
Ed Walters
Ed Walters is an experienced business systems development consultant and trainer, with a background in development for a variety of industries, both in the UK and overseas. Ed’s industrial experience covers work both as a systems analyst and as a business analyst in which roles he has been concerned with creating and maintaining major software applications. Recently, Ed has been working as a trainer in business systems development subjects, whilst also undertaking coaching and mentoring assignments for business analysis teams within major corporate accounts.
Previous posts
- Posted by Ed Walters
- on 21 February 2012
Like most Business Analysts I’ve become involved with process modelling at various junctures in my working life, using a variety of notations, even, I recall, inventing my own notation on one memorable occasion! But questions inevitably arise at some point like ‘how do I know if I’m doing it right?’ and even ‘I wonder what else there is to know about all this?’
I've just taken (and passed!) OMG's* OCEB Fundamental
Examination, so I thought perhaps others might be interested in
knowing something about this certification path.
OCEB stands for OMG Certified Expert in Business Process
Management. There are 3 levels of certification, Fundamental,
Intermediate and Advanced, along 2 development paths, Business and
Technical. Fundamental is common to both paths.
If you want to get some sort of accreditation to underpin your
process modelling activities this certification is a good option to
consider. The certification is based around the Business Process
Modelling Notation (BPMN) specification, which the OMG owns and
manages.
However only about 40% of the certification is about process
modelling directly, the rest of the syllabus includes a range of
topics around business process management (BPM), which is a much wider subject area.
Fundamental Topics include:
Business Goals, Objectives: general business
administration topics such as might be encountered in an MBA or
basic Business Studies course.
Business Process Concepts and Fundamentals: some
of the basics of process architecture and different levels of
modelling processes, for different audiences.
Business Process Management Concepts and
Fundamentals: basic notions of Business Process Management
(BPM) as a management topic. BPM is concerned with planning,
developing and monitoring business processes and trying to balance
the process and functional tensions that always exist in any
organisation.
Business Modeling: Here OMG brings in its own
Business Motivation Model (BMM) as the principle basis for
modelling fundamental business concepts like Mission, Vision
etc.
Business Process Modeling Concepts and Skills:
These sections examine the syntax and semantics of the BPMN
modelling language.
Process Quality, Governance, and Metrics
Frameworks: The final section overviews some famous
process related frameworks, including 6 Sigma, and some governance
frameworks, like CobiT.
I must say I found it hard to prepare for the examination
adequately - there is quite an extensive reading list attached to
the syllabus. It was certainly a benefit to have already studied
and used BPMN extensively, so at least I had that part well covered
already.
There is a textbook, published by OMG, that purports to cover the
Fundamental exam syllabus, but to be honest I didn't find it as
useful as I had hoped - for one thing the use of English is quite
bizarre in places (well it is only the first edition, I'm sure it
will improve!). I found it necessary to resort to the original
texts for most of the research work, and even then found a number
of links to resources that didn't work or were broken.
That said, there aren't many places to go to acquire a rounded, and
non-proprietary, education in Process Management and Process
Modelling, so I'm inclined to recommend folk to take a serious look
in the OCEB direction. Given the evident importance of this topic
to the field of process improvement, and to the deployment of IT in
support of processes, it is odd that there isn't more general
support available for practitioners such as Process Analysts,
Business Analysts, Quality Improvement Specialists and so on; and
not forgetting of course the needs of their associated Management
and Executive functions.
* Object Management Group