The quote above comes from The People Are the Company by John Seely Brown and Estee Solomon Gray. It is a great quote highlighting where business process tooling seems to fail - in handling human interactions and their approaches to processes and problem solving.
This is the subject of a book (written in 2005) by Keith Harrison-Broninski, Human Interactions, The Heart and Soul of Business Process Management. The information is also overviewed in a paper by Harrison-Broninski at http://human-interaction-management.info/A%20Role-Based%20Approach%20To%20Business%20Process%20Management.doc. The paper and book describes the mismatch between human-driven and machine-driven processes, and that most processes are the former, while most tooling supports the latter.
The mismatch with human processes is that:
So, where do we go with this? The author suggests using and modifying Role Activity Diagrams (RADs). Before reading this book, I had only a passing acquaintance with these diagrams (since there is almost no tool support for them). RAD was conceived quite some time ago - it was proposed in 1983 by Holt, Ramsey and Grimes in Electrical Communication. Although not widely implemented, the concepts are quite valuable and should be used to inform BPMN and other high-level process modeling work.
OK, then, what are the main concepts in RADs? These are defined as:
You can probably see the corrollaries and differences vis-a-vis BPMN (Business Process Modeling Notation, http://www.bpmn.org).
And, what modifications are needed? These are discussed in Chapter 3 (a "New Theory of Roles") of the Human Interactions book as:
These thoughts really resonated with my experiences, and suggested areas to work to better capture business process information.
I did want to expand on what Role and User attributes were deemed valuable (I mentioned this in the list directly above). For Roles, these are:
And for Users, these are:
Pretty interesting! More on this in later posts.
Andrea