David McCoy

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What Will We Call BPM in 2018?

November 5th, 2009 · 1 Comment

BPM – business process management – is a good term. In fact, it’s a great term. But there are lots of great terms that get pushed aside in the march of time:

  • Personnel has become Human Resources (HR)
  • Employees have become associates, partners, colleagues, team members, etc
  • Soup has become broth, consommé, bisque – why can’t you just sell me some dang soup?

Ok, that last one was a bit personal… but It just goes on and on. Once good words are being pushed aside due to some inherent flaw in the original word. Sometimes, that flaw is simply the fact that the word has cobwebs. Other times, it’s because of political correctness, a false sense of intimacy, or some need to introduce change. Actually, we no longer introduce change. We now transform, renew and revitalize. Ick! So, when does BPM get the ax?

Perhaps, BPM will be pushed aside and replaced by a jazzier term. BPR was once a term we all used. But, BPR was poisoned with down-sizing and right-sizing, so it had to die. BPM doesn’t seem to have that same bile. But, time marches on…and words meet their doom.

In 2018, we will certainly be talking about the THINGS that we currently call PROCESSES. We will be talking about how they relate to BUSINESS and how they can be MANAGED. But… will be we talking about BUSINESS PROCESS MANAGEMENT (BPM) in one collective mouth-full? I wonder. To be fair, we might be calling cloud by different names; services by new tags; events by jazzier labels. Nothing resists change… er, I mean… Nothing resists transformation.

Labels are the spawn of marketing and we are become a market-driven economy. But, labels are real and powerful, so we cannot ignore BPM’s future, and we cannot leave it to the whims of some Ketel One drinking ad exec to come up with a sizzling new term for us.

What alternative terms can you imagine to describe that which we currently define by BPM? I don’t care about being right. I just want to see where we might go with this.

Think… and thanks for playing.

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Tags: Business Process Management (BPM) · Rabble-Rousing and General Hoopla

1 response so far ↓

  • 1 Robby Slaughter // Nov 6, 2009 at 6:39 pm

    The biggest problem with BPM is that it’s a TLA—a three letter acronym. Terms that are so complex they need to be shortened seem like they might be fluff or are at least unapproachable.

    In our practice, we prefer the word “workflow.” This term contains two smaller words, each of which are well understood. The connotation of “work” is effort, labor and exhaustion. The word “flow” makes us think of smooth, continuous movements and steady, inexorable progress.

    Therefore “work” and “flow” seem a little contradictory when placed together, and in that contradiction there is appeal. Imagine if effort/labor/exhaustion was actually replaced by something smooth, continuous and progressive. Work would be not just about producing, but about being productive.

    Workflow in 2018!

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