oriented, and plan to insure predictability of the results.
Conversely, only a few organizations focus on innovation and invest in
their capabilities as necessary to ensure future success. It must be
underlined that the respondents (organizations) were not selected at
random and therefore, generalization is an important limitation of the
study. Furthermore, due to the large differences in the size of the
samples and to the complexity of the questionnaire, the error estimated
for data collection and processing is of maximum 5%. Further empirical
evidence to substantiate our research assumptions will be provided in a
future research.
5. REFERENCES
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