2010-12-30

Re: BPMN In Outer Space

Reply on http://mainthing.ru/item/396

Four processes so far:
“BATTLESHIP-sensing” for observing the space (any number of ships and any number of sensing devices are allowed)
“BATTLESHIP-weapon” (maybe several per ship)
“CENTER-decision” for assignment of targets per weapon(s)
“CENTER-tracking” for maintaining the list of targets (only this process can alter this list; others can read it only)


Thanks,
AS

2010-12-16

Interview with Peter of eBizQ -- Taking an enterprise architecture approach to #BPM

From http://www.ebizq.net/blogs/2010/12/taking_an_enterprise_architect.php

Listen to Peter of eBizQ.net podcast with Dr. Alexander Samarin, who is Chief Enterprise Architect of the African Development Bank. Dr. Samarin is author of the book, and continues to blog at this site, Improving Enterprise Business Process Management Systems. In this podcast we discuss how companies should first approach BPM and how to avoid some of the initial deployment problems.


And the full story http://www.ebizq.net/topics/social_bpm/features/13176.html?asrc=EM_NLN_13093658&uid=10000098

Thanks,
AS

2010-12-12

Illustrations for #BPM, #ACM, Case management, adaptive processes

The aim of this post is to illustrate possible relationships between process-template and process-instance which have been discussed in several blogs (my main contribution is http://improving-bpm-systems.blogspot.com/2010/04/let-us-architect-use-of-existing.html ), LinkedIn discussions and at the OMG meeting in Jacksonville.

BPM as “process-oriented management discipline to help an enterprise to realise its vision, by managing the flow of business activities in a holistic way thus considering together modeling (or planning), automation (or instrumentation), execution, control, measurement and optimization of business processes”. Below I illustrate a few variants of how those 6 functions can be applied.

Variant 1 – classic (one template is used for many instances)

Variant 2 – tailoring (a template is adjusted for each instance)
Variant 3 – reactive (no initial template and next activity is selected based on the current situation)

Variant 4 – proactive planning (similar to variant 3, but a few next activities [fragment] are executed together; whose fragments can be predefined [e.g. patterns] or designed as needed)


Variant 5 – scenario-based (similar to variant 4, but a few scenarios are considered [e.g. optimistic, realistic and pessimistic)]

1. Optimise / Reflect / Refactor + Model / Plan / Simulate + Automate / Instrument


2. Execute + Control + Measure

3. Execute + Control + Measure

4. Execute + Control + Measure

Variant 6 ...


Example for this variant is from the healthcare - thanks @Karl

Note 1 – Those illustrations show only diagrams, not all other necessary parts of the business process such as roles, rules, services, data, documents, and KPIs. Obviously, all parts have to be treated equally.

Note 2 – Ideally, some of those variants have to be intermixed within a process – selecting one of them should be easy as changing the gear.

Thanks,
AS