The process model in BPMN: reducing its complexity.

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Resumen

Building a process model is the most relevant step to manage a business process under the BPM paradigm. Process modeling with the BPMN standard could seem difficult and scaring, but… does it really bite?



The Process Model Bite
Jaguarete - Original from South America.



The BPMN bite

Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) has become the worldwide standard for business processes diagrams. In fact, it is an OMG Standard. It is intended to be used directly by non-technical users (i.e stakeholders). But also by IT-staff (programmers, designers), to automate business processes using a BPMN compliant engine.

Ok, the standard is flexible enough to cover both, business users’ needs and technical staff’s needs for automation. This means the BPMN standard will need to support a wide range of elements and artifacts. Certainly, this leads to complexity.

As a way of example, the following image summarizes the type of events that you can use in a process model (source: BPMN 2.0 specification):



Events in BPM. Process modeling should seem scaring.



In other words, the standard is necessarily complex, to cover all and every single business process’s need. Said that, in the next sections we will see if this complexity is always necessary.



One process model for each audience

When we build a process model, we build it for an audience. If we are trying to describe the process for the CEO and Board of Directors, the most important thing is that the model is easy to understand. It should include only relevant steps and information. Technical details will make them lost their focus.

In contrast, when you model a process to be automated in a BPM Suite, you need the greatest level of detail. IT staff need to know every possible case, relevant data, and metadata to be stored, formal conditions for the gateways, etc.

A Process Model is firstly a communication tool. It must fullfill its audience needs. In other words, it needs to have the right complexity and detail level for this audience.

BPMN supports using different levels for different audiences. For example, you can define a process with a few “bubbles” that are subprocesses. You will show the top-level process to the board of directors, hiding the details of each “bubble”. But, when you pass the same BPMN model to the IT staff, they will explode those “bubbles”. Inside each “bubble” they will find the level of detail they need.



Process modeling toolset.

You may be thinking that you don’t need the full BPMN artifact set. Your particular business process is not so complex. And you may be right.

In fact, there are a few artifacts that are really necessary for any process model. Certainly, user tasks, gateways, and sending mails seem to be needed in most of your administrative processes.

In Flokzu, we carefully selected the most useful artifacts and put them in the toolset. In the image below, you see just a reduced set of BPMN artifacts. Some of them support configuration (for example, you can setup the Gateway as Exclusive or Inclusive).



Process modeling with a reduced toolset.

 

This reduced toolset dramatically reduces complexity. You only need to learn how to use a few very intuitive artifacts. A business user will see the model, and just understand it.

Of course, when you try to model a complex business process, you will need more and more artifacts. The idea here is “hiding” them in the configuration of simpler artifacts. This way, you keep the first level of the model understandable for everyone. And those who need more detail can dig into the model to get the information they need.



No-code / low-code compromised?

When modeling a process to be automated, you need an automatic transformation from the “drawn” model to the “executable” model. This is what the no-code / low-code BPM paradigm promise. Moreover, this a very relevant instrument to increase the understandability of the model.

If you model a process and just pressing a button you have it running, you can show your user how it works. They can try the automated process, and get back to the model to adjust it. This improvement cycle notably accelerates the comprehension of the model and the business. People will get involved in discussions about the process, how to improve it, how to measure it, etc.

On the other hand, if you model the process, and you have to wait one day (or week) to have it deployed and available to be used, the involvement of the team will be much lower. This is why no-code / low-code capabilities are so relevant for a successful process modeling team.



In conclusion…

The BPM Notation is the worldwide standard for process modeling. Given it is very wide, it is also complex to understand all its artifacts. You can reduce this complexity identifying the audience of the process model and adjusting it for them in particular. Using a reduced toolset dramatically improves the understandability of the model. A low-code / no-code BPM Suite will enable trying the process and improve iteratively. This leads to a strong involvement and commitment of the process modeling team.

If you have doubts about what it would be like to use Flokzu in your company for process modeling and automation, we offer you a free trial of our Premium service. We will help you model your first processes (in minutes, and without complex configurations) and then automate them without coding.

Click here to schedule a 30 minutes working session to model one of your real business processes.

 

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Sobre el autor

Juan Moreno

Juan Moreno

I have been an entrepreneur, founder, and investor in tech companies since 2001, with a B2B vision and a focus on innovative technologies. What do I talk about? I concentrate on applied computer technology as a tool for efficiency and effectiveness in real organizations. In particular, I specialize in the digitalization and management of business processes, involving aspects of process automation, artificial intelligence, and no-code tools. I always apply a pragmatic approach, prioritizing the effective application of technologies in real businesses. My background: I am a Computer Engineer, with a PhD in Software Engineering and an MBA. I have been a university professor since 2002, currently teaching undergraduate, postgraduate courses, and giving lectures. As an entrepreneur, I founded 5 technology companies and am an angel investor in others. I am a recipient of the National Innovation Award, with dozens of academic publications and two books. My role at Flokzu: I currently serve as the Chief Strategy Officer, where I am responsible for the medium and long-term strategy of the product and the company. Part of my role is to evaluate technological trends and their incorporation to ensure that Flokzu becomes increasingly useful to our clients. It also involves understanding the reality and needs of our customers to ensure a perfect fit with what Flokzu offers. Finally, my job also includes evangelizing the discipline of Business Process Management and no-code technologies worldwide through publications, conferences, workshops, or complete courses.

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