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Process Redesign to Reduce Cycle Time − A Case Study
B A power distribution company in India, catering to the needs of domestic, commercial, industrial and agricultural users, was not meeting the country's Electricity Regulatory Commission performance standard regulations for metering and billing. Those standards require the company to provide new power connections within 30 days from the date an application is received. In each case that the company was unable to meet the standard, it was required to pay a penalty for the delayed connection. This translated into an annual cost of 1,980,000 Rupees (US$46,000). A Six Sigma DMAIC project was initiated to reduce cycle time. This is the case study of that project. Improvement Opportunity: The Define/Measure PhasesThe project scope was limited to the process of providing new power connections to users up to a 100kw load in approved and electrified areas where the power supply network exists. The defect was defined as any new power connection that required more than 30 days to complete. Data collected for a five-month period showed an increasing trend in the number of defects with an average of 330 per month (Figure 1). Completion of the data collection plan yielded the information reflected in Table 1.
Table 1: Summary Statistics of Collected Data
Analysis and Interpretation: The Analyze PhaseA cross-functional team was formed to prepare a process map with each activity identified by one of three categories real value-added, business value-added, non-value-added based on the following criteria: Real value-added included essential activities that transform inputs into outputs that are necessary to meet customer requirements and have perceived value to the customer. Business value-added included activities that are installed by management and deemed necessary to support, control, and monitor internal business functions but have little or no perceived value to the customer. Non-value-added included nonessential and non-processing activities that do not contribute to customer satisfaction or improved business operations. Table 2: Analysis of Various Activity Categories
Table 3: Definitions of Each Sub-Cycle Time
A brainstorming session identified the significant factors affecting these times. From that information, solutions were identified. Recommendations: The Improve PhaseTo redesign the process all non-value-added activities were eliminated, business value-added activities were minimized, and real value-added activities were streamlined. Key improvements included the following:
The redesigned process was piloted in one district during a four-week period. A time study was carried out to estimate the standard man-minutes required for performing each activity in the new process (Table 4). Results were positive, with the new standard deviation set at 4.8 days and the mean total cycle time reflecting 12.1 days, a substantial reduction over the previous process mean of 46.2 days. In addition, the number of activities in the process was reduced from 74 to 36. Table 4: Analysis of Various Activity Categories
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| Account Headings | Amount (Rupees) | Remarks |
| Savings/per annum from: Penalty money Expenditure on local conveyance | 1,980,000 1,008,000 | Based on past performance Based on data provided by the claimants |
| Total Annual Savings | 2,988,000 | |
| Expenditure per annum for: Purchase of two mobile supply vans (one for each five districts) E-mail costs (2,000 Rupees per month per zone) |
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| Total Annual Expenditures | 1,120,000 | |
| Total Net Annual Savings | 1,868,000 |
Dibyajyoti Bandyopadhyay has been a consultant and trainer in Six Sigma and Quality Management System (ISO 9000, QS 9000) for eight years. His experience includes program implementation, process management, manpower planning, organization restructuring, production system design, modernization and technology upgrading. He has assisted many organizations in implementing ISO 9000 QMS. He has rendered consulting services to companies like Hindustan Electro Graphites, Indorama Synthetics (I) Ltd., Fujitsu Optel Ltd., Tata Power, Department of Telecommunications. He can be reached at dibyajyotib@hotmail.com.
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