USERNAME: 
PASSWORD: 
lost password? 
search:
Friday, November 21
 
 
Membership
Articles
All Articles
White Papers
Research
Round Tables
Presentations
News Clippings
Local Chapters
Events
Training
Workshops
Consultant Network
Solution Locator
BPM Magazine
Job Bank
Search
Topical Areas
Biz Decision MGMT
Biz Architecture
Org. Performance
SOA
Innovation
Government

Solution Locator

Expedite your research.
Find specific BPM solutions and request information.

 

BPMS WATCH Column

BPMS Watch: BPM Standards in Perspective

Nobody really cares about standards… until suddenly they do. When a standard reaches some threshold of adoption, a tipping point is reached. Then, if you’re not on the standard you’re proprietary....

 

Experts Wanted

Would you like to:

  • Submit an article
  • Lead a Round Table
  • Speak at a Conference

    Contact us today!


  •  

    Articles

    BPMS Watch: Step Up Your Modeling Game With Subprocesses

    By: Bruce Silver, Principal, Bruce Silver Associates
    Thursday September 6, 2007

     

    One of the most powerful features of BPMN is the least appreciated… by modelers and tool vendors alike. I’m talking about subprocesses. Most of the process models I have seen would be much improved if they were used more liberally, and more effectively. 

    In BPMN, a process is viewed as a flow of activities, and an activity – a rectangle in the diagram – can signify only one of two things: a task, meaning it has no subparts of interest to the model, or a subprocess, meaning the activity has subparts of significance to the model. So right off the bat, any process activity can be represented as a subprocess, whether you show the internal detail or not. In BPMN, you can draw a subprocess either collapsed as a single rectangle with a + symbol inside, or expanded – either inline in the diagram or in a separate linked diagram. Both representations mean the same thing; they just show different levels of detail.

    In my BPMN training we talk about five fundamental benefits of subprocesses. The simple idea that any process fragment can be displayed either collapsed or expanded accounts for Benefit #1.  Subprocesses allow the end-to-end process to be described at multiple levels of detail.

    When you are first capturing the workings of an as-is process, it’s ok to begin with a “flat” model taking thirty feet of wall space. But flat models are no good for shared process understanding.  Better to start with a top-level view in which the whole end-to-end flow fits on one page, using very coarse-grained subprocesses. Then you can expand any of those top-level subprocesses in another BPMN diagram. Ideally, all these second-level diagrams should be hyperlinked to the top-level diagram, and in a few tools they are. The second-level diagrams probably contain subprocesses as well, so you can use this nesting technique to drill down to any level of detail without losing the end-to-end context.

    This feature of subprocesses in BPMN accounts for their second benefit as well. Subprocesses encourage top-down thinking and analysis, also known as the end-to-end view. Use BPMN subprocesses to describe the entire process, end to end, on one page, so the handoffs between the major process components are visible to everyone from the start. BPM as a management discipline is all about breaking down the functional stovepipe views of business that stymie performance improvement and replacing them with end-to-end views and KPIs. If you use BPMN correctly, the end-to-end view is not an “artist’s conception” but actually the top-level of a real working model.

    A third benefit is that subprocesses fit well with distributed process ownership. Each part of an end-to-end process may be only known in detail, and ultimately controlled, by a different group within the enterprise. If the top-level diagram accurately describes the interaction between those parts, including the exception paths, then each part can be modeled and maintained independently, while preserving the integrity of the end-to-end process.

    A fourth benefit is that subprocesses are ideal representations of business services in SOA – units of business reuse that can be invoked by various processes and composite applications. In its collapsed representation, a subprocess describes the inputs and outputs of the service, and where it fits in the business context.  Expanded, it can describe and analyze the inner workings of the service, whether or not it is implemented in a BPM suite.

    The fifth benefit of subprocesses is in some ways the most powerful, but the least understood by process modelers. In BPMN, a subprocess defines the scope or context of an event, meaning the boundaries of the part of the process where some external signal – cancellation of an order, for instance – is valid and can be acted on in a particular way. If the event occurs before that fragment starts or after it ends, it can be ignored. In fact, a subprocess in BPMN may have no business significance other than describing when a deadline timer starts and ends, or where an error results in a particular action.

    Developers using BPEL are familiar with this. In fact, BPEL calls it a “scope” and its primary purpose is to create start and end points for errors and events. As BPMN-based BPM suites increasingly add support for scoped events to their execution environments, process analysts using BPMN will need to understand that behavior in order to effectively model exception paths in their processes.

    If your process modeling or design tool doesn’t support these five ways of using subprocesses, you should ask the vendor why not… or start looking for another tool. BPMN imposes some rules on subprocesses that take some getting used to. For example, a sequence flow cannot cross the subprocess boundary. But it’s all readily understandable by a business analyst with a little training.

    If you want to step up your modeling game, subprocesses are usually the place to start.

    Bruce Silver (bruce[at]brsilver.com) is an independent industry analyst covering BPMS technology and the author of the 2006 BPMS Report series on bpminstitute.org.

    Learn about Bruce Silver's 2-day BPMN training course.

     

    Back to Articles, including BPM, SOA, BDM, BA & OP

     

    Read More on BPM Institute

    Featured White Paper

    Achieving enterprise process agility through BPM and SOA
    Courtesy of: EMC

    In this ITO America article by Razmik Abnous, youʼll learn how organizations are focusing on increasing productivity, decreasing costs, and attempting to build business models that allow them to...

    Featured Presentation:

    Presentation
    Case Study: The Third Wave: Large Scale BPM Implementation at JPMorgan
    Featuring: Robert L. Wald, XBB Technical Lead, JPMorgan

    In 2008 JP Morgan Chase will be implementing very large scale BPM processing in several key areas. To get to this point took several years of preparation, with two noticeable phases of preparatory...

     
       
    About Us : Contacts : Advertise : Partners  
    BrainStorm Group © 2008 • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use