Going Beyond Process Modeling: Part 1: Why Do We Manage Processes?
Going Beyond Process Modeling: Part 1: Why Do We Manage Processes?
Overview
Business process modeling - creating a graphical description
of a business process - is a recognized practice in describing,
analyzing and improving business operations. In many
organizations, the model itself is the end product that
communicates the business process amongst stakeholders;
however, significant benefits can be realized by moving
beyond process modeling to process automation.
Process models can be created using ad hoc drawing tools, or more sophisticated modeling
applications that enforce model integrity and provide analytical capabilities for process
improvement. They may use an industry-standard modeling notation, such as the Business
Process Model and Notation (BPMN), or a graphical notation specific to – and likely only
understood by – the organization or even the individual analyst.
Once created, process models are valuable as operational documentation: they can guide
workers through the steps in processes, ensure that processes are performed in a standardized
fashion, and provide all stakeholders with a common understanding of the processes.
Documenting processes makes it possible to apply analytical techniques, either manually or
using modeling and analysis software, to detect inefficiencies and bottlenecks in processes,
and simulate improved processes before they are put into practice.
A financial institution has a back office operation that processes transaction, and wants to
improve efficiency and reduce costs rather than consider outsourcing. A BPMS is
implemented to orchestrate and integrate multiple line-of-business systems, removing
the need for workers to re-enter information from one system to another and thereby
reducing error rates. The BPMS is also used to manage exceptions that require manual
intervention, routing and enabling collaboration between workers while providing a rich
information context. The BPMS tracks all work, both fully-automated and human tasks,
and provides alerts when service level agreements that may incur regulatory penalties are
in danger of being missed.
Although the primary benefits are improved efficiency and reduced operational risk, this
also has the effect of improving customer satisfaction by decreasing transaction cycle time
and raising the speed and quality of problem resolution through collaboration.
A consumer goods manufacturer has complex product development and supply chain
processes in a rapidly-changing market. A BPMS is implemented to replace several
spreadsheet-based planning and control systems, and integrate with an enterprise
resource planning (ERP) system to provide a business-controlled supply chain process.
The process model within the BPMS can be modified directly by analysts within the
product development business units, allowing immediate changes in timing and order of
operations, thereby reducing time to market for new products. The BPMS monitoring
capabilities provide visibility and control over the operational processes, and feed back
into the process modeling and analysis for continuous process improvement.
The primary benefit is improved time to market, with a secondary benefit of reduced
reliance on IT resources and the associated costs.
Transportation Logistics:
Knowledge Work Support
A transportation logistics company provides freight shipping for one-off shipments and
long-term contracts, in a market driven by competitive pricing. A BPMS is implemented to
manage pricing quotes by routing requests and information between a salesperson, the
pricing manager and (optionally) the customer. The BPMS integrates with a rules
management system that provides recommendations based on comparative cost and
pricing data from similar shipments and current market conditions, and captures the
final price directly into the billing system.
The primary benefit is increased profits due to faster and better-informed pricing
decisions, with a secondary benefit of reduced errors and manual processing time.
Consumer Lending:
Intelligent Document Capture
A bank offers loans to individuals and small businesses, requiring the collection of a
variety of documents and other supporting information before approving the loan. A
BPMS is implemented to manage the loan initiation process, using case/folder
management capabilities integrated with an enterprise content management (ECM) and
document capture system. Documents are added by loan officers using scanners at the
bank branches, or through capture directly by the customer using a mobile application.
The BPMS uses business rules to determine the information required for the specific loan
parameters, and sends alerts to the loan office and customer regarding missing
information. Bank managers can monitor the status of loan initiation, determining which
loan officers and/or customers may be delinquent in providing information prior to
issuing the loan.
The primary benefits are improved regulatory compliance due to the rules-based
documentation requirements, and improved loan issuance rates due to reminders about
missing documentation.
Summary
Most organizations model processes, but many fewer go beyond process modeling to
take full advantage of process automation and management, thereby improving customer
satisfaction while increasing operational efficiencies.
In this paper, the first in a series on going beyond process modeling, we have focused on
the reasons why you should consider going beyond process modeling to a more complete
business process management program, including several use cases to illustrate the
benefits.
In the second paper in the series, we will address how to make those first moves beyond
process modeling to take full advantage of process management within your organization.
Kemsley Design
http://www.kemsleydesign.com
Column 2
http://column2.com/
We are an innovative disrupter in the BPM market and were first in the enterprise
application space to offer freemium software. With Bizagi, there is very little coding as the
modeled process is the application. Business people work alongside IT in defining
requirements, building & automating processes, which produces fast results.
Our software is intuitive and uses a “drag and drop” interface to easily adapt and digitalize
the processes whilst supporting reusability of all business objects, data, and forms -
accelerating your time to market. With Bizagi, users easily move from process modeling
to execution, without needing technical knowledge, making this a seamless and a
painless transition.
Our free software comes with active BPM support forums, dedicated social media groups
and online training to help you fast-track your BPM journey.
You can use our ready-made and reusable process apps from Process Xchange or take
advantage of our ready-made “Lego” blocks from Widget Xchange - another two great
reasons to automate your processes with Bizagi!
And don’t forget – when you download our free software, you become part of the buzzing
Bizagi Community. With 200,000 members worldwide, you’ll never be short of advice,
ideas and like-minded people to interact with.
• adidas connects 500 sales units & 400 • Abengoa’s 400 processes connect 149
factories to streamline 5,000 PO changes a companies and 14,000 staff speaking
month multiple languages
• Colombian government, Colpensiones, • ICO (SME Virtual Bank) handled 80,000
automates state pensions, performing 28m credit applications in highly regulated
activities a month and serving 6.5m people environment
• Slow time to market. Anida (BBVA) at Saudi hospital (PSMMC), Anida & the
automated real-estate asset admission in Colombian government pension unit,
19 weeks, 5 weeks earlier than projected; Colpensiones.
Mars’ time to market improved seven-fold • Lack of collaboration. We connect silos &
• Low productivity & quality. Saudi bridge the gap between business & IT as
Hospital’s patient registration process proved at adidas, Generali, Audi, and
increased staff efficiency by 60% & reduced Abengoa.
human errors by 80% • High development costs. On average, our
• Weak regulation compliance. Standard projects cost 30% of in-house development
processes, transparency, better controls costs or less than 50% of competitive
deliver complete auditability & traceability systems.
Discover