Operating Model
Operating Model
1. Step 1
Examine your entire production process and figure out if there are external
services you could cut out. It may be cheaper in the long run for you to make
small components, rather than buy them from a supplier. Also, some things that
you make yourself may be cheaper to buy from someone else.
2. Step 2
Remember that the end of your business operating model is always the
consumer. Refocusing some of your services around the needs of the consumer is
one way to help increase your business, but you'll also need a marketing plan to
reach the customer.
3. Step 3
Figure out what you need to deliver the best product. These needs can vary from
things like state of the art manufacturing facilities to highly trained professionals
managing your factory workers. Your requirements can also include intangible
things like marketing campaigns and grassroots support.
4. Step 4
Consider geographic locations for your business when you develop your model. A
centralized location will help decrease transportation costs, while basing your
company in an educated area could make more qualified workers apply to work
for you. Property cost, taxes and development must also be considered as part of
your start-up and operating costs.
5. Step 5
Incorporate environmental policies in the plan that you create. Sustainable
development guidelines preserve the environment and also help your business
appeal to people who are very interested in conservation.
6. Step 6
Work a production threshold into your business operating model so you know how
much growth you can sustain before you need to expand your facilities. Your limit
may depend more on capital than space if you are in a small start-up company.
7. Step 7
Create a target operating model that details how the company will develop in the
best case scenario. In addition to things like market share and financial goals, the
target model should include infrastructure, personnel and technology growth.
A business operational model is a roadmap for managers and employees to use as a guide for
leading a business along a path to success. Operational models place the mission of the
company, and the means to achieve that mission, in front of employees for reference and
inspiration. A good operational model is easy to access by all stakeholders and is open to
amendment and change as environments and conditions change around and within the business.
Even the smallest business enterprise should have an operations model.
The Conceptual Operating Model of a business is used to understand what the key areas of the organisational
structure should be, how they would associate with each other and what each area does.
The conceptual model is concerned with how the business should look, not how it does look now. It can be
useful to allow understanding of what the key areas of the business are and how they interact. It allows an
organisation to focus on where they need to be and to plan to move towards this.
To capture the business operating model, the key relationships between Business Roles are:
• Containment - capturing the sub-roles that make up a Role, e.g. the Business Roles that are required to
make up a logical team (Group Role)
• Responsibility - capturing those roles to which a Business Role is responsible
http://www.enterprise-architecture.org/business-architecture-tutorials/92-conceptual-
business-operating-model
Operating Model is a term that is used in many contexts. An Operating Model is the abstract
representation of how an organisation operates across process, organisation, technology
domains in order to deliver value defined by the organisation in scope.
An Operating Model can be used as a framework for formulating Operations Strategy – explicit
choices about the best deployment of organisation’s elements to achieve the business goals. It is
usually informed by the Business Model. In some cases, an Operating Model can become the
source of competitive advantage and can inform the Business Model.
The Operating Model can be a vehicle product to describe how the organization does business
today - the "as-is" Operating Model. This can be the foundation for an organization that wants to
transform its business. New business drivers can be translated into requirements that can lead to
a new "to-be" or "Target" Operating Model. The Target Operating Model represents the high level
requirements that drive the future Business and IT Architecture design.
Contents
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• 8 See also
• 9 References
A Business Model describes the rationale of how an organization creates, delivers, and
captures economic, social, or other forms of value. The process of Business Model design is
part of business strategy.
An Operating Model describes the necessary level of business process integration and
data standardization in the business and among trading partners and guides the underlying
Business and Technical Architecture to effectively and efficiently realize its Business Model.
The process of Operating Model design is also part of business strategy.
A Capability Model describes the capabilities necessary to execute the Operating Model.
The process of Capability Model design is part of Operations Planning.
Corporate Role Resource allocations Define Protocols Financial roll-ups and analysis
This "large grain" view informs many decisions about how to design and build the
capabilities that make up the organization. For example, the first choice for a Holding
Company such as Tyco Industries would not be to try to run all of the companies in its
portfolio on a single configuration of the same financial management business applications.
However, the "large grain" view insufficiently informs decisions within each model. For
example, the Federated/Allied model suggests common IT Systems. However it is common
that the Corporate/Home Office Company shares little with its Divisional Companies. MIT's
Center for Information Systems Research presents a useful model which provides a way of
thinking about the need for multiple Operating Models for a given Corporate Strategy.
The team of Jeanne W. Ross, Peter Weill and David C. Robertson summarized their
research in Enterprise Architecture as Strategy.[3] They found that an organization with an
explicitly defined operating model report 31% higher operational efficiency, 33% higher
customer satisfaction, and a 34% advantage in new product development. In an extension
to the earlier Corporate Strategy work, they outline four operating models:
Process Standardization
Process
Low High
Integration
High Coordination Unification
[edit]Role
in Defining the Business and Technical
Architecture
Operating Models drive the necessary level of business process integration and
standardization to deliver the organizations proposition, goods and services to
customers, shareholders and it people.[4]
The Operating Model also informs IT and other support services as to the value and
appropriateness of shared services and related Service Level Agreements.
On the Technical architecture side, the Operating Model informs IT leaders about how
various technical and business components should be designed and implemented to
enable the chosen Operating Model:[5]
Component Coordination Unification Diversification Replication
Customer Data X X
Product Data X X
Shared Services X X X X
Infrastructure Technology X X X
Portal Technology X
Middleware Technology X
Operational Processes X X
Application Systems X
From the table above, it is shown that Coordination and Unification models benefit
more from consolidated views of Customer and Data across the enterprise than do
Diversification and Replication models.
Such dialogues allow IT management to use the Operating Model as Strategy to drive
design of concrete plans to enable the business in the form of IT projects.
As valuable as the result of the dialogue may be in terms of aligned plans, is the
organizational learning that takes place through the dialogue, choices, and translation
of the Operating Model intoEnterprise Architecture and IT Governance that guide and
control IT investment over time.