A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business
Processes
Thiago Mendes and Simone Santos
Centro de Informática, Federal University of Pernambuco, Av. Jorn. Aníbal Fernandes, Recife, Brazil
Keywords: Strategic Alignment, Business Process Management, Measurement Performance.
Abstract: BPM is a systematic approach that enables an organization to achieve results that are consistent and aligned
with its strategic objectives. In this context, organizations need to measure the performance of their processes,
thereby enabling them to support planning, inducing control and making it possible to diagnose the current
situation. The research that led to this article was prompted by the paucity of empirical investigations into
performance measures offered in the literature and recognition of the difficulties that organizations face when
attempting to verify the results of their business processes. From a systematic review of the literature, it
became evident that, among the approaches discussed, there are several variations in the methodology, in the
specifications of the measures and even as to how business processes are evaluated. By undertaking a
comparative evaluation of the approaches, a set of criteria was defined which addresses not only theory, based
on the references, but also some usability aspects of a process performance model. Thus, we proposed the
definition of a new approach that brings together elements and recommendations selected from the approaches
analyzed, plus enhancements. To evaluate the proposed approach, a case study is discussed, and important
results presented which demonstrate its applicability.
1 INTRODUCTION
Various organizations have been engaging on
reorganizing their business processes and
implementing process-based management in order to
gain competitive advantage. From this perspective,
the concept of Business Process Management (BPM)
has emerged as a management approach that shifts the
focus from functional units to controlling the
performance of business processes in achieving their
objectives.
BPM enables corporate processes to be
standardized, thereby increasing the productivity and
efficiency of the organization, Its aim is both to
monitor, after having defined the priorities of the
processes, how the resources of an organization are
applied and transformed into actions to achieve the
organizational goals (Baldam et al., 2007). The
results of the processes are directly linked to the
mission and goals of the organization, since the
processes represent the implementation of the
strategy.
The focus of process management is supported on
key business strategies that establish the direction of
the organization. Smith and Furt (2009) emphasize
that a critical factor is the need for measurement in
process management. Therefore, it becomes essential
to use measures that enable the performance of
processes to be monitored, thus contributing to check
how well these processes meet the strategic objectives
that have been set.
Trkman (2010) states that issues related to
performance measures and to defining what should be
measured in relation to business processes should be
directly linked to the strategic priorities of each
organization.
BPM initiatives need to be evaluated to check the
alignment between the strategic, tactical and
operational aspects of processes, thus making it
possible to verify the results achieved in accordance
with the objectives outlined. Business processes
should be designed by the administration, after
having established measures of performance (Powell
et al., 2001), which should reflect the desired
direction in strategic objectives, and serve as a basis
for the control of processes.
According to Kueng and Krahn (1999), as well as
Vuksic et al. (2008), the effects of BPM programs are
often not easily visible as to the generation of value
when organizations are unaware of or do not have
good control over the operation of its processes. The
518
Mendes, T. and Santos, S.
A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business Processes.
In Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS 2016) - Volume 2, pages 518-527
ISBN: 978-989-758-187-8
Copyright
c
2016 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
result of this is to create performance indicators that
reflect departments’ prompt results, defined by a
functional management focused on a vertical view
(Pidun and Felden, 2012). Thus, measures and
evaluation of performance end up targeting the
functional performance of departments and
individuals when they should focus on the outcomes
of the process.
According to Leclair et al. (2012), organizations
have difficulty in defining what should be measured,
and end up measuring less complicated aspects such
as productivity, cost, time; and often neglecting
indicators linked to strategy. Based on their analysis
of empirical studies, Pidun and Felden (2012) verified
there is a gap between the analysis, implementation
and execution of processes as well as between
strategic management and operational execution; to
which they give as a possible explanation the lack of
a methodological orientation of systems that measure
the performance of Business Processes.
In the analysis of Pidun et al., (2011), various
models for assessing the performance of Business
Processes use numerical parameters, and artificial and
simplifying measures in an attempt to assess
processes. However, various processes of a
qualitative and non-deterministic nature end up not
being evaluated effectively. If various processes are
not evaluated or this evaluation is difficult when
using these measures, possible problems or
performance results may remain invisible to
managers, and thus make hardly any contribution to
the decision-making process and consolidate the gap
between strategy and business processes (Pidun and
Felden, 2012). This leads us to following research
question: Which approach best meets the evaluation
of business processes, with a view to a greater
alignment between process indicators and strategic
objectives?
