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Contents
1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems
1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information
Systems
2. Business Process Management Systems
3. Architecture of a BPMS
4. The Case of ACNS
2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS
1. Workload Reduction
2. Flexible System Integration
3. Execution Transparency
4. Rule Enforcement
3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS
1. Technical Challenges
2. Organizational Challenges
4. Recap
SEITE 1
Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
Process
discovery
Process
identification
Process
analysis
Process
implementation
Process
monitoring
Process
redesign
Process architecture
As-is process
model
Insights on
weaknesses and
their impact
To-be process
model
Executable
process
model
Conformance and
performance
insights
Process-Aware Information Systems in the
BPM Lifecycle
Define Vision Develop Strategy Implement
Strategy
Manage Personnel Manage Assets
Management Processes
Core Processes
Support Processes
Manage Risk
Manage
Information
Procure
Materials
Procure
Products
Market
Products
Deliver
Products
Manage
Customer
Service
les for BPM lifecycle and process mining
C
1.5h
B
15h
D
E
2h
C D
A B E
A
3m
35h 30h
15m
10m
10min
5m
5m 10m
30m
 This chapter deals with information systems that support process automation.
 We explain what an automated business process is, after which we focus on a
specific kind of technology that is suitable to achieve process automation:
 Process-Aware Information Systems (PAISs) and
 Business Process Management Systems (BPMSs).
 We discuss some of the
 Advantages and
 Challenges
that are involved with introducing a BPMS in an organization..
SLIDE 3
Chapter Overview
Contents
1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems
1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information
Systems
2. Business Process Management Systems
3. Architecture of a BPMS
4. The Case of ACNS
2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS
1. Workload Reduction
2. Flexible System Integration
3. Execution Transparency
4. Rule Enforcement
3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS
1. Technical Challenges
2. Organizational Challenges
4. Recap
SEITE 4
Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
 Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems:
 Provide generic business functionality, which is required across various industries.
 Supports accounting, controlling, human resource management, and production.
 Most important processes covered are procure-to-pay and order-to-cash process.
 Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems:
 Support marketing and sales.
 Helps to document interaction with customers through various channels.
 Supports sales and marketing activities related to products, pricing, distribution, and campaigning.
 Most important processes supported are campaign-to-leads and lead-to-order.
SLIDE 5
Domain-Specific
Process-Aware Information Systems
 Supply Chain Management (SCM) systems:
 Focus on support of logistics operations.
 Support for freight and transportation, warehousing, storage and inventory.
 Support electronic data interchange, tracking technologies such as Radio-Frequency
Identification (RFID) and barcode scanning.
 Key supply chain processes are order-to-delivery and return-to-refund.
 Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) systems:
 Support processes of product lifecycle from engineering perspective.
 In realisation phase, manufacturing system is planned and actual products are built, assembled,
and tested.
 In service phase, products are sold and delivered, used, maintained, and eventually disposed of.
 Important processes are idea-to-launch and different types of order processes.
SLIDE 6
Domain-Specific
Process-Aware Information Systems
 Exercise 9.1. The PAISs mentioned above (ERP, CRM, SCM, PLM, ECM) form a
specific category in the market for enterprise software. Enterprise software covers
not only PAISs, but also database systems, middleware, office software, and
analytical software, which are not directly process-aware. The market for enterprise
software is huge. According to a Gartner Report from 2017, it is estimated with a
sales volume of almost $ 400 billion (more than e 340 billion).
 Conduct an Internet search to find the Top 5 vendors of (a) enterprise software in
general and (b) ERP systems specifically.
SLIDE 7
Exercise 9.1: Process-Aware Information
Systems
Groupware systems:
 User is enabled to:
 share documents and information and
 directly communicate with other users.
 Best known groupware system is IBM Notes.
 Popular for their high operational flexibility.
 Traditionally do not directly support business processes in a strict sense.
 Several commercial groupware systems offer workflow extensions
SLIDE 8
Business Process Management Systems
Ad hoc workflow systems:
 Allow on-the-fly process definitions that can be created and modified.
 Possible to adapt the process during execution. On the technical level, these
systems
 Private process definition for each case
 Two major requirements to success:
 end users are aware of the processes in which they operate.
 Users have sophisticated tools and capability to model.
SLIDE 9
Business Process Management Systems (cont.)
Production workflow systems:
 Most prominent type of BPMS.
 Work is routed strictly on basis of process models.
