Towards a typology of business process management professionals: identifying patterns of competences through latent semantic analysis

Müller Oliver, Schmiedel Theresa, Gorbacheva Elena, vom Brocke Jan


Abstract
While researchers have analysed the organisational competences that are required for successful Business Process Management (BPM) initiatives, individual BPM competences have not yet been studied in detail. In this study, latent semantic analysis is used to examine a collection of 1,507 BPM-related job advertisements in order to develop a typology of BPM professionals. This empirical analysis reveals distinct ideal types and profiles of BPM professionals on several levels of abstraction. A closer look at these ideal types and profiles confirms that BPM is a boundary-spanning field that requires interdisciplinary sets of competence that range from technical competences to business and systems competences. Based on the study’s findings, it is posited that individual and organisational alignment with the identified ideal types and profiles is likely to result in high employability and organisational BPM success.

Keywords
business process management; professionals; competences; knowledge; skills; abilities; latent semantic analysis; typology



Publication type
Research article (journal)

Peer reviewed
Yes

Publication status
Published

Year
2014

Journal
Enterprise Information Systems (EIS)

Volume
8

Start page
1

End page
31

Language
English

ISSN
1751-7575

DOI