Based on the model proposed by Wohlim (2000),
which was adapted from the GQM (Goal Question
Metric) method, the overall objective of this research
is: (1) To analyze metric models or approaches for
assessing business processes proposed in the
literature; (2) Proposing an assessment approach to
business processes that contribute to a better
alignment between indicators of processes and
strategic objectives; (3) Checking applicability from
the standpoint of leaders, analysts and owners of the
process; (4) In the Business process of a public
organization context.
The rest of the article discusses theoretical and
methodological reference works in Section 2. Then,
the Approach put forward in this paper is described
(Section 3). Section 4 presents the results obtained by
applying the Approach and in Section 5 final remarks
are made, the contributions of the paper listed and
suggestions for future studies made.
2 THEORETICAL AND
METHODOLOGICAL
REFERENCES
The research began with an ad hoc review of the
literature in order to search for and acquire, in
general, a better understanding of how the
performance of business processes is evaluated. This
review contributed to defining the research problem
and subsequently to formulating the objectives of this
paper.
After this stage, it was found there was a need to
conduct a systematic review of the literature (SRL).
This method enables a wider range of relevant results
to be included, instead of the limitation on our
conclusions that would result from reading only a few
articles. The bibliographical search was conducted in
accordance with the systematic review of literature
method defined by Kitchenham (2004).
With the objective of analyzing, more specifically,
what the measures or indicators of they are and how
they are being used measures or indicators of
performance are and how they are being used in the
context of managing business processes to ensure that
processes and strategic objectives are aligned. The
following search questions for the SRL were defined:
QP1- What are the metrics and indicators that
are being used in the evaluation of business
processes?
QP2- Do the studies have rules, guidelines or
sets of guidance on how to use the metrics
presented?
QP3- What is the context in which the metrics
are being used?
Automatic searches were conducted in the digital
libraries of the Association for Computing Machinery
(ACM), the IEEE Computer Society, Emerald
Insight, Science Direct and Springer Link. The result
of the searches resulted in the return of 3,377 articles.
Their titles and/or abstracts of these were analyzed,
and exclusion criteria were applied. References were
discarded that clearly dealt with other matters not
relevant to the purpose of this research, as a result of
which an initial selection of 25 items was made. The
second filter consisted of reading the text of the
articles initially selected in their entirety and as a
result the list of articles described in Table 1 were
obtained.
A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business Processes
519
It was found from the analysis of the approaches
selected (Section 3), there was a need to propose a
systematic approach (Section 4), which would
combine relevant and complementary aspects of the
articles analyzed.
Table 1: Final result of selecting the studies.
ID Title of Article
EP6 Optimizing Process Performance Visibility
through Additional Descriptive Features in
Performance Measurement.
EP7 Organizational Performance Measures for
Business Process Management: A
Performance Measurement Guideline.
EP9 Research on Key Performance Indicator
(KPI) of Business Process.
EP11 The Research of Metrics Repository for
Business Process Metrics.
EP13 Two Cases on How to Improve the
Visibility of Business Process Performance.
EP15 Performance measurement in business
process outsourcing decisions: Insights
from four case studies.
EP22 Quality evaluation framework (QEF):
Modelling and evaluating quality of
business processes.
In order to verify the usefulness of the proposed
approach, a case study was conducted of a business
process of a public organization. In particular, this is
an empirical research that according to Yin (2005)
that investigates a current phenomenon within its real
context, when the boundaries between the
phenomenon and context are not clearly defined. The
case study is described in Section 5 of this article.
The different approaches discussed above show
variations in the methodology, specifications and
even as to how business processes are evaluated. In
order to assess these approaches, a set of criteria was
defined which addresses both the theory, based on the
selected references, and some aspects of usability.
The criteria used were:
Methodology: Ad-hoc (Ah) OR Systematic
(Sy);
Types of measures: Quantitative (Qt) AND/OR
Qualitative (Ql);
Context of Applications: Specific (S) OR
Generic (G);
Processes supported by systems: Yes OR No;
Efficiency: Yes OR No;
Effectiveness: Yes OR No;
Empirical validation: Yes OR No.
