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1 Process Modeling Kridanto Surendro [email protected]
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Feb 23, 2022

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Page 1: surendro15@gmail - cdn-edunex.itb.ac.id

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Process Modeling

Kridanto Surendro

[email protected]

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Process Modeling

• Process Modeling requires a critical set of skills and techniques

that enable people to understand, communicate, measure, and

manage the primary components of business processes.

• Business Process Modeling is the set of activities involved in

creating representations of an existing or proposed business

process. It can provide an end-to‐end perspective or a portion of

an organization’s primary, supporting, or management processes.

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Process Modeling

A model refers to a simplified representation of a thing, concept, or

activity. Models can be mathematical, graphical, physical, narrative, or

a combination of these.

Models have a wide range of applications in business environments,

including

Organizing (structuring)

Discovery (learning)

Forecasting (predicting)

Measuring (quantifying)

Explaining (teaching, demonstration)

Verification (validation)

Control (constraints, objectives).

Business processes can be expressed through modeling at many

levels of detail, ranging from highly abstract to highly detailed. A

fully‐developed business process model will typically represent several

perspectives serving different purposes.

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Process Model Contents

A process model includes icons that represent workflow, data flow,

events, decisions, gateways, and other elements of the process itself.

A process model can contain illustrations and information about

The icons (representing the process elements) used in the

illustrations

The relationships among the icons

The relationships of the icons to their environment

How the icons represented behave or perform.

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Identifying a process model

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Process Components

Process components specify the properties, behavior, purpose, and

other elements of the business process. You can use some modeling

tools to capture and catalogue process components and the

information associated with each component to organize, analyze, and

manage an organization’s portfolio (i.e., collection) of processes.

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Purpose of Process Modeling

Process models are the means to

• Manage organization processes

• Analyze process performance

• Define changes.

Process models can express a target business state or specify the

requirements for resources to enable effective business operations,

such as people, information, facilities, automation, finance, and energy.

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Purpose of Process Modeling

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Commonly Used Process Modeling Notations

For example, musical notation includes universally recognized symbols

for notes and clefs. Similarly, a business process modeling notation

includes icons (pictures) and connectors that help show relationships

among the various real‐life components of a business process.

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Commonly Used Process Modeling Notations

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Commonly Used Process Modeling Notations

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Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) 2.0

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Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) 2.0

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Flow Charting

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Flow Charting

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Swim Lanes

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Event Process Chain (EPC)

Event Process Chains range from very

simple to very complex.

EPC describes events as either

triggering or resulting from a process

step, called a “function.” Thus, the flow

is normally event‐function‐event. EPC

relies heavily upon logical operators

called “rules.” The basic rule objects

are “AND,” “OR,” and “Exclusive OR.”

These rule objects express decisions,

tests, parallelism, and convergence in

the process flow. A simple EPC

consists of just these objects plus

arrows that define relationships

between them.

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Unified Modeling Language (UML)

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IDEF

IDEF is a family of modeling notation concepts that are described in a Federal

Information Processing Standard (FIPS) that was developed by the US Air

Force. It is a notation and technique that is one part of a methodology for

defining the work processes and information systems in manufacturing

environments.

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IDEF

The notation employs a very simple set of symbols consisting of process boxes with

arrows showing inputs, outputs, controls, and mechanisms. Although each level of the

model is read left to right and top to bottom, the numbering system used for the major

steps are represented in a way that allows for easy association between parent and

child levels of decomposition in the process. Thus, a child process box named A1.3 is

interpreted to be a child process of the parent diagram A1. Each successive level of

decomposition uses another decimal point to continue this easy traceability of lineage.

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Value Stream Mapping

Value Stream Mapping is a technique used in Lean Manufacturing. Not to be

confused with Value Chain notation, Value Stream Mapping expresses the physical

environment and flow of materials and products in a manufacturing environment.

At Toyota, where the technique originated, it is known as "Material and Information

Flow Mapping." Value Stream Mapping is used to add process resource costs and

time elements to a process model, to incorporate the view of the process efficiency.

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Specialized Approaches in Process Modeling

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Value Chain

Value chain notations are a category of symbol sets used to visualize the accumulation of

value or steps toward achievement of a goal.

Sometimes groups of steps are summarized under a “process superior” object. These

models generally flow from left to right, describing the sub‐processes that directly

contribute to producing value for the organization’s customers (clients or constituents).

The concept of the value chain was introduced by Michael Porter in his works on

corporate strategy and is typically applied at the enterprise modeling and planning level.

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SIPOC

SIPOC stands for Supplier, Input, Process, Output, and Customer. It is a style of

process documentation used in Six Sigma. There is no standard or preferred

notation set and this technique may be satisfied by completing a table with those

headings.

The SIPOC model is often used to gain an initial consensus on what areas of a

process are under study.

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System Dynamics

• System Dynamics models are “activity on arrow” diagrams rather than

“activity on node” diagrams like most of the other notations.

• System Dynamics models are especially useful in developing dynamic

lifecycle‐type models that focus on the overall business system’s

performance and the impact of changing the key variables that affect

overall performance.

• These are more often used to model an entire enterprise or line of

business rather than lower‐level workflow type models. System

Dynamics models are often used to describe the enterprise business

“architecture” from a dynamic behavioral perspective, rather than a static

structural perspective.

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System Dynamics

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