7th
October
2008
The folks from Cordys presented their view of the new business operations platform. Current systems development is in the context of four key game-changing trends:
Consumerization
Not just technology but can deliver business processes as services using the Internet
Commoditization
Virtualization
Not just of hardware but of processes and teams
Globalization
In this environment, processes are a key competitive advantage - much [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Activity Monitoring, Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, SOA |
7th
October
2008
The SOA Symposium started today in the AJAX Stadium in Amsterdam. The opening keynotes were actually in the Stadium itself - we all sat at the halfway line. Thomas Erl and Sandy Carter gave quick intros and I will add some comments later but I could not type so this is just a placeholder have [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Customer Experience, Decision Management, Event-Driven Architecture, SOA, web 2.0 |
29th
September
2008
Bruce Silver had an interesting article recently on The Next Innovation in BPMS in which he discusses the need for repository capabilities in BPM. Bruce makes the point that “next generation” repositories for process management must not only support process models, they must also support “decision models”, business object definitions, performance measurement information and service [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Decision Management |
27th
August
2008
A reader had an interesting question this week. As a comment to Using decision management to deliver intelligent business performance he asked “What makes a company ready?”. I suspect my closing line “The products are, mostly, ready. Whether companies are is another question…” prompted this.
So, what makes a company ready for enterprise decision management - [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Decision Management, Reader Questions |
8th
August
2008
I got a briefing this week from my friends at Tibco about their Service Performance Manager product released a couple of months ago. The product is a big step along the road to what some call “autonomic computing” in that it provides dynamic and automated monitoring and correction of service levels in a service-oriented world.
The [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Composite Applications, Decision Management, Predictive Analytics, SOA |
7th
August
2008
Well it seems that IBM believes in business rules too. I was reading SOMA: A method for developing service-oriented solutions which I found thanks to Eric Roch’s post on IBM’s SOA Methodology anda couple of things struck me:
Business rules get called out explicitly both in the meta model Eric shows and in the overall flow. [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, SOA |
23rd
May
2008
Mike Gilpin and Noel Yuhanna gave a presentation on how informaton-as-a-service can help your projects and applications. Many SOA implementations were focused on transactional solutions but Forrester found that many used the same service infrastructure to expose information - e.g. a customer update service which exposes the current address also. Theme: Information-as-a-service (IaaS) offers to [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Composite Applications, SOA, SaaS, Text Analytics |
21st
May
2008
Marta Foster from Proctor and Gamble gave this presentation. Marta has been at P&G for 30 years and is now in charge of their IT operations. P&G is well known and is the largest consumer products company in the world with over $80B in sales. They have 138,000 employees, 200 brands in 160 countries and [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Decision Management, Innovation, News |
20th
May
2008
Last session of the day (also blogged on paper) was Charles Brett on Why Events Matter To The Business and what this means for application development professionals. I heard Charles talk on a similar subject at the IBM IMPACT event -Live from IMPACT - Business Event Processing.
While many more business and IT people are [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Activity Monitoring, Business Rules, Event Processing, Event-Driven Architecture |
29th
April
2008
Paul Daro was next giving some detail around the new architecture (introduced by Bernhard Nann). A number of trends were identified first:
Clearly the move to a collection of services from monolithic applications has fundamentally changed the relationship of vendors to customers - now more about delivering services that can be fitted in to an overall [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Adaptive Control, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Decision Management, Predictive Analytics, SOA |