Let me recount a story from the television show Babylon 5.
In one episode there is the description of guard posted in the middle
of an empty courtyard. There is nothing there to protect. When one of
the characters, Londo, questions why, he finds that no one, not even the
emperor, knows why. After doing some research, Londo discovers that
200 years before, the emperor's daughter came by the spot at the end of
winter. The first flower of the spring was poking up through the snow.
Not wanting anyone to step on the flower, she posted a guard there.
She then forgot about the flower, the guard, and never countermanded her
order. Now, 200 years later, there was still a guard posted but with
nothing to protect. There had been nothing to protect for 200 years.
This demonstrates the unfortunate power of process. It often takes
on a life of its own. Those creating the complex system of rules expect
it to be followed. Once written down though, people stop thinking
about why it was done. Instead, they only expect it to be carried out.
This often leads to situations where work is being done for the sake of
process instead of the outcome. It is from this situation that
bureaucracy gets its sullied reputation (well, that and the seeming
ineptitude of many bureaucrats). Process can easily become inflexible.
This is especially true in the technology industry where process is
embedded in the code of intranet sites and InfoPath forms.
I encourage you to constantly revisit your process. Question it.
Why do you do things the way you do? Is there still a reason for each
step? If you don't know, jettison that step. Simplify. You should
have just enough process to get the job done, but no more. Once again,
I'll re-iterate. You hire smart people. You pay them to think. Let
them.
This isn't to say that all process is bad. Having common ways of
accomplishing common tasks is efficient. If a process truly makes
things more efficient, it should be kept. If not, it should be killed.
What was at one time efficient probably isn't any more. Be vigilant.
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/steverowe/archive/2007/11/12/question-process.aspx
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