Table of contents

Table of contents

Poor process improvement leads to higher costs, fragile infrastructure, and frustrated teams that are unable to reach their full potential. Follow these 9 process improvement steps to guide your teams to success.

19 Process Improvement Ideas to Add to Your Toolkit

Identify problems, brainstorm solutions, and implement meaningful changes to your process.

View the eBook • 19 Process Improvement Ideas to Add to Your Toolkit

Kanban Roadmap: How to Get Started in 5 Easy Steps

You and your team can build a Kanban board in just 5 easy steps. Learn how.

View the eBook • Kanban Roadmap
Kanban is an invaluable tool for helping teams to visualize, measure, and track their progress as they follow these process improvement steps.
Kanban is an invaluable tool for helping teams to visualize, measure, and track their progress as they follow these process improvement steps.

What Is Process Improvement?

Process improvement is the proactive task of identifying, analyzing and improving upon existing business processes within an organization, with the goal of improving process efficiency.

Continuous improvement is the ongoing practice of process improvement; it’s a process improvement that is woven into the fabric of daily work, as opposed to process improvement that happens once a quarter (or less frequently) with no follow-up. Continuous improvement can be viewed as a formal practice or an informal set of guidelines.

Process improvement is a process in itself – so understanding each of these process improvement steps can help to improve your process improvement efforts.

When implemented successfully, the results of following effective process improvement steps can be measured in the enhancement of product quality, customer satisfaction, customer loyalty, increased productivity, development of the skills of employees, efficiency, and increased profit resulting in higher and faster return on investment (ROI).

Why Is Process Improvement Important?

Operate efficiently

Every business relies on many processes, or a set of activities to accomplish an objective. These processes help maintain order and consistency and should also increase efficiency.

However, processes often become unwieldy over time. When that happens, they end up creating delays and eating up costs. Process improvement helps teams keep process top of mind, so they can operate efficiently, consistently.

Maintain a competitive edge

Another reason to focus your energy on process improvement steps: Your competitor probably will. Put another way: If an organization is not continuously improving the way it performs processes, it will likely fall behind in the market. That’s because at least some if not all its competitors will be making such improvements.

Succeeding in today’s business environment means constantly looking for ways to do things better.

“Unhappy customers, stressed colleagues, missed deadlines, and increased costs are just some of the problems that dysfunctional processes can create,” according to Mind Tools, a provider of on-demand career and management learning solutions. That’s why it is so important to regularly revisit your process improvement steps when your processes are not working well.

Improve business agility

As the pace of change gets faster and faster in nearly every industry, adaptability, often discussed as business agility, has become the most important business competency.

Processes that do not work lead to numerous problems:

  • Customers complain about poor product quality or bad service
  • Team members get frustrated
  • Work is duplicated or not completed at all
  • Costs increase
  • Resources are wasted
  • Bottlenecks develop, causing teams to miss deadlines

By making a commitment to following the right process improvement steps, companies can save money, boost innovation, improve talent retention, and create more value for their customers.

9 Process Improvement Steps

Map the current process

The first step in process improvement is to clearly define and visualize your current process. Consider: How do we do things now?

Visual process improvement relies on using visual elements (like cards on a digital Kanban board) to represent your workflow (as opposed to text-based methods, such as to-do lists).

Many teams use Kanban boards to map their current process when they implement process improvement steps.
Many teams use Kanban boards to map their current process when they implement process improvement steps.

Text-based methods of process management don’t translate well into process improvement because they don’t connect the dots between what work is done and how it is completed.

Most teams don’t spend a lot of time discussing how work is being completed, but the process we use can directly affect the quality of the work.

The only way to achieve a true, accurate understanding of our processes is through process visualization: Creating a flow chart or process / workflow map of how work moves from “‘to do” to “done.”

Visualizing your process can be immensely helpful in illuminating areas where you can improve.

Clearly defined process improvement steps can identify some of the most common sources of inefficiencies in teams so they can be eliminated. For example, having a clearly defined “Quality Assurance” step (with criteria for whether a work item passes QA) can help to reduce defects and errors that might have otherwise gone unnoticed.