The criterion of Methodology is related to the
attention to the way in which an approach can be used
to evaluate a business process. Classified approaches
such as systematic ones are those that describe a set
of rules, guidelines, processes or activities needed to
use the measures presented. On the other hand, ad-
hoc approaches focus only on describing performance
measures, without, at first being interested in the way
that its approaches can be put into practice.
The criterion named types of measures concerns
the nature of the measures presented in the selected
approaches. Quantitative measurements are those
based on numerical performance indicators, while
qualitative measures consist of textual descriptions
and narratives about factors of success of the process
and which often require interpretation.
The criterion called application is related to the
context in which a particular approach can be used.
Certain approaches present measures that are
sufficiently generic so that they that can be applied in
different contexts and business processes of very
different natures. Approaches classified as specific
are those used in a specific business process or those
of a similar nature.
Some approaches have performance measures
that are established from information generated by
business process automation systems. In other words,
the use of the measures presented is associated with
making information available by means of systems.
The criterion of processes supported by systems is
related to the concern for analyzing if the
performance evaluation of the process depends, in
principle, on some support by means of systems such
as a BPMS (Business Process Management Suite), for
example.
The aim of using criteria of efficiency and
effectiveness is to describe whether the approaches
analyzed present measures to evaluate the
productivity and performance (efficiency) of
processes, as well as their ability to do what is needed,
which is correct in order to reach a certain goal or
outcome (effectiveness). Efficiency involves the way
in which an activity or process is performed;
effectiveness refers to whether it results in meeting
customer’s needs in all their restrictions. According
to Corrêa and Corrêa (2006), efficiency is a measure
of the extent to which an organization's resources are
used economically, and effectiveness refers to the
extent to which the objectives are achieved.
The criterion of empirical validation is concerned
with assessing the practical utility of the proposed
measures in the different approaches. Empirical
validation occurs by conducting experiments, case
studies or research in a real context, and helps to
determine the effectiveness of these measures.
ICEIS 2016 - 18th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
520
Tables 2 and 3 present the approaches
investigated related to the evaluation criteria
illustrated above
Table 2: Evaluation Criteria (Methodology, Measures and
Application).
Articles
Evaluation Criteria
Methodology Measures Application
Ah Sy Qt Ql S G
EP6
X X X X
EP7
X X X
EP9
X X X
EP11
X X X
EP13
X X X X
EP15
X X X
EP22
X X X
Table 3: Evaluation Criteria (System support, Efficiency,
Effectiveness and Empirical validation).
Studies
Systems Efficiency Effectiveness Validated
EP6
No Yes Yes
No
EP7
No Yes Yes
No
EP9
Yes Yes Yes
No
EP11
Yes Yes No
No
EP13
No Yes Yes Yes
EP15
No Yes Yes Yes
EP22
No Yes No Yes
Based on the criteria presented and discussed
earlier in this paper, we considered that a systematic
approach (which enables the metrics presented to be
used consistently), which brings together quantitative
and qualitative performance measures, generically
(measures not linked to a specific context or domain)
not dependent on using systems that provide an
evaluation of efficiency (resources) and effectiveness
(results) and which had been validated empirically
could be considered ideal, or one that best meets the
evaluation of performance of business processes.
From the analysis of the selected approaches,
there was a need to propose a systematic approach
that would combine relevant and complementary
aspects of the studies analyzed.
3 APPROACH PROPOSED FOR
EVALUATING THE
PERFORMANCE OF BUSINESS
PROCESSES
Of the approaches investigated, the one that
comprises the largest number of requirements, set out
in the previous section, is Article EP13. However, it
does not describe in great detail how this approach
can be used. Moreover, the approaches presented in
articles EP7 and EP22 do give a detailed description
of the the process for using performance measures.
In article EP7, Vuksic et al. (2008) argue that the
performance measures of a process should be aligned
to the strategic goals and objectives of the
organization and that they should be measured under
the quantitative and qualitative dimensions,
Nevertheless, the metrics presented in the article are
quantitative, whereas, in Article EP22, the
performance measures are associated exclusively
with expressions quantified as a quality objective.
It was arising from these considerations that our
approach was defined. It brings together the model of
performance measures described in EP13, but using it
as a guide to using the measures presented, and the
procedural description defined in Article EP7.
