Abstract

Collaborative business process management allows for the automated coordination of processes involving human and computer actors. In modern economies, it is increasingly needed for this coordination to be not only within organizations but also to cross organizational boundaries. The dependence on the performance of other organizations should, however, be limited, and the control over the own processes is required from a competitiveness perspective. The main objective of this work is to propose an evaluation model for measuring a resilience of a service-oriented architecture (SOA) collaborative process management system. In this paper, we have proposed resilience analysis perspectives of SOA collaborative process systems, i.e., overall system perspective, individual process model perspective, individual process instance perspective, service perspective, and resource perspective. A collaborative incident and maintenance notification process system is reviewed for illustrating our resilience analysis. This research contributes to extend SOA collaborative business process management systems with resilience support, not only looking at quantification and identification of resilience factors, but also considering ways of improving the resilience of SOA collaborative process systems through measures at design and runtime.

Highlights

  • Collaborative business processes are increasingly driven by business flexibility and agility

  • We focus on service-oriented architecture (SOA) collaborative business process systems as well as analysis of resilience related the different perspectives of SOA collaborative business process systems

  • Based on their work of resilience factor, we extend to the SOA collaborative business process system

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Summary

Introduction

Collaborative business processes are increasingly driven by business flexibility and agility. The increasing importance of value chains and production networks, of interconnected organizations, collaboration dynamics, outsourcing, and the increasing potential of new ICT technologies supported innovations have driven research into such collaborative networks [33]. Organizations, enterprises, and communities are interconnected by networks in the new application areas. To support such collaboration in a hyper-connected world, existing technologies need to be improved and adapted in terms of larger-scale integration and more intelligent devices, sensors and cyber-physical systems involvement. Systems need to support enterprise agility and be resilient in turbulent business environments [5]

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