Process Improvement — Process Improvement | TacticalVC
Process Improvement
3
Levers that improve how the business operates — amplifying the impact of revenue and cost levers.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most impactful process improvement strategies for PE portfolio companies?
The most impactful process improvement strategies fall into three categories: operational excellence, data-driven decision-making, and organizational design. Operational excellence — including workflow automation, quality management, and cycle time reduction — delivers the most measurable near-term results. Randstad reduced average time-to-fill by 40% (from 8.2 to 4.9 days), generating an estimated EUR 180M in incremental annual revenue. Data-driven improvements enable better forecasting and measurement, as demonstrated by Infosys improving demand forecast accuracy from 65% to 82%. Organizational redesign provides the structural foundation — Accenture's industry vertical reorganization accelerated revenue CAGR from approximately 6% to 8%. PE firms should prioritize operational excellence for quick wins, invest in measurement and analytics infrastructure, and then tackle organizational design changes that lock in the improvements.
How do process improvements translate to financial results?
Process improvements translate to financial results through three mechanisms: cost reduction (doing the same work with fewer resources), revenue acceleration (doing work faster to capture more demand), and quality improvement (reducing rework and customer churn). Genpact's delivery automation eliminated 12,000-15,000 FTE equivalents, reducing cost per transaction 25-30%. ManpowerGroup's cycle time reduction accelerated an estimated $200-250M in annualized revenue by filling positions faster. Rentokil Initial's quality improvements drove customer retention up 13.9 percentage points, directly protecting revenue. The financial impact compounds: a company that simultaneously reduces costs 10%, accelerates revenue 5%, and improves retention 5% achieves far more than 20% improvement because these effects multiply. PE firms should model process improvement ROI across all three dimensions rather than focusing solely on cost.
How long do process improvement initiatives take to show results?
Timeline varies by initiative type. Workflow automation and cycle time reduction can show measurable results within three to six months — Randstad achieved 40% time-to-fill reduction through Lean Six Sigma analytics implementation. Quality management programs take six to twelve months to mature, as they require process redesign, training, and cultural change — Teleperformance achieved ISO 9001 certification across 90%+ of delivery centers and improved first-call resolution from 72% to 81%. Organizational design changes are the slowest, typically requiring 12-24 months for full implementation — Korn Ferry's pod-based restructuring drove 56% revenue growth over a multi-year period. Data and analytics platforms take 6-12 months to deploy but compound in value as data accumulates. PE firms should plan for staggered returns and fund longer-term initiatives with early wins from automation.
What is the role of technology in process improvement?
Technology enables process improvement by automating repetitive work, providing real-time visibility into operations, and enabling data-driven decisions. In workflow automation, Fujitsu reduced human-handled IT tickets by 20-30% and improved first-contact resolution from 55-60% to 70-75%. In measurement, Cushman & Wakefield's analytics platform reduced data gathering time 40-50% for advisors while standardizing advice quality. In forecasting, Robert Half's AI processed 10M+ candidate-job matches annually, improving placement speed 50%. However, technology alone does not improve processes — it must be paired with process redesign and change management. Companies that automate broken processes simply execute bad processes faster. PE firms should ensure process improvement programs follow a sequence: understand the current process, redesign it, then apply technology to the redesigned process.
How do PE firms measure process improvement ROI?
Process improvement ROI should be measured through three lenses: efficiency metrics (cost per unit, throughput, cycle time), quality metrics (error rates, customer satisfaction, rework rates), and business outcome metrics (revenue impact, margin improvement, cash flow). EXL Service provides a clear example: cost per insurance claim declined 22%, throughput increased 28%, claims accuracy improved from 96.2% to 98.5%, and gross margin expanded. The most sophisticated PE firms track operating leverage — the ratio of incremental margin to incremental revenue — as the compound measure of process improvement. If a company adds $100M in revenue and generates $40M in incremental EBITDA (40% incremental margin) versus a historical 25% margin, the 15-point gap represents the value of process improvements. Key benchmarks include revenue per employee trends, gross margin trajectory, and working capital efficiency.
How do companies sustain process improvements over time?
Sustaining process improvements requires embedding them in governance structures, measurement systems, and organizational design — otherwise gains erode as attention shifts. TaskUs maintained 40%+ revenue CAGR for four consecutive years through an agile governance framework that halved new client launch time (from 90 to 45 days) and kept management overhead 30% lower than peers. EXL Service's digital command centers reduced decision latency from 5-7 days to 1-2 days by institutionalizing real-time operations management. Cognizant sustained CMMI Level 5 certification for eight consecutive ratings across 20+ years while scaling from 38,000 employees to 355,000. The common elements are: standard operating procedures that codify improvements, measurement dashboards that make performance visible, regular cadence reviews that catch regression early, and incentive structures that reward sustained performance rather than one-time gains.