3.1 Process for Evaluating the
Performance of Processes
The evaluation process defined in EP7 is illustrated in
Figure 1 below:
Figure 1: Process for using performance measures.
The aim of the activities illustrated in the process
flow is to lead to proposing a guideline for measuring
the performance of business processes. In order to
provide adequate guidance for assessing
performance, on following this procedural
description, a description will be given below of the
steps and some artifacts or suggestions that may
contribute to making such an assessment.
3.1.1 Defining the Strategic Objectives
According to Vuksic et al. (2008), the performance
measures of business processes should be aligned to
the organizational goals and objectives. The first
activity in the process of evaluating the performance
of a process consists of defining the strategic
objectives to be achieved by the results of the
processes. These objectives are defined by the owners
A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business Processes
521
of the process in the organization, and can be obtained
from the strategic planning documents.
3.1.2 Identifying the Stakeholders
After the identifying the objectives of the process, the
stakeholders in the conduct of the process must be
identified, i.e., those responsible for the process,
those taking part in the activities, clients,
beneficiaries, sponsors and others. Process mapping
artifacts or even the use of a RACI matrix can
contribute to defining the stakeholders in
implementation.
3.1.3 Defining the Information Required for
Each Party
The information needs of each stakeholder can be
very different, and require that the performance
measures be adapted to their requirements.
The activity of mapping makes it possible to
define the roles and responsibilities of each
participant during the implementation of the process
more clearly and objectively thereby contributing to
defining the information required for each party and
assisting in defining the performance measures.
3.1.4 Establishing what Will be Measured
In this stage what is sought is to identify what
measures are useful for evaluating the performance of
the process in relation to its goals, in achieving the
strategic objectives. Performance reports or
accounting documents can be used to identify
performance measures of the process.
3.1.5 Specifying how the Measures Will be
Collected
When identifying the performance measures of a
process, a process for collecting these measures needs
to be identified. In the case of processes supported by
systems, there automated data collection. In order to
develop an action plan for identifying and collecting
performance measures in non-automated processes,
an adaptation of the 5W2H management tool was
proposed as an artifact for this step. The information
is organized as follows:
Description of the measure (What): Defines
what this measure means.
Rationale (Why): Defines the end, the purpose
of using the measure.
Instruments to obtain measures (From where):
Specifies the instruments (media) from where
the data of the measures can be collected.
Frequency (When): Determines the frequency
or time interval at which the information of the
measures needs to be collected.
Responsible (Who): Describes the sector or
department responsible for providing
information on a particular measure.
Process for obtaining measures (How): Details
what process will be undertaken to obtain the
measures.
Costs (How much): Describes the costs for
obtaining the measure.
3.1.6 Defining what Approaches, Methods
or Instruments Will be used
There are several approaches and frameworks that use
different methods for measuring performance,
described in the literature, as well as various tools that
support these evaluation methods.
Based on the critical analysis of the approaches
presented in Section 3, it was found that the model in
EP13 has the largest number the criteria presented.
Thus, it is recommended that this is used in step for
evaluating the process. Subsection 4.2 presents how
the measures in the EP13 model are systematized.
3.1.7 Assessing what the Measures Present
The performance measures of business processes
should be related to (or the same) measures existing
in the organization that are used to monitor the
success of the strategy.
3.2 Adapting the Evaluation Model
The performance measures defined in Article EP13
require a greater capacity of interpretation due to the
way they are presented. The paper presents the
measurements in the form of questions such as: There
numerical parameters linked to quality, such as cycle
time, probability of failure or average of
interruptions. This could hamper their use by
individuals who evaluate their business processes.
Given this configuration, the measures model was
systematized in an attempt to make it orderly,
coherent, clear and understandable by the parties that
may use it. The model originally defined in EP13 was
discussed together with two BPM experts until the
model shown in Tables 4 and 5 was reached.
ICEIS 2016 - 18th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
522
Table 4: Systematization of the Measures Model
(Efficiency).
NP
(*)
Efficiency
Indicators Types of Indicators
Key
Perfor-
mance
Indicator
(KPI)
- Time cycle of the process;
- Countable amounts of process
outputs;
- Number of returned processes;
- Number of processes carried
out;
- Downtime;
- Percentage of the budget used.
