Business analysis & BPM methodologies PV207 – Business Process Management Spring 2016 Jiří Kolář 1 Lecture overview ● Why a methodology for BPM development? ● Methodology overview ● BPM and SOA again ● BPM development approaches ○ Top down ○ Bottom up ○ Meet in the middle ● Library scenario: ○ Strategy and vision ○ Goals, objectives and KPIs ○ Stakeholders identification ○ Business components ○ Processes and services ○ Process description ○ Process BPMN diagram 2 Last lecture recap ● Processes ○ What is business process? 3 Business process definition Definition: Series of logically related activities or tasks (such as planning, production, sales) performed together to produce a defined set of results. -- Business Dictionary: A repeatable sequence of logically related activities, which contributes to fulfilment of one or more business objectives -- Jiří Kolář 4 Last lecture recap ● Processes ○ What is business process? ○ What is BPM? 5 Is a Management discipline, focused on systematic definition and execution measurement of processes in organizations ● An effort to describe processes in organisation measure results and manage process changes towards higher efficiency Business Process Management 6 Last lecture recap ● Processes ○ What is business process? ○ What is BPM? ○ What is BPM adoption? 7 BPM adoption - definition A change in target organization towards the establishment of a process-driven management model. This can, but does not necessarily have to, lead to the automation of some processes in a processoriented Information Systems. Such systems can be eventually based on a Business Process Management Suite 8 Why we need specific methodologies for BPM-oriented development? ● BPM differ significantly from traditional data-based approach to system design ○ Special analysis & design steps needed ○ Traditional methodologies do not fit ● BPM oriented SW solutions depend on proper organisation structure ● BPM discipline has impact both on business structure and EIS ● Organisation changes are often necessary ● Processes have to be aligned with business 9 Some BPM methodologies ● General BPM methodology (Mathias Weske) ○ Rather general, End-to-end, very complete ● CBM-BPM-SOMA ○ IBM specific, proprietary, tight with IBM technologies ● IBPM ○ Focused on general organization of a BPM project ○ Emphasis on SOA-based implementation ● BPM4SME ○ End-to-end ○ Focused on small scale BPM adoptions 10 ● Process can be decomposed to activities ● Many automated activities are implemented as services (service orchestration) ● We want to assemble our processes from many independent services ● At least a basic SOA infrastructure is useful for well implemented BPM solution ● SOA infrastructure provide flexibility we need to achieve process evolution and improvement Relationship of SOA and BPM 11 Relationship of SOA and BPM (cont.) 12 Relationship of SOA and BPM (cont.) 13 Top down BPM development approach ● Sumarize business strategy: vision&mission ● Identify/Define business goals and objectives ● Define/Identify processes and roles ● Implement executable processes ● Reuse/Implement required services and SW components 14 Bottom up BPM development approach ● Identify services on lowest level (code) ● Identify composed services ● Discover processes (by hand, algorthmic) ● Refine processes ● Align with goals and strategy 15 Reality: Meet in the middle ● Top down ○ Define/refine strategy and vision ○ Identify/refine goals and components ○ Define KPI/KRI ○ Identify/define processes ● Bottom up ○ Identify existing services and SW components ○ Identify composed services ○ Assign to processes In parallel: 16 Recap (Lecture 1): BPM adoption phases 0. Business analysis ○ Roles ○ Goals ○ Objectives ○ AS-IS processes ○ Process architecture ○ Reengineering plan ○ KPIs/Business Metrics 1. Process definition ○ Process boundaries ○ Business value ○ Inputs/Outputs ○ Process metrics ○ Process Owner ○ Roles 2. Process modeling ○ Process models L1+L2 ○ (BPMN + text) 3. Implementation ○ Executable models ○ BPMN L3, BPEL, other 4. Monitoring ○ Fault/error detection ○ Performance measurement ○ Tracking goal fulfillment 5. Process Improvement ○ Process changes Image from: http://www.what-is-bpm.com/get_started/bpm_methodology.html 17 ● An organisation should state clearly it's purpose and business goals ○ This is important for outside world as much for the company itself ● There has to be a mechanism of goal achievement evaluation ● Evaluation has to be performed regularly ● Results are used as an input for