Getting started with visualizing your process starts with:

  • Defining the various steps involved in your process
  • Determining the time it takes to complete each step
  • Outlining who typically works on each step, and where handoffs occur

Define the business challenges

Define the business challenges you are trying to solve with these process improvement steps. What are your big-picture goals?

Albert Einstein is quoted as saying, “If I had one hour to save the world, I would spend fifty-five minutes defining the problem and only five minutes finding the solution.”

If your team or organization has been using Kanban boards to manage your workflow (and even if it hasn’t), everybody probably has ideas for how to improve your existing processes. Once you decide to start practicing continuous improvement, it can be tempting to spend your theoretical hour brainstorming ways to improve your current workflow.

But there’s a difference between practicing continuous improvement and going down rabbit holes. You’ll have far better results if you follow process improvement steps can first define the problems you’re trying to solve, then brainstorm solutions to help you solve them.

1. Start with organizational goals.

What organizational goals is your team working towards right now? Are you trying to build better quality products, or improve your service offerings? Do you want to achieve faster delivery cycles or billing cycles? If you’re practicing Lean / Agile, you might call these Objectives and Key Results, or OKRs.

“OKRs” is a term that refers to the framework that Lean / Agile organizations use to collaboratively set and track objectives and their outcomes. Looking at these can be a great start when you’re working your way through process improvement steps.

Look at each organizational goal and determine how well your process helps you achieve it. For example, if your larger organizational goal is to amplify the voice of the customer, think about your team’s current workflow and how well it is working to amplify the voice of the customer.

If you see opportunities to improve your process to better help your team achieve that goal, then you’ve defined your challenge: We need to improve our process to help us better amplify the voice of the customer.

2. Consider team and personal goals.

You probably also have team goals that you’d like your process to help you meet. You might want to improve documentation, use tools more efficiently, or reduce the time you spend in meetings.

Brainstorm a list of these goals as a team and then develop a system for voting on which goals you’d like to focus on in your process improvement steps.

Perhaps the entire team agrees that reducing time spent in meetings is a worthy goal to incorporate into your continuous improvement efforts. Toward this goal, the team decides to replace several standing meetings with regular update emails. You all commit to making better use of meeting time by requiring agendas for all meetings and only inviting people who need to attend.

This type of improvement activity might not directly impact the customer, but it can greatly increase team efficiency, which can then have a positive impact on the customer.

Analyze what needs to change

The next action in your list of process improvement steps is critical: Getting to the heart of what needs to change.

Nearly every process has some form of waste hidden within it. We’re defining waste in the Lean sense here, as anything that does not add value to the customer. If you identify and eliminate areas of waste within your processes, you will save time and produce higher quality results.

Type of Waste Description Example
Defects Errors due to incomplete or inaccurate information A new feature that doesn’t function as promised by a sales rep
Excess processing Additional steps that are unnecessary to deliver the final result Requiring teams to document their work in multiple tools (instead of using an integration to share information between tools)
Overproduction Producing more than is necessary A designer creates 10-15 customer illustrations for a blog post that only requires 1-2
Non-utilized talent Team members sitting idle due to process inefficiency Copywriter unable to start work because creative brief has not been written for new campaign
Sitting inventory Any bits of value that are completed (or close to complete) but have not been deliveredn Features that were 90% developed during a hackathon but never delivered
Products waiting for the next step Work items that are unable to move forward due to excess WIP downstream Product tutorial videos that are waiting to be reviewed by a busy PM
Unnecessary motion In knowledge work, any activity that doesn’t move a piece of work forward Status meetings where no new information is shared
Inefficient motion of people Any activity that (physically or mentally) moves people away from more valuable work Including the entire team in a meeting that is only relevant to a few members

As with all these process improvement steps, it’s critical to involve your entire team in this analysis phase. As you think about your team’s process, answer the following questions:

  • What issues frustrate team members and / or customers?
  • Which steps are creating bottlenecks?
  • What is causing costs to rise or quality to decline?
  • Which steps require the most time to complete or cause the most delays?

Again, speak to people who are most affected by the process and ask them what they think is wrong with it and what improvements they suggest.

Redesign the process

Once you have mapped your current process, defined the business challenges, and analyzed what needs to change in order to meet those challenges, it’s time to start “solutionizing:” Brainstorming ways to resolve these pain points.