 Operational data typically handled by complementary DBMS.
 Not allowed to deviate from process logic.
 Two types:
 Administrative BPMSs used in settings where work is performed by people;
 Transaction processing BPMSs support processes that are automated.
SLIDE 10
Business Process Management Systems (cont.)
Case management systems:
 Also adaptive case management system (ACM)
 Supports processes that are neither tightly nor completely specified.
 Case management system is fully aware of data belonging to case
 Able to inform end users about status and history, and steps to continue with.
SLIDE 11
Business Process Management Systems (cont.)
SLIDE 12
Spectrum of Business Process Management
Systems (BPMS)
SLIDE 13
Architecture of a BPMS
SLIDE 14
Process Modeling Tool of Bonita
SLIDE 15
Worklist Handler of Camunda
SLIDE 16
Monitoring Tool of Perceptive
SLIDE 17
Exercise 9.2: Monitoring Tool of Perceptive
The monitoring of user queues provides good transparency of the current workload of
the different process participants. However, any sort of chart should be carefully
reflected upon before decisions are made. Before interpreting the above chart, answer
the following questions.
1. Which important information is not visible in the chart?
2. Does the chart allow you to conclude who are good and bad employees?
Exercise 9.3: Construction Company BuildIT
Construction Sight of WU Vienna‘s New Campus opened in 2013.
Source: Wikimedia Commons
 Recall BuildIT’s business process for renting equipment from Chapter 1. Let us suppose
it is supported by a BPMS.
 The execution engine can track that for orders #1,220 and #1,230 site engineers
have already filled out the equipment rental requests.
 On the basis of a process model of the renting equipment process, the execution
engine can detect that for both of these cases the proper piece of equipment must be
determined.
 This needs to be done by any of the clerks at the depot. Therefore, the BPMS passes
on the request to all worklist handlers of all clerks for further processing.
 For order #1,240, on the other hand, the equipment rental request is not available
yet. So, the BPMS engine will not pass on a similar request for this order yet.
 Instead, it will await the completion of this work item.
 In which state is the process after all the actions of the rental process of BuildIT have
been performed as described above?
 Which work items can you identify that are under control of the BPMS?
 Make sure to identify both the case and the activity for each work item.
SLIDE 19
Exercise 9.3: Renting Equipment of BuildIT
 Can you imagine that a BPMS can work on the basis of a business process model
without any information on the types of resources that are available to work on the
tasks? What problems would the BPMS run into when executing this process?
 In what situation will the execution engine generate multiple work items after the
completion of a single work item?
 Can you provide examples of external services that may be useful to be invoked in
a loan application process?
 If it is important that a BPMS hands out work items to available resources, can you
imagine information on resources that is useful to be captured by an administration
tool (apart from whether they are ill or on vacation)?
SLIDE 20
Exercise 9.4: BPMS
 Ms. Senora has been with ACNS
for a long time and, for the past
years, works as a senior acceptor.
 Mr. Regulo has started his training
and works as an regular acceptor.
SLIDE 21
Claims Handling at ANCS
Car damage of € 12,500 claimed by Mr. Bouman
 BPMS forwards claim to worklist handler of Ms. Senora.
 Positive Assessment.
 Work item appears in worklist handler of financial officer to do payment.
 Once done, process completes.
A car damage of e 500, as claimed by Mrs. Fillers
 BPMS forwards claim to worklist handlers of Ms. Senora and Mr. Regulo.
 Mr. Regulo selects the claim, which then disappears from list of Ms. Senora.
 Mr. Regulo rejects, case is handed over to account manager.
 Client is informed.
SLIDE 22
Two new claims are handled
Consider the following developments and indicate which components of the BPMS
architecture are affected:
1. A new decision support system is developed to support acceptors in making their
assessment of claims.
2. Ms. Senora retires.
3. A new distinction between claims becomes relevant: regular acceptors are now
also qualified to deal with claims above e 1,000 as long as they worked on
previous claims by the same client.
4. Claims that are issued on cars which are over 10 years old need to be
continuously monitored by management.
