Business Rules for Business People

Today, business success is not just a matter of how effectively an organization can create or sell products. It’s also about how fast it can react to changing market conditions. Speed, flexibility, and organizational agility have become critical success factors for all companies.

Many companies are experiencing some of their fastest rates of change and the most important process requirements at the edge of their business. That’s where the business connects directly with customers, suppliers, and partners. It might be through something as simple as an application used to interact with suppliers or something as complex as customer self-service or B2B supply chain integration processes.

Improving business agility increasingly depends on the ability to quickly and easily modify the decisions and business logic that drive and manage its fastest changing and most dynamic business processes.
As a result, business processes and applications must be brought out to the edge or front office of the organization in order to meet rapidly changing customer requirements, increased user expectations, more competitive market pressures, coupled with the need to increase revenue, customer satisfaction, and other key performance indicators. Unfortunately, most companies have realized too much of their business logic is tied up in applications that are difficult to modify rapidly and adapt to the challenges at the edge of the business.

That’s because business rules technologies traditionally focused on providing greater flexibility for back office applications. Now, however, these traditional rules solutions have proven inadequate at meeting the challenges constant change presents. They’re simply not designed to address the rising demand for agility in front office applications. The architecture of traditional rules solutions can’t cope with the more dynamic environments found in customer-driven applications.

For example, most organizations need CRM applications, sales configurators and other dynamic front office processes to provide users and customers with the flexibility to explore a myriad of options and outcomes as they progress through a business process. Business rule solutions should help drive this agility. Yet, because of their architecture and original purpose, traditional BRE solutions limit users. Such BREs can’t provide dynamic interactivity—what people refer to as “start anywhere, go anywhere” capabilities.

For example, you may think the most important thing when choosing a computer is screen size. Why not start there and choose other options further on down the line? Why does a customer have to start or to go where the company traditionally dictates? Why take a straight-through, single-path approach? This ultimately translates into lost revenue, low customer satisfaction and decreased opportunity for companies.

What’s needed is a new business rule approach that dynamically crosses a wide range of front office business processes and applications: from stand-alone or embedded applications to business processes crossing application and business boundaries. Think of it as dynamic business rules solutions for customer-driven applications.

This white paper provides a perspective on the challenges traditional rules engines and technologies face in addressing today’s dynamic business needs. It also focuses on the new business rules requirements needed to bring processes and applications to the edge of the business, enabling organizations to rapidly meet changing user and customer expectations and needs as well as to run more effective organizations.

Click here to download the complete Upside Research report on Business Rules

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Beyond Sarbanes-Oxley – The Benefits of BPM for Compliance

Sometimes an investment in one area can pay off big in another. Take the example of compliance and the money that organizations are spending meeting regulations such as Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX). While companies might view SOX investments as addressing specific regulatory requirements, such investments can actually be a gateway to enterprise-wide risk management and better business process management. By using business process management (BPM)-based SOX solutions, organizations can not only meet these immediate regulatory requirements, but can put in place an internal control framework that supports future change, helps eliminate any deficiencies in controls, improves inefficient business processes, and helps to manage and reduce risk across the enterprise.

This is particularly important since compliance requirements are growing at a rapid pace at most enterprises. Between external regulatory compliance requirements like Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPPA, and The Patriot Act, and internal compliance standards, business and IT managers must find ways to address immediate regulatory and compliance requirements while ensuring that such solutions will be compatible with future compliance requirements. That’s why forward-looking organizations are looking to solutions such as business process management (BPM) that can not only meet their initial regulatory needs, but provide the framework for strategic risk management and process control.

This paper explores the evolution of SOX and compliance requirements and identifies how BPM can successfully address those requirements. It also introduces HandySoft BizFlow BPM as one solution for managing both tactical and strategic compliance issues. Business managers can use this report to begin a conversation about how best to manage compliance within their organizations, especially managing compliance with BPM.

Click here to download the complete Upside Research report on Handysoft

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J2EE Service Management: Are You Ready?

Introduction
Java is increasingly being used in business-critical applications, primarily because it offers several advantages over older technologies. However, while most organizations have logically been focused on the task of developing Java applications, more organizations are now beginning to realize that there’s another important consideration to creating Java applications—deployment and management.

The Issue: Java Performance
Java has enabled organizations to take application development to a new level of functionality. While the increase of Java in the enterprise environment solves many of the previous limits of application development, it does not eliminate the traditional concerns of enterprise applications, namely the application service management challenges.

How to Begin ensuring Java Services Now
IT managers should make a number of service considerations when delivering J2EE applications to the organization. Identifying these performance considerations and beginning to anticipate these issues during development is the first step in being able to better manage J2EE applications.
VantageWhat a Good Solution for Managing Enterprise Java Applications Should Provide
Compuware’s Vantage is designed to provide IT operations staff with the highest level of monitoring and analysis capabilities to keep their J2EE applications running effectively.

Conclusion
Upside Research recommends that IT operations managers look for a solution that will not only enable them to respond quickly to J2EE application performance issues, but also proactively manage J2EE applications in a way that meets service levels and contributes to business goals. Compuware’s Vantage is a solution that accomplishes both of these objectives.

Upside Research report on Compuware Vantage

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