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The Workflow Patterns project by Arthur ter Hofstede, Marlon Dumas, and Wil van der Aalst analyzes the expressiveness of workflow languages. By using a catalog of predefined modeling patterns they studied a number of commercial and research workflow modeling languages. In addition to control flow patterns, Nick Russell, David Edmond, Arthur ter Hofstede and Wil van der Aalst have studied the use of data patterns for the modeling of the data aspect of process automation systems. The project website contains much background information as well as documentation of the individual patterns and analyses of current workflow systems and standards - highly recommended. > BABEL Homepage

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At the AIIM Conference in Philadelphia, Trevor Naidoo (IDS Scheer, BPMI, ABPMP) and Michael zur Muehlen (Stevens Institute of Technology, WfMC) spoke about the current state and the future of BPM standards. With the merger of BPMI and the Object Management Group you can expect some changes to the landscape of standards bodies, but there still exists a proliferation of complementary, competitive, and overlapping standards in the BPM space. We are trying to shed some light on the focus areas of these standards, and what the consequences for users interested in BPM applications are today.

  • You can download of the PDF of our presentation [here].
  • Join the discussion on standards [here].

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The automation of business processes requires the specification of process structures as well as the definition of organizational resources involved in these processes. While the modeling of business processes and workflows is well researched, the link between the organizational building blocks and process activities is less well understood, and current developments in the web services choreography area completely neglect the organizational aspect of workflow applications. The purpose of the paper is to give an overview of the organizational aspects of workflow technology in the context of the workflow life cycle, to provide a review of existing work, and to develop guidelines for the design of a workflow-enabled organization, which can be used by both workflow vendors and users…

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Workflow management (also called Business Process Management) is, in the largest sense, the coordination of work processes through software. A workflow management system routes pending activities to process participants according to a model of the process. Workflow management systems have been around since the late 1970s, but every now and then they are rediscovered in a marketing wave such as Office Automation, Business Process Reengineering, or Web Services Choreography.

Workflow and BPM are typical Information Systems topics, since they operate at the intersection of the business side and the technology side of an organization. While organizations can benefit immensely from a properly aligned solution, failing to match the available workflow technology with the organization’s culture and the properties of its business processes can have strong counter-productive effects. Process management technology is a typical back-end solution, which is often embedded in middleware such as application servers or enterprise resource planning systems.

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