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ITIL and BPM
by : John M. Clark
 


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6 November 2008 by Nari Kannan
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Master Data Management (MDM) and Business Process Improvement

Many organizations are busy implementing Master Data Management (MDM) solutions on top of all of their applications. Master Data Management unifies the concept of a Customer of a business or a Patient in a Healthcare System. MDM solutions unifies the data about a single Customer or a single Patient in one place. This picks up all the data regarding a patient from many databases that a healthcare system like a hospital may have, and makes it available when needed. Many compliance regulations like HIPAA may need the hospital to make this available when needed. Companies may use MDM solutions to gather up ALL the information about a single customer in one single place for doing marketing, cross-selling, up-selling, etc.

Service-Oriented Architectures (SOA) is used to stitch many disparate heterogeneous databases together to make this happen. The information about a patient in a hospital may be in Patient Records or the Pharmacy transactions database. Making them all available in one single place involves accessing many different applications and databases and SOA enables them.

Master Data Management could be so very useful in the context of Business Process Management also, End-to-end business processes involve many different applications and databases. Managing, measuring, analyzing and improving business processes involves pretty much the same kind of problem. MDM soolutions that help you keep track of a Customer or a Patient could just as easily keep track of an end-to-end business process like Order to Cash, tracking the order through the company and various departments and functions! Very intriguing idea!

Errors using inadequate data are much less than those using no data at all. - Charles Babbage

 
BPM , Companies , General , Research , SOA
posted by Nari Kannan  at  5:16 PM ET | comments [2] | trackbacks [1]


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posted by  Stan 7 November 2008 at 11:21 AM ET
I think that the connection between MDM and BPM is a dependent relationship - they each require eachother to be fully effective. BPM allows for the visualization of processes while workflow BPM automates the collection of data. Even collecting health information is BPM topic as it takes BPM software to map otu the process of collecting that information - all with the help of SOA.

BPM suites offer a variety of features - each tailored to your company. I was particularly impressed by the <A HREF="http://www.interfacing.com/Products">Enterprise Process Center</A>, as it has a full range of useful modules allowing you to capitalize on your business' potential. The company also offers a <A HREF="http://www.interfacing.com/Products">100% Free BPMN Modeler for Microsoft visio</A>which is very useful as a tool to map your business processes immediately. I suggest taking a look!
 


posted by  JonasE 7 November 2008 at 5:37 PM ET
Peter Weill speaks about different operational models. These four models are defined by the level of unified business process and the level of data integration. Here you can find a good answer on how they relate to each other.

 

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