Value Management 2: The Roots of The Discipline
Value Management 2: The Roots of The Discipline
Paper 0952V3-0
Value Management 2
Contents
2. Definitions
4. Methodology
Summary
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Miles was assigned the task of addressing the problem and in so doing concluded
that:
That statement led to an approach, the basis of which is to first identify the required
function of a component and then to source an alternative that will equally deliver the
same function. When applied to the problem of the day, it was observed that many of
the alternatives were not only delivering an equivalent function, but at a reduced cost
also. And so the underlying philosophy of value management was established, viz:
‘Eliminate all cost that does not contribute to the performance of the required
function.’
It is worth noting that the roots of the discipline were in the US manufacturing
industry, but it has been adopted and applied extensively by the Australian – and to a
lesser extent, the UK – construction industries.
The approach, which was initially called value analysis, was adopted by the US
military in 1954 into their Core of Engineers and so it became known as value
engineering.
After the US, Australia was the next country to become interested and it was here that
its application was adopted by the construction industry, by construction managers
and hence its current title of value management.
The approach began to become established in the UK in the late 1980s and is slowly
becoming recognised for the benefits it can bring to the construction development
process.
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2 Definitions
Although value management is the preferred term for the process, there are some who
still like to use the terms value analysis and value engineering. For the sake of
completeness, and to demonstrate the development over time, definitions for each of
these terms are given below:
z Value analysis – ‘If we can’t get the part, we must get the function’ (Miles,
1943).
The BS definition refers explicitly to the evolution of the process and concludes that
it is a management style. I suggest that it is a style akin to that of ISO 2000, ie one
that depends upon a whole systems approach.
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‘Cost that provides neither additional function, length of life, or user benefit.’
It is a widely held view that unnecessary cost is endemic in building design. Some of
the many reasons put forward to support this view are:
The value management process takes as its starting point the notion that such
problems are best solved by drawing upon expertise from a wide range of
(construction) industry professionals. There is a great deal of empirical evidence to
support this view, not least of all the fact that in most professional design offices,
work is reviewed or checked independently before being issued.
Value management is an extension of that practice, one that opens the review to the
eyes and criticism of those beyond the team or discipline that originally created the
idea. Furthermore, it goes beyond checking etc of a solution, it positively contributes
to the creation of the original solution by first determining what the design must do,
its function.
It is important to understand (and referring back to the definitions should help) that
the objective of value management is to eliminate unnecessary cost. It is not a cost-
cutting exercise, but it is through the removal of unnecessary cost that it is possible to
enhance value.
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4 Methodology
As mentioned previously, value management is a process. A process is defined as:
Strictly speaking, the value management process is a parasite. It depends for its
(justified) existence upon the design process, linking into that process through a series
of interventions.
Construction development projects are, of course, all bespoke or unique and so the
actual design process and the corresponding value management process intervention
points are also unique but they generally fit the following pattern:
Value management
intervention point: × × × × ×
Returning yet again to the basic philosophy of value management – the elimination of
unnecessary cost – it well known that the opportunity to achieve that objective
diminishes over time. Furthermore we can improve or remove the need to ‘eliminate’
cost by not allowing it into the project in the first instance. The opportunity to exclude
unnecessary cost must be taken at the earliest opportunity, ie in the briefing stages. A
brief that is in any way inadequate will allow into the design solution unnecessary
cost.
This point can be illustrated by an extreme example: during the business brief phase it
was established that there was no need for a project at all. If this point was recognised
at any later stage, all expense incurred (management and design fees and construction
costs) would be unnecessary but unable to be eliminated.
Each intervention point in the value management process adopts the same generic
structure of:
During the planning and preparation stage, the following issues need to be
addressed:
This planning and preparation work is essential to the successful outcome of the
intervention and thus contributes to the overall success of the process. It usually takes
place over a period of weeks, in a quiet, behind-the-scenes atmosphere.
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z The development phase – the shortlisted ideas are examined and developed in
more detail paying particular attention to the interfaces with essential
adjacencies (physical as for a component or metaphorically as in an
organisational or strategic context).
At the end of the workshop period, the evaluation team disbands and returns to their
‘day jobs’. This may be a permanent or temporary disbanding depending upon the
circumstances, leaving the facilitator to collate and produce a report for the project
sponsor or employer.
The recording and reporting stage overlaps the workshop stage. If possible a
member of the facilitation team records, in a report format, the output of each of the
workshop phases. If this is not possible, care must be taken to ‘preserve the
evidence’ (flip-chart sheets, post-it notes etc) so that they may be converted into a
report format.
