BPMN Gaining Traction in BPA Tools

May 7th, 2007

BPMN is the de facto standard for process modeling, but many leading modeling tools, particularly those incorporated within high-end business process analysis (BPA) suites, have so far been reluctant to adopt it.  Now that appears to be changing.

Recently IDS Scheer announced that ARIS, generally considered the leading standalone BPA suite, would be supporting the full BPMN notation in the v7.0.2 service release this spring.  Announcement of BPMN support was tucked into their press release on new simulation capabilities based on Lanner’s technology.  IDS Scheer will provide their own BPMN serialization using the “ARIS Markup Language” rather than XPDL or BPDM, asserting that customers are not asking for a standards-based serialization.  Also, they are currently working on a mapping between EPC (ARIS’s standard process modeling notation) and BPMN.

The announcement was surprising to me, since at Process World IDS Scheer’s CTO, Dr Wolfram Jost, was generally dismissive of BPMN’s richness compared to EPC and the rest of ARIS.  Now, however, IDS Scheer appears to warming to BPMN as an emerging standard… not for modeling but for executable process design!  The following is their current statement on BPMN:

In general, IDS Scheer will follow the trend that actually takes place with BPMN. On the execution layer, we expect that BPMN will become the accepted standard. It is specifically designed for this use case, including all the constraints necessary to describe a valid and executable process.  For typical questions, in the area of BPD/BPA, the current BPMN specification does not provide the necessary broadness. The EPC notation, with its link into many other topics (BSC, risk management, compliance management, data modelling, BI, EA, etc.), is a mature industry standard which will have the rights to exist also in the future. All recent customers and partner projects have shown this very clearly. While BPMN is used on the technical-oriented BPM layer only, EPCs and many other methods are used on business-oriented BPM layers.  Our strategy is to establish a bridge between those two layers via our tools and integrated methods.

Also, IBM is expected to make an announcement at their upcoming Impact event in 2 weeks regarding support for BPMN in WebSphere Business Modeler.  It is not clear whether this is a wholehearted move to BPMN or just support for it as an alternate secondary notation as IDS Scheer is doing.  Either way, it’s a significant endorsement that I believe solidifies BPMN’s place as the emerging standard for process modeling. 

WebSphere Modeler is an interesting case, because it tries to be both a standalone BPA tool and an integrated component of the WebSphere BPM Suite.  Even though IBM’s own guy, Steve White, was editor of the BPMN 1.0 spec, the company had been betting that UML 2.0 would emerge as the eventual winner in the process modeling notation standards battle.  (Funny, I never even knew there was a battle. or that UML was even in the running.)  Either IBM is throwing in the towel, or they think that with BPDM, UML has co-opted BPMN anyway at the serialization level.  But it really doesn’t matter.  With support from both BPA and BPMS vendors, it looks like BPMN is at last established as the only significant multivendor standard for the process modeling notation.

Entry Filed under: BPM

5 Comments Add your own

  • 1. links for 2007-05-08 &laq&hellip  |  May 8th, 2007 at 2:18 pm

    [...] BPMN Gaining Traction in BPA Tools (tags: bpm bpmn cx aris) [...]

  • 2. Developments with BPMS an&hellip  |  May 8th, 2007 at 3:56 pm

    [...] Developments with BPMS and BPMN that you should be aware of Recent commentary from two “must read” analysts: Paul Harmon and Bruce Silver.  [...]

  • 3. kewbss  |  May 9th, 2007 at 4:03 pm

    Bruce,

    You probably also spotted the announcement a few days ago by Handysoft that their BizFlow BPM suite will soon have BPMN and BPEL support - see http://www.handysoft.com/news/viewPressRelease.asp?id=110

    Warwick

  • 4. paulvanerk  |  May 29th, 2007 at 1:37 pm

    Bruce, I know my question is a little bit off topic, however I am very interested in your opinion.

    A few weeks ago I was writing a post about the difference between a workflow management system and a BPMS and I couldn’t really figure it out.

    Below you can find the results of my research:

    Characteristics Workflow MAnagement System:
    Focusses on processing of digital business/office documents
    Manual processes or decision making processes are not considered
    Emphasises use of information technology

    Characteristics BPMS:
    Includes manual activities/processes
    Business processes can be related to every kind of resource

    However I think the line between BPMS and workflow management system is vanishing, because most workflow systems nowadays tend to be a BPMS. What is your opinion about this?

    With regards,

    Paul van Erk

    http://sourcelinq.blogspot.com

  • 5. marlon_dumas  |  June 21st, 2007 at 10:59 pm

    BPMN is indeed gaining traction among tool vendors . But is BPMN “good enough” and for which purposes? Which classes of BPMN users find it more useful or usable? Do business analysts find BPMN more useful than IT solution architects do? Why do people find BPMN to be an “intuitive” notation? Do early adopters of BPMN intend to continue using it into the future? The following survey, organised by the BPM Research Group at Queensland University of Technology, is gathering data to address many of these questions (and the aggregated results will be made public). Please contribute, the more the merrier: http://www.bpm.fit.qut.edu.au/projects/acceptance/survey/BPMN/

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