SLIDE 23
Exercise 9.5: ANCS Developments
Contents
1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems
1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information
Systems
2. Business Process Management Systems
3. Architecture of a BPMS
4. The Case of ACNS
2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS
1. Workload Reduction
2. Flexible System Integration
3. Execution Transparency
4. Rule Enforcement
3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS
1. Technical Challenges
2. Organizational Challenges
4. Recap
SEITE 24
Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
 Straight-through processing
 Less coordination
 Less gathering of relevant information
 Generic functionality of process layer
 Easier to change process logic
 Island automation
Workload Reduction
SLIDE 25
Advantages of Introducing a BPMS (I)
Flexible System Integration
 Transparency of operational information
 Transparency of historic information
 Reducing freedom of executing process
 Enforce separation of duties
 Implement control tasks
Execution Transparency
SLIDE 26
Advantages of Introducing a BPMS (II)
Rule Enforcement
To which categories would you classify incentives to introduce a BPMS?
 An auditing agency has found out that the written procedures and actual execution
of business processes are not aligned. The management of that organization
wishes to enforce the written procedures and decides to introduce a BPMS.
 The clients of a company complain that they can only get very shallow updates on
the progress of the orders they make. The IT manager of that organization looks
into the use of a BPMS to capture and provide status information on all these
orders.
 An insurance organization finds out that there is an urgent need to quickly adjust
their claims processing to the offerings that its competitors bring to the market.
Using a BPMS is considered to address this demand.
SLIDE 27
Exercise 9.6: Advantages of BPMS
Contents
1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems
1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information
Systems
2. Business Process Management Systems
3. Architecture of a BPMS
4. The Case of ACNS
2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS
1. Workload Reduction
2. Flexible System Integration
3. Execution Transparency
4. Rule Enforcement
3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS
1. Technical Challenges
2. Organizational Challenges
4. Recap
SEITE 28
Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
 Applications often not developed from a
business process perspective
 Screen scraping might be required to
integrate input and output from legacy
 Batch processing systems do not work
with a case concept
 Middleware, Enterprise Application
Integration, Service-oriented Architecture
and Web Service solutions support
integration
 Complexity due to exceptions
 Adjust to pace of organizational change
 Potential fears of process participants
 Strong management commitment needed
Technical Challenges
SLIDE 29
Challenges of Introducing a BPMS
Organizational Challenges
 Novel class of systems that automate
user task on computers
 RPA scripts can be developed by
recording repetitive user tasks that move
data between several computer screens
 Robots can then work on task according
to these scripts
Software vendors specialized in RPA
include, among others:
 Automation Anywhere
 Blue Prism
 PEGA
SLIDE 30
Robotic Process Automation (RPA)
Introducing a BPMS is a larger transformation initiative, often taking dozens of months
 Factors that influence the change are DICE:
 Duration of initiative,
 Integrity of the project team,
 Commitment of top management,
 Effort demanded from employees
 Risk of resistence:
 Potential lack of support from employees
 Hidden competing commitment
 Matters of caution:
 Avoid premature victory celebration
 Programmatic change fallacy
SLIDE 31
Change Management
Consider the following issues that come up when introducing a BPMS in a hospital to
support preoperative care, i.e., the preparation and management of a patient prior to
surgery. Classify them as technical or organizational issues.
1. On hearing about the plans to introduce a BPMS, the surgeons flatly reject to
cooperate on this endeavor. Their claim is that each patient is an individual person
that cannot be trusted to the care of a one-size-fits-all system.
2. The anesthetists in the hospital use a decision support system that monitors the
proper dosage of anesthetics to patients. The system is developed as a
standalone system that is difficult to synchronize with the BPMS, which has to
feed the decision support system with patient data.
3. The nurses are provided with mobile devices, which they can use to access their
worklist handlers. However, they find it difficult to follow up on the automatic
notifications, which are signaled to them as gentle vibrations of the device.
SLIDE 32
Exercise 9.7: BPMS at a Hospital
Contents
1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems
1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information
Systems
2. Business Process Management Systems
3. Architecture of a BPMS
4. The Case of ACNS
2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS
1. Workload Reduction
2. Flexible System Integration
3. Execution Transparency
4. Rule Enforcement
3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS
1. Technical Challenges
2. Organizational Challenges
4. Recap
SEITE 33
Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
 There are two types of Process-Aware
Information Systems (PAIS).
