Business Process Improvement: Effectiveness or Efficiency? Yes.

March 09,2025 16:14:57 - Comment(s) - By James

A framework for process improvement where Effectiveness, Efficiency, and Excellence are considered.

In the ongoing search for operational excellence, a persistent question haunts the corridors of corporate America: Should we prioritize effectiveness or efficiency when improving our processes? This seemingly simple question has profound implications for how organizations approach transformation initiatives. If you've ever found yourself caught in this debate, you're not alone—and you're about to discover why one perspective deserves precedence.

Consider the recent efforts of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).[1] Yes, they are likely achieving efficiency in some of their cuts, but at what cost? Is effectiveness being removed from the equation? The jury is out as to whether their efforts will achieve both objectives but it is important to understand that both of them are important, yet effectiveness reigns supreme. Perhaps a better name for DOGE should be "Department of Government Excellence".

The False Dichotomy of Effectiveness or Efficiency

Let's start by acknowledging what many consultants won't tell you: viewing effectiveness and efficiency as opposing forces creates a dangerous false dichotomy.

You've likely sat in meetings where someone confidently declared, "We need to be more efficient!" while another countered with, "But we need to be effective first!" The room divides, solutions stall, and the organization suffers. This isn't just counterproductive—it fundamentally misunderstands the relationship between these concepts.

Consider this perspective: Effectiveness establishes the foundation upon which efficiency builds. One without the other creates systems that either work well but waste resources or conserve resources while failing to deliver value.

Understanding Effectiveness vs. Efficiency

Let's clarify the distinction between the two concepts:

  • Effectiveness is about doing the right things—ensuring a process achieves its organizational purpose and delivers the expected value to the customers and stakeholders of the process.
  • Efficiency is about doing things right—optimizing resources, time, and costs within a process.

Peter Drucker, the legendary management thinker, captured this well: "Efficiency is doing things right; effectiveness is doing the right things."[2] The best organizations master both, but the order in which they approach them makes a crucial difference.

Effectiveness: The Non-Negotiable First Step

Effectiveness answers a deceptively simple question: Does the process deliver its promised value? Before optimizing how quickly or cheaply we can execute a process, we must ensure it accomplishes its fundamental purpose.

According to research published in the Harvard Business Review by Michael Hammer and Steven Stanton, "In our study of more than 100 companies engaged in process redesign, we found that approximately 70% failed to deliver the expected results."[3] Their research emphasized that companies focusing exclusively on efficiency metrics without ensuring process effectiveness were among the most common failures.

The Wells Fargo account scandal (2016) provides a real-world example where efficiency metrics (new account openings) were prioritized over effectiveness (providing actual value to customers). Under pressure to meet aggressive sales targets, employees opened millions of unauthorized accounts. While this appeared "efficient" by internal metrics, it was catastrophically ineffective at delivering actual customer value, ultimately resulting in $3 billion in fines and significant reputational damage.[4]

As Drucker famously noted, "There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all."[5]

The Hierarchy of Process Maturity

Understanding that Effectiveness is a non-negotiable first step, consider process improvement through the lens of a maturity hierarchy:

  1. Effectiveness (Value Creation) — Does the process deliver the intended outcome?
  2. Reliability (Consistency) — Does it do so consistently?
  3. Efficiency (Resource Utilization) — Does it do so with minimal error and waste?
  4. Adaptability (Continuous Improvement) — Can it evolve with changing needs?
  5. Excellence (Operational Excellence)  Is it sufficiently refined to ensure it is the best it can possibly be?


This hierarchy isn't arbitrary. Each level builds upon the previous foundation. Attempting to achieve efficiency before establishing effectiveness is like trying to optimize the fuel consumption of a car that doesn't start.

What This Means For You

You might be thinking, "This makes sense conceptually, but how does it apply to my organization?" Let me offer a practical framework:

The E2 Assessment Method

When evaluating any business process, start with these sequential questions:

  1. Effectiveness Assessment
  • Does this process reliably deliver the value promised to its customers?
  • Is the outcome aligned with organizational objectives?
  • Would the process stakeholders agree that it meets their needs?
  1. Efficiency Assessment (once and if effectiveness is confirmed)
  • Are there redundant steps that don't add value?
  • Can we reduce the resources required without compromising outcomes?
  • Is the process scalable as volume increases?