The report is essential not only to advise the project sponsor and to inform the next
stage, but also to serve as an audit trail. An audit trail is important not only to satisfy
any organisational governance rules but also to serve to remind people how a
recommendation was arrived at and to prevent the subsequent attempts to ‘reinvent
the wheel’.
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Having produced a series of answers to the What and How questions and thus
identified the function(s), the next phase concentrates on generating a range of
potential alternative ways in which that function might be delivered.
Critical to the success of this phase is the ability of the facilitator to create and
maintain a conducive atmosphere and to encourage the participants to break away
from their familiar ways of thinking.
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Each idea must be carefully evaluated, its advantages and disadvantages examined
without bias. Those that fail to satisfy the criteria, ie to perform the desired function,
must be eliminated. A shortlist of ideas that will satisfy the criteria is established by a
process of elimination, expanding and consolidating ideas that are then taken forward
into the development phase.
The work of this phase is to refine potential solutions and can be a very time-
consuming and specialised exercise requiring access to bulky databases etc. It might
therefore be appropriate to suspend the workshop, commission the necessary work
and reconvene the workshop when the necessary information is available.
A subjective ‘cost-benefit’ decision needs to be made here, as a great deal of time and
money might be expended producing unnecessary data (which in itself might be
spurious, such as future interest rate predictions). However, some analysis and fact is
probably better than relying totally on intuition or experience.
Before the team disperses, the time and place for the next intervention workshop (as
appropriate) should be established and an outline of its agenda agreed. Finally the
team should be asked for their feedback on the workshop process itself, the quality of
the venue and, most importantly, on the facilitator themselves.
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The same condition applies to workshop programmes. One of either of two durations
seem to be appropriate for use. They have become known as the 40-hour workshop
programme and the two-day workshop programme.
For either programme, having been previously approached and briefed, the team is
brought together, ideally at a neutral location. Hotel conference rooms are often used
because, although they are often boring and bland, they do tend to:
z Help focus the team’s minds on the job in hand – there are no everyday
distractions.
z Demand commitment – especially if they are located at a distance from the
normal place of work.
z Mitigate against partial attendance.
The 40-hour programme is usually split over four or five days, the first of which is
devoted to the information phase followed by a half-day working on the speculation
phase. The next two and half days are spent on the evaluation and development
phases and the final half-day summing up and concluding the results.
This approach, involving perhaps 15–20 people plus conference facilities and maybe
travel and hotel accommodation expenses, might be viewed as extravagant in terms of
both time and cost, but it should be seen as both an investment and a demonstration
by senior management of their commitment to the project.
The four or five days do not, of course, have to be consecutive; as has already been
explained, it might be appropriate to break off and reassemble when certain data
collection/preparation work has been completed.
In order to merit the investment and commitment, the facilitator must thoroughly
prepare for the workshop or serious damage will be done to the credibility of the
process as well as to the person.
The two-day workshop follows the same series of phases compressed into a shorter
timescale. The information and speculation phases are covered in the first half-day,
speculation and evaluation in the second half of the first day. The second day starts
with development and concludes with the conclusions and recommendations phase.
With just two days, it is not usual to break away for further research and data
gathering and the quality of the output will reflect this.
This, however, is not always a problem as in the earlier interventions such detail
might not be required. This emphasises an important point concerning the application
of the value management process – that it is a flexible process which must be applied
appropriately according to the specific objectives or timing of the intervention.
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It is also worth reiterating the fact that it is a process as opposed to a one-off exercise
(unless, of course, the project is abandoned after the first intervention). As in all
processes, continuity is advantageous and so the process team leader or facilitator
should be identified and appointed at the earliest opportunity.
The facilitator takes responsibility for all of the necessary research and preparation
work, for monitoring the progress of outside or in-between workshop activity, for
producing and circulating the conclusions report and for ensuring any recommended
follow-up action is taken.
Summary
Value management has evolved over the past 50 years or so, changing its name on the
way but always being concerned with the elimination of unnecessary cost without any
reduction in the required quality.
It must be seen as a process, and a key to the success of its application is the adoption
of a flexible approach within a prescribed framework. The structure of that
framework is a series of appropriately timed intervention points. The activity
surrounding each intervention is in three parts: planning, execution and reporting.
Any methodology can be designed and adopted but the underlying principle is first to
discover the function of the project or component part and then to identify an
alternative way of providing that function at a reduced cost.
REFERENCES
BS EN 12973: 2000, Value Management.
Male S and Kelly J (1998) The Value Management Benchmark, Thomas Telford,
ISBN 072772729X.