Seven paradoxes of business process management in a hyper-connected world

01 Pubblicazione su rivista
Beverungen Daniel, Buijs Joos C. A. M., Becker Jörg, Di Ciccio Claudio, van der Aalst Wil M. P., Bartelheimer Christian, vom Brocke Jan, Comuzzi Marco, Kraume Karsten, Leopold Henrik, Matzner Martin, Mendling Jan, Ogonek Nadine, Post Till, Resinas Manuel, Revoredo Kate, del-Río-Ortega Adela, La Rosa Marcello, Santoro Flávia Maria, Solti Andreas, Song Minseok, Stein Armin, Stierle Matthias, Wolf Verena
ISSN: 1867-0202

Business Process Management is a boundary-spanning discipline that aligns operational capabilities and technology to design and manage business processes. The Digital Transformation has enabled human actors, information systems, and smart products to interact with each other via multiple digital channels. The emergence of this hyper-connected world greatly leverages the prospects of business processes – but also boosts their complexity to a new level. We need to discuss how the BPM discipline can find new ways for identifying, analyzing, designing, implementing, executing, and monitoring business processes. In this research note, selected transformative trends are explored and their impact on current theories and IT artifacts in the BPM discipline is discussed to stimulate transformative thinking and prospective research in this field.

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