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Activities performed in organizations are coordinated via
communication
between the people involved. The sentences used to communicate
are naturally structured by subject, verb, and object. The subject
describes the actor, the verb the action and the object what is
affected by the action. Subject-oriented Business Process
Management (S-BPM) as presented in this book is based on this
simple structure which enables process-oriented thinking and
process modeling.
S-BPM puts the subject of a process at the center of attention
and thus
deals with business processes and their organizational
environment from a new perspective, meeting organizational
requirements in a much better way than traditional approaches.
Subjects represent agents of an action in a process, which can be
either technical or human (e.g. a thread in an IT system or a
clerk). A process structures the actions of each subject and
coordinates the required communication among the subjects. S-BPM
provides a coherent procedural framework to model and analyze
business processes: its focus is the cooperation of all
stakeholders involved in the strategic, tactical, and operational
issues, sharing their knowledge in a networked structure.
The authors illustrate how each modeling activity through the
whole development lifecycle can be supported through the use of
appropriate software tools. The presentation style focuses on
professionals in industry, and on students specializing in process
management or organizational modeling. Each chapter begins with a
summary of key findings and is full of examples, hints, and
possible pitfalls. An interpreter model, a toolbox, and a glossary
summarizing the main terms complete the book. The web site
www.i2pm.net provides additional software tools and further
material."
This open access book presents an overview and step-by-step
explanation of process management. It starts with the individual
participants' perspectives on their work in a process and its
structuring and harmonization, and then moves on to its
specification in a model and how it is embedded in the
organizational and IT environment of the company. Lastly, the book
examines the joint processing of instances in the resulting
socio-technical systems. A corresponding illustration, which
expands with the overview, enables readers to gain a comprehensive
understanding of business process management. The book presents
various facets of business process management from the perspective
of the participants, and introduces a selection of models that have
proved useful in practice. The design of such models supports the
transition from a more-or-less unstructured or unsatisfactory way
of working to a structured process that corresponds to the ideas of
the company and its customers. The book is intended for
professionals in industry as well as students in the field of
business information systems who are looking for guidelines on how
to discover, create and implement real-world processes.
This is the first book to present field studies on the application
of subject-oriented business process management (S-BPM). Each case
presents a specific story and focuses on an essential modeling or
implementation issue, and most end with implications or suggestions
for further studies. Significant variables and success factors are
identified that were discovered during the respective study and
lead to suggesting S-BPM novelties. For each case, the authors
explain step-by-step how the story develops, and provide readers
guidance by detailing the respective rationale. The studies covered
are clustered according to three main S-BPM themes: Part I
"Business Operation Support" documents approaches to the practical
development of S-BPM solutions in various application domains and
organizational settings, while Part II "Consultancy and Education
Support" highlights cases that can help to train readers in S-BPM
modeling and knowledge acquisition for S-BPM lifecycle iterations.
It also refers to architecting S-BPM solutions for application
cases based on hands-on experience. Part III "Technical Execution
Support" focuses on concepts for utilizing specific theories and
technologies to execute S-BPM models. It also addresses how to
create reference models for certain settings in the field. Lastly,
the appendix covers all relevant aspects needed to grasp S-BPM
modeling and apply it based on fundamental examples. Its format
reconciles semantic precision with syntactic rigor.>Addressing
the needs of developers, educators and practitioners, this book
will help companies to learn from the experiences of first-time
users and to develop systems that fit their business processes,
explaining the latest key methodological and technological S-BPM
developments in the fields of training, research and application.
