In any business process reengineering (BPR) project, a thorough understanding of various tasks and activities of the organization is required. Very often this idea is captured using a simple flow chart or static representation diagram. The weakness here is that the process design complexity is not adequately represented by the use of flow charts, and this allows for limited human-computer interaction during the process design and analysis. In this paper, we propose an enhanced flow chart approach; the concept of activity-section flow chart to support BPR, which is a combination of the existing activity flow chart and section flow chart. Using this approach, a human-computer interactive model for BPR is developed. This model can identify the unreasonable activity loops and excessive business rounds between sections by the adjacent and reachable matrices. Via the human-computer interaction, the process can be revised by human experience. This approach provides an efficient tool for BPR of large-scale systems. It has been applied to the material supply management system of an iron and steel works, and satisfactory results have been achieved.
[1]
M. Hammer,et al.
REENGINEERING THE CORPORATION: A MANIFESTO FOR BUSINESS REVOLUTION
,
1995
.
[2]
Gu Jifa.
Systems Engineering in China
,
1993
.
[3]
J. A. Bondy,et al.
Graph Theory with Applications
,
1978
.
[4]
F. Caeldries.
Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution
,
1994
.
[5]
Andrew Kusiak,et al.
Reengineering of design and manufacturing processes
,
1994
.
[6]
Ray W. Baines,et al.
A state of the art review of IDEFO
,
1993
.
[7]
Elwood S. Buffa,et al.
Graph Theory with Applications
,
1977
.
[8]
Richard J. Mayer,et al.
Information Integration for Concurrent Engineering (IICE) IDEF3 Process Description Capture Method Report
,
1992
.
[9]
Robert L. Katz,et al.
Business/Enterprise Modeling
,
1990,
IBM Syst. J..
[10]
G. N. Evans,et al.
Business process re-engineering the supply chain
,
1995
.
[11]
R. Jewett,et al.
Systems Engineering
,
1959,
IRE Transactions on Military Electronics.