BPM 105: BPM
Centers of Excellence
SANDY KEMSLEY




Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.   Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Agenda

 Economic drivers for BPM
 Why create a BPM CoE?
 What is the value of a CoE?
 How do you build a CoE?
 Case study example




            Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
BPM Economic Drivers
Economic conditions mandate
operational efficiency and cost reduction                             “Gartner estimates the BPMS
                                                                          market. . .is one of the
                                                                     fastest-growing segments in
Related compliance and risk
                                                                       software, and it is forecast to
management scrutiny driving standards
                                                                      remain so during the next five
and policies enforcement
                                                                     years. Many organizations are
                                                                     now focused on making BPM
Satisfying customers on-demand, with                                      a program, not just a
agility to respond to competitive threats                                        project.”
and constant change
                                                                                -- Gartner: "Hype Cycle for
                                                                           Application Development, 2008",
Visibility, transparency, governance &                                                          July, 2008
controls more important than ever




                        Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
More Urgency Now Than Ever


“  "Particularly in light of today’s volatile economy, organizations
are looking to trim the fat off their operations. In a receding
market, process agility is an objective that organizations strive
for. In order to leverage business opportunities with a short
window of execution, an organization must be able to adapt its
processes quickly and efficiently.“

                      BPM and Beyond: The Human Factor of Process Management, October 2008




Source: Aligning IT to Business Processes: How BPM is Complementing ERP and Custom Applications, Aberdeen Group, May 2007




                                         Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Why Create A BPM CoE?

   Benefits and drivers for a Center
             of Excellence



            Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Expected Benefits of a CoE

 Knowledge transfer
 Synergies between
 BPM projects
 Shared code and
 components for
 increased reusability
 Results:
 – Faster deployments
 – Lower costs
 – Standardized, repeatable
   BPM projects


                  Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Measuring the Impact

 Forrester survey, October 2007:
 – “What impact have BPM efforts had on
   your enterprise to date?”
 – “Did the BPM project deliver on your
   organization’s expectations or goals?”
 – “Has a team been created to provide BPM
   guidance?”

 –   Source: “The EA View: BPM Has Become Mainstream”, Forrester Research Inc., February 19, 2009




                             Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
CoE Correlates with Business Improvement


 Forrester survey results:
  – Of the companies experiencing clear,
    measurable improvement due to BPM,
    49% have a CoE
  – Of the companies that have had no
    success with BPM, 4% have a CoE




              Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Forrester’s Summary

 “Clearly, while a BPM COE may not be
 a panacea for BPM success, having
 one in operation significantly increases
 the odds of BPM success.”




             Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
CoE Correlates with BPM Success

 Forrester survey results:
 – Of the companies stating that BPM
   exceeded their goals significantly, 67%
   have a CoE
 – Of the companies stating that BPM failed to
   meet their goals, 14% have a CoE




             Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
What Is The Value of a BPM CoE?

      Functions that the Center of
         Excellence provides



            Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Skills

BPM knowledge and skills
that are too rare to maintain
in each project
– BPM methodology
– Process engineering
– BPM tool usage
Mentoring and project-
specific advice
Training and skills transfer to
project
                 Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Governance

 Creating common BPM principles and
 methodologies
 Ensuring that principles and
 methodologies are used




           Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Repository

 BPM training materials
 – Process specialists on projects
 – Process participants
 Best practices and techniques
 Common code/components
 Shared (sub)processes



              Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Community

 Shared ideas and problem-solving
 Better view of end-to-end processes
 across enterprise
 Potential to combine common
 processes
 Promoting shift from departmental to
 enterprise scale projects


            Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
How Do You Build a BPM CoE?

