IS

Seah, Kin-Lee

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.241 process business reengineering processes bpr redesign paper research suggests provide past improvements manage enable organizations
0.237 public government private sector state policy political citizens governments contributors agencies issues forums mass development
0.103 case study studies paper use research analysis interpretive identify qualitative approach understanding critical development managerial

Focal Researcher     Coauthors of Focal Researcher (1st degree)     Coauthors of Coauthors (2nd degree)

Note: click on a node to go to a researcher's profile page. Drag a node to reallocate. Number on the edge is the number of co-authorships.

Thong, James Y. L. 1 Yap, Chee-sing 1
Business Process Reengineering 1 Case Study 1 Information Technology 1 Public Sector 1

Articles (1)

Business Process Reengineering in the Public Sector: The Case of the Housing Development Board in Singapore. (Journal of Management Information Systems, 2000)
Authors: Abstract:
    Our existing knowledge of business process reengineering (BPR) is mainly derived from the experiences of private sector organizations, which have fundamentally different characteristics from public organizations. This paper represents a first step in understanding how BPR may be different in public organizations. Drawing on the public administration literature, it examines the differences between public and private organizations and their implications for BPR. Following that, it examines the BPR experience of a large public organization through an intensive case study. The case analysis shows that while there are similarities in the BPR experiences of public and private organizations, there are also notable differences. In this specific case, there were social and political pressures to reengineer, press publicity to promote BPR, a reengineering team comprised mainly of neutral staff, performance benchmarks adapted from the private sector, high-level approval for redesigned processes, and a pilot site implementation to secure further funding. It concludes with lessons learned for implementing BPR in public organizations.