Flowcharting is useful for:
Tip: If you choose to use MS Word to create your flowchart, before adding any textboxes, hit "enter" multiple times until the cursor has moved down two or three pages. The pages will remain blank. If you don't do this initially, it is more difficult to add boxes later.
To begin the flowcharting process, the organization should schedule a “flowcharting event” or often referred to as group flowcharting. Table 1 outlines steps for successful group flowcharting. The first step in planning a flowchart event is to define the objectives (e.g. see all clients within 24 hours). This step is best accomplished by meeting with clinical and managerial leaders to discuss objectives, identify participants, etc.; be sure to include opinion leaders.
Step 1 | Define objective (e.g., see all clients within 24 hours) |
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Step 2 | Define process (e.g., admission process) |
Step 3 | Define first and last steps |
Step 4 Quiet Time 1 |
Have each person write down process steps on yellow Post-it notes |
Step 5 | Have everyone place their yellow Post-it notes on wall paper to create a flowchart. Encourage those who finish this step quickly to read what others are placing on the wall paper. |
Step 6 | Review flowchart |
Step 7 Quiet Time 2 |
Have each person use red Post-its to identify and record bottlenecks and blue Post-its to describe suggestions for process improvements |
Step 8 | Place blue and red Post-its on flowchart |
Step 9 | Review suggested changes |
Step 10 Quiet Time 3 |
Ask each participant to pick the three changes that offer the best combination of ease of implementation and impact on objective |
Step 11 | Conduct multi-vote to select changes to initially pilot test |
Step 12 | Discuss next steps |
The event is a group exercise where up to 25 participants, who regularly participate in an identified process, create a flowchart of a process. Typical event resources include: a roll of brown paper or wallpaper; three different colors of Post-its: yellow, red, and blue and a flipchart and markers (for parking lot issues). Using the Post-it notes and paper, as a group they map the process flow using common flowcharting symbols (see the next section), identify potential bottlenecks, and generate solutions to remove causes of waits and delays.
Several guidelines for the event facilitator are: