and applicable representation of the necessary model
elements for the individual tasks of the stakeholders.
Since the information types within an enterprise
model are very heterogeneous we believe that a
sustainable and practical usage can only be achieved
by offering a wide set of representations and
utilizing different visualization techniques for the
respective information types. The rest of the paper is
organized, so that in section 2, we will establish
stakeholder needs and demands by looking into
several studies. Section 3 will see us using these
criteria to evaluate related research. In section 4 we
will introduce our framework for contextual
enterprise model representations. This will include
an application of said framework. The conclusion
will be stated in section 5.
2 REQUIREMENTS AND
CHALLENGES
In order to satisfy stakeholder demands, it is
important to identify these demands. Several studies
have dealt with Business Process Management
(BPM) and their results help us to identify the main
requirements for BPM-systems. These requirements
can be directly translated to enterprise models since
they are ever increasing in importance. The
following studies deal with certain aspects and
criteria for BPM models, as well as enterprise
models. At the end of this section, we will have
identified five core requirements through the
analysis of these studies.
The first study deals with the criteria themselves,
in particular, how study participants define
understandability. The study „Understanding
Understandability of Conceptual Models – What Are
We Actually Talking about?“ (Houy et al., 2012)
shows a diverse collection of criteria and argues for
a more unified approach to measuring
understandability for which it offers some
guidelines. The scope of this study does not allow
for an in-depth analysis of the different criteria, but
it is important to notice that different studies employ
different criteria and degrees of understandability
when they look at business- and process-models.
This study thus serves as a cautious reminder that
understandability can be an ambiguous term.
Bobrik has defined three foundational principles
which can improve the understandability of process-
visualizations (Bobrik, 2008). These principles can
easily be projected onto business process models.
the first principle is the “Notation“ of symbols:
different shapes and colors can enhance user
understandability. Secondly, the “Layout”, the
organization and structure of elements within the
model is identified as essential. The last principle is
“Reduktion“(reduction) which deals with the
aggregation of model elements. These principles
can all be found in one way or another in each of
these studies, as well as subsequent sections.
The next study focusses on understandability as
well as how participants rate their own capabilities
of understanding a process-model (Mendling et al.,
2007). The study, conducted among 73 students of
the field process management and several experts,
offers two important results: personal characteristics
as well as the size of the model (its complexity), are
the two main factors for model understandability.
Both results are equally apparent for students and
experts of process models. Since this study is from
2007, we can assume that the process models that
were used then, would be even larger now, making
the size even more important. the size and
complexity of models is a reoccurring challenge in
every study and most research papers that deal with
enterprise models and process management. It is
thus a core stakeholder demand. Also, the individual
preferences as an understandability criterion is
important, as this will be addressed later in section 4.
The growing complexity of business and process
models is also identified as the major issue by a
study by Bearing Point (BARC, 2013). along with
the growing complexity of the employees’
responsibilities, this study reveals that most
companies use several process-models for different
processes. a coherent, diverse, context sensitive
business model would connect these different
processes as well as save resources, thus we can
again identify complexity reduction as a major
requirement for a contextual representation of an
enterprise model. Other aspects that are mentioned
in this study are forecasting, making budget
decisions and planning ahead. These aspects are
reoccurring and will be collected under the umbrella
term transparency as a requirement.
the last two studies offer two essential set of
results, with the first one focusing on companies and
the second one on individuals. the former
(BearingPoint 2012) shows that the general
importance and usefulness of sustainable BPM is
accepted, yet there are still obstacles for companies
to integrate process management. besides reluctance
from management, the study identifies model
complexity and the missing holistic nature of many
BPM models as the main challenges. It can be
assumed that, if the two aspects mentioned will be
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