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Main Authors: Trottier, Jacques, Van Woensel, William, Wang, Xiaoyang, Mallur, Kavya, El-Gharib, Najah, Amyot, Daniel
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.05869
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author Trottier, Jacques
Van Woensel, William
Wang, Xiaoyang
Mallur, Kavya
El-Gharib, Najah
Amyot, Daniel
author_facet Trottier, Jacques
Van Woensel, William
Wang, Xiaoyang
Mallur, Kavya
El-Gharib, Najah
Amyot, Daniel
contents We present a case study of Process Mining (PM) for personnel security screening in the Canadian government. We consider customer (process time) and organizational (cost) perspectives. Furthermore, in contrast to most published case studies, we assess the full process improvement lifecycle: pre-intervention analyses pointed out initial bottlenecks, and post-intervention analyses identified the intervention impact and remaining areas for improvement. Using PM techniques, we identified frequent exceptional scenarios (e.g., applications requiring amendment), time-intensive loops (e.g., employees forgetting tasks), and resource allocation issues (e.g., involvement of non-security personnel). Subsequent process improvement interventions, implemented using a flexible low-code digital platform, reduced security briefing times from around 7 days to 46 hours, and overall process time from around 31 days to 26 days, on average. From a cost perspective, the involvement of hiring managers and security screening officers was significantly reduced. These results demonstrate how PM can become part of a broader digital transformation framework to improve public service delivery. The success of these interventions motivated subsequent government PM projects, and inspired a PM methodology, currently under development, for use in large organizational contexts such as governments.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_05869
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Using Process Mining to Improve Digital Service Delivery
Trottier, Jacques
Van Woensel, William
Wang, Xiaoyang
Mallur, Kavya
El-Gharib, Najah
Amyot, Daniel
Computers and Society
J.1
We present a case study of Process Mining (PM) for personnel security screening in the Canadian government. We consider customer (process time) and organizational (cost) perspectives. Furthermore, in contrast to most published case studies, we assess the full process improvement lifecycle: pre-intervention analyses pointed out initial bottlenecks, and post-intervention analyses identified the intervention impact and remaining areas for improvement. Using PM techniques, we identified frequent exceptional scenarios (e.g., applications requiring amendment), time-intensive loops (e.g., employees forgetting tasks), and resource allocation issues (e.g., involvement of non-security personnel). Subsequent process improvement interventions, implemented using a flexible low-code digital platform, reduced security briefing times from around 7 days to 46 hours, and overall process time from around 31 days to 26 days, on average. From a cost perspective, the involvement of hiring managers and security screening officers was significantly reduced. These results demonstrate how PM can become part of a broader digital transformation framework to improve public service delivery. The success of these interventions motivated subsequent government PM projects, and inspired a PM methodology, currently under development, for use in large organizational contexts such as governments.
title Using Process Mining to Improve Digital Service Delivery
topic Computers and Society
J.1
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.05869