New Processes Speed Chain's Salon Openings
It's been able to boost the number of store openings from 200 a year to 300
April 17, 2006 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Great Clips Inc. is about a year away from wrapping up a four-year effort to overhaul and automate its business processes. Officials say the project is a key reason why the company has already been able to increase new store openings from 200 per year to 300.
The Minneapolis-based chain of 2,500 hair salons completed the first phase of the $1 million project in July 2005 by automating and streamlining what had been a 120-step process for opening a new salon.
This July, Great Clips IT developers will begin work on overhauling the business procedures used by managers to work with franchisees and existing salons. And at the beginning of next year, the company plans to launch the last phase of the project: re-engineering its contract management and communication processes.
The full project is slated to be completed in mid-2007.
"In our previous state, it was hard for management to be able to see the performance of the business processes -- to see into it and measure it," said Jim Waldo, vice president of IT at Great Clips. The company decided to automate its processes to give executives the visibility they need to manage them more proactively, he said.
That decision came after an internal analysis in 2003 determined that the company's procedures were preventing it from meeting growth plans.
The internal study found, among other things, that people in various steps in the process -- such as internal employees, real estate agents and contract managers -- had to spend significant time searching for information before handing it off to the next person in the chain.
Great Clips officials decided to automate its processes using Metastorm Inc.'s eWork business process management (BPM) suite and Interwoven Inc.'s MailSite Document Management suite. Meta-storm's BPM suite is designed to support design, integration and deployment of new internal procedures while integrating them into existing applications and systems.
For the first phase of the project, from July 2004 to July 2005, Great Clips developers used the Metastorm tool to automate and streamline the course of action for opening a new salon. Prior to completing the first phase, the 120-step process included eight specialized roles and 50 users.
Automation let Great Clips eliminate 20 of those steps. The most important result, Waldo said, was eliminating the steps that required people to wait for "days up to two weeks for information that was already in the building."
The project required significant effort from Great Clips developers working with the third-party tools, Waldo noted.
Software
Additional Resources



White Papers & Webcasts
HP Technology Guide for Scalable Business Solutions
Download This Resource Now!
Enterprise Application Delivery: No User Left Behind
Gain the ability to deliver applications to all users, using any device, across any network.
Gartner: Magic Quadrant for Application Delivery Controllers, 2009
The market for products to improve the delivery of application software over networks remains dynamic and innovative. Vendors focused on solving enterprises' most-pressing...
Data Protection is not an insurance policy -you cannot buy-back lost data
Find out why you need to maintain access to critical information to run your business and remain competitive.
Chiquita selects Workday's fresh approach to Human Capital Management
A fresh approach to meet IT and HR objectives.
ITIL in Tough Economic Times
Are you looking for new inspiration to move forward with ITIL in these tough economic times?
The ROI of Software-As-A-Service
A Total Economic Impact™ Analysis Uncovers Long-Term Value In SaaS
IT Governance Podcast: IT Provider Forecasts $10 Million in Savings
In this podcast, learn how OTS was able to prioritize, then deliver, on the mission-critical demands and, in the process, project $10 million...
