Author:
König Ulrich Matthias,Linhart Alexander,Röglinger Maximilian
Abstract
AbstractDespite substantial investments in business process management (BPM), every organization experiences deviant processes, i.e., processes that show different behavior than intended. Thus, process deviance is an essential topic of BPM research and practice. Today, research on process deviance is mainly driven from a computer science perspective. IT-based methods and tools (e.g., deviance mining and prediction or compliance checking) detect process deviance by comparing log data from past process instances with normative process models or execution traces of currently running instances. However, requiring process models and event logs as input, existing approaches are expensive and limited to processes executed in automated workflow environments. Further, they can only detect process deviance, not explain why it occurs. Thus, knowledge about reasons for process deviance is immature. What is missing is a systematic exploration of reasons for process deviance. Against this backdrop, we compiled and structured reasons for process deviance based on a rating-type Delphi study with more than 30 experts from industry and academia. Thereby, we chose a process manager’s perspective as analytical lens, as process managers are familiar with and responsible for business processes end-to-end. We also analyzed the reasons’ importance for causing deviance in routine and nonroutine processes, two process types that capture the nature of processes in terms of variation and variety. Our results contribute to the descriptive knowledge on process deviance and serve as foundation for prescriptive research.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference77 articles.
1. Al-Mashari, Majed, and Mohamed Zairi. 1999. BPR implementation process: an analysis of key success and failure factors. Business Process Management Journal 5 (1): 87–112.
2. Alter, Steven. 2014. Theory of workarounds. Communications of the Association for Information Systems 34: 1041–1066.
3. Alter, Steven. 2015a. A workaround design system for anticipating, designing, and/or preventing workarounds. In Enterprise, business-process and information systems modeling: 16th international conference, BPMDS 2015, and 20th international conference, EMMSAD 2015, held at CAiSE 2015, Stockholm, Sweden, June 8–9, 2015, proceedings, vol. 214, ed. Khaled Gaaloul, Rainer Schmidt, Selmin Nurcan, Sérgio Guerreiro, and Qin Ma, 489–498.
4. Alter, Steven. 2015b. Beneficial noncompliance and detrimental compliance: expected paths to unintended consequences. AMCIS, Twenty first Americas conference on information systems. Puerto Rico: AMCIS.
5. Andrade, Ermeson, Henrik Leopold, Han van der Aa, Steven Alter, and Hajo A. Reijers. 2016. Factors leading to business process noncompliance and its positive and negative effects: Empirical insights from a case study. 22nd Americas conference on information systems, AMCIS 2016, San Diego, CA, USA, August 11–14, 2016. San Diego, USA: Association for Information Systems (AIS).
Cited by
18 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献