Untitled Document

Editor's note: Interested in how BPM can improve financial services, then you cannot miss our August 26 Webinar, "BPM for Financial Services." Sign up now!

At the moment in financial services organizations, not spending today on an IT project is often a more compelling option than even a significant return on the investment tomorrow. This means that the business expects the IT department to be innovative or accept cost reduction as the only viable strategy. Unfortunately, investments in software infrastructure -- even for hot topics such as SOA and BPM -- seem to offer primarily medium-term returns. This makes justifying new investments and even sustaining current investments in this area challenging. What this means is technology innovation must be carefully focused on "sweet spots" where it can pass these more exacting investment criteria. In the case of BPM, the sweet spots emerging are those where BPM has the ability to automate complex manual processes, remove human error and handle process change.

To somebody coming fresh to BPM, this idea of looking for very specific problems to fix may be surprising, as BPM is often positioned as a strategic project driven from the top down with widespread benefits. While it can be argued that the returns of a strategic approach may be substantial, the overall costs will be high and the payback not immediate. Therefore, such an investment is out of sync with the realities facing most financial services organizations today.

Unfortunately, this perception of BPM as "big concept" may make some organizations slow to try BPM in a different and more pragmatic mode. To make matters worse, BPM can be quite confusing, as it is really a combination of concepts from process re-engineering and an approach to describing and formalizing ad hoc business processes as well as a set of technologies.

To complicate matters further, BPM technology is actually applied to two types of problems (and sometimes a combination of the two): the integration of applications with multi-step business processes, and the automation of human workflows. This final distinction has mostly to do with the origins of the vendors selling solutions, who typically come from one or the other camp.

1

  • ebizQ Update
  • Contribute

Please pardon our appearance while we work out the remaining kinks of our new site. If you happen to find a bug, please let us know at support@ebizq.net

ebizQ is very interested in what you have to say. To contribute an article, an opinion, or to become a blogger, please contact Peter Schooff.

  • Virtual Conferences
  • Webinars
  • Roundtables

SOA In Action

Nov 19, 2008

This conference will teach business leaders what to expect, and what to avoid, to make their SOA journey a success. SOA is a long journey, not a single project, and distributed architectures are inherently complex. Success requires new ways of working, creating more efficient cross organization processes, adopting new tools, and building new skills.Register

View All Virtual Conferences

Create a Center of Excellence in SOA Governance

Date: Dec 02, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET- (17:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!

Next-Generation BI

Date: Dec 03, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET- (17:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
View All Webinars

Insurance: Discovering the Missing Link of Business Architecture


Date:Jan 14, 2009

Time:12:00 PM ET- (17:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
View All Roundtables
  • White Papers
  • Podcasts
  • Blogs

Dennis Byron: Revisiting Bill Miller of XAware, Open Source Data Integration Software

Almost a year after their first chat, XAware founder and CTO Bill Miller gives Dennis Byron an update on what's going on this year at XAware and how that "open source thing" is working out.

Listen Now

The Acceleration of SOA: iTKO Explains

Listen to Peter Schooff's podcast with Jason English, VP of Corporate Marketing for iTKO, where they offer a quick preview of ebizQ's upcoming SOA in Action Virtual Conference on Nov. 19.

Listen Now

Heading Off SOA Disillusionment With Progress

David Bressler provides Progress Software's customers and field teams with the expertise and experience to deliver SOA. In this podcast, Bressler gives an excellent introduction to ebizQ's Nov. 19 SOA in Action Virtual Conference, where he'll be a featured speaker.

Listen Now

Dennis Byron: VP of IONA/Progress Larry Alston on Functionality in OSS

Hear Larry Alston's unique perspective on the open source development model and how IONA is adopting a "functionality rules" open-source-as-a-tactic theme now that Iona is part of Progress.