S-BPM stands for “subject-oriented business process management”
and focuses on subjects that represent the entities (people,
programs etc.) that are actively engaged in processes. S-BPM has
become one of the most widely discussed approaches for process
professionals. Its potential particularly lies in the integration
of advanced information technology with organizational and
managerial methods to foster and leverage business innovation,
operational excellence and intra- and inter-organizational
collaboration. Thus S-BPM can also be understood as a
stakeholder-oriented and social business process management
methodology. In this book, the authors show how S-BPM and its tools
can be used in order to solve communication and synchronization
problems involving humans and/or machines in an organization. All
the activities needed in order to implement a business process are
shown step by step; it starts by analyzing the problem, continues
with modeling and validating the corresponding process, and
finishes off by embedding the process into the organization. The
final result is a workflow that executes the process without the
need for any programming. To this end, in the first step a very
simple process is implemented, which is subsequently extended and
improved in “adaption projects,” because additional problems
have to be solved. This approach reflects the organizational
reality, in which processes must always be changed and adapted to
new requirements. This is a hands-on book, written by professionals
for professionals, with a clear and concise style, a wealth of
illustrations (as the title suggests), and focusing on an ongoing
example with a real industrial background. Readers who want to
execute all the steps by themselves can simply download the S-BPM
tool suite from the www.i2pm.net website.
This is the first book to present field studies on the application
of subject-oriented business process management (S-BPM). Each case
presents a specific story and focuses on an essential modeling or
implementation issue, and most end with implications or suggestions
for further studies. Significant variables and success factors are
identified that were discovered during the respective study and
lead to suggesting S-BPM novelties. For each case, the authors
explain step-by-step how the story develops, and provide readers
guidance by detailing the respective rationale. The studies covered
are clustered according to three main S-BPM themes: Part I
“Business Operation Support” documents approaches to the
practical development of S-BPM solutions in various application
domains and organizational settings, while Part II “Consultancy
and Education Support” highlights cases that can help to train
readers in S-BPM modeling and knowledge acquisition for S-BPM
lifecycle iterations. It also refers to architecting S-BPM
solutions for application cases based on hands-on experience. Part
III “Technical Execution Support” focuses on concepts for
utilizing specific theories and technologies to execute S-BPM
models. It also addresses how to create reference models for
certain settings in the field. Lastly, the appendix covers all
relevant aspects needed to grasp S-BPM modeling and apply it based
on fundamental examples. Its format reconciles semantic precision
with syntactic rigor.>Addressing the needs of developers,
educators and practitioners, this book will help companies to learn
from the experiences of first-time users and to develop systems
that fit their business processes, explaining the latest key
methodological and technological S-BPM developments in the fields
of training, research and application.
Activities performed in organizations are coordinated via
communication between the people involved. The sentences used to
communicate are naturally structured by subject, verb, and object.
The subject describes the actor, the verb the action and the object
what is affected by the action. Subject-oriented Business Process
Management (S-BPM) as presented in this book is based on this
simple structure which enables process-oriented thinking and
process modeling. S-BPM puts the subject of a process at the center
of attention and thus deals with business processes and their
organizational environment from a new perspective, meeting
organizational requirements in a much better way than traditional
approaches. Subjects represent agents of an action in a process,
which can be either technical or human (e.g. a thread in an IT
system or a clerk). A process structures the actions of each
subject and coordinates the required communication among the
subjects. S-BPM provides a coherent procedural framework to model
and analyze business processes: its focus is the cooperation of all
stakeholders involved in the strategic, tactical, and operational
issues, sharing their knowledge in a networked structure. The
authors illustrate how each modeling activity through the whole
development lifecycle can be supported through the use of
appropriate software tools. The presentation style focuses on
professionals in industry, and on students specializing in process
management or organizational modeling. Each chapter begins with a
summary of key findings and is full of examples, hints, and
possible pitfalls. An interpreter model, a toolbox, and a glossary
summarizing the main terms complete the book. The web site
www.i2pm.net provides additional software tools and further
material.
