USERNAME: 
PASSWORD: 
lost password? 
search:
Tuesday, January 6
 
 

Membership
Articles
All Articles
White Papers
Round Tables
Presentations
News Clippings
Events
Training
Workshops
Consultant Network
Solution Locator
Search
Other Topics
BPM
Biz Decision MGMT
Biz Architecture
Org. Performance
Innovation
Government

Solution Locator

Expedite your research.
Find specific SOA solutions and request information.

 

SOA Watch Column

SOA Watch: When Considering Services…

Services are the building blocks of SOA, and like building blocks of a house or a building, the quality will define the value of the finished product. In this case, the SOA itself. Thus, spending...


Experts Wanted

Would you like to:

  • Submit an article
  • Lead a Round Table
  • Speak at a Conference

Contact us today!


 

Articles

The Future of Services Engineering
By: Brett Champlin, President, ABPMP.org
Thursday, July 5, 2007

 

BPM Strategies


This article originally appeared in the members-only quarterly BPM Strategies Magazine.  Join today to receive your own copy.

The services sector of business is different than the industrial manufacturing models that have been the primary references for the last century or so. Treating services businesses as if they were just a version of a manufacturer - just substituting the word “service” for “product” is a mistake, and leads to poor decisions and worse results. Trying to analyze and design services processes with the same tools and techniques used for manufacturing processes may give us some improvement in internal measures, but usually completely misses the mark in the perspective that really counts - that of the customer.

Where is SE today?
The few academic texts that deal with services are from the marketing and strategy disciplines. None are from engineering. The closest is “Six Sigma for Services,” which attempts to translate the measures and techniques that easily and comfortably apply to industrial product manufacturing processes. Essentially, there really is no discipline of “Services Engineering” today.

Yet, if we want to find ways to get the same levels of productivity and quality improvement in our services processes that came from applying industrial engineering practices to manufacturing processes, we desperately need to develop a service engineering discipline that is appropriate to deal with a business segment that employs over 77 percent of the labor force and contributes to nearly 80 percent of the gross domestic product in industrialized countries.

IBM has taken a leadership role in advancing academic research and attention to this topic (see www.research.ibm.com/ssme/). In 2005, IBM sponsored a conference on what their research group calls SSME or Services Science, Management, and Engineering. Research professors from top universities focused on issues such as improving productivity in services, the extended enterprise, and business strategy models. As more research is centered on services management and engineering, expect to see a more formal services engineering discipline emerge. I think this will be linked with BPM.

BPM Professionals & SE
What does all this have to do with BPM? Most of us probably work in a services industry or provide process management services to support processes that are inherently services-oriented processes to the organization’s primary processes. Given the overwhelming percentage of workers and industries that are primarily services companies, there are, de facto, more people looking at improving and redesigning services processes than doing so in manufacturing.

Services industries’ primary, or value chain, processes are inherently people focused. Not only is services delivery highly knowledge-worker-dependent, it is highly collaborative in all aspects, including delivering value to the customer which is co-produced by the provider and the customer. To me, this alone indicates that the high-value BPM tools and approaches must inherently be those that best support human tasks and operations.

Providing services is going to be the dominant model of business for the 21st century and BPM is going to be the dominant model of management. Services don’t transform (process) raw materials (inputs) into products (outputs). They are event-driven, non-linear, asynchronous, multi-threaded, complex, business relationships that evolve over time. Analyzing, modeling, simulating, designing and implementing service processes is going to take more effort and more care and ultimately will be more rewarding.

Brett Champlin, CSP, CCP, CDMP, is the president and founder of the Association of Business Process Management Professionals (ABPMP.org), a non-profit, vendor-independent professional society dedicated to the advancement of business process management. ABPMP is practitioner-oriented and practitioner-led. Champlin is a manager in the Business Performance Improvement group of a large financial services company. He also teaches a course in BPM at the University of Chicago. You may email him at President@abpmp.org.

 

Back to Articles, including SOA, BPM & BA

 

Become a Member Today

SOAInstitute.org offers many benefits to its members. Learn more about becoming a member or join today!

 

Read More on SOAInstitute.org

Featured Presentation:

Presentation
Sustainable SOA Solution Development Lifecycle
Sanjay Thakur, Principal Analyst, Project Performance Corporation

ROI on SOA initiatives has been elusive for companies. The key challenge being that the realization of ROI happens very late in the lifecycle of what is usually a long-term initiative. Stakeholders...

Featured White Paper:

SOA and BPM - Taking the Enterprise to the Next Level
Courtesy of: Rick Sweeney, Independent Consultant

It is unfortunate but most companies find themselves always trying to catch up with technology advancements. Like many others they are burdened by a significant investment in legacy systems (and the...

 
   
About Us : Contacts : Advertise : Partners  
BrainStorm Group © 2008 • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use