 Domain-specific PAIS include
 ERP Systems
 CRM Systems
 SCM Systems
 PLM Systems
 Business Process Management Systems
are domain-agnostic PAIS having:
 Execution engine
 Process modeling tool
 Process model repository
 Administration and monitoring tools
 Execution logs
 Worklist handlers
 External services
 Advantages of introducing a BPMS:
 Workload reduction
 Flexible integration
 Execution transparency
 Rule enforcement
 Challenges include:
 Technical challenges
 Organizational challenges
SLIDE 34
Recap

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FBPM2-Chapter09-ProcessAwareInformationSystems.pptx

  • 1. Contents 1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems 1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems 2. Business Process Management Systems 3. Architecture of a BPMS 4. The Case of ACNS 2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS 1. Workload Reduction 2. Flexible System Integration 3. Execution Transparency 4. Rule Enforcement 3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS 1. Technical Challenges 2. Organizational Challenges 4. Recap SEITE 1 Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 2. Process discovery Process identification Process analysis Process implementation Process monitoring Process redesign Process architecture As-is process model Insights on weaknesses and their impact To-be process model Executable process model Conformance and performance insights Process-Aware Information Systems in the BPM Lifecycle Define Vision Develop Strategy Implement Strategy Manage Personnel Manage Assets Management Processes Core Processes Support Processes Manage Risk Manage Information Procure Materials Procure Products Market Products Deliver Products Manage Customer Service les for BPM lifecycle and process mining C 1.5h B 15h D E 2h C D A B E A 3m 35h 30h 15m 10m 10min 5m 5m 10m 30m
  • 3.  This chapter deals with information systems that support process automation.  We explain what an automated business process is, after which we focus on a specific kind of technology that is suitable to achieve process automation:  Process-Aware Information Systems (PAISs) and  Business Process Management Systems (BPMSs).  We discuss some of the  Advantages and  Challenges that are involved with introducing a BPMS in an organization.. SLIDE 3 Chapter Overview
  • 4. Contents 1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems 1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems 2. Business Process Management Systems 3. Architecture of a BPMS 4. The Case of ACNS 2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS 1. Workload Reduction 2. Flexible System Integration 3. Execution Transparency 4. Rule Enforcement 3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS 1. Technical Challenges 2. Organizational Challenges 4. Recap SEITE 4 Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 5.  Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems:  Provide generic business functionality, which is required across various industries.  Supports accounting, controlling, human resource management, and production.  Most important processes covered are procure-to-pay and order-to-cash process.  Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems:  Support marketing and sales.  Helps to document interaction with customers through various channels.  Supports sales and marketing activities related to products, pricing, distribution, and campaigning.  Most important processes supported are campaign-to-leads and lead-to-order. SLIDE 5 Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 6.  Supply Chain Management (SCM) systems:  Focus on support of logistics operations.  Support for freight and transportation, warehousing, storage and inventory.  Support electronic data interchange, tracking technologies such as Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) and barcode scanning.  Key supply chain processes are order-to-delivery and return-to-refund.  Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) systems:  Support processes of product lifecycle from engineering perspective.  In realisation phase, manufacturing system is planned and actual products are built, assembled, and tested.  In service phase, products are sold and delivered, used, maintained, and eventually disposed of.  Important processes are idea-to-launch and different types of order processes. SLIDE 6 Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 7.  Exercise 9.1. The PAISs mentioned above (ERP, CRM, SCM, PLM, ECM) form a specific category in the market for enterprise software. Enterprise software covers not only PAISs, but also database systems, middleware, office software, and analytical software, which are not directly process-aware. The market for enterprise software is huge. According to a Gartner Report from 2017, it is estimated with a sales volume of almost $ 400 billion (more than e 340 billion).  Conduct an Internet search to find the Top 5 vendors of (a) enterprise software in general and (b) ERP systems specifically. SLIDE 7 Exercise 9.1: Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 8. Groupware systems:  User is enabled to:  share documents and information and  directly communicate with other users.  Best known groupware system is IBM Notes.  Popular for their high operational flexibility.  Traditionally do not directly support business processes in a strict sense.  Several commercial groupware systems offer workflow extensions SLIDE 8 Business Process Management Systems
  • 9. Ad hoc workflow systems:  Allow on-the-fly process definitions that can be created and modified.  Possible to adapt the process during execution. On the technical level, these systems  Private process definition for each case  Two major requirements to success:  end users are aware of the processes in which they operate.  Users have sophisticated tools and capability to model. SLIDE 9 Business Process Management Systems (cont.)
