A collection of notes about the Forrester BPM Forum, and the Forrester Content and Collaboration Forum in Boston Sept 22 & 23. Continue reading
Monthly Archives: September 2011
Bring Your Own ACM to Work
Yesterday’s post was about workers will use personal clouds to organize their information, their personal devices, for both home and work life. This is a general trend I am seeing toward personal services in the Internet that represent a given person. Let me propose an even more radical idea, one of managing your projects out of such a personal cloud. Continue reading
Bring Your Own Cloud to Work
Personal Cloud was the unusual subject of Frank Gillett’s talk at Forrester Forum this week. Traditional IT: prepare for something deeply disturbing, yet inevitable. It is important to understand this to see where Adaptive Case Management(ACM) will be going in the future. Look for a few related posts to come out soon. Continue reading
Untamed Processes at BPM Forum 2011
Craig Le Clair shared the stage this morning with Steven J Spear (author of the book “Chasing the Rabbit” and new book “The High-Velocity Edge“) to talk about complex business situations and how to support them. Continue reading
Social Business Doesn’t Mean What You Think
Just a quick post about an excellent article: “Social Business Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Does, Neither Does Enterprise 2.0” by Deb Lavoy arguing that these are not technological trends, but rather cultural trends. Continue reading
Social BPM – Book Review
The book “Social BPM: Work, Planning and Collaboration Under the Impact of Social Technology” was released in June, and I became more enthusiastic the more I read. Here is my review of the chapters of this very timely book. Continue reading
Self-Organizing Business Networks
As the Social Business meme becomes more mainstream, people are starting to ask “What is the real connection with ‘Social’ after all?” and “Isn’t the connection to ‘Social’ a bit overblown?” After all, we really are not talking about literally placing Facebook (as the canonical example) inside a business. Why, then, call it social? Continue reading