Abstract

Business process modeling is an important activity for developing software systems—especially within digitization projects and when realizing digital business models. Specifying requirements and building executable workflows is often done by using BPMN 2.0 process models. Although there are several style guides available for BPMN, e.g., by Silver and Richard (BPMN method and style, vol 2, Cody-Cassidy Press, Aptos, 2009), there has not been much empirical research done into the consequences of the diagram layout. In particular, layouts that require scrolling have not been investigated yet. The aim of this research is to establish layout guidelines for business process modeling that help business process modelers to create more understandable business process diagrams. For establishing benefits and penalties of different layouts, a controlled eye tracking experiment was conducted, in which data of 21 professional software developers was used. Our results show that horizontal layouts are less demanding and that as many diagram elements as possible should be put on the initially visible screen area because such diagram elements are viewed more often and longer. Additionally, diagram elements related to the reader’s task are read more often than those not relevant to the task. BPMN modelers should favor a horizontal layout and use a more complex snake or multi-line layout whenever the diagrams are too large to fit on one page in order to support BPMN model comprehension.

Highlights

  • Because in the context of Business process model and notation (BPMN) process execution, diagrams tend to get larger, we focus on the layouts of large diagrams

  • Because Mandarin-speaking people relate time more with the y-axis [6], replication of this experiment with a Mandarin-speaking population can show whether this impacts the findings or not—thereby either strengthening the generalizability or establishing boundaries for the results

  • Based on the findings and open questions of the presented experiment, there are possible follow ups for future research: Regarding the layout, it is interesting to analyze whether snake or multi-line layouts are better comprehensible

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this research is to establish layout guidelines for business process modeling that help business process modelers to create more understandable business process diagrams. Our goal was to minimize manual tasks as much as possible and automate the whole data collection process in order to avoid errors made by human experimenters

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Results
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