hallmark's process journey and center of excellence for integration
TRANSCRIPT
Hallmark’s Process
Structure and Its SAP COE
Key Discussion Points for Today’s Webinar • The “Business” must lead transformation of their process
• Large initiatives can provide foundation for process focus and change management
• Formal process roles need to be right-sized and emphasized
• Process integration failures shine the light on criticality of process
• Sustainment takes constant effort and subordination of silo agendas
• An engaged process leadership team and center of excellence jointly help to prevent retrenchment to siloed thinking and operation
President & CEO: Don Hall Jr.
NA President: Dave Hall
Founded: 1910 by J.C. Hall
Headquarters: Kansas City
Ownership: Private
Revenues: $3.9 billion in 2013
Employees: 11,300 full-time + 20,500 part-time worldwide
(Hallmark and subsidiaries)
Creative talent: 500+ artists, designers, stylists, writers, editors, web
designers, and photographers
Products: 10,000 new & redesigned cards/yr
Available products: 49,000 at any time
U.S. distribution: 40,000 retail outlets
Gold Crown stores: 2,800
U.S. subsidiaries: 8 related businesses in Hallmark family of companies,
including Crayola LLC
Hallmark facts
Everything begins and ends with Process
5 Process is rarely Linear
2006 Multiple-Initiatives Business Transformation
Why? 1. Changing Consumer/ Changing Expectation
2. Better Innovation Capability
3. End-to-End Supply Chain Process Streamlining to Enable 1 and 2
4. Better Integrated Planning and Execution
Two Significant Enablement Initiatives
• Extend Lean to all facilities
• Project Horizon – SAP ERP
• Wave 1 – STP/RTR • Wave 2 – DP/SCP/MTI • Wave 3 – OTC
Enterprise Performance Support
Consumer
& Customer
Engagement
Produce & Ship
Value Creation
Vision to Strategy
Core Processes
North America
Governing Processes
Enabling Processes
Demand Planning & Forecast
Sales & Operations Planning
Supply Chain Planning
Source to Pay
Materials to Inventory
Order to Cash
Master Data Management
Business Performance Management
People Management
Corporate Operations Management
Information Systems & Technology Management
Record to Report
Level 1
Hallmark’s Enterprise Process Model
Sample Migration Map
(STP E2E Process)
• Suppliers using multiple processes and technologies to interact with Hallmark
• SAP ECC MM module has been implemented
• Key metrics are measuring and driving the efficiency of the STP process;.
Current State
1-2 years
Completed
Future State
3-5 years
Future
Waypoint 2
Waypoint 3
Improve order visibility
throughout the supply chain
Waypoint 2
Drive financial benefits
Waypoint 4
Cross-Process Metrics
Waypoint 2
STP process
expertise
Waypoint 1
Establish connections to
industry groups
Waypoint 3
Waypoint 4
Cross-process
succession planning
Waypoint 1
Waypoint 3
Optimize cross-process
roles & procedures
Waypoint 4
Lean vision implemented
Waypoint 5
Maintain STP Consideration
to any Supply Chain / SAP
design changes
Waypoint 1
Waypoint 2
Waypoint 4
Leverage technology
solutions across STP,
including subsidiaries
Waypoint 1
Waypoint 3
Enable spend reduction
Waypoint 6
Optimize connections to
future SAP modules Waypoint 6
Metrics
Waypoint 5
1. Round One – Too Many Cooks, Inedible Stew
2. Round Two – Fewer Cooks, Better Stew, Better Line Prep
3. Round Three – LEAN out Line Prep, Only Use Healthy Ingredients
Process Structure
Round One – Too Many Cooks, Inedible Stew
10 Process Leads
5-10 IT Leadership
Formal Process Roles
• Process Champion (senior executive level)
• Process Owner (senior manager - business) • Process Lead (middle-manager business) • Sub-process Owner (business) • Portfolio Owner (IT) • Process Catalysts
Round Two – Fewer Cooks, Better Stew, Better Line Prep
Process Council: 6 SAP-enabled Process Owners 1 Non-SAP-enabled Process Owner 3-5 IT/Process Leaders
Primary Objective: Final funding decision-making for technology projects
Process Office: 6 SAP-enabled Process Leads 5-6 IT/Process Leaders
Primary Objective: Recommend prioritization of technology projects and funding Secondary Objective: Educate members on process issues and tee-up for Process Council
Strategic Fit
Scoring
1 = No Strategies impacted by this project.
