Based on the results of the study carried out in 1996 to investigate the
state of the art of workflow and process technology, MCC initiated the
Collaboration Management Infrastructure (CMI) research project to
develop innovative agent-based process technology that can support the
process requirements of dynamically changing organizations and the
requirements of nomadic computing. With a research focus on the flow of
interaction among people and software agents representing people, the
project deliverables will include a scalable, heterogeneous, ubiquitous
and nomadic infrastructure for business processes. The resulting
technology is being tested in applications that stress an intensive
mobile collaboration among people as part of large, evolving business
processes.
Workflow and Process Automation: Concepts and Technology provides an
overview of the problems and issues related to process and workflow
technology, and in particular to definition and analysis of processes
and workflows, and execution of their instances. The need for a
transactional workflow model is discussed and a spectrum of related
transaction models is covered in detail. A plethora of influential
projects in workflow and process automation is summarized. The projects
are drawn from both academia and industry. The monograph also provides a
short overview of the most popular workflow management products, and the
state of the workflow industry in general.
Workflow and Process Automation: Concepts and Technology offers a road
map through the shortcomings of existing solutions of process
improvement by people with daily first-hand experience, and is suitable
as a secondary text for graduate-level courses on workflow and process
automation, and as a reference for practitioners in industry.