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AbstractPurpose -The purpose of this paper is to present a methodology that may be used to perform evaluation of business process management (BPM) methodologies. As this area lacks proper formalized approaches, the aim of the publication is to promote the new approach, proposed by the authors. Design/methodology/approach -The authors analyse related methodologies and theoretical background. Based on that, they suggest an evaluation approach, which is used to verify correctness of a semantic BPM (SBPM) methodology. Findings -The proposed evaluation methodology has been practically tested. Additional interviews have been conducted and interviewees stress high value of the approach. The presented evaluation methodology was validated on the example of the SBPM methodology used in a European integrated project.Research limitations/implications -The results of this paper can be used to guide development and verify correctness of new BPM methodologies. Practical implications -The paper demonstrates how validation of BPM methodologies can be conducted in practice. Originality/value -The approach presented in the paper is the first comprehensive approach to provide methodology for evaluating BPM methodologies.
Abstract. One of the main problems when creating execution-level process models is finding implementations for process activities. Carrying out this activity manually can be time consuming, since it involves searching in large service repositories. We present Maestro for BPMN, a tool that allows to annotate and automatically compose activities within business processes. We explain the main assumptions and algorithms underlying the tool, and we overview what will be demonstrated at ESWC.
Summary.With the change of EU regulations in the automotive market in 2002, multi-brand car dealers became possible. Despite the high economical expectations connected with them, the existing IT infrastructure does not provide satisfying support for these changes as it had been developed independently by each brand for many years. Thus in this paper, we sketch solutions for two of their most important problems: (1) the systems of the manufacturers have to be accessed separately and in a proprietary manner which aggravates a product finding process across brands and (2) the status of the customer is not explicit because of a technological gap between car configuration and CRM system. Our solution is based on research results and tools from the EU project ATHENA 3 , especially the SAP tool suite for crossorganizational business processes which is presented in more detail. We conclude the paper by explaining the lessons we learned from a technical and research transfer point of view.
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