By Suresh Sambandam | Article Rating: |
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April 11, 2014 10:06 AM EDT | Reads: |
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The evolution of BPM has been centered around workflow management systems built on office productivity platforms, like the mail, messaging and collaboration suites.
Way back in 1987, Lotus came out with a powerful platform integrated with mail, messaging and collaboration capabilities. It surely was a revolution back then, yes of course IBM folks continue to sell Lotus as a revolution even now :D . Nevertheless, Lotus provided Designer and Domino Server capabilities that allowed people to build business process automations and workflows.
Fast Forward to PC Era, Microsoft Exchange with MS Office and Sharepoint server became the leader in this segment. Microsoft did not miss out to copy what Lotus Designer provided, it promptly added Sharepoint workflow and infopath for building simple forms. Of course, one has to resort to programming options to make things really work in Sharepoint workflow.
Both Lotus Designer and Sharepoint intended to provide business users the ability to build workflows/automations for their respective needs. Neither achieved that even partially. Sad!
In the cloud world we live in today, users are much more tech savvy and love to use software tools that are designed as “Self Service” systems, BPM/Workflow Automation tools are not seen any differently. With this being the trend and Google Apps leading the market in cloud based office productivity suites, customers prefer “Self Service” workflow platforms which allow them to create workflows and automate business processes all by themselves, making platforms like KiSSFLOW an obvious choice. It’s time you move your BPM to the cloud and make the most of it.
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Published April 11, 2014 Reads 279
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After an initial entrepreneurial stint for three years at the age of 19, Suresh Sambandam went on to work at Hewlett-Packard. Later, Suresh joined Selectica and rose to senior position, as Director of e-Insurance product division in a short-span. The e-Insurance division and its products were later acquired by Accenture. Suresh is a technocrat specializing in product engineering with expertise in software architecture for complex enterprise applications, inference engines, configuration engines, rule-based computing and enterprise middleware. He has applied for multiple patents. Suresh is passionate about entrepreneurship, technology startups and spends a significant amount of personal time in the start-up ecosystem in Chennai. Suresh is a member of the National Council for Emerging Companies Forum and also a core committee member of Product Forum at NASSCOM. He also does mentoring for budding entrepreneurs at IIT Bombay, E-Cell. Suresh is a regular speaker at various industry forums & academic institutions.
Suresh is the Founder & CEO of OrangeScape. OrangeScape is a platform (PaaS - Platform as a Service) to develop process oriented business applications that can be deployed "On Cloud" and "On Premise". OrangeScape supports platforms like Google App Engine and Microsoft Azure as cloud deployment option and Microsoft .Net and J2EE as on-premise deployment options. OrangeScape has 50+ customers including global brands like Unilever, Citibank, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Fullterton, etc. OrangeScape in the only Indian company has been featured in the PaaS research reports of Forrester and Gartner. OrangeScape has been featured as 'India's Rising Tech Stars' by Forbes(US) magazine. OrangeScape was showcased as one of the 3 emerging product companies in India by Nasscom and was also awarded 'Top IT Innovations' for 2 consecutive years.
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