A clear divide remains between vendor and user when it
comes to BPM technology: the way forward for Business Process Management
(BPM) involves better alignment between what the technology vendors
think is required, and what the end users are actually looking to do
with their solutions.
For business professionals across the globe the core value of BPM
remains as a solution for building links and integration bridges between
various IT application systems.
A new report 'Business Process Management--Building End-to-end
Process Solutions for the Agile Business', recently published by
Butler Group, the IT research organisation highlights the fact that BPM
is often brought in to a business to solve a particular problem or
provide facilities in a part of the business operation where there is
currently a technology gap or integration shortfall. This approach
leaves the value-to-business model for BPM being driven by the
technology's ability to allow business professionals--process
owners and business analysts--to develop operational processes that
accurately reflect their business requirements.
However, according to Andrew Kellett, Butler Group Research Analyst
and co-author of the study, before there is an opportunity to get
carried away with the benefits package that modern BPM appears to
provide, he comments: "There is an underlying requirement to deal
with some of the baggage that comes with today's mainstream BPM
products. For example, there remain serious divisions between what the
vendors see as the most important components within their all-inclusive
offerings, and the basic function-driven approaches to BPM--application
development, modelling, and integration services--that business users
say drive their basic requirements of the technology.
"Furthermore, as the divide between the vendor and business
user view of the key elements of BPM appears to be widening, it is
interesting to fired that many of the latest features which the vendors
genuinely feel add value to their product offerings are viewed by the
end-user community as little more than lightweight
bells-and-whistles."
Another significant issue that also divides the vendor and user
communities is the 'automation' (the vendor position) versus
'human workflow' (business analyst vision) disparity that
continues to exist. Unfortunately, even today, many BPM vendors still
struggle to move away from their entrenched position of seeing BPM as a
technology sell, a stance that works to the detriment of human
interaction.
Solutions that operate under the BPM banner have become more
functionally inclusive
Today solutions that operate under the BPM banner have become more
functionally inclusive. A constructive and helpful part of this
fleshing-out process has involved a consistency of approach across all
service delivery components, so that most core elements of mainstream
BPM platforms are properly targeted at the business professional rather
than the IT technician.
Many of the solutions can be fairly described as end-to-end
offerings; taking in process discovery, modelling, simulation,
deployment, lifecycle improvement, and ongoing change management. Many
also include, as standard, previous extended functionality such as
business rules capabilities, business process reporting, alerting, and
more recently analysis, plus associated services such as: Business
Activity Monitoring (BAM), Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), and
Business Intelligence (BI) functionality.
Understanding, managing, and aligning the rule element of processes
is central to ensuring the success of BPM
From a business perspective, one of the often-promoted benefits of
BPM is that it will help remove the functional mismatch that occurs with
more traditional development methodologies. This is certainly the case,
but it has to be underpinned by a codified structure--which involves
bringing together the management of process activities with the rules
that underpin their use. Understanding, managing, and aligning the rule
element of processes is central to ensuring the success of BPM.
BPM can only deliver on its full potential when the facilities that
the vendors provide fully match up to the requirements of the end users
Over the years vendors have promoted BPM on the basis that it has
the ability to dynamically link disparate systems by providing a build
methodology that will significantly reduce the need for IT involvement
when new processes are required or existing processes need to change.
This, Butler Group believes, is an important point that must be
emphasised because history tells us that business differentiators tend
not to be driven by all organisations making the same use of standard
technology. The real differences and advantages come when the innovative
skills of the business community to seek and deliver change can be
aligned with the effective use of technology solutions that have the
flexibility and ease-of-use to deliver change whenever it is required.
Fundamentally Butler Group believes that this is the BPM advantage, but
it can only deliver on its full potential when the facilities that the
vendors provide fully match up to the requirements of the end users.
www.butlergroup.com
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