
As business grow it is likely that inefficiencies will be found it their processes. If left untackled such inefficiencies can run a business into the ground. Customers will feel they aren’t getting good value, the company will struggle to be profitable, and employees will get frustrated and start looking for jobs elsewhere.
You need to go into battle against inefficiency which will require examining all your business processes. Businesses usually do this with the help of an experienced consultant. While more costly than completing this work in-house, a consultant will have the skills and experience to spot inefficiencies, the knowledge about what works to solve the problem, as well as both the methodology and objectivity to complete the process quickly and…efficiently.
If you are ready to start right away, however, you can being by identifying the three enemies of efficiency that may be lurking in your current processes. These are rigidity, variability and waste. Let us look at each of them.
1. Rigidity
In our fast-moving, tech-driven, globalised world, businesses need to be flexible and adaptable.
The same goes for their employees. Those who adapt to the needs of the business help make processes quicker and smoother while those who rigidly stick to what they know are likely to cause bottlenecks.
People within a rigid process may end up waiting for everyone else to make their contributions before making their own, for example.
If these employees are allowed more flexibility, however, then they know they can get on with other things while they wait for information. You may discover technology that allows different teams to work on a document simultaneously or a process that removes the need for multiple checks. Changing this process means greater efficiency, faster output, and happier clients and staff.
It should be noted, however, that flexibility doesn’t mean unstructured or seat of your pants. Employees need to feel confident and clear on how to manage their time/workload rather than being left entirely to their own devices.
2. Variability
Combatting overly rigid processes is the first step in managing resources ‒ allowing staff to better utilise their time. Expecting 100% utilisation, however, is unrealistic and impractical. ‘Stuff’ happens and your teams need to deal with it quickly or risk it turning into a bottleneck.
Even on factory floors, where there is very little variability, manufacturing managers may only plan their machines to operate at around 80-85% load. The other 75 minutes of the day are left unallocated to allow time to deal with unexpected ‘stuff’.
In the modern office teams can be pushed to work at near 100% load leaving little flexibility to deal with unexpected variability. By viewing workload across entire teams, however, you can introduce flexibility and improve your capacity planning.
For example, say your design team currently needs to make all changes to graphics within a document. Training other staff on how to make minor changes to graphics will alleviate bottlenecks.
3. Wastes
Waste can be broken down into eight branches: transport, inventory, motion, waiting, overproducing, over-processing, defects, and skills.
These wastes spell out TIM WOODS ‒ handy for remembering them. Let’s look at them one at a time.
Transport ‒ This can apply to the movement of anything from goods, to people, to documents. Even a small amount of transport waste can build up. Looking for ways to decrease movement, shorten the distance or reduce the item size can all help to minimise transport waste.
Inventory ‒ Anything you buy or produce in bulk can suddenly become redundant. For example, you print 50 new customer forms in case you need them, but then the forms need to change. Be as lean as possible with what you buy or produce. That way you can minimise inventory waste.
Motion ‒ People need to move around to do their job and this physical movement takes time, money and effort, quickly leading to waste. Say, for example, that your marketing team often need to meet your design team, one is on the 4th floor and the other on the 12th. This will waste time and money as people go up and down. Try to look for ways to rationalise the placement of people to help minimise motion.
Waiting ‒ This is connected to rigidity (see above). If people are waiting to proceed on a task until someone else has made their contribution, you create waste. When different teams have different priorities, you can end up with some very long delays. Introduce more flexibility into your processes to minimise the time wasted waiting around.
Overproducing ‒ If you produce more than you need, stock turns into inventory (see above) and is at risk of redundancy. Try and be as accurate as possible when assessing the needs of your customers and anticipating future orders. Improving this may require new technology or processes.
Overprocessing ‒ You want the document you produced to be incredible, but does it really require checking three or four times before it goes to the client? Is it really about improving work or about including people in the process? By providing clear briefs you will help to minimise the checking needed, the number of mistakes made and the number of people included in the process.
Defects ‒ Mistakes devalue your output, take time to correct, and are demoralising for staff. Some mistakes will always happen, but unclear briefs or communication, a lack of information, and poorly defined processes will dramatically increase defects. People need to know clearly what’s needed, what the intended outcome is, what’s important, and how to go about it. Otherwise, they will experiment with novel processes to achieve an unclear objective, introducing many mistakes and inefficiencies along the way.
Skills ‒ People need the relevant skills for the task. Sounds obvious, I know, but managers often misuse the skills within a team. For example, I’ve seen experienced copywriters being used for time-consuming admin tasks and I’ve seen interns being thrown onto sales calls. Misuse of skills is an inefficient use of personnel and also leads to mistakes.
By working through each of these potential areas for inefficiency, you will gain a good overview of the processes used by your business and a fair idea on how to improve them. However, thinking back to point number one, rigidity, it’s important to be flexible in your approach. In a startup, for example, it may not be possible to establish clear processes as people are managing multiple roles.
As the business expands, eliminating inefficiencies becomes increasingly important to growth. Upskilling employees can be crucial to keeping them motivated in the long-term, for example, and it will help manage workload if someone is ill.
Keep these points in mind as you grow and use them as red flags to be resolved when the business has the capacity. At that point, you can use a consultant to analyse your inefficiencies and suggest improvements in order to rapidly grow your SME. For example, you can post a question on Consulthon and ask for responses from a range of experts, and then book a one hour call with the one you feel best suits your business. This is a good way to keep your consultancy costs down, and ‘try before you buy’
Keeping inefficiencies to a minimum is essential if you want to grow your business and your profits, so start by doing as much as you can in-house and then look to bring in outside experts as the business expands.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marieta Bencheva is co-founder of Consulthon,a UK Management Consulting Expert Network. Businesses can raise a Business Challenge and the network’s experts will brainstorm solutions. After selecting the answer they like the most, the business can book a paid one-hour advisory call and deep-dive session with that consultant. All the consultants are vetted by Consulthon and the platform offers businesses access to a wide range of skills, in a variety of sectors and countries.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/consulthon/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CONSULTHON.CO.UK/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CONSULTHON @consulthon
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/consulthon.co.uk/ @consulthon.co.uk