   Center of Excellence roles and
              models



           Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Basics of Creating a CoE

 Executive sponsorship and involvement
 Establish a BPM methodology independent of
 technology
 –   Terms and definitions
 –   Standards
 –   Best practices
 –   SOA alignment
 Co-locate the expertise and define roles and
 responsibilities
 – Business and technical
 – Practical and visionary


                 Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Roles

 Chief Process Officer or process czar
 Steering committee
 Project manager
 Enterprise architect
 Business process analyst/process architect
 BPM developer
 Process modeler
 User Acceptance Testing (UAT) and Quality
 Assurance (QA)
 BPM software administrator

              Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Skills

 Process architecture expertise
 Platform management
 Education and training
 Best practices development
 Technical patterns development
 Vendor product expertise
 BPM industry and standards expertise
 Implementation methodology
 Process registry and repository

             Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Case Study

    The “Accidental” BPM CoE




         Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Investment Management Company
$49B assets under management, 1 million investors

Business Challenges:                            BPM Solution:
  Streamline Credit Fulfillment                   Increased control over
  and Credit Servicing                            human-centric, mission-
  processes                                       critical processes
  Support continuous                              Incoming documents trigger
  improvement                                     loan origination process,
  Risk management                                 using OCR to auto-index and
  Provide firm foundation for                     route
  business growth                                 Conversion of 650,000+
  Improve compliance                              documents from legacy
                                                  system
                                                  Improved risk management
                                                  and compliance practices


                     Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
No “Formal” Institution of a CoE, But…

 After initial deployment, key players continued to
 monitor success, optimize and look for expansion
 opportunities
 Lead: owner responsible for BPM strategic direction
 From the business:
  – Business process designers
  – Release project manager
  – QA lead
 From IT:
  – Solution architect
  – System administrator
  – Lead developer


                  Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Informal CoE Drove New BPM Initiatives


 Prioritize feature requests
 End user training/communication
 Release management framework
 Process application best practices
 Social networking to facilitate adoption
 Knowledge base
 Knowledge transfer sessions

             Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Business Value Created by CoE

 Bridge communication gap between
 conflicting business and IT groups
 Improved efficiency in BPM
 development and release




            Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Models for a CoE

 Small “accidental” CoE
 Large internal build
 Virtual CoE with external portions on
 vendor or independent site




             Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Summary and Key Takeaways

 Benefits and drivers for a BPM CoE
 CoE functions
 CoE roles and skills
 Case study: grassroots CoE




            Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
Thank You

     BPM Basics is your online resource center for BPM.
         www.BPMbasics.com
         info@bpmbasics.com




     Appian is a global innovator in business process management
     software suites.
         www.appian.com
         info@appian.com



27                         Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.

