2015 WfMC Global Awards for
Excellence in Case Management
- Press Release Award Winners 2015
- Download 2015 Winners Press Release PDF
- Awards 2015 Slides: WfMC Awards Ceremony
- Gala Awards Dinner Photographs
The 2015 FINALISTS (in alphabetical order) across all categories:
(click each link below to view the slide of case study highlights)
- African Reinsurance Corporation nominated by Newgen
- Eaton Vance Investment Managers nominated by EMC
- EDP Renewables nominated by Appian
- King Saud University nominated by King Saud University
- National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases nominated by OpenText
- Nuclear Regulatory Commission nominated by Vega ECM Solutions
- Ospedale Pediatrico Bambino Gesù (OPBG) nominated by Openwork srl
- PENSCO Trust Company nominated by PENSCO Trust Company
- Remfry and Sagar nominated by Newgen
- Spar Nord nominated by IBM
- Texas Office of the Attorney General nominated by Adjacent Technologies
- Universal Forest Products nominated by Hyland Software
Published 2014 Case Studies:
Thriving On Adaptability:
Best Practices for Knowledge Workers
Read more here: Thriving on Adaptability
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The full case studies of the 2013 Finalists are published in "Empowering Knowledge Workers" together with the following papers:
Retail $49.95. Publish date Jan 2014
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Where is ACM Today? Realities and Opportunities
Nathaniel Palmer, Business Process Management, Inc.
Today,
more than a half-century after Drucker first coined the phrase
“knowledge worker” (in 1959) the share of the workforce represented by
this group has grown considerably, to as much as half of all workers by
some measures. So, too, have grown investments targeting knowledge
worker productivity. Yet despite this, we remain far from realizing the
level of improvement seen in manual labor over the course of the last
century.
Nathaniel Palmer shares his intensive research on
how knowledge work is performed and how to bridge the gap between
controlled and ad hoc ACM. He explores work patterns applicable to case
management and how the emergence of Adaptive Case Management represents
the paradigm shift from adapting business practices to the design of IT
systems, to building systems that reflect how work is actually
performed.
Innovative Organizations Act Like Systems, Not Machines
Keith D Swenson, Fujitsu America
The author asks - do you conceptualize your organization as a machine? If so, you may be led down the wrong path for optimizing business processes. Machines are complicated, but truly complex systems, like an organization, a marketplace, an ecosystem, are not like machines. Evidence for this is both familiar and surprising. It is the “Enlightenment Bias” which blinds us to the true nature of organizations. For an organization to be innovative, you need to design it to be self-controlling, but not constrained to fixed predefined patterns. A new generation of tools is come to support organizations in this manner. Antifragility is a quality that emerges from an adaptive system. While it sounds crazy, there are adaptive systems all around us, and a human organization is one of those. We need to think of an organization as a system which includes both the people and the information technology.
Bottom-up Process Discovery using Knowledge Engineering Techniques
Thomas Bech Pettersen, Steinar Carlsen, Gunnar John Coll, Helle Frisak Sem, Norway
We have found acquisition techniques from knowledge engineering (KE) useful for process discovery in our work with operational Adaptive Case Management (ACM) solutions. These techniques can easily be combined with more traditional top-down approaches from the architect’s toolbox. Our overall approach uses dynamically combinable snippets of task support functionality rather than trying to create linear and static "end-to-end" processes. Events and user goals chain these snippets together. The described knowledge engineering techniques have proved useful for bottom-up discovery focusing on tasks and their actual work performance that may go hand in hand with the prototyping and development of a task support system.
Justifying ACM: Why We Need a Paradigm Shift in BPM
Ilia Bider, Paul Johannesson and Erik Perjons, Stockholm University, Sweden
This
paper is devoted to understanding the needs of the enterprise of the
future in the area of BPM, and analyzing whether the mainstream
workflow-based systems will satisfy these needs. The analysis is done
based on assumption that an essential property of the enterprise of the
future is agility. The agility is understood as ability to discover
changes, trends and opportunities in the dynamic world and react to
them by adjusting current products, services and processes, or creating
completely new ones.
