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Management of IT Environment (3)

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1 Management of IT Environment (3)
Riadenie IT prostredia Modelling of business processes Karol Furdík Department of Cybernetics and AI, FEI TU Košice

2 Lecture content Definitions of basic terms Ways of BP modelling BPMN
processs, business process, a model, modelling,... Ways of BP modelling hierarchical process diagram, process threads diagram approaches, formalisms: UML, BPMN BPMN characteristics, history BPMN elements: activities, events, gateways, connectors, ... Examples References

3 Def.: Process, business process and its types
Process - an unifying principle that acts in various systemic contexts. (K. L. von Bertalanffy, philosophical-cybernetic def. Example: process of feedback) Business process (BP): A set of structured and temporally connected activities or tasks that are employed in an organisation/enterprise for producing a certain service or product (i.e., activities are goal-oriented) for a particular customer. Types of business processes: 1. Management processes 2. Operational processes 3. Supporting processes Operationalmanagement Middle management Top management Strategic planning Managerial control Control of actions actions/ services feedback planning Information flow in an enterprise. Ref: Mihók, Révészová: IS pre ekonómov. EkF TU Košice, 2006

4 Def.: Model, BP modelling
a (formal) representation of a domain, part of reality, or a system, which enables investigating relevant events, relationships, and processes ongoing in the domain/system more easily - in comparison with investigation these events in a real world environment. Consequence: model does not match the reality; it expresses just our view of the reality in a particular context, from certain perspective. (cf. L. Wittgenstein, W. V. O. Quine, W. Sellars, ...) BP modelling: a set of activities for representing business processes in a formal way enabling analysis and further improvement of these processes. IT perspective: BP modelling is required as a presumption for creating and/or modifying information systems in an enterprise.

5 BP models and levels of modelling
serve for presenting a structured flow of business activities togehter with all related information. interpreted models enable to determine the level of fulfilling business goals by an organisation/enterprise. Levels of BP modelling: Process maps – simple schemas of activity sequences. Process descriptions – schemas extended on additional descriptive information (however, not complete enough for executing the modelled processes). Process models – schemas extended on all information required for modelled process execution.

6 Ways of BP modelling BP model formalisms:
Older – data/control flow diagrams, block schemas of functions, Gantt diagrams, PERT diagrams, etc. UML – general modelling formalism, primarily in software engineering area, but applicable on BP modelling as well. Various types of process models, for example: Hierarchical process diagram, Process threads diagram Use case diagram Interaction overview diagram Object diagram BPMN – standardised graphical notation of abstract (i.e., not executable) BP, suitable for all levels of modelling (process maps, descriptions, models) and control (planning, design, implementation, transition, operation, ...).

7 Hierarchical process diagram
Taxonomy of business processes: proces on a higher level is composed of sub-processes modelled on lower levels.

8 Process threads diagram
Dynamic description of business processes: describes events that are launching particular sub-processes, as well as results of these sub-processes.

9 UML - Unified Modeling Language
UML: a modelling language for specification, visualization, development and documenting of software systems. Can be applied on business processes as well. A set of diagrams enabling an object-oriented design Diagrams: Use-case diagram Class diagram State diagram Activity diagram Sequence diagram Interaction diagram Component diagram Deployment diagram

10 BPMN - Business Process Modeling Notation
Formalism for graphical representation of business processes by means of a diagram of ordered/structured flow of activities and related information - Business Process Diagram. BPMN is a set of graphical objects and rules defining available connections between the objects. BPMN provides a mechanism for generating executable business processes - BPEL (Business Process Execution Language).

11 History & versions of BPMN
Business Process Management Institute (BPMI, nowadays a part of OMG consortium, developed the BPML language (XML-based, representation of executable BPs). It implied a necessity of a general and easily understandable graphical notation - BPMN. BPML was later replaced by BPEL (currently a standard). August 2001: group Notation Working Group, consisting of 35 members, organisations and individuals. BPMN 1.0 May 2004: BPMN 1.0 specification published. February 2006: BPMN 1.0 accepted as OMG standard. BPMN 1.1: OMG specification, February 2008. BPMN 1.2: OMG specification, January The last non-executable notation BPMN 2.0: released in January 2011:

12 Basic elements of BPMN Flow objects

13 BPMN: Poster

14 BPMN: Examples (1)

15 BPMN: Examples (2)

16 BPMN: Examples (3)

17 BPMN: Examples (4a)

18 BPMN: Examples (4b)

19 Choreography - BPMN 2.0 notation
BPMN: Examples (4c) Choreography - BPMN 2.0 notation

20 BPMN: References the web of Object Management Group/Business Process Management Initiative tutorials, guidelines, best practices, ... specifications short tutorial in Czech brief intro to BPMN in Slovak

21 Questions?


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