DP
(**)
Indicators Types of Indicators
Process
Success
Factors
(PSF)
- Benefits, scope and steps of
the process;
- Information systems,
databases or interfaces used;
- Descrition of the success of
the process;
- Documents and information
produced and delivered.
(*) Numeric Parameters; (**) Descriptive Parameters.
Table 5: Systematization of the Measures Model
(Effectiveness).
NP
(*)
Effectiveness
Indicators Types of Indicators
Metrics of
the
Process
(PMX)
- Probability of failure;
- Average number of
interruptions;
- Time-cycle approval meetings;
- Number of approval meetings;
- Number of approvers /
officers-in-charge.
DP
(**)
Indicators Types of Indicators
Descrip-
tion of the
Compo-
nents
which
comprise
the
Process
(PO)
- Departments responsible,
informed or affected;
- Role of approvers or officers-
in-charge;
- Interfaces with other
departments;
- Conditions and restrictions;
- Initiators, beneficiaries and
customers of the process;
- Key people or information
system for a step of the process
or shared backup.
(*) Numeric Parameters; (**) Descriptive Parameters.
Also added to the model described above was an
auxiliary table, which describes in detail each of the
indicators presented. Such as, for example, “Process
Cycle time: corresponds to the time required for
performing the process, i.e. the time between the start
and end of the process”.
The proposed approach to evaluating business
process performance of this work consists of the
process for measuring performance, artifacts and
model of systematic measures described in this
section. In order to ensure the validation of the
approach, it was applied in a real business process of
an organization, and this is described in the next
section.
4 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The process that was selected to validate the proposed
approach is called Pro-equipment, linked to the Pro-
rectorate for research and postgraduate subjects
(PROPESQ) of a Brazilian Federal Institution of
Higher Education (IFES).
Pro-equipment procures equipment intended for
shared use in the structure of scientific and
technological research of post-graduate programs of
the recommended IFESs and is funded by the
Coordination Unit for Improving the Qualifications
and Experience of Higher Education Personnel
(CAPES), and is linked to the strategic objective of
stimulating the development of research. The
selection of this process, to validate the proposed
approach, occurred in a timely manner in view of the
demand for having it mapped and optimized,
requested through PROPESQ together with the IFES
Office for Processes to which the author of this
research is linked.
4.1 Defining the Objectives of the
Process
The first interview was attended by two
representatives of the Research Board (DPQ in
Portuguese) and three process analysts of the
Processes Unit of the institution were also present.
The two participants are directly responsible for the
performance of the process.
Initially a description of the following points was
requested:
P1 – “What is the Objective of Mapping and
Optimizing the Process?
According to Respondent 2, the main problem of
this process is the lack of transparency of the
information on the results, when he states that:
E2 - "We have partial and not effective control,
for example, we know the input volume of resources,
we know how much CAPES makes available, and we
even know how much of the resources were
earmarked because the Accounts Department of
PROPESQ send us this information on a spreadsheet,
if we request it. From there on, we have no feedback,
we do not know if the teacher received it. "
A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business Processes
523
P2- “What is the Objective of the Pro-Equipment
Process?”
E1 - "To stimulate scientific production by
acquiring equipment intended for shared use in
postgraduate laboratories of the university."
4.2 Identifying Stakeholders in the
Process
P5 – “Who are the Stakeholders in the Process?
Specifically those in charge (the owners of the
process), participants of the activities (sectors),
clients, beneficiaries and sponsors.
CAPES acts as the sponsor, the clients of this
process were defined as the teachers and/or research
groups. Finally, the participants in the activities when
the given process was being carried out were: the
Director of Research (DPQ/PROPESQ), the
Accounting Board (DC/PROPESQ), the Agreements
Sector (PROPLAN), the Legal Department (Office of
the Rector), the Rector, The National Purchases
Sector (PROGEST), the Importations Sector
(PROGEST) and the Publishing Sector (PROGEST).
4.3 Defining the Information Necessary
for Each Party
At this stage we were invited to the meetings, prior to
which the stakeholders described above, excluding the
sponsor of the process (CAPES). This was justified by
the fact that CAPES is configured as an entity external
to the University context in which one does not have
dominion over the rules and procedures used.
