My very first BPMS Watch column, over three years ago, was titled “Without a BPMS, It’s Not Really BPM.” And to a large degree I still believe that, although today I would probably tone it down to...
BPM Standards Update
Featuring: Keith Swenson, WfMC Wf-XML WG Chair
Sunday December 5, 2004
ASAP is a web services protocol that can be used to access a generic service that might take a long time to complete - for example services that last from minutes to months in duration. The service being invoked might be fully automated, a manual task that a person performs, or any mixture of the tw...
Also Featuring: Rajiv Bawa, Business Area Executive, Software as a Service IBM Global Small and Medium Business
Those four little words, "Quick Return on Investment", can now be music to your ears. Hear from the experts at IBM and Nsite about how the Software as a Service model is taking off and p...
Ask The Experts with Tom Davenport
Featuring: Renowned Author/Professor, Institute for Process Mgmt at Babson College
Thursday February 5, 2004
Round Table particpants asked Tom their most pressing process questions in this Round Table "Ask The Experts with Tom Davenport". Tom is the Renowned Author and Professor, Institute for Process Management at Babson College.
There are multiple types of integration problems. Information integration problems pertain to the class of problems where users need access to disparate data through the lens of the needs of business. This session will discuss a methodology and a case study of an approach toward information integrat...
In an effort to simplify their IT architectures and optimize systems company-wide, many businesses are standardizing on a single content- management platform for document management, Web-content management, imaging, intranet publishing, and E-mail management. Such a move requires that companies care...
BPM Hits the Boardroom
Featuring: William M. Ulrich, Conference Co-Chairman and President, Tactical Strategy Group
Thursday July 10, 2003
Round Table particpants asked William Ulrich their most pressing questions in this Round Table "BPM Hits The Boardroom". Paul Harmon discusses "The Process Centric Company" and Bruce Silver discusses "BPM 2.0: Process without Programming". The Round Table closed with Q&A from audience.
Some time ago during a discussion on ITtoolbox.com, I theorized about BPMS Cloud as the last, ultimate step, providing the final means to transition to a post-IT era.
As is well known, Cloud computing companies dedicate their business to enabling Enterprises to outsource all or part of their IT operations to external utility providers. From a Computer Science point of view, though, it...