Knowledge base

Process Mapping

Introduction: Process Mapping

Process Mapping is a visual technique used to describe, understand, and analyse how work is performed within an organisation. It displays the sequence of steps, decisions, and interactions that make up a process. By making workflows visible, Process Mapping helps teams identify inefficiencies, improve communication, and design smoother, more effective operations.

Background

Process Mapping has been a core part of quality management since the early days of industrial engineering and later became a standard tool within Lean and Six Sigma methodologies. It supports continuous improvement by revealing how activities actually flow across departments or systems. When people can see a process, they can more easily identify waste, rework, and non-value-added steps. This makes Process Mapping essential in process redesign and improvement workshops.

Key Elements / Features

  • Visual Clarity: Uses diagrams to represent each activity, decision point, or flow of information.
  • Standard Symbols: Shapes such as rectangles (activities), diamonds (decisions), and arrows (flows) provide a universal visual language.
  • Transparency: Makes invisible processes and cross-functional interactions visible to everyone.
  • Flexibility: Applicable across industries, including manufacturing, healthcare, logistics, and administrative environments.
  • Collaboration: Often developed through team workshops to ensure shared understanding and engagement.

Applications / Examples

Common types of process maps include:

  • Flowcharts: Simple diagrams showing the order of tasks and decisions.
  • Swimlane Diagrams: Divide activities by role, department, or system to clarify responsibilities.
  • Value Stream Maps: Illustrate the end-to-end flow of materials and information, highlighting value and waste.
  • Makigami Diagrams: Provide a detailed view of complex, multi-departmental processes.
  • Spaghetti Diagrams: Visualise the physical movement of people or materials to identify motion waste.

Relevance / Impact

Process Mapping promotes understanding, efficiency, and collaboration across teams. It builds a shared visual language for improvement and helps prioritise areas for Lean or Six Sigma projects. When combined with techniques like Brown-Paper Workshops or Value Stream Mapping, Process Mapping becomes a cornerstone of process transformation and operational excellence.

See also

Anend Harkhoe
Lean Consultant & Trainer | MBA in Lean & Six Sigma | Founder of Dmaic.com & Lean.nl
With extensive experience in healthcare (hospitals, elderly care, mental health, GP practices), banking and insurance, manufacturing, the food industry, consulting, IT services, and government, Anend is eager to guide you into the world of Lean and Six Sigma. He believes in the power of people, action, and experimentation. At Dmaic.com and Lean.nl, everything revolves around practical knowledge and hands-on training. Lean is not just a theory—it’s a way of life that you need to experience. From Tokyo’s karaoke bars to Toyota’s lessons—Anend makes Lean tangible and applicable. Lean.nl organises inspiring training sessions and study trips to Lean companies in Japan, such as Toyota. Contact: info@dmaic.com

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