23rd
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Ken Vollmer kicked off the last day of the event with a view from the field - a survey on BPM that Forrester did at the end of 2007. The theme is that “BPM has already achieved mainstream status inside of most enterprises but we still have a long way to go to achieve the [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Financial Services, Supply Chain |
22nd
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Mark Hennessy the CIO from IBM presented on his perspective on the changing role of the CIO. An IBM survey in 2005 found that of CEOs 80% thought IT had to be aligned to be successful but only 45% thought this was something they did well. More recent surveys showed CIOs feeling that this was [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Innovation |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I can’t blog this session live as John Rymer and Mike Gualtieri have asked me to participate. What follows is a combination of thoughts based on the presentation and post-presentation notes.
The theme of the presentation is that “The next frontier in business process management (BPM) and business rules is automating decisions within business processes”. If [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Data Mining, Decision Management, News, Predictive Analytics, SOA |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Dean Hager from Lawson came on to follow-up on the dynamic business applications story. Dynamic means “continuous change, activity, or progress” and Enterprise Applications “suck at this” to use his words. But this is a problem as the world is changing - people change, events cause change, the business climate changes and more. He asked [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Enterprise Applications, SOA |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Connie Moore and John Rymer kicked off today talking about Dynamic Business Applications and their first discussion was around brown paper bags. They made the point that brown paper bags are a pure commodity and all you can do is reduce costs. Other kinds of bags offer more opportunities for innovation and, thus, more margins. [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Innovation, News, SOA, web 2.0 |
20th
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I had to blog the last two sessions on paper - there are no power sockets in the hotel (the Palazzo at the Venetian in Las Vegas, conference planners please note) and my battery eventually gave up. So, back in the hotel now, here’s a summary of the notes I took.
Sharyn Leaver presented on the [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Business Process Management, Enterprise Applications |
29th
April
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Back on this blog for John Rymer of Forrester talking about dynamic business applications (about which I have blogged before) and how the next generation of systems will be designed for people and built for change. John began by showing a video of a broker’s desktop demonstration built by Adobe and some partners. Brokers are [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Decision Management, Innovation, Predictive Analytics, SOA |
8th
April
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Last session for me today, indeed the last session before I go home, is Janelle Hill of Gartner and Kramer Reeves of IBM on improving agility through end-to-end process agility. Janelle went first sharing Gartner’s BPM Scenario for the next five years. She had two initial points:
In 2013, do you know where your work is?
How [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Activity Monitoring, Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, SOA |
7th
April
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Next up is a business session on the impact of technology on business. The good news is that the IBM wireless is working in this room and I have managed to find a power outlet (though not without moving a chair and sitting under the loudspeakers).
Mark Chapman of IBM’s Business Services Strategy group introduced the [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Strategy, Green IT, Innovation |
21st
March
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I recently finished Ade McCormack’s book, The IT Value Stack: A Boardroom Guide to IT Leadership. The book is aimed at a fairly high-level audience and makes a case for better integration, or “entwinement”, of technology into businesses. Ade can come across somewhat opinionated but he gives you fair warning of this right up front [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Business Strategy, Decision Management, Innovation |