Development of BPM Capabilities - Is Maturity the Right Path?

Plattfaut Ralf, Niehaves Björn, Pöppelbuß Jens, Becker Jörg


Abstract
Business Process Management (BPM) is an influential concept in information systems (IS) research and management practice. While a great number of studies dealt with developing methods, procedures, or tools for BPM, especially process modeling, today the question of how to assess and – from that point on – to develop BPM capabilities in a real-life organization has become key to BPM practice and is becoming a central element in BPM research as well. A plethora of BPM maturity models have been designed for the purpose of guiding the development of BPM capabilities in organizations. In this study, we take a critical perspective on maturity models for BPM capability development and present a case study example where maturity model-based guidance is rendered to be inadequate if not further considering organizational position and environment. Our theory discussion introduces alternative takes on BPM capability development, lays out implications for BPM practice, and presents potentially fruitful paths for future research and theory in the area of BPM capability development.



Publication type
Research article in proceedings (conference)

Peer reviewed
Yes

Publication status
Published

Year
2011

Conference
European Conference on Information Systems

Venue
Helsinki, Finland

Language
English

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