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    Five Reasons Why BPM Programs Struggle or Fail to Succeed

    Several high-profile business process management (BPM) programs have recently been dropped, and a recent blog post by Elise Olding, research director at Gartner,  examines why BPM is facing more challenges in recent times. Ms. Olding said there are five reasons why some programs struggle or fail to succeed.

    Five Reasons Why BPM Programs Struggle or Fail to Succeed - slide 1

    Click through for five reasons why some BPM programs struggle, as identified by Elise Olding, research director at Gartner.

    Five Reasons Why BPM Programs Struggle or Fail to Succeed - slide 2

    Many BPM projects tout results from automating paper-intensive routine activities, many times with little, if any breakthrough re-thinking about the work. This is often because the automation is at the task or activity level. Getting a bunch of people in a room and asking them how to improve their work in a two-hour meeting can’t possibly yield innovative results.

    Five Reasons Why BPM Programs Struggle or Fail to Succeed - slide 3

    Some organizations create a BPM empire from scratch and don’t play nicely in the sandbox with already mature disciplines like enterprise architecture, project management and applications development. BPMers tout breaking down process silos, while they blindly build their own methods, governance and competency centers.

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    The BPM group becomes a bottleneck because the team is doing the detailed work. Pretty soon transformation teams, aligned with strategic processes begin to sprout up – especially in large organizations.

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    Standardization has become synonymous with BPM. Whether right or wrong, Olding hears many execs refer to “standardizing business processes” as their view of what BPM achieves. As an expectation, this road is fraught with politics at the front end and shadow processes at the back end.

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    Doing things more cheaply is not always the answer. Efficiency is a short-term win – there’s only so much efficiency you can wring out of your organization. Then what? Effectiveness is boundless and radically rethinking how work is done creates long-term value that pays forward.

    The advice here is to think bigger, play nice with others, embrace effectiveness and focus on long-term value. BPMers need to radically rethink what the role of visibility, accountability and adaptability will be for the future of their organization.

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