AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

Business Process Change: A Manager's Guide to Improving, Redesigning, and Automating Processes

Please fill out form in order to compare prices
Title: Business Process Change: A Manager's Guide to Improving, Redesigning, and Automating Processes
by Paul Harmon
ISBN: 1-55860-758-7
Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann
Pub. Date: 18 December, 2002
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $44.95
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 5 (5 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: A Great BP Primer
Comment: Having experienced process improvement in the Manufacturing arena with influences from the Japanese (JIT, TQM, Kaizen), I wanted to expand my horizons by getting an orientation in BPM. The first chapter is worth the price of the book on strategy, fit, focus and position. Excellent summary of M. Porter the hot daddy on strategy. Harmon is a good writer--he writes clearly and succinctly. His insights and observations are biased toward the practical. If you are need a good intro into BP, start here--you will be ahead of the pack.

Rating: 5
Summary: Excellent Resource for Business-IT Integration
Comment: Businesses are changing shape faster today than ever before. Information technology (IT) is playing an increasingly significant part in this rapid evolution of businesses. That does not just mean the Internet, but a whole range of increasingly powerful influences from data warehousing to developments in Web services.
Unfortunately most books about business process change tend to assume that IT is merely a support player in relation to business. The continued economic downturn only serves to reinforce this mistake. At the same time most books about systems analysis and design, including those on the Unified Modeling Language (UML), are weak in their treatment of business processes. There is a widespread failure to appreciate the collaboration that must achieved between business and IT if business process change is to really work well in today's climate.

While this book will probably be of immediate interest to business managers, the refreshing thing about Paul Harmon's new book is that it speaks clearly to both IT and business camps in plain language. It reflects the need to integrate business and IT thinking. As such it is also a must read for both business facing IT people and for those key individuals who are breaking the conventional barriers between business and IT.

The book contains a wealth of timely advice. While it's range is wide and impressive, it is structured for ease of information access. This means that readers can quickly use the book for reference. Enjoy!

Rating: 5
Summary: A Backward Glance
Comment: I spent last year creating a "Business Process Management" team for the CIO of HP. We spent much time and effort thinking clearly about how to approach business processes without the pitfalls of "Business Process Re-engineering," and worked to create both a holistic approach and an extremely simple, intuitive methodology. Through concentrated effort, without the luxury of time (in the midst of a complex, highly-visible merger), we arrived at a set of conventions for our work, policies on alignment to the office of the CIO, IT Architecture and Program teams, as well as different approaches we could supply to our business and IT internal clients. The value we've provided has been dramatic in the areas we've worked in, from Supply Chain Integration between pre-merger HP and pre-merger Compaq, to HP direct sales process design, to Global Content Management processes and re-engineering.

In hindsight, I wish I'd been able to read Paul Harmon's Business Process Change a year ago. Creating the team and its functions would have been much simpler, direct, and less time-consuming. Based on our experiences in a process architecture team in a $75B IT company, I see the book having major value to at least three audiences I deal with daily. First, the book is for managers considering major business change. It will provide a blueprint to why they might be changing (Part 1 - Process Management), specific ways they might change (Part IV - Patterns section), and if/when they use external consultants, a way to specify with formidable detail what they're expecting to receive (Part II - Modeling, and Part III - Managing).

Second, it is for IT people who are seeking to regain architectural and analytic skills, which ERP and packaged workflow may have supplanted. This book provides both modern idioms for approaching business with what might be termed 'object-oriented' analysis (Part II - Modeling), as well as a summary of the field of implementation techniques (Part V - Automation and Part VI - E-Business).

Third, for the consulting function to both IT and business, it provides a well-rounded blueprint for marketing (value propositions), tools, techniques, and implementation approaches. I cannot imagine a consultative team which doesn't have virtually all the elements of Paul's book as part of their basic operations. Certainly, no state-of-the-art team would want to be without them.

For the futurists (which I don't deal with daily), the book provides an implicit narrative of how the nature of business is changing (I myself feel we're on the edge of a dramatic change in business structure.) It begins with the disappearance of organizational models - which in the book are artifacts of a process model - and the focus on quantifiable outcomes for transactions (I'm thrown back to hierarchy-disrupting transactional analysis from the '70s). It continues by looking at virtual business structures - the 'extended supply chain' example which Paul walks through -- a linking together of transactions. And it ends by building IT - automation -- around process elements instead of traditional 'systems' architecture. Traditional labels, capsules, and hierarchies change and shift, and I see the book in a more 'future perfect' tense.

Similar Books:

Title: Business Process Management: Profiting From Process
by Roger Burlton
ISBN: 0672320630
Publisher: SAMS
Pub. Date: 17 May, 2001
List Price(USD): $45.00
Title: Business Process Management (BPM): The Third Wave
by Howard Smith, Peter Fingar
ISBN: 0929652339
Publisher: Meghan-Kiffer Press
Pub. Date: January, 2003
List Price(USD): $39.95
Title: Workflow Modeling: Tools for Process Improvement and Application Development
by Alec Sharp, Patrick McDermott
ISBN: 1580530214
Publisher: Artech House
Pub. Date: 15 February, 2001
List Price(USD): $79.00
Title: Business Process Management (BPM) is a Team Sport: Play it to Win!
by Andrew Spanyi
ISBN: 0929652029
Publisher: Meghan Kiffer Pr
Pub. Date: June, 2003
List Price(USD): $29.95
Title: Business Process Mapping: Improving Customer Satisfaction
by J. Mike Jacka, Paulette J. Keller
ISBN: 0471079774
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 21 December, 2001
List Price(USD): $49.95

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments

Powered by Apache