This structured approach ensures you're not merely doing things right, but doing the right things—and then doing them right.

The Competitive Advantage of Effectiveness-First Thinking

Organizations that master effectiveness-first process improvement enjoy substantial competitive advantages. 

According to research published by Bain & Company, companies that focus on delivering customer value (effectiveness) before streamlining operations (efficiency) are twice as likely to be top quartile performers in their industry. Their multi-year study of more than 1,000 companies found that organizations with balanced improvement approaches focusing first on effectiveness achieved 15% higher shareholder returns over a ten-year period.[6]

Consider Toyota's legendary production system. While often celebrated for its efficiency, what's frequently overlooked is how Toyota first established rock-solid effectiveness through their "quality first" philosophy before pursuing the efficiency that made them famous.[7] Principles like "Jidoka" seek to "build in quality" from the start before pursuing "Kaizen" or continuous improvement aimed at efficiency.

The Integration Perspective

The most sophisticated view recognizes that effectiveness and efficiency ultimately converge in mature processes. Once a process effectively delivers value, efficiency improvements often enhance effectiveness by reducing errors, improving response times, and creating capacity for innovation.

Take Amazon's approach to warehouse fulfillment. They didn't start by optimizing picking speeds—they first ensured their fulfillment system could reliably deliver the right products to customers (effectiveness). Only then did they implement the robotics and algorithmic optimization that created industry-leading efficiency.[8]

Practical Application: The Three-Phase Approach

For organizations ready to embrace this effectiveness-first mindset, I recommend a three-phase implementation:

  1. Value Mapping Phase — Clearly define what constitutes success from the customer's perspective, establishing unambiguous effectiveness criteria.
  1. Process Rehabilitation Phase — Redesign processes to reliably deliver the defined value, even if initially resource-intensive.
  1. Optimization Phase — Only after establishing consistent effectiveness, systematically remove waste and increase throughput.


Each phase should include rigorous testing and validation before progression. This disciplined approach prevents the common trap of declaring victory after efficiency improvements while the fundamental effectiveness issues remain unresolved.

The Balanced Perspective

While I've made the case for prioritizing effectiveness, the mature view acknowledges that exceptional organizations eventually develop the capacity to pursue both simultaneously. The key insight is understanding the sequence for organizations early in their process maturity journey.

If your organization struggles with process improvement, chances are you've fallen into the trap of pursuing efficiency before establishing effectiveness. The remedy isn't necessarily to abandon efficiency concerns entirely, but to temporarily subordinate them while rebuilding processes that actually work.

The Path Forward

As you consider your organization's process improvement initiatives, ask yourself: "Are we trying to do the wrong things better, or the right things well?" The answer will tell you whether you need to redirect your focus toward effectiveness.

Remember, an effective but inefficient process can be optimized. An efficient but ineffective process is simply a faster path to failure.

The choice between effectiveness and efficiency isn't really a choice at all. Effectiveness comes first—not because efficiency doesn't matter, but because it creates the foundation upon which meaningful efficiency improvements can be built.

What process in your organization needs an effectiveness reassessment before further efficiency improvements? The answer might reveal your next big opportunity for breakthrough performance.

[1]Department of Government Efficiency. (2024). Official Website. Retrieved from https://www.doge.gov/

[2] Drucker, P. F. (1974). "Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices." Harper & Row.

[3]Hammer, M., & Stanton, S. (1999). "How Process Enterprises Really Work." Harvard Business Review, 77(6), 108-118.

[4] U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. (2020, February 21). "Wells Fargo to Pay $3 Billion to Resolve Criminal and Civil Investigations into Sales Practices Involving the Opening of Millions of Accounts without Customer Authorization." SEC Press Release.

[5] Drucker, P. F. (1963). "Managing for Business Effectiveness." Harvard Business Review, 41(3), 53-60.

[6] Markey, R., & Reichheld, F. (2016). "Closing the Customer Experience Gap." Bain & Company Insights.

[7] Liker, J. K. (2004). "The Toyota Way: 14 Management Principles from the World's Greatest Manufacturer." McGraw-Hill Education.

[8] Stone, B. (2013). "The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon." Little, Brown and Company.

James