The UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) hosted a delegation of designers from 12 October to 6 November 2009. No, not fashion designers as you may be thinking, but rather process designers who were very busy taking a closer look at "to be" or future processes for eventual inclusion in Umoja.
As you may already know, Umoja is the cornerstone of UN administrative reform - supported by a new Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system that will help integrate the management of human, financial, and physical resources of the Organization.
The Monrovia design sessions brought experts in process re-engineering together with experienced and knowledgeable staff members serving as "Subject Matter Experts" (SMEs). The UN Secretariat design sessions hosted by UNMIL were organized to look at specific aspects of supply chain (receipt and distribution and management of assets) and central support services, along with some technical functions.
All told, UNMIL hosted thirty-two Umoja design sessions with more than sixty participants contributing to the sessions. Each session was prepared and facilitated by an Umoja team comprising UN staff members and system integration consultants serving with the project. Participants worked diligently to bring their experiences and skills to the challenging task of defining streamlined processes and leading practices for the future.
The UNMIL Director of Mission Support and the Chief of Administrative Services were among the Mission's senior staff who opened the sessions. In addition to UNMIL staff, SMEs came from the UN Operation in Côte d'Ivoire (UNOCI) and the UN Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC).
On-line participation also enabled SMEs and others from the UN Truce Supervision Organization (UNTSO), UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), MONUC and UN Headquarters in New York to participate remotely.
The Monrovia sessions allowed for a field perspective for input into Umoja's continuing effort to cover the entire scope of administrative reform. With this objective in mind, experts attending the sessions in Monrovia went through the current "as is" processes in order to create "to be" processes that are simplified, streamlined and standardized. In doing so, participants held lively discussions on business requirements, risks and other related issues while working simultaneously with process diagrams to map the future.
Feedback from the sessions indicates that the exercise was extremely productive and that participants found the sessions useful to the future work of the Organization. In the words of one participant, "the design session has been very well planned and executed and many 'as is' (processes) addressed to help improve the 'to be' development." Another participant thought that "it was very essential to ask staff from different missions and crosscheck ideas and processes to make the design session a success…" and yet another participant expressed the view that "this project 'Umoja' will change a lot of aspects of how we work in United Nations and it will help to improve resources that UN uses to execute their mandate especially in field mission(s) of DPKO."
Contributions made by participants were documented and compiled into "to be" process maps that will be validated by designated business owners in the months ahead.
With respect to design sessions, the Umoja team takes seriously the old tailor's maxim of "measure twice, cut once" so as to minimize waste and rework.
The Umoja team, therefore, appreciates the work completed at the Monrovia sessions and extends its thanks to all participants for a job well done.
You can learn more about Umoja or become a part of the Umoja network by visiting us at http://www.unumoja.org.
Originally published on iSeek on Friday, 19 November 2009, Monrovia