Archive for May 6th, 2008

An Insider’s View of BPMN 2.0

Since my recent post, a bit more has dribbled out into the blogosphere about the negotiations over BPMN 2.0, most of it completely off track.  But now SAP’s David Frankel, definitely an insider, is shining a welcome light in those dark spaces with his BPMN 2.0 Update

The biggest difference between the two submissions is in how they define the BPMN 2.0 metamodel.  The BPMN-S submission positions the OMG’s Business Process Definition Metamodel (BPDM) as the metamodel for BPMN 2.0.  The BEA-IBM-Oracle-SAP submission defines a dedicated BPMN 2.0 metamodel, and proposes a mapping between the dedicated metamodel and BPDM.

Here the BEA-IBM-Oracle-SAP submission is what my post called Approach 1 or the BPMS approach, and BPMN-S is what my post called Approach 2, or BPDM.  David gets right to the key point:

The BPMN-S submission uses BPDM as the metamodel, and uses BPDM’s mapping to BPMN notation.

The BEA-IBM-Oracle-SAP submission takes the position that BPDM is not a metamodel of BPMN; rather, it says, BPDM is a metamodel of a new, abstract language for process that, as envisioned by the BPDM RFP, was intended to be mapped to multiple concrete languages.  BEA-IBM-Oracle-SAP approach is that BPMN, as one of those concrete languages, requires its own metamodel, whose constructs are clearly recognizable as BPMN elements.

But I think he is being polite here.  Since custom behaviors can be expressed in BPDM’s new abstract language, BPMN-S takes the position that the notation semantics should be user-definable, referencing for example my “wish list” post on BPMS Watch for non-aborting attached events.  BPDM can express this behavior, and that’s a good thing, says BPMN-S.  But I don’t think that’s a good thing if others can’t understand the semantics from looking at the diagram, and I believe that is also the philosophy of the IBM-SAP team as well.  BPMN-S seems to throw down the glove with statements like this:

BPMN2 provides capabilities… needed for effective functioning of organizations and productive interaction with industry partners.  These capabilities cannot be supported by typical language modeling techniques that simply capture pictures in XML with a computation-dependent semantics.

Ouch.  But David goes on to say that despite the trash talk, merger negotiations between the two groups have been ongoing since March, in which the goal is a unified submission.

Add comment May 6th, 2008

BPMN Workshop at Gartner AADI

If you want to jump-start your BPMN efforts, I’ll be offering a half-day pre-conference workshop on Process Modeling with BPMN at the upcoming Gartner Application Architecture, Development & Integration Summit in Orlando.  This Gartner event is the leading independent SOA and application infrastructure conference, and the agenda’s 6 tracks and 70+ sessions cover future trends and latest best practices in application development, application integration, SOA, Web Services and Web2.0, as well as SaaS/Cloud Computing.  My workshop is on the afternoon of June 8; the regular conference runs June 9-11.

The BPMN workshop provides an in-depth tutorial on what has become the key BPM standard, used for both analytical modeling and model-driven implementation in BPM Suites ranging from Oracle, SAP, BEA, and SoftwareAG to Lombardi, TIBCO, Savvion, Appian, and Adobe.  You’ll learn not only the semantics behind the notation, but patterns and best practices for modeling events and exceptions, flow control, and organizing complex end-to-end models. 

There is an additional $495 fee for participating in the workshop, but BPMS Watch has secured a saving of $400 off the standard registration fee for the conference. For complete conference details and to view the agenda visit www.gartner.com/us/aadi-spring. To register and claim your discount call 866-405-2511 and mention priority code: ADISA.

Beyond the workshop, the event is a good opportunity to understand the future of SOA and the web, new application and architecture models, and discuss your specific issues through Gartner 1-1s, roundtables, facilitated working sessions, and online community.  Guest keynotes include Nick Carr, Leading Tech and Business Writer on “The Big Switch,” and Andrew Lippman, MIT’s Media Lab Futurist on “IT Architecture futures.”

I’ll be available to meet with you one-on-one as well to discuss how BPMN can help bring business and IT together in your organization.

Hope to see you in Orlando.

Add comment May 6th, 2008


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