Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Is Good For BPM
Source of Article )http://www.ultimus.com/Blog/bid/36679/Microsoft-SharePoint-2010-Is-Good-For-BP)
- Document Management and Content Management
- Application Management / Portals
- Information Collaboration
- Document-based Workflow
SharePoint does many things well from a document and workflow perspective. If your company has the know-how and resources to leverage SharePoint, SharePoint Workflow, and Workflow Foundation, then easy and clear document-based workflows can be developed which will serve your company well. Part of the success with any software platform, including Microsoft SharePoint, is to understand what the platform does do and what it does not do. Every software platform has limitations which should be respected and recognized. If not, the benefits and attractions of the software platform that you enjoy today may ultimately have a "corrosion" effect when you attempt to make the software perform in ways it is not intended (corrosion in terms of user attraction and application effectiveness).
Business Process Management is a natural extension of workflow, and thus, a natural extension for anyone who has already invested in Microsoft SharePoint. While there is a definite value proposition in automating your document based processes, moving away from manual and paper based work styles, and evolving human based operations into web-based activities, at some point, you will ask yourself "Do my processes make sense?" Once you reach the point where you need to understand if your company is working smart, and not just hard, then you will want to consider BPM.
Every good BPM Suite in the market today integrates with Microsoft SharePoint. Being able to leverage SharePoint workflows, documents in repositories, and information from SharePoint Team Sites in a BPMS will allow all of your already invested information to be taken to the next level. BPM Suites provides the tools and features to give you answers to questions like:
- How will by processes and process participant workloads trend over the long term?
- Do I need to invest in more resources (or less resources) to ensure processes execute efficiently?
- If I want to double my output, what additions and changes will I need to make to my processes?