The paper is structured in the following way:
we start with giving a pragmatic definition of the concept of business
process that will be used in the paper. Then, we analyze the properties
of a business process that can be supported by a workflow-based system
and discuss whether business processes of the enterprise of the future
will possess these properties. After that, we give some suggestions on
what type of techniques could be employed in the new generation of
software to support business processes. In the last section, we
summarized our findings.
Automated Guidance for Case Management: Science or Fiction?
Irina Rychkova, Manuele Kirsch-Pinheiro and Bénédicte Le Grand, University Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne, France
Humans
dream about an intelligent computer assistant who would support them in
critical situations thanks to its capacity to reason objectively, to
take into account millions of factors and criteria and to value
carefully thousands of alternatives prior to make a decision. HAL 9000,
in Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (IMDB 1968), is probably the most
famous incarnation of such assistant. Being a fictional character, it
reflects a number of great ideas of scientists from the 20th century
who believed that machines one day would be capable of doing any work a
man can do. Though it was shown that such a vision of computer
technology is too optimistic, scientists keep working on theories and
prototypes that can support practitioners in agile decision-making and
smart process management.
In this paper, we propose our vision of
what academic research can do for such a pragmatic and
experience-driven discipline as Adaptive Case Management and to discuss
to what extent fiction may become reality in what we call automated guidance for case management?
Identity Management via ACM
Keith Harrison-Broninski, Role Modellers
Despite the current fast pace of innovation in Identity Management, new technologies still provide little support for securing the primary occupation of most knowledge workers - collaboration with colleagues, especially those in other organizations. If an organization is going to grant access to business-critical resources, it needs to know why access is needed and what will be done with those resources. This means understanding the work item that has caused the person to request access – i.e., the business process context in which access is being granted:
-
The Activities the person is carrying out using the resource;
-
The Roles they have been assigned, to which the Activities belong;
-
The Plans (projects, programmes, processes, initiatives, ventures…) of which the Roles form a part.
This paper discusses an ACM technique that not only enhances traditional Role-Based Access Control for use with collaborative work spanning multiple organizations, but also solves a related challenge into the bargain. Increasingly, business systems are used to send messages, by email and other means, often containing sensitive content. The sender may be known, but what about the recipients? The ACM technique presented streamlines and improves collaborative work across multiple organizations in such a way that not only the sender but also the recipients of any message are automatically authenticated, authorized and audited.
Mastering Knowledge Flow: Aligning Social Network, Knowledge Use and Process Design
Alberto Manuel, Process Sphere
Our
society is constructed around flows: flows of capital, flows of
information, flows of technology, organizational interaction, flows of
data. This construction is also applied inside of organizations and
among its stakeholders. Flows are the sequence of interaction between
physically disjointed positions held by social actors that belong or
interact with organizations. These flows are what organizations are
made off.
Classic analysis methods can only work in predefined or
controlled environments, because organizations live in a world where
interdependence, self-organization and emergence are agility,
adaptability and flexibility. It is a networked composed world in the
design of collaborative-networked organizations. This networked
configurations comes to the composition of complex systems, from cells,
to society and enterprises (associations of individuals, technology and
products). In those complex systems, characteristics of emergence,
order and self-organization, develop a set of network interdependent
actions not visible in the individual parts. This is the reason why
defining methods to analyze a domain fail if the domain and the parts
change, which is what most of the times occurs once we are living in a
world of variety.
In this paper you will learn how to tackle the challenge that
organizations must be able to align network structure to the process
type being executed and evolve the network type according to
circumstances. Organizations that manage to better align these three
perspectives: social network, knowledge nature and process design, are
those that will be ahead in terms of execution capabilities,
flexibility and adaptation to change.
Prior Winners
Year 2014
Award Winners 2014
Award Finalists 2014
Year 2013
Award Winners 2013
Award Finalists 2013
Year 2012
Award Winners 2012
Award Finalists 2012
Main Awards Categories
- Customer Facing
- Public Sector
- Legal and Courts
- Healthcare and Medical
- Knowledge Worker Innovation
Awards Program Committee
Marco Brambilla
Fred Cummins
Henk de Man
David Duggal
Keith Harrison-Broninski
Sandy Kemsley
Dana Khoyi
Alberto Manuel
John Matthias
Dermot McCauley
Frank Michael Kraft
Nathaniel Palmer
Tom Shepherd
Keith Swenson
Jacob Ukelson
Karl Walter Keirstead
Chuck Webster