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Business Process Management: Profiting From Process (Sams White Book) | 
enlarge | Author: Roger Burlton Publisher: Sams Category: Book
List Price: $45.00 Buy Used: $12.44 You Save: $32.56 (72%)
New (16) Used (14) from $12.44
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 205327
Media: Paperback Pages: 416 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.3 x 0.9
ISBN: 0672320630 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.404 UPC: 752063320631 EAN: 9780672320637 ASIN: 0672320630
Publication Date: May 27, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Learn the concepts and transform your business!- See why process management is an inevitable trend that won't go away.
- Understand why relationship management needs effective processes to work.
- Define your stakeholders and determine their needs.
- Discover what other organizations have done to manage processes successfully.
- Explore a complete framework for managing business, process, and human change.
- Apply your knowledge to manage process projects effectively and efficiently.
- Learn what to do and what to avoid in every step.
- Develop processes to align technology, organization, and facility transformation.
- Gain cross-organizational acceptance of process and personal change.
- Anticipate objections and proactively manage stakeholder concerns.
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| Customer Reviews:
Too old fashioned July 26, 2006 Jim Baker (Arizona, USA) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book provides an interesting framework but lacks the modern thinking of the Third Wave by Smith and Fingar and contains more of the old Business Process Reengineering stuff
Getting the Business Value from BPM December 7, 2005 Mark McGregor (Warwick, UK) 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
As a Trainer and Consultant in the Business process space it is important to read as widely as possible. This can often be a chore, but in the case of this book it was a real pleasure. Roger really focusses in on getting the Business Architecture right first and then drilling down into process. As with so many books this too can be viewed as several books in one. The first 1/3 or so is great reading for any manager involved in helping their organization move to being process based. The framework suggested is readily useable by all organizations. then the book does get a little more technical and might lose the business readers, but provides valuable resource and insight for analysts involved in process improvement. An enjoyable read and well worth the time it takes to do so.
A Business Process Management toolkit must have. October 31, 2002 steve towers (West Midlands United Kingdom) 0 out of 8 found this review helpful
Rogers new book is notable for a number of reasons. It presents the subject of Business Process Management with a practical 'can do' approach that will appeal to organisation leaders and practitioners alike. It's direct style is accessible and provides a framework which leads both the reader and the BPM implementer through a tried and tested approach harnessing people, process and technology.This is a definite must have in your BPM toolkit.
Best in class book with a full view of the subject September 16, 2001 Linda Zarate (Azusa, CA United States) 97 out of 99 found this review helpful
Among the stack of business process and process design books I've read this one stands out as the best. The reason for this bold statement is this is the only one that carefully examines business processes from the four dimensions of (1)Business, (2) Process, (3) Knowledge and (4)Business Rules. Contrast the four-dimensional view this book provides with the two-dimensional view most business process books take (business and process), and you'll begin to see why I like it so much and how this book is a good fit for process analysts and engineers who are faced with aligning business processes to e-commerce initiatives, or aligning IT to business.What I like most is the book is divided into a management guide and a practitioner's guide. This is a unique approach that has a significant benefit: it aligns the sponsors and business process owners (managers) and the design and implementation teams (practitioners) into a unified team by giving each group the necessary information for business process management in their own language and from their own points of view. Among the "necessary information" are" ten guiding principles, a common framework and project management essentials. I also like the way knowledge management is included, the clear focus on end results and the fact that the processes are designed for contemporary business (e-commerce, supply chain management, etc.), and incorporation of business rules. Combined, these make this book stand out as the best on the topic (in my opinion). This book blends the no-nonsense process approach of pure process books with the fresh views of the current flood of "e" books, and does so without hype or gushing promises. It's down-to-earth, copiously illustrated and methodical. I strongly recommend this as the primary book on business process management and give it 5 stars.
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