Take a look at each of the pain points you have identified in previous process improvement steps. For each of these pain points, discuss potential solutions to resolve the pain. Be careful not to simply accept the first or most obvious solution – as the saying goes, there are many ways to skin a cat, and some of these ways might yield better results than others.

If a step in your process is taking too long, you might investigate:

  • Dedicating more resources to that step
  • Breaking that step into two or more steps
  • Creating tools to expedite parts of the step

If you are experiencing quality issues, you might consider:

  • Creating tools to standardize the step
  • Adding detailed instructions to the lane (as a process policy) to increase
  • Adding a quality control step between this step and the next step in your process

If the issue is that your team is often waiting on external blockers, you could look into:

  • Adding someone to your team to do that work
  • Training someone internal to do that work
  • Offloading that particular process to a different team
No process happens in a vacuum – so it’s important to always consider the upstream and downstream impact of any changes you might make to your process.

Does the change you are suggesting improve both your process and the other processes that are being affected? If the changes you are making are affecting other people or teams, are they being included in this conversation? (If not, be sure to consult with them before implementing any changes.)

Finally, before moving onto the next of these process improvement steps, you’ll want to talk through your anticipated outcomes for each of the changes you are looking to make. Ask questions like:

  • How will we know it is working?
  • What will we use to measure its effectiveness?
  • When will we decide whether to keep the change, reverse it, or iterate upon it?

Discuss this for each of the changes before you make them, to ensure that you have a plan in place for assessing the impact of your changes.

Implement changes

Finally, you’ve reached what is arguably the most exciting of these process improvement steps: Actually implementing the changes!

Now that you have a plan for how to improve each of the pain points you have identified, it might be tempting to implement all of the changes at once. However, it’s difficult to measure the impact of a single change when you have too many variables at play, so you’ll want to take a more measured approach.

As a team, you’ll want to discuss how to prioritize the implementation of your improvements so that you can effectively tackle the most pressing problems first. Implementing your improvements one at a time will allow you to measure the impact of each change, and allow your team time to adjust to each of the changes so that they are not distracting or overwhelming.

Create open streams of communication

Improving communication and collaboration requires you to eliminate boundaries so team members can easily participate in process improvement by sharing (and finding) feedback and ideas on a regular basis. Ideally, this helps people communicate clearly and fully the first time around to reduce the amount of back-and-forth communications.

Kanban enables teams to create opportunities for implementing process improvement steps as they discuss capacity constraints and other bottlenecks.
Kanban enables teams to create opportunities for implementing process improvement steps as they discuss capacity constraints and other bottlenecks.

Software improves communication and collaboration by connecting people more closely (even when they work in two entirely different locations) and putting all relevant communications in a single place. Ultimately, it leads to fewer emails, which means team members spend less time digging through their inboxes trying to find answers and more time getting work done.

Identify KPIs: how will you measure impact?

How will you measure the impact of these process improvement steps you are taking? What kind of impact are you trying to make?

Do you want to:

  • Increase team productivity?
  • Boost efficiency?
  • Speed time to market?
  • Increase customer satisfaction?
  • Improve employee morale?
  • Gain competitive advantage?

Peter Drucker is quoted as saying, “You can’t manage what you can’t measure.” To achieve any of the goals on this list, you must have a plan in place for measuring progress you’ve made by implementing these process improvement steps. Whatever your goal, ask yourself what you’ll need to know in order to measure progress.

  • To increase team productivity or efficiency, you might want to measure work in process, cycle time, and lead times.
  • To speed time to market, you might track cycle time on new feature development or the lead time of a new marketing campaign.
  • To increase customer satisfaction, you might track sentiment ratings on support tickets or set up a way to ask customers to give you a Net Promoter Score (NPS).
  • Employee morale might be measured through an anonymous survey sent a few times per year.

1. Set up a system to gather metrics

Whatever you need to measure to assess how process improvement steps help you reach your goals, set up a system for it. If you’re using Kanban boards to manage work, you can build a board to track metrics to fuel your improvement activity.

An important element of process improvement steps is gathering metrics, such as cycle time.
An important element of process improvement steps is gathering metrics, such as cycle time.