Four meetings were held with the following
representatives: 02 (DPQ/PROPESQ), 01 (DC/
PROPESQ), 01 (Agreements Sector/PROPLAN) and
01 (PROGEST). At this stage the process was modelled
collaboratively using the BizAgi Process Modeler.
The process starts from the release of the official
notice by CAPES. Then, the Board of Research
(DPQ) sets an internal schedule of activities before
submitting a single proposal.
Generally, the amount of resource requested by
the projects is greater than the amount initially made
available by CAPES. Therefore, the DPQ convenes a
committee to assess and recommend what projects
should be submitted. The end result of the projects
selected internally is announced and submitted to the
CAPES.
These projects will be further evaluated by
CAPES, who may refuse some requests. Projects
approved at this stage are announced by DPQ. After
this step, the term of decentralization of credit is sent
to PROPLAN, the process is reviewed, and the
document is sent to the Legal Department, which will
analyze items such as dates, terms, rubrics, data, etc.
The Legal Department must give its assent in writing
to ensure the process continues. If so, the process is
sent for the signature of the Rector of the institution.
The process for requesting ear-marking is then
returned to PROPLAN which monitors that CAPES
has released the funds and PROPLAN notifies the
Accounting Sector of PROPESQ.
The Accounting Sector of PROPESQ then starts
the activity of mounting the ear-marking process for
each piece of equipment. At this moment, a request is
made to the coordinators of the subprojects for a
series of documents. Subsequently, the accounting
entry for the committed funds is made via PROGEST,
and there follows a new phase of analysis by the Legal
Department. After being approved by the Legal
Department, the process goes to the Publishing Sector
in PROGEST, and the flow of the process proceeds to
the National Purchases or Importations Sector so that
the purchase can be made.
4.4 Defining what Will be Evaluated in
the Process
At this stage there were two interviews with those
responsible (DPQ) for this process. Initially the
interviewee was asked about the existence of an
accounting report on the performance of the process.
According to E1 - "CAPES demands an indication
of how the previous buying process was conducted.
We describe, when asked, only what was actually ear-
marked .".
For interviewee E2, this kind of report is based on
measures that do not reflect, in a satisfactory manner,
that achieving the objectives of the process was verified.
E2 - "Ear-marking is only the first stage of the
expenditure budget, where the funds were granted, but
there is no guarantee the equipment will be purchased."
When asked:What are the important
performance measures for making a satisfactory
assessment of the results of this process?”
E1 - "In my opinion we should have information
about whether or not the equipment was purchased,
was actually installed in the laboratory and which
research groups are using it".
Still on the measures that should be used to
evaluate the process, interviewee E2 stated that:
E2 - "Besides the amount ear-marked and bits and
pieces to be paid, which are data that we can get easily,
we need to know the quantity and description of the
pieces of equipment bought, how many and which ones
are awaiting delivery and installation, and what the
institutional outcomes are (number of dissertations,
ICEIS 2016 - 18th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
524
theses, descriptive reports on patents generated or
information on the rendering of research services to
other institutions) that have been achieved".
4.5 Specifying how the Measures Will
be Collected
At this stage a meeting was held with the same
representatives who took part in the mapping of the
process meetings. Initially, a projection of the
mapping process was presented, followed by a set of
measures that were extracted. The measures
presented to the participants were:
Total amount ear-marked;
Amount spent the ear-marked resources;
Amount in smaller bills to be paid;
List of equipment purchased;
List of delivered equipment;
List of installed equipment and;
Academic indicators.
For each of the measures proposed the artifact for
specifying the collection process defined in the
approach was discussed jointly by the participants
and filled in. Table 6 shows an example.
Table 6: Collection process for academic indicators.
Academic Indicators
Description
measure
Corresponds to descriptive reports on
data from the scientific production
supported by the equipment purchased.
Reports may contain descriptive
information about numbers of
dissertations, theses, patents obtained
as a result of using the equipment, as
well as descriptions of services
rendered to other institutions.
Justification
One of the strategic objectives of
PROPESQ is to encourage scientific
production of the university. Products
purchased by Pro-equipment are
intended to contribute to achieve this
goal. Academic indicators enable the
results of this process to be made more
visible in relation to achieving the
strategic objectives.
Instruments
to obtain
measures
Scientific production reports from
research laboratories that have
equipment coming from Pro-equipment
funds.
