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Jan
11

In a previous blog entry, James McGovern asks me to "describe the difference between regular BPM and integration centric BPM". So here goes.

First a caveat - many of these terms are devised by analysts as a way to categorize products in order that they can perform a reasonable comparison. IMO the names don't define the products and nor do they always accurately reflect the customer's problem space. And I'm not convinced that constantly changing these industry taxonomies benefits society (and it's not like there's only one taxonomy) . But I'm speaking as a vendor - maybe real customers see it differently.

I think what James means by "regular BPM" is the pure play BPM products like FileNet (IBM), Savvion, Fuego (BEA), Intalio and Lombardi - these pure-play vendors are mostly about human-to-human integration vs. the system-to-system integration (EAI / B2B) suites offered by Sun, IBM, Oracle, Tibco, etc. To some extent this distinction goes back to the genesis of this industry - when EAI and Document Workflow were pretty distinct - one being an IT solution the other being a business solution. So IC-BPM products will have a lot more focus on data transformation, protocol support, event management, security and a strong, integrated developer story; whereas HC-BPM would be a lot more focussed on things like human collaboration, resource assigment, etc. Of course there's a lot of overlap.

If that explanation doesn't help much, here's an excellent 8-part history of this whole space written by Sandy Kemsley on ebizQ and some additional insight on the subject from Phil Gilbert.

Jan
10

We (Sun) seem to be on a roll this year with launches, announcements and awards (and we're only 6 days in). And as of today the stock is at a 4-year high. One accolade that I've been waiting to blog is that Forrester has just ranked Sun as a leader in Inetgration-Centric BPM Suites (IC-BPMS). Sun's entry into that market came as a result of the SeeBeyond Acquisition a couple of years ago and subsequent integration of that technology into our existing software portfolio (such as Portal and Application Server).

Combined with our leadership in Identity Management and Web Services - this is a great platform on which to build our "Middleware 2.0" business.

It's great to be able to blog about something work-related for a change - hopefuly I'll be able to do more of that this year.

I think it's going to be a fun year.

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