  • 10. Production workflow systems:  Most prominent type of BPMS.  Work is routed strictly on basis of process models.  Operational data typically handled by complementary DBMS.  Not allowed to deviate from process logic.  Two types:  Administrative BPMSs used in settings where work is performed by people;  Transaction processing BPMSs support processes that are automated. SLIDE 10 Business Process Management Systems (cont.)
  • 11. Case management systems:  Also adaptive case management system (ACM)  Supports processes that are neither tightly nor completely specified.  Case management system is fully aware of data belonging to case  Able to inform end users about status and history, and steps to continue with. SLIDE 11 Business Process Management Systems (cont.)
  • 12. SLIDE 12 Spectrum of Business Process Management Systems (BPMS)
  • 14. SLIDE 14 Process Modeling Tool of Bonita
  • 16. SLIDE 16 Monitoring Tool of Perceptive
  • 17. SLIDE 17 Exercise 9.2: Monitoring Tool of Perceptive The monitoring of user queues provides good transparency of the current workload of the different process participants. However, any sort of chart should be carefully reflected upon before decisions are made. Before interpreting the above chart, answer the following questions. 1. Which important information is not visible in the chart? 2. Does the chart allow you to conclude who are good and bad employees?
  • 18. Exercise 9.3: Construction Company BuildIT Construction Sight of WU Vienna‘s New Campus opened in 2013. Source: Wikimedia Commons
  • 19.  Recall BuildIT’s business process for renting equipment from Chapter 1. Let us suppose it is supported by a BPMS.  The execution engine can track that for orders #1,220 and #1,230 site engineers have already filled out the equipment rental requests.  On the basis of a process model of the renting equipment process, the execution engine can detect that for both of these cases the proper piece of equipment must be determined.  This needs to be done by any of the clerks at the depot. Therefore, the BPMS passes on the request to all worklist handlers of all clerks for further processing.  For order #1,240, on the other hand, the equipment rental request is not available yet. So, the BPMS engine will not pass on a similar request for this order yet.  Instead, it will await the completion of this work item.  In which state is the process after all the actions of the rental process of BuildIT have been performed as described above?  Which work items can you identify that are under control of the BPMS?  Make sure to identify both the case and the activity for each work item. SLIDE 19 Exercise 9.3: Renting Equipment of BuildIT
  • 20.  Can you imagine that a BPMS can work on the basis of a business process model without any information on the types of resources that are available to work on the tasks? What problems would the BPMS run into when executing this process?  In what situation will the execution engine generate multiple work items after the completion of a single work item?  Can you provide examples of external services that may be useful to be invoked in a loan application process?  If it is important that a BPMS hands out work items to available resources, can you imagine information on resources that is useful to be captured by an administration tool (apart from whether they are ill or on vacation)? SLIDE 20 Exercise 9.4: BPMS
  • 21.  Ms. Senora has been with ACNS for a long time and, for the past years, works as a senior acceptor.  Mr. Regulo has started his training and works as an regular acceptor. SLIDE 21 Claims Handling at ANCS
  • 22. Car damage of € 12,500 claimed by Mr. Bouman  BPMS forwards claim to worklist handler of Ms. Senora.  Positive Assessment.  Work item appears in worklist handler of financial officer to do payment.  Once done, process completes. A car damage of e 500, as claimed by Mrs. Fillers  BPMS forwards claim to worklist handlers of Ms. Senora and Mr. Regulo.  Mr. Regulo selects the claim, which then disappears from list of Ms. Senora.  Mr. Regulo rejects, case is handed over to account manager.  Client is informed. SLIDE 22 Two new claims are handled
  • 23. Consider the following developments and indicate which components of the BPMS architecture are affected: 1. A new decision support system is developed to support acceptors in making their assessment of claims. 2. Ms. Senora retires. 3. A new distinction between claims becomes relevant: regular acceptors are now also qualified to deal with claims above e 1,000 as long as they worked on previous claims by the same client. 4. Claims that are issued on cars which are over 10 years old need to be continuously monitored by management. SLIDE 23 Exercise 9.5: ANCS Developments
  • 24. Contents 1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems 1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems 2. Business Process Management Systems 3. Architecture of a BPMS 4. The Case of ACNS 2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS 1. Workload Reduction 2. Flexible System Integration 3. Execution Transparency 4. Rule Enforcement 3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS 1. Technical Challenges 2. Organizational Challenges 4. Recap SEITE 24 Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 25.  Straight-through processing  Less coordination  Less gathering of relevant information  Generic functionality of process layer  Easier to change process logic  Island automation Workload Reduction SLIDE 25 Advantages of Introducing a BPMS (I) Flexible System Integration