Periodicity Ad hoc.
Officer-in-
charge
Coordinators of postgraduate
laboratories.
Process for
obtaining
measures
Meetings or requests via email.
Costs Time
4.6 Applying Performance Assessment
Model
At this stage, four meetings were held with the
members already described: (02) representatives of
DPQ /PROPESQ, (01) representative of the
Accounting Sector/PROPESQ, (01) representative of
the National Purchases Sector and the Importations
Sector of PROGEST. Meetings were held separately.
The procedure for conducting this step may be
described in three phases:
Presentation of the Model – in this stage the
presentation was made, using a print document
format, of the model of measures defined to the
interviewee.
Recording of the participants' responses – the
interviewees’ answers were recorded in the
document.
Summary of the responses – in this stage, the
responses were combined in a single table,
thereby eliminating redundancies and
inconsistencies in a single frame.
Table 7 presents some of the indicators obtained in
this step:
Table 7: Systematization of the Measures Model
(Efficiency).
NP
(*)
Efficiency
Indicators Types of Indicators
Key
Perfor-
mance
Indicator
(KPI)
- Amount raised from CAPES;
- Amount of funds spent; ear-
marked (Percentage used of the
budget)
DP
(**)
Indicators Types of Indicators
Process
Success
Factors
(PSF)
- Steps: Official notice
published, term of
decentralization of credit
unundertaken, Review and
analysis of the process, Release
of Credit Authorized,
Constructing ear-marked funds,
review and analysis of the funds
ear-marked followed by legal
approval, Publication in the
Official Gazette of the Union,
Purchase and control of
acquisitions made;
- Information systems, databases
or interfaces used: SICAPES
(the CAPES Integrated System),
net purchases (Purchases Portal
of the Federal Government),
SICAF (System for the Unified
Registration of Suppliers);
(*) Numeric Parameters; (**) Descriptive Parameters.
A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business Processes
525
4.7 What the Measures Present
A set of measures for the process as a whole, and its
"partitions" (steps, departments, stages, etc.) have
been defined in the previous section so as to reflect
certain performance characteristics for each
management level of stakeholder. These measures
describe by means of generating information the
actual state of the configuration of the process, thus
enabling aspects of performance to be evaluated such
as s complexity in operations, bottlenecks, redundant
activities, excessive documentation and approvals. In
addition, they make it possible to evaluate the results
of the process as to achieving the objectives set.
Regarding Pro-equipment, a check was made on
the opportunity to insert some improvements into the
process. The following optimization proposals were
discussed, as a result:
Integrating the Superintendence of Works (SPO
in Portuguese) in the early stages of the process,
specifically in the (internal) evaluation stage of
the sub-projects to be submitted to CAPES. The
function of the SPO is to carry out assessment in
order to identify if the laboratory to which the
equipment will go, has the infrastructure needed
for its installation. In several situations it was
reported that the purchase of equipment had
been made but the research lab did not have an
infrastructure appropriate for its installation.
Currently, the process for guaranteeing
resources for renovations, or purchase of
equipment to ensure the effective installation of
the equipment is only started from the moment
that the equipment is delivered to the university.
The urgency to get the guarantee of these funds
for the purchase of equipment by ear-marking
funds encouraged the actors of the department
responsible not to check the (full) requirements
of documentation defined by legislation for the
formation of these processes (ear-markings).
The process very often did not follow its
"normal" flow, where and if it was published in
the Official Gazette of the Union without
necessarily obtaining the approval of the Legal
Department. This deviation in the flow led, in
various situations, to delays in conducting the
process due to non-observance of the applicable
legislation.
The information on the results obtained for the
research based on acquiring equipment were
practically non-existent or difficult to monitor.
As a proposed solution which was discussed
between the actors of the process is the creation
of the role of research lab coordinator.
At first, the adoption of the model, which
combined quantitative performance measures (that
permit performance to be measured and managed)
and qualitative measures (which allow grounding of
the critical analysis of the results), manages to gather
important information about the performance of the
process in relation to the strategic goals and
objectives set, in accordance with the evaluation of
utility perceived by the participants in the process.
5 CONCLUSIONS
In relation to the overall objective of the research,
which consisted of verifying which approach best
serves the evaluation of business processes, with a
view to greater alignment between process indicators
and strategic objectives, it may be noted that there is
no single approach that adequately assesses the
performance of business processes.
