Green, Greener, BPM?


Autoria(s): Recker, Jan C.
Data(s)

05/07/2011

Resumo

I am sure you’ve heard it too: Green is the new Black. While this was true back in the days when Henry Ford introduced process standardization with his assembly line for the Ford Model T (over 15 million of these were sold!), Green is also the color of choice for many business organizations, private and public. I am not talking about the actual color of their business shirts or their logo 2.0.; I am referring to the eco-aware movement that has pushed sustainability into the top ten list of business buzz-words. What used to be a boutique market for tourism and political activists has become the biggest business revolution since the e-commerce boom. Public and private organizations alike push towards “sustainable” solutions and practices. That push is partly triggered by the immense reputational gains associated with branding your organization as “green”, and partly by emerging societal, legal and constitutional regulations that force organizations to become more ecologically aware and sustainable. But the boom goes beyond organizational reality. Even in academia, sustainability has become a research “fashion wave” (see [1] if you are interested in research fashion waves) similar to the hype around Neuroscience that our colleagues in the natural sciences are witnessing these days. Mind you, I’m a fan. A big fan in fact. As academics, we are constantly searching for problem areas that are characterized by an opportunity to do rigorous research (studies that are executed to perfection) on relevant topics (studies that have applied practical value and provide impact to the community). What would be a better playground than exploring the options that Business Process Management provides for creating a sustainable, green future? I’m getting excited just writing about this! So, join me in exploring some of the current thoughts around how BPM can contribute to the sustainability fashion parade and let me introduce you to some of the works that scholars have produced recently in their attempts to identify solutions.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42460/

Publicador

Business Process Trends

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42460/1/07-05-2011-COL-Class_Notes--Green_Greener_BPM-Recker.pdf

http://www.bptrends.com/deliver_file.cfm?fileType=publication&fileName=07%2D05%2D2011%2DCOL%2DClass%20Notes%2D%2DGreen%20Greener%20BPM%2DRecker%2Epdf

Recker, Jan C. (2011) Green, Greener, BPM? BPTrends, 5(7), pp. 1-8.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology; Information Systems

Palavras-Chave #050205 Environmental Management #080603 Conceptual Modelling #150307 Innovation and Technology Management #sustainability #business process management #process measurement #green processes #process modelling
Tipo

Journal Article