BPM Summer Camp session 2 webinar replay
June 10th, 2010 by Alex
This summer, Active Endpoints CTO Michael Rowley and industry analyst, blogger and BPM expert Sandy Kemsley are presenting a series of webinars focusing on the “human aspects” of BPM.
On Wednesday, June 9, we presented How to Explain BPMN to Business Users, which featured an overview of proposed subsets of BPMN 2.0 designed for specific roles, a demonstration of the ActiveVOS BPMN modeler and an interesting discussion of the future of BPMN. A replay of this fascinating presentation is attached to this post below.
Our third and final session of BPM Summer Camp is titled Five Things You Should Never, Ever Try in Process Development and will be presented on Thursday, July 22, 2010 at 12pm EDT / 9am PDT / 16:00 UTC. Please register for this free webinar here.
You can also watch a replay of the first session here.
Tags: BPM, bpm summer camp, BPMN


June 10th, 2010 at 9:23 am
[...] BPM Projects, below. You can watch the replay of Session 2, How to Explain BPMN to Business Users here. BPM Summer Camp session 1 [80:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (150) [...]
September 6th, 2010 at 12:54 pm
[...] BPMN | How to explain BPMN to Business Users | VOSibilities: The replay of a webinar that I did in June on BPMN and business users. I make the points that the subset is all that’s needed for business, and that there’s a difference between knowing enough BPMN to create models and knowing enough BPMN to understand models. Here’s just the slides: How To Explain BPMN To Business Users View more presentations from Sandy Kemsley. [...]
September 6th, 2010 at 7:58 pm
[...] BPMN | How to explain BPMN to Business Users | VOSibilities: The replay of a webinar that I did in June on BPMN and business users. I make the points that the subset is all that’s needed for business, and that there’s a difference between knowing enough BPMN to create models and knowing enough BPMN to understand models. Here’s just the slides: How To Explain BPMN To Business Users View more presentations from Sandy Kemsley. [...]