Buisness Informatics Theory - Exam prep. Open Questions
BPMN, Use Case Specifications
BPMN, Use Case Specifications
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Kategorie | Informatik |
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VACD – Value Added Chain Diagram
Additional Notational Elements
Aside of the main notation elements, there are two elements that provide additional information. The organisational unit element shows which department of the company is responsible for the task. And the Technical term element shows objects that are involved in the function, links documents or other data. They are connected to functions by control flow edges along with the information if the technical term is an input or an output element.
VACD – Value Added Chain Diagram
Main Notation Elements
There are two different types of functions, to show which one is process-oriented higher ranked and that the other one is a predecessor of the first function. Consequence functions are predecessors of Start functions.
VACD – Value Added Chain Diagram
Definition
The VACD is a part of the process map of a company, in which process areas are detailed at the level of main processes. The VACD aims to ensure the effectiveness of a company’s strategic business process analysis. It serves as a basis for the decision making process within companies.
Support business processes (= Secondary processes)...
...support the other processes. They are not directly visible for external customers, but essential for the smooth provision of performance. Examples: Maintenance, staff deployment (human resources), IT services, quality management (QM).
Core business processes (= Primary processes)...
...are directly related to the external customer benefit and need. They begin and end with the customer.
Typical process areas are:
• CRM (customer relationship management):
Processes defined between customer needs and customer satisfaction (design of the customer relationships)
• SCM (supply chain management):
Processes between the customer order and the billing of solution/s (performance of the customer orders)
• PLM (product lifecycle management): Processes from product idea to product phase-out along the product life cycle.
Management business processes...
... are used in the company for the controlling and strategic planning. The goal is the control of core business processes and support business processes. Example: Controlling (planning and reporting).
PROCESS MAP
Definition
The process map of a company gives an overview of the core business processes, management processes and support business processes. In the following figure you can see typical process areas, grouped by management processes in the upper area), core processes (in the middle area) and supporting processes (in the lower area).
eEPC - Name Convensions for functions
eEPC Notations
Additional Symbols
Organisational unit: Organisational units are responsible for the tasks that have to be performed in order to achieve the company goals, e.g., inventory, accounting, ...
Technical term: Technical terms are input or output objects, e.g. documents, data etc., which are necessary for processing a function or are derived from the processing results.
Application system: Application systems for process support (e.g. SAP R/3)
Position: The smallest organisational unit to be identified in the enterprise is the position. Employees are assigned to a position.
Increasing level of detail from VACD via EPC to eEPC
eEPC - Extended Event-Driven Process Chain
Definition:
The eEPC shows the exact flow of business processes. It is based on the two model elements “events” and “functions”. Complicated eEPCs can be arranged in lines or columns – swimlanes. Functions can only be executed if certain events have occurred. Events trigger functions and are in turn results of them. Their name has to consist of an object of information (noun) and a performance/ status change (verb).
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