Abstract:
It is recognized that business models provides ways to explore
new
business ideas and hence design and redesign operational business
processes. Business model describes who are involved in the business
and what resources are exchange between them. Process model on the
other hand, shows ordering of exchange of resources, communication
among agents to coordinate these resource exchanges. Process model
is use to trace and coordinate value exchanges.
The business model used in this work is e3-value model. The e3-value
model was originally designed to support the explorations of new
business networks. The paper contributes by addressing the research
questions of identifying: e3-value model elements that needs to be
mapped into the process model, essential sub processes that should
be in a process model with respect to the e3-value model and nature
of the process patterns. The paper provides answers to these research
questions. The paper also discuss a method to transforms a business
model to a process model in a systematic way. Such a method would
provide support for traceability, evaluation of design alternatives.
When two agents are exchanging resources in a value transaction, the
order of exchange of resources would be vary from one business case
to another business case. It depends on the contractual agreement
setup between the involved business partners. The derivation of a
process model from a business model is considered to be a nondeterministic
design process. There would be different ways of achieving same goal.
As such there would be different process models that achieve the
same goal. Process patterns are ready made solutions to a certain
problem in a specific problem domain. Process patterns are using
as a candidate to build the process model. It is up to the designer
to choose the appropriate patterns to construct process model. The
selection is depends upon costs and benefits. He could compare the
alternatives and choose the suitable one that achieves the goal.
In this work we use elementary process patterns discussed in the
Open-EDI, in particular negotiation, actualization and post-actualization,
as the starting point