CFO Expectations of IT


Follow us




Latest debate

Why does everyone get BPM wrong?

CIO Debate on BPM Part 10 Reclaiming the business by the business and for the business

Everything you have heard to date about Business Process Management is wrong. BPM is not about a technology at all!


Is BPM just hype?

Engineering an approach to BPM: CIO UK Debate part 4

BPM without busting the budget: CIO UK Debate part 3


Next month

Are you moving to an Infrastructure as a Service IT model?

As a CIOs do you need to own the IT estate of your organisation? The current economy and increasing business competition is calling for a new approach to infrastructure decisions, CIOs today find themselves at a junction with regard to how they deploy resources. As organisations change their approach to markets, so CIOs may need to consider re-evaluating their infrastructure directions. Turning towards cloud computing and applications delivered as a service could well be the answer, come and join our CIO debate

Or, if you are involved in the email sector and would like to write an article on the future of email, send your thoughts to Mark Chillingworth, editor of CIO.co.uk at mark_chillingworth@idg.co.uk.

Everything you have heard to date about Business Process Management is wrong, says Lombardi president Phil Gilbert. BPM is not about SOA, or BRM, in fact, it is not about a technology at all! It's about reclaiming the business by the business and for the business; a business that's been stolen by technologists over the past 40 years.

Before computers, business processes were owned by business people. For example, processes, and the data that powered those processes - from accounts payable to product development - were all owned by the business. With the introduction of computers, all of the information that drives processes became lines of code or bits in a file, held hostage by IT. With the proliferation of IT, there can now be multiple references to one given document such as an individual invoice when previously there was only a single paper document. This complexity has meant that IT became the focus, not the process that it should have been serving. Business process management is not a new tool to "align business and IT"; instead it is about business taking control of its technology assets so that it can participate in the creation, change and management of its processes. The major transformation that is now starting to be seen across companies around the world is that business people are actually becoming empowered to understand and constantly improve their own processes.

To achieve this requires every person to develop a direct connection to every process and all the assets that that process moves around. But people don't do processes, they do tasks. Implementing an effective business process management strategy therefore requires you to connect those tasks to the process activities, and by extension to the processes, so that each individual can understand how they contribute to the mission of the organiszation. This connection of what a person does to the outcome the organisation achieves in the marketplace has been lost due to IT. BPM can bring that back.

How do we do this? Over the next twenty-five years, social technologies will play an increasingly important role in the enterprise. Bringing BPM to every desktop and into every business person's hand will require new ways to collaborate - in structured forms - around their tasks, and will give that insight into how that task fulfils an important element of the company's mission. Social technologies have the potential to give individuals that and in doing so will drive increased productivity. For the first time, such technologies present an opportunity to connect individuals to encourage faster business improvement, in structured ways, in real-time. Microsoft Access, Lotus Notes, and, today, Sharepoint have created multiple databases and only increase confusion.


Get involved

Express your views on the role IT has in business process management and redefinitions around technology

To get involved, contact the CIO UK LinkedIn community.

Comments

Ian Gotts | Published: 12:20 GMT, 11 January 2010

Most BPM projects are doomed from the outset as they are focused on 'building better IT systems'. Many improvements in business come from understanding end to end processes and streamlining them. There is now support for the business in terms of documenting and making their business processes available to every memebr fo staff. Nimbus is an example, and there are other companies emerging. This new breed of software is called Business Process Improvement Suite (BPIS) which mirrors the BPMS.

Jacob Ukelson | Published: 17:06 GMT, 07 January 2010

Phil, I agree - the coming challenges of business process management will be around unstructured, ad-hoc human processes. New social tools will play a role, but I believe innovation around email (the first and foremost social tool in most organizations) will provide a breakthrough in merging the worlds of process and collaboration (as can be seen in Google Wave and ActionBase).

Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.


CIO White Papers

The cloud 2015 vision

Cloud computing is an important transition and a paradigm shift in IT services delivery - one that promises large gains in efficiency and flexibility at a time when demands on data centers are growing exponentially. The tools, building blocks, solutions, and best practices for cloud computing are evolving and challenges to deploying cloud solutions need to be considered.

The consumerisation of technology

iPads are the must-have fad. Android is the rising mobile platform -- Everywhere you turn, the news is about personal, smart, mobile devices and their impact on business and on IT.

Big data analytics

Broadly, there are two ways to think of Big Data technologies. The first is as an extension of what many organisations are already doing with business analytics. Gaining insight from business information is something that has been happening for decades, but the challenges and opportunities are now greater than ever before.

Virtualisation: benefits, challenges and solutions

The majority of organisations have already implemented server virtualisation and most intend to implement additional server virtualisation during the next year. The primary factors driving the movement to deploy server virtualisation are cost savings and the ability to dynamically provision and move VMs among physical servers. There are however, a number of significant challenges associated with server virtualisation.


CIO UK - Business - Technology - Leadership

On Demand Webcast
Analyse Data In Real Time


Increasingly businesses require the ability to analyse information quickly. Find out how to handle growing data volumes more efficiently while reducing the cost of managing your organisation's IT landscape

Watch now

SAP Logo

What do CFOs expect from IT?


Watch our sister publication's latest webcast.
Hear a case study from the Guardian News and Media's Technology Director, Andy Beale, and join the discussion on the role of the CFO in technology innovation.

Watch Discussion

CFO World webcast in assocation with Google

On Demand Webcast:
Maximising business flexibility with virtualisation


Register for this on demand webcast and find out how technologies can enable cost effective and secure virtualisation from your server deployments.



Watch now

Dell VMware logo


CFO Expectations of IT


* *