When used in conjunction with a well-designed Kanban system, Lean metrics provide actionable insights that help teams answer important questions like:

  • How long does it take to complete a piece of work once we begin?
  • What’s the average cycle time for each type of work?
  • Where does work get stuck? How long does it wait between active steps?
  • Are we underestimating how much time it takes to complete a request?
  • Are we overloading any particular team member? How can we relieve this burden?

2. Practice clean data collection

Before you begin analyzing metrics, ensure the quality of your data. Make sure your team is using the board in a consistent way. Before drawing any conclusions, ask yourself two questions:

  • What does this metric truly measure?
  • What insights am I trying to learn from this data?

The answers should be fairly similar. Data is only useful when it is analyzed accurately, in context.

Continually monitor process improvement efforts

Process improvement is always a worthy use of time, but without a regular cadence to review the impact of your process improvement steps, it’s easy to let them fall by the wayside.

Whether or not your organization formally practices continuous improvement in the Lean sense, you can establish a system that allows you to practice process improvement in a consistent, sustainable, and effective way.

In general, process improvement activity gets less attention than project and break-fix work.

It’s natural to let urgent work take priority over important (but not pressing) work. This is why it’s critical for teams to find ways to keep them top-of-mind and dedicate time to improvement activity.

Some teams review process improvement steps at every standup, while others dedicate a monthly or quarterly meeting – typically called a retrospective – to align around improvement efforts. Establishing a regular cadence for both standups and retrospectives, and making sure you know how to run them effectively, is the key, even when more urgent work is looming. Visualizing process improvement activities on the team’s Kanban board alongside other work is a great way to give improvement efforts the space they deserve.

Leaders can reinforce the importance of process improvement by encouraging team members to block off time to devote to it. Similar to Google’s “20% time” policy, which is meant to encourage employees to spend time on innovation, dedicating time to improvement activity is an investment into the future of your company. You might find success with dedicating a few afternoons a month to process improvement steps, or adding a few questions to your daily standup to keep improvement efforts top-of-mind.

Whatever cadence works for your team, stick to it! While the impact might not be immediate, you’ll certainly see the impact of the work over the long-term.

Measure the impact of process improvement efforts

By following these process improvement steps, you did the work to track your performance metrics. Don’t forget to put them to use!

Before you begin work on any process improvement activities, determine success criteria: How will you know if it’s working? Then, during your regular meetings to review performance activity, be sure to discuss the performance of current or recently completed improvement projects.

Types of Processes to Improve

These process improvement steps can be used to improve any type of business process, from the most strategically important to the most mundane. Processes can be formal or informal.

Formal processes (protocol)

Formal processes are especially important when they involve anything having to do with employee or customer safety, legal issues, financial considerations, and other criteria or sensitive functions. In these cases, it’s important to follow particular steps.

Informal processes (habits)

Informal processes, on the other hand, are those more likely to be created by individuals or groups within organizations to complete certain tasks. They might not involve written instructions but are nevertheless important for achieving goals.

Processes considered formal, which are also known as procedures, are documented and have well-established steps. For instance, a company might have procedures in place for receiving and submitting invoices, or for establishing relationships with new clients.

Different kinds of processes have one thing in common: They are all designed to streamline the way individuals and teams work.

“When everyone follows a well-tested set of steps, there are fewer errors and delays, there is less duplicated effort, and staff and customers feel more satisfied,” MindTools says.

The Value of Process Improvement

If process improvement has so many benefits, then why do so many companies neglect these important process improvement steps?

Often, it’s a matter of cost – more specifically, sunk costs. If your entire company uses (albeit mediocre) software, you’ve already made a significant investment of time, energy, and resources into using that tool. The cost of switching to another tool might seem too much to bear.

But the reality is, companies save money by identifying inefficiencies in project teams with many layers of management or manufacturing teams whose motions equate to money. In order to fully make a commitment to process improvement, businesses have to accept that the risk of not evolving is far greater than the risk of changing the status quo.

Respond to Complexity with Process Improvement

As our world grows in complexity and the pace of innovation continues to hasten, every company needs a methodical, sustainable approach to maintain a competitive edge. Effective process improvement steps can help organizations operate more efficiently, reduce risk, deliver more value, and realize greater returns on their investments.

No industry, no organization, is safe from disruption: But by committing to process improvement, companies strengthen the muscles they’ll need to compete.