As I prepare to update my BPMS Report series, task number one is taking a fresh look at the process types or “use cases” that guide the evaluation analysis.

As I prepare to update my BPMS Report series, task number one is taking a fresh look at the process types or “use cases” that guide the evaluation analysis.
Brett Champlin is the President of the Association for Business Process Management Professionals (ABPMP.org) and a Senior Process Consultant with a large insurance company. He has led business process transformation projects for the last 15 years. Champlin is also on the adjunct faculty at Roosevelt University and the University of Chicago.
Champlin is a pioneer and advocate of the new field of “services engineering”. In the last two hundred years, we shifted from a primarily agricultural-based economy to a manufacturing-based economy because of the industrial revolution.
Considering the forum in which this article is published, I think it is safe to say that anyone reading it already knows the value of Business Architecture. I hope we also share the opinion that the IT Architecture is secondary to the Business Architecture: the business is the driver, not IT.
That is nice theory, but it hasn’t been reality for quite some time. New technology trends emerge, people with an eye for technology see the benefits, and they sell the idea of implementing the new technology based on those benefits.
Readers of the Business Rules topic section have probably found Barbara von Halle’s writing on the Rules Maturity model RMM. The model depicts an enterprise’s staged understanding of business rules and their progressive benefits. The model starts with stage zero, no recognition of importance of formal processes of managing policies and corporate guidance through business rules. In short, the stages are:
Governance has been defined as: “the art and discipline of managing outcomes through structured relationships, procedures and policies.” Governance plays an important part in the adoption and ongoing operation of any SOA initiative. It enforces compliance with the architecture and common semantics, and facilitates managing the enterprise wide development, use and evolution of services.
When discussing SOA governance, it is important to make sure that everyone is on the same page about what type of governance they are referring to.
In the late 1980s, Michael Hammer and James Champy published a bestselling book, Reengineering the Corporation, promoting the idea that radical redesign and reorganization of an enterprise was necessary to lower costs and increase quality so American businesses could become more competitive.
In past columns, I have discussed the idea of services engineering, the importance of understanding businesses as service providers, and the characteristics of different types of services. This column looks at the challenges of measuring and managing process performance in services industries.
Business Process Management (BPM) and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) initiatives can either be easy or difficult depending on your approach.
At first glance BPM and SOA offer a very good value proposition. However, the more you learn, the more you discover that everything is not exactly as expected.
BPM and SOA initiatives are made up of process and data. Too often, a lack of focus in one area or the other occurs and has pervasive effects on business results.
The most profound innovation since the assembly line is staring us right in the face. But we don’t see it because we are so busy looking for something else. For most of us the word “innovation” still conjures up images of amazing new gadgets such as technology to turn water into gasoline, black boxes to project moving 3D holograms from our TV sets, and bio-tech breakthroughs that reverse the aging process.
Everyone starts here.
You're looking for a way to improve your process improvement skills, but you're not sure where to start.
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Your skills will include building hierarchical process models, using tools to analyze and assess process performance, defining critical process metrics, using best practice principles to redesign processes, developing process improvement project plans, building a center of excellence, and establishing process governance.
The BPMS Certificate is the perfect way to show employers that you are serious about business process management. With in-depth knowledge of process improvement and management, you'll be able to take your business career to the next level.
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