The purpose of this book is to make the reader famliar with
software engineering for distributed systems. Software engineering
is a valuable discipline in the develop ment of software. The
reader has surely heard of software systems completed months or
years later than scheduled with huge cost overruns, systems which
on completion did not provide the performance promised, and systems
so catastrophic that they had to be abandoned without ever doing
any useful work. Software engi neering is the discipline of
creating and maintaining software; when used in con junction with
more general methods for effective management its use does reduce
the incidence of horrors mentioned above. The book gives a good
impression of software engineering particularly for dis tributed
systems. It emphasises the relationship between software life
cycles, meth ods, tools and project management, and how these
constitute the framework of an open software engineering
environment, especially in the development of distrib uted software
systems. There is no closed software engineering environment which
can encompass the full range of software missions, just as no
single flight plan, airplane or pilot can perform all aviation
missions. There are some common activities in software engi neering
which must be addressed independent of the applied life cycle or
methodol ogy. Different life cycles, methods, related tools and
project management ap proaches should fit in such a software
engineering framework."
This open access book presents an overview and step-by-step
explanation of process management. It starts with the individual
participants' perspectives on their work in a process and its
structuring and harmonization, and then moves on to its
specification in a model and how it is embedded in the
organizational and IT environment of the company. Lastly, the book
examines the joint processing of instances in the resulting
socio-technical systems. A corresponding illustration, which
expands with the overview, enables readers to gain a comprehensive
understanding of business process management. The book presents
various facets of business process management from the perspective
of the participants, and introduces a selection of models that have
proved useful in practice. The design of such models supports the
transition from a more-or-less unstructured or unsatisfactory way
of working to a structured process that corresponds to the ideas of
the company and its customers. The book is intended for
professionals in industry as well as students in the field of
business information systems who are looking for guidelines on how
to discover, create and implement real-world processes.
Prozesse werden nur dann erfolgreich gestaltet, wenn sie allen
Handelnden verstandlich sind und von Ihnen gemeinsam getragen
werden. Dies gilt fur Geschaftsprozesse, Organisationsablaufe und
die Entwicklung geeigneter IT-Losungen.
Mit diesem Buch wird sichergestellt, dass Anwender, Entwickler,
Berater und das Management dieselbe Sprache sprechen, um
Geschaftsprozesse erfolgreich zu realisieren. Entscheidend ist
dabei, dass das handelnde Subjekt in den Mittelpunkt gestellt wird.
So werden Modellierung, Visualisierung, Validierung und
Implementierung der Prozesse gleichermassen am Menschen
ausgerichtet. Durchgangige Beispiele und eine umfassende Fallstudie
stellen ein Hochstmass an Verstandlichkeit und Praxisbezug sicher.
Zusatzlich werden geeignete Modellierungs-Werkzeuge auf
www.springer-vieweg.de zur Verfugung gestellt.
"
In diesem Open-Access-Buch wird das Geschaftsprozessmanagement als
ein ganzheitlicher Prozess begriffen, der der Mitwirkung aller
Stakeholder bedarf. Denn das traditionelle Business Process
Engineering stoesst heute angesichts der Digitalisierung und der
dynamischen Entwicklung von Organisationen immer mehr an seine
Grenzen, beispielsweise bezuglich Agilitat. Um nun das Wesen von
Aufgaben und Ablaufen in Organisationen zu erfassen, schlagen die
Autoren einen Perspektivwechsel vor: das Denken in
Kommunikationsprozessen. Dieses Konzept lasst sich wirtschaftlich,
organisatorisch und technisch ohne einschlagige Vorkenntnisse
umsetzen. Leserinnen und Leser finden in dem Buch konkrete
Handlungsanleitungen fur die Digitalisierung von
organisationsrelevanten Ablaufen. Daneben liefern die Autoren
Einblicke in die Systemtheorie und in das Design Thinking. Ihr Ziel
ist, Konzepte einfach und verstandlich zu erlautern, ohne dabei
komplexe Zusammenhange zu vernachlassigen. Dank ausfuhrlicher
Konzeptdarstellung und Ausfluge in die Theorie mit Beispielen aus
der Praxis, eignet es sich fur Studierende und fur Wissenschaftler
genauso wie fur Praktiker. Entwickler und andere Fachkrafte aus den
Bereichen Operatives Management, Geschaftsprozessmanagement,
Organisationsentwicklung, Qualitatsmanagement, Wissensmanagement
werden sich von der UEbersichtlichkeit und dem Nutzwert
angesprochen fuhlen.
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