scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Business Process Management: Concepts, Languages, Architectures

Mathias Weske
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Matthias Weske argues that all communities involved need to have a common understanding of the different aspects of business process management, and details the complete business process lifecycle from the modeling phase to process enactment and improvement, taking into account all different stakeholders involved.
Abstract
Business process management is usually treated from two different perspectives: business administration and computer science. While business administration professionals tend to consider information technology as a subordinate aspect in business process management for experts to handle, by contrast computer science professionals often consider business goals and organizational regulations as terms that do not deserve much thought but require the appropriate level of abstraction. Matthias Weske argues that all communities involved need to have a common understanding of the different aspects of business process management. To this end, he details the complete business process lifecycle from the modeling phase to process enactment and improvement, taking into account all different stakeholders involved. After starting with a presentation of general foundations and abstraction models, he explains concepts like process orchestrations and choreographies, as well as process properties and data dependencies. Finally, he presents both traditional and advanced business process management architectures, covering, for example, workflow management systems, service-oriented architectures, and data-driven approaches. In addition, he shows how standards like WfMC, SOAP, WSDL, and BPEL fit into the picture. This textbook is ideally suited for classes on business process management, information systems architecture, and workflow management. This 2nd edition contains major updates on BPMN Version 2 process orchestration and process choreographies, and the chapter on BPM methodologies has been completely rewritten. The accompanying website www.bpm-book.com contains further information and additional teaching material.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A Study on Affecting Factors of White-Nest Swiftlet (Collocalia fuciphaga) Farming Performance in Haurgeulis District, Indramayu Regency

TL;DR: In this paper, the Malcom Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence (MBCfPE) was used to recognize the association white-nest business performance, including achievement-motivation factor, strategic planning, technical aspects and technologies, guanxi (personal relationship), and leadership.
Journal ArticleDOI

Graph-based managing and mining of processes and data in the domain of intellectual property

TL;DR: A bottom-up approach is proposed, which applies a continuously evolving graph of integrated data objects and tasks to model and store static and dynamic aspects of administrative as well as knowledge work, and is tested in a real-world setting in the domain of intellectual property.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fuzzy TOPSIS evaluation approach for business process management software acquisition

TL;DR: The presented BPM lifecycle based approach breaks down BPMS evaluation and selection criteria into two broad categories namely functional and non-functional requirements including totally 48 selection criteria.
Book ChapterDOI

Towards Dynamic Business Process Management: Adapting Processes via Cloud-based Adaptation Processes

TL;DR: AProPro (Adapting Processes via Processes), a flexible and cloud-capable approach towards dBPM, supports adapting target processes using adaptation processes while retaining an intuitive and consistent imperative process paradigm.
Posted Content

What's My Process Model Composed of? A Systematic Literature Review of Meta-Models in BPM

TL;DR: This work aims at answering research questions concerning the kind of meta-models proposed in literature; the recurring constructs they contain; their purposes; and their evaluations, and indicates the existence of a reasonable body of work conducted in this specific area, but not a full maturity.
Related Papers (5)