Analyzing and scrutinizing processes: Why this is crucial before any digital transformation

Ensuring that digital transformation doesn't fail at the process level

Many companies invest in digitalization before the actual process has been thoroughly understood: new tools are introduced, workflows are supposed to become more efficient, and manual steps are supposed to be eliminated .Yet the results often fall short of expectations. Not because the wrong technology was chosen, but because the actual process was never properly analyzed beforehand.

That is often where the problems begin. Unnecessary steps, special cases that have developed over time, and unclear responsibilities are carried over directly into new solutions. Analyzing and questioning processes reduces risks, improves decision-making, and highlights where optimization or digitalization truly makes sense.

When processes should be scrutinized

Many processes function well in day-to-day operations, even though they already create internal overhead and dependencies. Processes don’t have to fail outright to become a business risk. Often , recurring delays, manual loops, or a lack of transparency are enough to cause a process to consume more and more resources over time.

If several of these points apply to you, a process analysis is worthwhile:

  • Workflows take too much time
  • Data is entered multiple times
  • Follow-up questions and approvals slow down daily operations
  • Knowledge is tied to individuals
  • Excel, email, or workarounds support the process
  • Digitalization is a topic of discussion, but the foundation is unclear

What risks arise when processes are never questioned?

  • Increasing workload
    Teams waste time on coordination, follow-ups, and manual loops
  • Lack of transparency
    No one has a clear view of the entire process
  • Strong dependencies
    Knowledge is concentrated in the hands of individual people
  • Higher susceptibility to errors
    Handoffs, exceptions, and media breaks increase the risk
  • Wrong digitalization decisions
    Investments are made in solutions before the actual benefits are clear

The impact on the company

Longer processing times

Greater operational uncertainty

Less predictability

Higher operating and development costs

Why do these risks arise in the first place?

The problem rarely stems from a single flawed process step. More often than not, the workflow has evolved over the years. What slows things down today is frequently the result of many small additions, exceptions, and workarounds accumulated over several years.

Common causes

  • New requirements were continuously added
  • Exceptions were incorporated into the standard process
  • Responsibilities have shifted
  • Existing systems were expanded rather than simplified
  • Individual teams have developed their own interim solutions

What are the benefits of a structured process analysis?

  • Clarity on the current state
    You can see how the process actually works
  • Visible bottlenecks and dependencies
    Problems aren’t just suspected—they’re specifically identified
  • Better priorities
    You identify where the greatest leverage lies
  • Less operational friction
    Unnecessary steps and loops become visible
  • A solid foundation for digitalization
    You don’t digitize blindly, but strategically

In short

Only once it is clear how a process actually works today can you make informed decisions about what should be simplified, standardized, or digitized.

What does a good analysis look like?

A good analysis reveals what is actually happening in the process. This makes it clear where effort is being expended, where risks lie, and what improvements make sense.

1. Clarify the current situation

What exactly is the issue? Where do you experience effort, uncertainty, or delays?

2. Map out the current process

How does the process actually work today? Not on paper, but in everyday practice.

3. Identify bottlenecks and causes

Where do follow-up questions, wait times, duplicate work, or dependencies arise?

4. Assess relevance

Which problems are critical? Where is the greatest leverage?

5. Determine next steps

Where is simplification sufficient? Where does digitization make sense? Where is more than just a new tool needed?

Why soxes is the right partner for this topic

When it comes to issues like these, we don’t jump in with a hasty solution, but rather with a thorough assessment. Because only when it’s clear how a process actually works today can we reliably evaluate risks, root causes, and sensible next steps.

For you, this means

  • we analyze the actual workflow
  • we identify bottlenecks, dependencies, and unnecessary complexity
  • we clearly distinguish between optimization and digitalization
  • we derive concrete, realistic next steps

Frequently asked questions

  • Why do processes remain slow despite new software?

  • What should you do if Excel is still being used despite the new system?

  • Why do approvals still take too long, even with a digital workflow?

  • How can you identify media breaks in a process?

  • How can you tell whether the problem lies in the process or in the system?

  • Which processes should be digitized first?

  • When is a process not ready for digitization?

Understand the processes first, then digitize them effectively

Together, we’ll identify the risks, causes, and opportunities, and determine which next steps make the most sense for you.

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We look forward to your enquiry.

Sofia Steninger

Sofia Steninger
Solution Sales Manager