Listen Now

Mike Rothman: Understanding Web 2.0 Attacks

In this podcast, Rothman flies solo and rants about Web 2.0 attack vectors, providing a primer on the types of attacks you're likely to see from social networks. Rothman also gives himself the "free association" treatment, discussing topics like Facebook and the impact of Web 2.0 on PCI.rnrnListen to or download the 11:39 minute podcast below:

Listen Now
  • Most Read
  • Most Discussed
  • Quick Guide

Building The Instantly Responsive Enterprise

Integrating BPM and CEP gives you intelligent business processes that can react to rapidly changing business conditions with continuous visibility. Learn More

Enterprise Linkage: New Change Management

Insurers need to think about creating "true linkage," which means linking business strategy to process to IT investments and thereby setting the foundation for true change. Learn More

The Invisible Hand of BI

To be effective, business intelligence technology must work behind the scenes to deliver relevant information when, where, and how it's needed. Learn More

Quick Guide: What is Enterprise 2.0?

A lot of people are talking about Enterprise 2.0 as being the business application of Web 2.0 technology. However, there's still some debate on exactly what this technology entails, how it applies to today's business models, and which components bring true value. Some use the term Enterprise 2.0 exclusively to describe the use of social networking technologies in the enterprise, while others use it to describe a web economy platform, or the technological framework behind such a platform. Still others say that Enterprise 2.0 is all of these things. Learn More

Quick Guide: What is BPM?

Learn More

Quick Guide: What is Event Processing?

Smart event processing can help your company run smarter and faster. This comprehensive guide helps you research the basics of complex event processing (CEP) and learn how to get started on the right foot with your CEP project using EDA, RFID, SOA, SCADA and other relevant technologies. Learn More

Product Spotlight

As you may know, technology is only part of an overall SOA governance solution. It is sometimes difficult to ensure visibility into all SOA assets and their relationships, end-to-end governance throughout the lifecycle of SOA assets, and analytics to help ensure organizations are reaping the rewards of their SOA investments. Download this spotlight report to review a solution to governing your SOA.

The Forrester Wave: Business Process Management for Document Processes

Read this Forrester report to see how vendors stack up regarding business process management. Forrester evaluated eight business process management suite (BPMS) suppliers best suited and most experienced for document-intensive processes across approximately 150 criteria. Download this paper to find out which BPM tools are right for your business.

Community Managers

Deborah Smallwood

Top insurance industry advisors Deborah Smallwood and Cindy Maike are the Insurance Community Managers. Their focus is on transforming insurance companies into agile, business-driven enterprises where IT enables business value.

Read Deborah Smallwood's Blog
Deborah Smallwood's Features:
Read More »

Dennis Byron

Dennis Byron brings three decades as a top analyst to his role as Community Manager for Improving Business Processes. This community encompasses Business Process Management (BPM), Process Modeling, Process Analysis, and Business Alert Monitoring (BAM), among other topics.

Read Dennis Byron's Blog
Dennis Byron's Features:
Read More »

David A. Kelly

With twenty years on the cutting edge of enterprise infrastructure, David A. Kelly is Community Manager for Governing the Infrastructure. This category includes IT governance, SOA governance, and compliance, risk management, ITIL, business service management, registries and more.

Read David A. Kelly's Blog
David A. Kelly's Features:
Read More »

Peter Schooff

Peter Schooff is Managing Editor at ebizQ. Peter is also a popular blogger in the IT Security space, where he keeps an eye on security trends critical to protecting applications and locking down identities.

Read Peter Schooff's Blog
Peter Schooff's Features:
Read More »

Ronan Bradley

Financial services expert Ronan Bradley is Community Manager for Financial Services covering banking and capital markets.

Read Ronan Bradley's Blog
Ronan Bradley's Features:
Read More »

David S. Linthicum

One of the founding fathers of modern distributed computing, David Linthicum is Community Manager for Information and Intelligence. This community covers BI, operational BI, MDM, and EII, among other topics.

Read David S. Linthicum's Blog
David S. Linthicum's Features:
Read More »

View All Community Managers