Several variables can be measured and evaluated
with regard to business processes. However, it falls to
managers to undertake the tasks of identifying,
selecting and defining measures that are adequate for
and aligned with the organization's objectives. The
model used has a large number of indicators that can
and should be adapted to different organizational
contexts, from which the most important for use in
practice should be selected. Finally, it is essential that
an organization uses several indicators when
evaluating its business processes, since the use of a
single indicator can not represent the broader context
needed to support effective decision making.
Note that in the analysis of the literature and in the
very conduct of the empirical study, there was evidence
of the need to evaluate the performance of business
processes based on quantitative and qualitative
measures. Managers must consider the various existing
measures for evaluating business processes and should
spare no effort in identifying, selecting and defining the
most important one for use in practice.
In order to complement the results found in this
research, we propose the use of the approach in
several different business processes, with a view to
verifying its real results for the different
characteristics of operations and dynamics of an
organization such as: culture, size, area of activity,
and so one.
REFERENCES
Baldam, R. et al, 2007. Gerenciamento de processos de
negócios. 2ª edição. São Paulo: Editora Érica.
ICEIS 2016 - 18th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
526
Bosilj-vuksic, V.; Milanovic, L.; Skrinjar, R.; Indihar-
stemberger, M., 2008. Organizational
PerformanceMeasures for Business Process
Management: A Performance MeasurementGuideline,
Computer Modeling and Simulation, UKSIM 2008. pp.
94,99, 1-3. April.
Gil, A. C., 1999. Métodos e técnicas de pesquisa social. São
Paulo: Atlas.
Heidari, F.; Loucopoulos, P., 2014. Quality evaluation
framework (QEF): Modeling and evaluating quality of
business processes, International Journal of
Accounting Information Systems, Volume 15, Issue 3,
September, pp. 193-223, ISSN 1467-0895,
Hou, H.; Song, Q.; You, G.; Hao, K., 2009. The research of
Metrics 0repository for Business ProcessMetrics.
China: Second International Symposium on
Computational Intelligence and Design, pp. 168-171.
Kitchenham, B., 2007. Guidelines for performing
Systematic Literature Reviews in Software
Engineering. Reino Unido: EBSE Technical Report,
version2.3.
Leclair, C.; Cullen, A.; Keenan, J., 2012. Use A Metric
Framework To Drive BPM Excellence in: Forrester.
P. kueng, P.; Krahn, A., 1999. Building a Process
Performance Meaasurement System: some Early
experiences, Journal of Scientific and Industrial
Research, National Institute of Science Communication
and Information Resources, New Delhi, Vol. 58, No. 3-
4, pp. 149-159.
Pidun, T., J. Buder and C. Felden, 2011. Optimizing
Process Performance Visibility through Additional
Descriptive Features in Performance Measurement.
International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing
Conference Workshops, pp. 204–212.
Pidun, T.; Felden, C., 2012. Two Cases on How to Improve
the Visibility of Business Process Performance, System
Science (HICSS), 2012 45th Hawaii International
Conferenceon, vol. ??, no., pp.4396-4405, 4-7 Jan.
Powell, SG.; Schwaninger M.; Trimble, C., 2011.
Measurement and control of business process. Syst
Dyn 17:63-91.x.
Škrinjar, R.; Bosiljvukšić, R.; Indiharštemberger, M.
(2008). The impact of business process orientationon
financial and non financial performance, Business
Process Management Journal, Vol. 14 Iss: 5, pp.738-
754.
Smith, G.; Furt, S., 2009. How (not) to Fail at BPM.
BPM.COM. URL: http://bpm.com/how-not-to-fail-at-
bpm.html (visited 07/18/2013).
Trkman, P., 2010. The critical success factors of business
process management. International Journal of
Information Management, v. 30, n. 2, pp. 125-134,
Wang, P.; HE, W., 2012. Research on key performance
indicator (KPI) of business process. China: Second
International Conference on Business Computing and
Global Informatization, pp. 151-154.
Yin, R. Estudo de caso: planejamento e métodos. 3. ed.
Porto Alegre: Bookman, 2005.
A Procedural Approach for Evaluating the Performance of Business Processes
527