4 = 1-2 Strategies impacted by project.
7 = 3-4 Strategies impacted by project.
10 = All Strategies impacted by project.
COST
1 = > $2MM
2 = $1.5 to $1.9MM
3 = $1.0 to $1.4MM
4 = $750 to $999K
5 = $500 to $749K
6 = $300 to $499K
7 = $100 to $299K
8 = $50 to $99K
9 < $50K
BENEFIT
1 < $50K.
2 = $50 to $149K
3 = $150 to 299K
4 = $300 to 449K
5 = $450 to 599K
6 = $600 to 749K
7 = $750 to 899K
8 = $900K to 1MM
9 > $1MM
13
RISK OF DOING
1 = Serious concerns about feasability, expertise, etc.
2 =
3 =
4 =
5 =Moderate concerns about feasability, expertise, etc.
6 =
7 =
8 =
9 = Could program in your sleep.
PENALTY OF NOT DOING
1 = No Penalty
2 =
3 =
4 =
5 = Moderate Penalty—process is requiring manual effort,
customer is in jeopardy.
6 =
7 =
8 =
9 = Very serious penalty—process is shut down, loss of
customer, etc.
Prioritization Criteria— CBRPS
Round Three – LEAN out Line Prep, Only Use Healthy Ingredients
Supply Chain & Corporate Process Monthly Meeting: 6 SAP-enabled Process Owners 2 Non-SAP-enabled Process Owner (HTR, OTC) 8 Process Leads 7 SAP COE/IT Leaders
Primary Objective: Final funding decision-making for technology projects and re-prioritization
Process Leadership Monthly Forum: 6 SAP-enabled Process Owners 1 Non-SAP-enabled Process Owner 7 Process Leads 6 SAP COE/IT Leaders
Primary Objective: Cross-process education, issue resolution, evaluation
Process Leader Bi-weekly Working Forum: 6 Process Leads 3 SAP COE Leaders
Primary Objective: Operational continuous improvement discussion and joint process resolution
SAP Center of Excellence • Originally proposed as Process Integration Center
• True end-to-end process thinkers and business integrators who possess deep technical/ process knowledge needed now and in the future to work up-down-across processes.
• The charge of this team would be to: 1. Intentionally create opportunities to increase employee efficiency 2. Optimize the “entire” end-to-end process by leveraging SAP knowledge and using Lean tools 3. Ensure guardrails around data, process, and technology standardization are rigorously (and
continuously) applied with “limited to no” customization of software. 4. Simplify, clarify, and execute our integrated business process design
• Only special ingredient or “special sauce” is cross-process problem solving and ideation
• This is the company’s “brain trust” of technical business and process knowledge - most importantly, they understand how the process is connected and integrated
• Splitting the brain trust back into previous areas is like severing the connection in the human brain; what keeps these blades sharp is the mutual interaction and learning to understand the entire system
• They are the guardians of the overall design – advocating for simplification and clarification in the design and resisting creating a patchwork quilt of non-integrated and disparate systems
Frontiers and Challenges • How to best use the process catalysts, since change management resources are no
longer able to facilitate training for these important process agents
• Keeping the process flame alive, as inexperienced leaders or process advocates move into or out of SAP-enabled areas
• Creating better rotation opportunities both into and out of the SAP COE
• As the SAP landscape increases past the supply chain area into other functional silos, how should the COE be maintained so that this unique integrated ideation and cross-process problem solving does not become just another pool of technology analysts?
• Ensuring linkage of strategic goals to end-to end process continues to be understood and incorporated in both planning and execution – drivers still the same as during business transformation efforts
Let the Dialogue Begin!