BPM Center of Excellence

  • 1.
    BPM 105: BPM Centersof Excellence SANDY KEMSLEY Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 2.
    Agenda Economic driversfor BPM Why create a BPM CoE? What is the value of a CoE? How do you build a CoE? Case study example Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 3.
    BPM Economic Drivers Economicconditions mandate operational efficiency and cost reduction “Gartner estimates the BPMS market. . .is one of the fastest-growing segments in Related compliance and risk software, and it is forecast to management scrutiny driving standards remain so during the next five and policies enforcement years. Many organizations are now focused on making BPM Satisfying customers on-demand, with a program, not just a agility to respond to competitive threats project.” and constant change -- Gartner: "Hype Cycle for Application Development, 2008", Visibility, transparency, governance & July, 2008 controls more important than ever Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 4.
    More Urgency NowThan Ever “ "Particularly in light of today’s volatile economy, organizations are looking to trim the fat off their operations. In a receding market, process agility is an objective that organizations strive for. In order to leverage business opportunities with a short window of execution, an organization must be able to adapt its processes quickly and efficiently.“ BPM and Beyond: The Human Factor of Process Management, October 2008 Source: Aligning IT to Business Processes: How BPM is Complementing ERP and Custom Applications, Aberdeen Group, May 2007 Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 5.
    Why Create ABPM CoE? Benefits and drivers for a Center of Excellence Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 6.
    Expected Benefits ofa CoE Knowledge transfer Synergies between BPM projects Shared code and components for increased reusability Results: – Faster deployments – Lower costs – Standardized, repeatable BPM projects Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 7.
    Measuring the Impact Forrester survey, October 2007: – “What impact have BPM efforts had on your enterprise to date?” – “Did the BPM project deliver on your organization’s expectations or goals?” – “Has a team been created to provide BPM guidance?” – Source: “The EA View: BPM Has Become Mainstream”, Forrester Research Inc., February 19, 2009 Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 8.
    CoE Correlates withBusiness Improvement Forrester survey results: – Of the companies experiencing clear, measurable improvement due to BPM, 49% have a CoE – Of the companies that have had no success with BPM, 4% have a CoE Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 9.
    Forrester’s Summary “Clearly,while a BPM COE may not be a panacea for BPM success, having one in operation significantly increases the odds of BPM success.” Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 10.
    CoE Correlates withBPM Success Forrester survey results: – Of the companies stating that BPM exceeded their goals significantly, 67% have a CoE – Of the companies stating that BPM failed to meet their goals, 14% have a CoE Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 11.
    What Is TheValue of a BPM CoE? Functions that the Center of Excellence provides Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 12.
    Skills BPM knowledge andskills that are too rare to maintain in each project – BPM methodology – Process engineering – BPM tool usage Mentoring and project- specific advice Training and skills transfer to project Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 13.
    Governance Creating commonBPM principles and methodologies Ensuring that principles and methodologies are used Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 14.
    Repository BPM trainingmaterials – Process specialists on projects – Process participants Best practices and techniques Common code/components Shared (sub)processes Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 15.
    Community Shared ideasand problem-solving Better view of end-to-end processes across enterprise Potential to combine common processes Promoting shift from departmental to enterprise scale projects Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 16.
    How Do YouBuild a BPM CoE? Center of Excellence roles and models Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 17.
    Basics of Creatinga CoE Executive sponsorship and involvement Establish a BPM methodology independent of technology – Terms and definitions – Standards – Best practices – SOA alignment Co-locate the expertise and define roles and responsibilities – Business and technical – Practical and visionary Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 18.
    Roles Chief ProcessOfficer or process czar Steering committee Project manager Enterprise architect Business process analyst/process architect BPM developer Process modeler User Acceptance Testing (UAT) and Quality Assurance (QA) BPM software administrator Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 19.
    Skills Process architectureexpertise Platform management Education and training Best practices development Technical patterns development Vendor product expertise BPM industry and standards expertise Implementation methodology Process registry and repository Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 20.
    Case Study The “Accidental” BPM CoE Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 21.
    Investment Management Company $49Bassets under management, 1 million investors Business Challenges: BPM Solution: Streamline Credit Fulfillment Increased control over and Credit Servicing human-centric, mission- processes critical processes Support continuous Incoming documents trigger improvement loan origination process, Risk management using OCR to auto-index and Provide firm foundation for route business growth Conversion of 650,000+ Improve compliance documents from legacy system Improved risk management and compliance practices Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 22.
    No “Formal” Institutionof a CoE, But… After initial deployment, key players continued to monitor success, optimize and look for expansion opportunities Lead: owner responsible for BPM strategic direction From the business: – Business process designers – Release project manager – QA lead From IT: – Solution architect – System administrator – Lead developer Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 23.
    Informal CoE DroveNew BPM Initiatives Prioritize feature requests End user training/communication Release management framework Process application best practices Social networking to facilitate adoption Knowledge base Knowledge transfer sessions Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 24.
    Business Value Createdby CoE Bridge communication gap between conflicting business and IT groups Improved efficiency in BPM development and release Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 25.
    Models for aCoE Small “accidental” CoE Large internal build Virtual CoE with external portions on vendor or independent site Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 26.
    Summary and KeyTakeaways Benefits and drivers for a BPM CoE CoE functions CoE roles and skills Case study: grassroots CoE Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.
  • 27.
    Thank You BPM Basics is your online resource center for BPM. www.BPMbasics.com info@bpmbasics.com Appian is a global innovator in business process management software suites. www.appian.com info@appian.com 27 Copyright © 2009 BPMbasics. All rights reserved.