Why Six Sigma Will Work In Service Environments
Although Six Sigma has its roots in manufacturing, it works
just as effectively in service industries. It's no secret that
service environments, such as financial organizations,
healthcare providers, retail companies, and hospitality
organizations have a harder time applying Six Sigma principles.
However, the core principles of Six Sigma allow it to
cost-effectively translate manufacturing-oriented Six Sigma
tools into the service delivery process.
Service organizations have different root causes of problems
and a unique set of processes and metrics. Thus, the tools and
methodology required to achieve the improvements of Six Sigma
are significantly different. While problems in the
manufacturing setting may lie within a process, the issue in a
service environment often is the process itself. Service
industries are full of waste--and ripe for the benefits of Six
Sigma. It is easy to apply relatively simple statistical and
lean tools that will reduce costs and achieve greater speed
with less waste in service processes. There are numerous case
studies that demonstrate how Six Sigma can be used in service
organizations just as effectively as in manufacturing and with
even faster results.
In a service organization, the critical factors in quality and
efficiency are the flow of information and the interaction
between people, especially interactions with customers.
Transforming the process of these flows will yield quality
results. At the heart of every service business are the
opinions, behaviors and decisions made by people. Analyzing and
modifying human performance in service environments is as
complex as any manufacturing situation. Six Sigma achieves
documented bottom-line strategic business results by initiating
an organization-wide culture shift. Until a process focus,
rather than a task focus, is developed, the scope and endurance
of improvements will be limited. Analyzing and modifying human
performance in these environments is complex, but Six Sigma
provides the tools and methodology required to achieve
significant long-term improvements.
Service managers trained in Six Sigma become skilled at
advanced process analysis and problem solving techniques
relevant to the “real world” of service environments. They
learn to identify and eliminate poor decision-making processes,
standardize practices, reduce cycle times and manage the risk of
the extensive changes required for breakthrough process
improvement in people-oriented transactional processes.
Successful Six Sigma services projects will lead to improved
customer satisfaction, increased profit margins, reduced costs,
and lower turnover. Six Sigma tools can be used in many service
environments, even service areas within a non-service industry.
Areas such as procurement, call centers, surgical suites,
government offices, R&D, and many more will all receive
benefits from implementing Six Sigma process improvement.
Six Sigma will help a service environment become a
customer-centered organization, gain control over process
complexity, and improve response time on signature services.
About The Author: Peter Peterka is President of Six Sigma US
www.6sigma.us. For additional information on Six Sigma
Green Belt www.6sigma.us/six-sigma-green-belt.php or
other Six Sigma Certification programs
www.6sigma.us/six-sigma-training.php contact Peter
Peterka.
|