KOLÁŘ, Jiří and Tomáš PITNER. Collaborative Process Design in Cloud Environment. In Haller, Armin and Huang, Guangyan and Huang, Zhisheng and Paik, Hye-young and Sheng, QuanZ. Web Information Systems Engineering – WISE 2011 and 2012 Workshops. Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012, p. 55-69. ISBN 978-3-642-38332-8. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38333-5_8.
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Basic information
Original name Collaborative Process Design in Cloud Environment
Authors KOLÁŘ, Jiří (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution) and Tomáš PITNER (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution).
Edition Heidelberg, Web Information Systems Engineering – WISE 2011 and 2012 Workshops, p. 55-69, 15 pp. 2012.
Publisher Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Proceedings paper
Field of Study 10201 Computer sciences, information science, bioinformatics
Country of publisher Germany
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form printed version "print"
Impact factor Impact factor: 0.402 in 2005
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14330/12:00081905
Organization unit Faculty of Informatics
ISBN 978-3-642-38332-8
ISSN 0302-9743
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38333-5_8
Keywords in English Business requirement; Cloud environments; Cloud-based; Collaborative process; Iterative process; Process Improvement
Changed by Changed by: RNDr. Pavel Šmerk, Ph.D., učo 3880. Changed: 6/5/2016 07:19.
Abstract
This paper presents an approach to adoption of BPM in an organization, with emphasis on collaboration with process participants. We present subset of our methodology for end-to-end BPM adoption, aimed to describe collaborative processes mapping, iterative process design and further process improvement. Such technique preserves organization's flexibility as it helps to obtain realistic processes easily adaptable to changing business requirements. We further explain how to foster collaboration by use of a cloud-based environment for process design and define some more general requirements on such environment. We approach general obstacles of BPM adoption observed by practitioners and scientist and explain how the methodology can help to deal with some of those obstacles by involving process participants to collaboration on process design and improvement.
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