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Article
Publication date: 9 February 2010

Björn Münstermann, Andreas Eckhardt and Tim Weitzel

The purpose of this paper is to show if business process standardization (BPS) has an impact on business process performance and should be considered as both a valid business…

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to show if business process standardization (BPS) has an impact on business process performance and should be considered as both a valid business process management (BPM) measure and a regular driver of process success.

Design/methodology/approach

An empirical analysis based on data from 156 firms is used to evaluate the hypothesis that process standardization positively impacts business process time, cost, and quality.

Findings

First, the paper proposes a model and empirical operationalization to analyze the impact of process standardization on process performance. Second, empirical analysis shows that BPS has a decisive impact on process performance (R2=61.9 percent). Precisely, there is a significant impact on process time, cost, and most notably on quality. The results indicate that the impact is strongest in services firms and varies subject to a firm's strategy type.

Practical implications

The results suggest that BPS should regularly be considered a prime action item and major tool in a firm's BPM toolbox.

Originality/value

The paper is among the first to empirically show the vital impact of process standardization on performance. For academics and practitioners interested in BPM and the value impact of processes, the results suggest adding process standardization as a regular argument into research on and management of business processes.

Details

Business Process Management Journal, vol. 16 no. 1
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1463-7154

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