BPM Use Cases
Structuring the Business Process Management discipline

Special issue BISE (Business & Information Systems Engineering) journal
http://www.bise-journal.com/?p=957

Deadline: March 1st 2015
Business Process Management (BPM) efforts resulted in a plethora of approaches, 
methods and tools to support the design, analysis, improvement, enactment and 
management of operational business processes. The BPM discipline combines 
knowledge from information technology and management sciences and applies this 
to operational business processes. The ultimate goal of BPM is to embed the 
“process thinking” mindset within organizations, i.e. to conceive the 
organization as a set of interrelated, end-to-end business processes, which 
need to be managed holistically, and continuously improved, in order to 
ameliorate organizational performance.

Interestingly, the scope of BPM extends far beyond that of traditional methods 
such as workflow automation and six sigma, which seek to identify 
process-related problems and address them incrementally. BPM is also about 
transformational process change, aiming to achieve breakthrough innovation 
within organizations. The importance of process modeling, model-based analysis 
(e.g., simulation and verification), improvement, analytics (e.g., data & 
process mining, process discovery, conformance checking, and predictive 
analytics), as well as lateral thinking methods (e.g. design thinking) for BPM 
is evident.

As the BPM discipline is maturing, there is a need to provide more structure 
and show "how, where, and when" BPM can be used. As a reference, in “Business 
Process Management: A Comprehensive Survey” (ISRN Software Engineering, vol. 
2013, Article ID 507984, 37 pages, 2013, 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/507984), an initial set of 20 BPM Use Cases was 
presented. These Use Cases aimed to structure the domain and were used to 
analyze trends in papers presented at the BPM conference series. Although the 
20 BPM Use Cases triggered insightful discussions, they are just a starting 
point for systematically identifying, clarifying, and organizing BPM 
requirements. Moreover, many alternative approaches to rigorously structure the 
BPM discipline can be envisioned.

This special issue of the BISE (Business & Information Systems Engineering) 
journal aims to attract original contributions that can be seen as 
complementary or that provide alternative or more specific sets of BPM Use 
Cases. Authors should not feel restricted by the initial set of 20 BPM Use 
Cases. Rather, it is important that the contributions are innovative and 
rigorous. For example, we welcome empirical studies analyzing BPM approaches, 
literature or tools in a systematic way.

We seek contributions to the following areas:

·         BPM use cases (alternative collections, empirical evaluations of use 
cases)

·         Use cases for specific BPM areas (enactment, mining, improvement, 
etc.)

·         BPM ontologies

·         Multi-perspective BPM meta models

·         Alternative BPM lifecycle models

In fact, this special issue is open to any approach, method or tool showing 
"how, where, and when" BPM can be used. However, any contribution should 
provide a new angle on process management related to the BPM use cases and may 
be related to topics such as:


·         BPM modeling languages (declarative and procedural)

·         BPM enactment infrastructures (cloud, service-oriented, etc.)

·         Process model analysis and improvement (simulation, verification, 
etc.)

·         Data-driven analysis (process mining, compliance, business process 
intelligence, etc.)

·         Process flexibility and case management

·         Process reuse and repositories

·         BPM in the large

·         Social and managerial aspects of BPM

Submissions should be innovative. Survey papers providing an overview of BPM 
using established notions such as the basic BPM life-cycle model are not within 
the scope. Originality and rigor are key!

Submission Guidelines

Please submit papers for the sections BISE – Research Paper and BISE – BPM Use 
Cases via the journal’s online submission system 
(http://www.editorialmanager.com/buis/). Please observe the instructions 
regarding the format and size of contributions to Business & Information 
Systems Engineering BISE/WIRTSCHAFTSINFORMATIK. Submissions are accepted in 
English only. Papers should not exceed 50,000 characters including spaces, 
minus 5,000 characters per page for illustrations. Detailed authors’ guidelines 
can be downloaded from http://www.bise-journal.org/.

All papers will be reviewed anonymously (double-blind process) by several 
referees with regard to relevance, originality, and research quality. In 
addition to the editors of the journal, including those of this special focus, 
distinguished national and international professionals with scientific and 
practical backgrounds will be involved in the review process.

Schedule


·         Paper submission deadline: 1-3-2015

·         Author notification: 26-4-2015

·         Revision due: 28-6-2015

·         Completion of a second revision (if needed): 20-9-2015

·         Editorial deadline: 15-10-2015

·         Planned publication: February 2016


Special Issue Editors


·         Wil van der Aalst
Eindhoven University of Technology
The Netherlands
http://www.vdaalst.com

·         Marcello La Rosa
Queensland University of Technology
Australia
http://www.marcellolarosa.com

·         Flávia Maria Santoro
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
Brazil
http://lattes.cnpq.br/5377746284077362


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