Water

Home : Sectors and Themes : Water : Programs : Water Operators Partnerships Program : Continuous Improvement and Benchmarking

Main
Policy
Programs
Water Financing Program
Sanitation
Water Operators Partnerships Program
Awareness
Projects
Partners
Stories
Library
Contact Us


Water Operators Partnerships Program
Continuous Improvement and Benchmarking

Continuous Improvement and Benchmarking is a powerful technique to achieve change and has enabled service delivery improvements in many countries.
About Continuous Improvement and Benchmarking

Continuous Improvement and Benchmarking (CIB) involves collecting, analyzing, and comparing key performance data of water and sanitation utilities and, on the basis of analysis, developing a strategy and work program to improve specific aspects of a utility’s performance.

This program seeks to help utilities establish internal processes and build skilled teams to collect, analyze, and measure their services and then compare their performance and service practices against those of other utilities. This yields sufficient insights to enable the utility teams to identify improvement opportunities, craft change proposals, and then drive their implementation to achieve better results.

Simply put, the change processes and skills to achieve change is the continuous improvement part, while benchmarking provides comparative information that can be used to craft change proposals.

To date, CIB workshops have been conducted for each of the water utilities networks, designed to build staff capacity for the process and provide guidance on institutionalizing CIB in the organization. About a hundred utility personnel attended these sessions. Member utilities have also agreed to participate in the WOPs’ CIB program—SAWUN: 21 utilities, SEAWUN: 17 utilities, and CASCWUA: 11 utilities.


Continuous Improvement: The Technique

Continuous improvement (CI), as a technique, provides a structured process to arrive at improvements that will improve a service in respect of its outputs and outcomes.

The CI technique involves:

  1. Management introduction and commitment
  2. Service focus
  3. Prioritize services for improvement
  4. Plan the CI project
  5. Form and train the teams
  6. Define the service
  7. Map the processes
  8. Measure performance
  9. Analyze the problems
  10. Benchmark the service
  11. Develop improvements
  12. Implement improvements
  13. Monitor performance

View CI technique details and materials


Continuous Improvement Culture

CI is also a culture. A CI culture is the desire and behavior within all staff, management and stakeholders to pursue continuous improvement in service delivery. This desire and behavior is manifested by managers developing CI project nominations, allocating budget resources to complete CI projects, participating in CI projects, meaningful consultation with all stakeholders and staff and customers accepting change.

View related materials on CI Culture


Knowledge Products


CIB Events

Date Event Related Documents*
2009
10-13 Feb Twinning Regional Forum (Daejeon, Korea) Program and Materials

2008
10-14 Nov Nonrevenue Water Management Training Course II (Sabah, Malaysia) Program
30 Aug-5 Sep Continuous Improvement and Benchmarking Workshop (Lahore/Rawalpindi/Faisalabad/Pakistan)  
12-16 May Nonrevenue Water Management Training Course (Manila, Philippines) Meeting Report
22-28 Mar CASCWUA Benchmarking and Continuous Improvement Workshop (Tashkent, Uzbekistan) Materials

Share and Bookmark
Share|

Contact
Alan Baird
Water Supply and Sanitation Specialist, ADB
Email: abaird@adb.org