Business Process Management (BPM) specialist
Metastorm has today announced
the acquisition of Enterprise Architecture (EA) and process analytics software
specialist Proforma in a deal that offers
an insight into the future of the BPM market and the extent to which day-to-day
business decisions could soon be made through automated systems.
Metastorm said that the acquisition of Proforma's ProVisionEA suite, which
provides firms with visibility over their business strategy and organisational
structures, will significantly extend the capabilities of its own BPM suite.
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"A lot of BPM projects simply automate processes within a departmental silo
without accounting for the impact on the rest of the business," admitted Laura
Mooney, senior director of corporate and product marketing at Metastorm. "But
once you have the EA piece you have an organisational diagram and you can apply
the process modeling and management functionality across the business and work
out the wider impact of changing a process."
Mike Thompson of analysts Butler Group agreed EA functionality would make BPM
projects more far-reaching. "BPM has always been empowered by EA and adding that
to a BPM and analytics suite should give Metastorm the ability to manage the
entire process lifecycle," he said.
Metastorm said that it would offer some of this functionality immediately
following the launch last year of a connector that integrates its BPM toolkit
with Proforma's suites. However, Mooney said the company was now working on
tightening integration further and was aiming to launch a new suite, called
Metastorm Enterprise, early next year which would combine both companies'
technology around a common meta-model, database and shared services repository.
"Having that common platform will enable end-to-end [process] visibility,"
she said. "It is also great for impact or opportunity assessment, allowing an
executive to model a decision and get a view of the overall impact or
opportunity to the business."
This level of analytical capabilities would also allow for guided or even
automated decision making, according to Mooney, whereby the system works out the
optimal decision based on the overriding business strategy and either
automatically changes the process or offers executives the best options.
"It is the kind of functionality that would see a lot of interest from
manufacturing, where there is so much focus on optimal processes for quality
assurance, or in areas like emergency services or security where optimised
decisions are so important," she predicted.
The Metastorm acquisition is the latest in a wave of deals or partnerships
that have seen the fields of BPM, business intelligence and analytics gradually
merge.
Metastorm's arch rival IDS Scheer has partnered with Oracle, SAP and
Microsoft as each company works towards incorporating more process management
and guided decision making capabilities into their applications, while a series
of product developments and acquisitions from BI vendors such as SAS, Business
Objects and Cognos have seen them bolster their analytics and process management
functionality in an attempt to offer tools that can automatically optimise
business performance.
"The whole BPM space is moving beyond rules management and towards decision
management," commented Thompson. "Four to five years ago businesses may have
resisted and argued gut instinct was better [for making decisions] but given the
legislative climate and the pressure for firms to record process decisions and
why they were made they are now more interested in this technology."
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