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 Essential Business Process Modeling
  

  Essential Business Process Modeling by Mike Havey

  • Published by: O'REILLY & ASSOCIATES
  • Author: Mike Havey
  • Page Count: 332
  • Group: SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
  • ISBN: 0596008430 / 9780596008437
  • Published: Sep 2005

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Discount: 30%
RRP: 31.95 

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Book Information and Description:

Essential Business Process Modeling
Ten years ago, groupware bundled with email and calendar
applications helped track the flow of work from person to
person within an organization. Workflow in today's
enterprise means more monitoring and orchestrating massive
systems. A new technology called Business Process
Management, or BPM, helps software architects and developers
design, code, run, administer, and monitor complex
network-based business processesBPM replaces those sketchy
flowchart diagrams that business analysts draw on
whiteboards with a precise model that uses standard
graphical and XML representations, and an architecture that
allows it converse with other services, systems, and
users.Sound complicated? It is. But it's downright
frustrating when you have to search the Web for every little
piece of information vital to the process. Essential
Business Process Modeling gathers all the concepts, design,
architecture, and standard specifications of BPM into one
concise book, and offers hands-on examples that illustrate
BPM's approach to process notation, execution,
administration and monitoring. Author Mike Havey
demonstrates standard ways to code rigorous processes that
are centerpieces of a service-oriented architecture (SOA),
which defines how networks interact so that one can perform
a service for the other. His book also shows how BPM
complements enterprise application integration (EAI), a
method for moving from older applications to new ones, and
Enterprise Service BUS for integrating different web
services, messaging, and XML technologies into a single
network. BPM, he says, is to this collection of services
what a conductor is to musicians in an orchestra: it
coordinates their actions in the performance of a larger
composition. Essential Business Process Modeling teaches you
how to develop examples of process-oriented applications
using free tools that can be run on an average PC or laptop.
You'll also learn about BPM design patterns and best
practices, as well as some underlying theory. The best way
to monitor processes within an enterprise is with BPM, and
the best way to navigate BPM is with this valuable book.

Preface
 Part One. Concepts
1. Introduction to Business Process Modeling
      The Benefits of BPM
      BPM Acid Test: The Process-Oriented Application
      The Morass of BPM
      Workflow
      Roadmap
      Summary
      References
2. Prescription for a Good BPM Architecture
      Designing a Solution
      Components of the Design
      Standards
      Summary
      Reference
3. The Scenic Tour of Process Theory
      Family Tree
      The Pi-Calculus
      Petri Nets
      State Machines and Activity Diagrams
      Summary
      References
4. Process Design Patterns
      Design Patterns and the GoF
      Process Patterns and the P4
      Basic Patterns
      Advanced Branch and Join Patterns
      Structural Patterns
      Multiple Instances Patterns
      State-Based Patterns
      Cancellation Patterns
      Yet Another Workflow Language (YAWL)
      Additional Patterns
      Process Coding Standards
      Summary
      References
 Part Two. standards
5. Business Process Execution Language (BPEL)
      Anatomy of a Process
      BPEL Example
      BPEL in a Nutshell
      BPELJ
      BPEL and Patterns
      Summary
      References
6. BPMI Standards: BPMN and BPML
      BPMN
      BPML
      Summary
      Reference
7. The Workflow Management Coalition (WfMC)
      The Reference Model
      XPDL
      WAPI
      WfXML
      Summary
      References
8. World Wide Web Consortium (W3C): Choreography
      About the W3C
      Choreography and Orchestration
      WS-CDL
      WSCI
      WSCL
      Summary
      References
9. Other BPM Models
      OMG: Model-Driven BPM
      ebXML BPSS: Collaboration
      Microsoft XLANG: BPEL Forerunner
      IBM WSFL: BPEL Forerunner
      BPEL, XLANG, and WSFL
      Summary
      References
 Part Three. Examples
10. Example: Human Workflow in Insurance Claims Processing
      Oracle BPEL Process Manager
      Setting Up the Environment
      Developing the Example
      Testing the Example
      Summary
      References
11. Example: Enterprise Message Broker
      What Is a Message Broker?
      Example: Employee Benefits Message Broker
      Summary
Key BPM Acronymns
index

 

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