continuous business improvement ● Organisation reflects changes in Business environment by adjusting its strategy Business strategy: "A way we want to go" 18 Business strategy: Mission and vision Simple and clear statements: ● Vision: ○ Desired future state of the organisation ○ Guiding, motivating, Inspiring, Long term Alzheimer's Association: "Our Vision is a world without Alzheimer's disease." Microsoft: "Empower people through great software anytime, anyplace, and on any device." ● Mission: ○ Define current state and purpose ○ Answers: what, who, how questions, Short term ○ Direct relation to goals and objectives NatureAir: "To offer travelers a reliable, innovative and fun airline to travel in Central America." 19 Business strategy: Goals and objectives Desired outcomes, things we want to achieve: ● Goals ○ The purpose toward which an effort is directed. ○ Long term, general intentions, hard to measure Goal: Students will gain a greater appreciation for poetry. ● Objectives ○ Narrow, concrete easy to measure ○ Achievable in mid-to-short term ○ Related to a goal Objective: read at least 10 poems Objective: attend 2 live poetry readings Objective: identify 4 different poems used in lyrics of modern music Objective: write a poem containing 3 verses 20 Performance measurement ● Metric ○ Related to one instance of object/process/service Metric: Incident resolution time Metric: Incident severity ● Performance Indicator/ Key PI ~ KPI ○ Current/short term measurement = input for action ○ Indicator of actual business performance KPI: Number of incidents in progress, number of incidents waiting for input ● Result Indicator/ Key RI ~ KRI ○ Result from the past = input for planning ○ Indicator of recent business performance KRI: Unresolved incidents this month, quartal average incident solving time 21 Measurement guidelines 22 ● An indicator has to have a discrete value in each moment in time ● Targets have to be set and justified ● Give a frame to your indicators ○ Time frame, milestone, limit ■ Wrong: number of logged incidents ■ Correct: number of logged incidents per week ● Indicators has to be related to a goal / objective / SLA / contract.. Example Library scenario 23 Strategy: ● Vision We foster knowledge of people by providing ultimate library services. We make book rental process easy and accessible to anybody. ● Mission We help people to extend their knowledge in modern way by offering access to all major electronic information sources and provide 24/7 support to information consumers.. Example: Library scenario 24 Library scenario: Goals and objectives (cont.) ● Goal: Provide access to all major forms of modern electronic information sources ○ Objective: Provide access to common internet sources and to 40 major digital libraries ■ KRI: Number of accesses per library / month ○ Objective: Sell electronic books and reading devices ■ RI: Turnover and profit in devices sold / Quartal ■ KRI: Number of electronic books sold per sold device ○ Objective: Provide separate high-speed access for mobile devices ■ KPI: average response time of service today ■ PI: number of simultaneously connected users 25 Library scenario: Stakeholders involved ● State administrative (Regulations,state funding) ● Library management ● Library employees (staff) ● Readers ● Banks (online payments) ● Business partners (device resellers) ● Service providers (digital libraries) 26 Library scenario: Processes and services ● Objective: Provide full-featured 24/7 online IS for readers ○ Process: Register new reader ■ Service: Create reader's record ■ Service: Update reader's details ■ Service: Subscribe reader for service ○ Process: Book reservation ■ Service: Find book according to name or ISBN ■ Service: Retrieve book rental state ■ Service: Reserve book for certain period of time 27 Library scenario: Processes and services (cont.) ● Objective: Introduce 3-steps-3-minutes epayment method ○ Process: Direct electronic payment ■ Service:Verify payment credentials ● Composed service: Create invoice ● Metric: Manual corrections necessary ○ Service: Retrieve payment details ■ Metric: processing time ○ Service: Retrieve order details ■ Metric: processing time 28 Library scenario: Process: Charge internal credit 29 Library scenario: BPMN: Charge internal credit 30 ● Goal ○ Objective ■ KPI/KRI PI/RI ■ Process ● Metric ■ Process ○ Objective ■ KPI/KRI PI/RI ■ Process ● Service ○ Metric ● Service ○ Metric Analysis structure recap 31 FIN Questions? PV207 – Business Process Management Spring 2012 Jiří Kolář 32