The Ones That Create Beautiful Diagrams & Zero Change
Most process maps look impressive. Boxes, arrows, swimlanes, colours, the lot. And yet the business still feels the same: delays, rework, confusion, firefighting.
At Map Your Process, we see this all the time: organisations invest time documenting work, but the map never becomes a lever for better performance.
That’s because a process map isn’t the outcome. It’s evidence. It’s a tool for clarity, decision-making, and improvement.
If you want your mapping work to create real change (not just a tidy diagram), avoid these seven mistakes.
Mistake 1: Mapping the “official” process, not the real one
What it looks like: The map reflects policy, job descriptions, or how leaders think work happens.
Why it kills impact: Improvements based on a fictional process don’t land. People revert to workarounds because the map never matched reality.
Do this instead:
- Map what actually happens on a normal day and what happens on a bad day
- Capture workarounds, shortcuts, and “we only do this when…” scenarios
- Ask: “Where do things get stuck?” not “What’s the correct procedure?”
Mistake 2: Starting with the diagram, not the purpose
What it looks like: “We need a process map” becomes the goal.
Why it kills impact: Without a clear purpose, you can’t choose the right level of detail, the right stakeholders, or the right success measures.
Do this instead: Start every mapping effort by answering one question:
What decision will this map help us make?
Examples:
- Reduce cycle time
- Improve handoffs between teams
- Prepare for automation
- Standardise onboarding
- Reduce errors and rework
- Support compliance and audit readiness
Mistake 3: Choosing the wrong level of detail
What it looks like: Either a “helicopter view” that’s too vague to act on, or a 200-step monster no one will maintain.
Why it kills impact: Wrong altitude = wrong conversations. Leaders need end-to-end clarity; teams need actionable steps.
Do this instead: Match the map to the purpose:
- High-level (end-to-end): to align teams and expose handoffs
- Mid-level (swimlane): to clarify roles, decisions, and delays
- Detailed (task/instruction): for training, compliance, or automation build
A good rule of thumb: if the map can’t drive a decision, it’s too high-level. If nobody can read it in 5 minutes, it’s too detailed.
Mistake 4: Ignoring exceptions (where the pain actually lives)
What it looks like: The map shows the “happy path” only.
Why it kills impact: The happy path is rarely the problem. The cost sits in exceptions: missing information, unclear approvals, customer changes, system issues, urgent requests.
Do this instead:
- Identify the top 5–10 exceptions by frequency or impact
- Add decision points and rules (what triggers the exception, what happens next)
- Separate “rare but high-risk” exceptions from “common and annoying” ones
Mistake 5: Leaving out time, queues, and handoffs
What it looks like: The map shows activities, but not waiting.
Why it kills impact: In many processes, the work takes minutes and the waiting takes days. If you don’t map queues and handoffs, you won’t find the real delay.
Do this instead: Capture:
- Touch time (time spent doing the work)
- Wait time (time spent waiting for someone/something)
- Handoffs (team-to-team or person-to-person transfers)
Then ask:
- “Where does work sit?”
- “What causes the queue?”
- “What needs to be true for the next step to start?”
Mistake 6: Not defining ownership (so nothing changes)
What it looks like: The map is created, shared, and then quietly forgotten.
Why it kills impact: If no one owns the process, no one owns the improvement. And if no one owns the map, it becomes outdated fast.
Do this instead: Assign three types of ownership:
- Process owner: accountable for end-to-end performance
- Step owners: responsible for specific activities
- Map steward: ensures updates, version control, and review cadence
Even a simple quarterly review beats “we’ll update it when we have time.”
Mistake 7: Treating mapping as a one-off project, not a management system
What it looks like: A mapping workshop happens, a document is produced, and the organisation moves on.
Why it kills impact: Processes change constantly—new hires, new systems, new products, new customer expectations. A static map becomes a museum piece.
Do this instead: Build a lightweight process management rhythm:
- Keep maps in one place (single source of truth)
- Set review triggers (system change, policy change, recurring issues, audit findings)
- Link maps to metrics (cycle time, error rate, rework, customer complaints)
- Use maps in onboarding and continuous improvement, not just “documentation”
A quick checklist: will your process map create change?
Before you publish or present a map, check these boxes:
- The purpose is clear (what decision it supports)
- The map reflects reality, including workarounds
- The level of detail matches the goal
- Exceptions and decision rules are captured
- Time, queues, and handoffs are visible
- Ownership is assigned (process + map)
- There’s a plan to use it (and keep it current)
Final thought (and a practical next step)
A process map should do more than describe work. It should improve work.
At Map Your Process, our approach is simple: we map reality, make the delays visible, and turn the diagram into a decision tool leaders can actually use.
If you’d like a second pair of eyes on a process before you invest weeks documenting it, message me “MAP” and I’ll send over a one-page mapping brief we use to clarify purpose, scope, stakeholders, and the right level of detail. more actionable.