Very easily, Six Sigma is your
best bet for maximizing return on investment, more so in troubled economic
times. However, the success of implementation depends much on its achieved
degree of alignment with the problems. Ifs and buts not withstanding, there are
stories to support both sides of the issue. First let’s consider the negative
side of the story.
Why Do We Hear Failures To Achieve Projected ROIs On Six Sigma
Investments?
We hear failure stories not just
because they are reported but because they occur. Now, why do they occur so
much as to be heard in the open? The first reason any practitioner can give is
the lack of support from the top management. Considering long implementation
periods, commitment levels sometimes wither away and consequently the effects
percolate down the line of the organization. And project implementation turns
into a ritual exercise. The claims of $1 million per Black Belt in ROI can
appear more and more unrealistic.
It is not enough to blame top
management alone. Champions and Master Black Belts on their parts could scale
down the projects that result in slashed expenses. High returns can be realized
in this scenario by driving projects initially through the internal market to
gain much-needed support. Things are subjective to multiple aspects but a
complete turnaround is not impossible.
What Critical Factors Help Bring About Satisfactory ROI?
There are three more critical
factors barring project selection that play a role in ROI. Obviously, these
are:
1.
Lowering the investment
2.
Maximizing the returns
3.
Reducing the time to return
But things are more complex than
meets the eye! Interrelated variables such as quality of personnel and
training, support of management and magnitude of the opportunity, function in
unison. Apart from these, aligning the management (and stakeholders’)
initiatives to the Six Sigma initiatives must be given due importance. All good
programs will launch from a project on revenue maximization that potentially
becomes an instant hit.
How to Measure ROI in A
Six Sigma Initiative?
Return on investment
simplistically means the cost of implementation over time compared to return
for the corresponding period after discounting inflation and risk adjusted
rates. For reasons of practicality, return on investment is measured in terms
of hard and soft returns. Hard returns are those which are tangible and can be
measured; for example, the savings achieved on reduced personnel and wastage.
Whereas soft returns are mostly intangible like the advantage derived from the
reduced cycle time.
Soft returns vary hugely from
company to company and from project to project, unlike hard returns, which are
measured almost by the same yardstick universally. So clearly, the soft returns
are relative in nature, depending on accepted interpretations at that time,
thus making quantification a difficult exercise. Errors in calculation of
reduced capital employed or cost of financing leaves tremendous room for
debate.
As a rule, most successful
companies don’t differentiate between hard and soft returns. What is more
interesting is the recurring returns in terms of all around savings. Add to it
the value creation by increases in the growth rates and defeating competition,
which all result in higher shareholder value.
More sophisticated tools such as
Economic Value Analysis may help quantify intangible value created.