  • 26.  Transparency of operational information  Transparency of historic information  Reducing freedom of executing process  Enforce separation of duties  Implement control tasks Execution Transparency SLIDE 26 Advantages of Introducing a BPMS (II) Rule Enforcement
  • 27. To which categories would you classify incentives to introduce a BPMS?  An auditing agency has found out that the written procedures and actual execution of business processes are not aligned. The management of that organization wishes to enforce the written procedures and decides to introduce a BPMS.  The clients of a company complain that they can only get very shallow updates on the progress of the orders they make. The IT manager of that organization looks into the use of a BPMS to capture and provide status information on all these orders.  An insurance organization finds out that there is an urgent need to quickly adjust their claims processing to the offerings that its competitors bring to the market. Using a BPMS is considered to address this demand. SLIDE 27 Exercise 9.6: Advantages of BPMS
  • 28. Contents 1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems 1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems 2. Business Process Management Systems 3. Architecture of a BPMS 4. The Case of ACNS 2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS 1. Workload Reduction 2. Flexible System Integration 3. Execution Transparency 4. Rule Enforcement 3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS 1. Technical Challenges 2. Organizational Challenges 4. Recap SEITE 28 Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 29.  Applications often not developed from a business process perspective  Screen scraping might be required to integrate input and output from legacy  Batch processing systems do not work with a case concept  Middleware, Enterprise Application Integration, Service-oriented Architecture and Web Service solutions support integration  Complexity due to exceptions  Adjust to pace of organizational change  Potential fears of process participants  Strong management commitment needed Technical Challenges SLIDE 29 Challenges of Introducing a BPMS Organizational Challenges
  • 30.  Novel class of systems that automate user task on computers  RPA scripts can be developed by recording repetitive user tasks that move data between several computer screens  Robots can then work on task according to these scripts Software vendors specialized in RPA include, among others:  Automation Anywhere  Blue Prism  PEGA SLIDE 30 Robotic Process Automation (RPA)
  • 31. Introducing a BPMS is a larger transformation initiative, often taking dozens of months  Factors that influence the change are DICE:  Duration of initiative,  Integrity of the project team,  Commitment of top management,  Effort demanded from employees  Risk of resistence:  Potential lack of support from employees  Hidden competing commitment  Matters of caution:  Avoid premature victory celebration  Programmatic change fallacy SLIDE 31 Change Management
  • 32. Consider the following issues that come up when introducing a BPMS in a hospital to support preoperative care, i.e., the preparation and management of a patient prior to surgery. Classify them as technical or organizational issues. 1. On hearing about the plans to introduce a BPMS, the surgeons flatly reject to cooperate on this endeavor. Their claim is that each patient is an individual person that cannot be trusted to the care of a one-size-fits-all system. 2. The anesthetists in the hospital use a decision support system that monitors the proper dosage of anesthetics to patients. The system is developed as a standalone system that is difficult to synchronize with the BPMS, which has to feed the decision support system with patient data. 3. The nurses are provided with mobile devices, which they can use to access their worklist handlers. However, they find it difficult to follow up on the automatic notifications, which are signaled to them as gentle vibrations of the device. SLIDE 32 Exercise 9.7: BPMS at a Hospital
  • 33. Contents 1. Types of Process-Aware Information Systems 1. Domain-Specific Process-Aware Information Systems 2. Business Process Management Systems 3. Architecture of a BPMS 4. The Case of ACNS 2. Advantages of Introducing a BPMS 1. Workload Reduction 2. Flexible System Integration 3. Execution Transparency 4. Rule Enforcement 3. Challenges of Introducing a BPMS 1. Technical Challenges 2. Organizational Challenges 4. Recap SEITE 33 Chapter 9: Process-Aware Information Systems
  • 34.  There are two types of Process-Aware Information Systems (PAIS).  Domain-specific PAIS include  ERP Systems  CRM Systems  SCM Systems  PLM Systems  Business Process Management Systems are domain-agnostic PAIS having:  Execution engine  Process modeling tool  Process model repository  Administration and monitoring tools  Execution logs  Worklist handlers  External services  Advantages of introducing a BPMS:  Workload reduction  Flexible integration  Execution transparency  Rule enforcement  Challenges include:  Technical challenges  Organizational challenges SLIDE 34 Recap