Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ruomo.lib.uom.gr/handle/7000/1644
Title: Systematizing Business Process Redesign Initiatives with the BPR:Assessment Framework
Authors: Tsakalidis, George
Nousias, Nikolaos
Madas, Michael
Vergidis, Kostas
Type: Conference Paper
Subjects: FRASCATI::Natural sciences::Computer and information sciences
FRASCATI::Social sciences::Economics and Business::Business and Management
Keywords: business process
business process redesign
redesign assessment
redesign application
Issue Date: 2022
First Page: 17
Last Page: 24
Volume Title: 2022 IEEE 24th Conference on Business Informatics (CBI)
Abstract: Business process redesign (BPR) has emerged as a widely accepted practice within organizations for delivering better products and services and ensuring measurable benefits. Despite the adoption of BPR, it largely remains the result of a creative process and there is a lack of approaches for evaluating the potential impact of a BPR method before investing in its implementation. This means that BPR initiatives are selected based on ‘black-box’ generic options that are not explicitly tailored to the culture, structure, and existing processes of the organization. This paper aims to address this gap by introducing the BPR: Assessment Framework, a conceptual model based on Design Science Research Process (DSRP). The framework is intended to assess the BPR capacity of process models based on their plasticity and external quality. The usability of the framework is presented in the following manner: (a) through the demonstration of the framework using a data-intensive workflow optimization method as an end-to-end paradigm, and (b) the BPR capability assessment of 15 business process models from literature, to better demonstrate the benefits of omitting ineligible models prior to BPR application. The categorization of the redesign capability of models was based on a tested cluster analysis method using the k-means algorithm. Based on the findings, a considerable number of process models proved to be either overly constrained for the application of redesign heuristics or did not possess the required external quality to be redesigned. The contribution of the approach lies in the fact that the framework can also be extended to apply systematic BPR to eligible BPs. The framework can serve as a reliable measurement of the redesign capacity of candidate process models and as an essential part of a systematic methodology for increased BPR effectiveness.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1109/CBI54897.2022.10044
https://ruomo.lib.uom.gr/handle/7000/1644
ISBN: 978-1-6654-6016-3
Other Identifiers: 10.1109/CBI54897.2022.10044
Appears in Collections:Department of Applied Informatics

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