Case for Virtual Business Processes, The: Reduce Costs, Improve Efficiencies, and Focus on Your Core Business
- By Martha Young, Michael Jude
- Published Mar 2, 2004 by Cisco Press.
Book
- Sorry, this book is no longer in print.
- Copyright 2004
- Edition: 1st
- Book
- ISBN-10: 1-58720-087-2
- ISBN-13: 978-1-58720-087-8
Reduce costs, improve efficiencies, and focus on your core business
- Leverage your technology infrastructure to save money and virtualize processes.
- Discover the principles behind BPV and the ways in which they can benefit your business.
- Benefit from incremental cost savings, maximizing your business' ROI.
- Learn from real-world case studies that illustrate best practices.
- Understand the solution-provider market, maximizing the impact of your investment.
The dot-com collapse generally discredited the idea of leveraging the Internet to build viable businesses. Many market pundits have decried the concept without examining the underlying dynamics associated with these companies' failures. The truth is, prior business models were built on a flawed business case, not bad technology. In fact, the dot-com bubble created a whole new class of automation that, when applied to conventional businesses, can dramatically improve time to market, competitive response, and customer interaction. This is not virtual business; this is business process virtualization (BPV), and enterprises that don't grasp and apply the principals of BPV will rapidly be rendered obsolete by those that do, being quickly outmaneuvered and displaced in the market.
BPV is the application of networked, intelligent IT infrastructure to enhance skilled personnel, processes, and assets, which enables companies to improve efficiencies, increase competitive advantage, heighten brand awareness, reduce costs, and improve bottom line revenues. Unlike business process automation, BPV focuses on new management approaches for personnel and technology, signaling a fundamental change in the way that we think about business and its objectives.
While reading The Case for Virtual Business Processes, you will understand why BPV is critical to the long-term viability of your business, while learning how to leverage your intelligent networked infrastructure using leading-edge products and technologies from Cisco Systems.
This volume is in the Network Business Series offered by Cisco Press. Books in this series provide IT executives, decision makers, and networking professionals with pertinent information on today's most important technologies and business strategies.
Related Articles
Business Process Virtualization, Outsourcing and Process Reengineering
Defining the Virtual Business and its Benefits
Incrementalizing Business Process Virtualization
The Rise of Intelligent Agents: Automated Conversion of Data to Information
Virtualization and Reengineering
Links
Read more articles by Martha Young:
The Rise of Intelligent Agents: Automated Conversion of Data to Information, Computerworld.com
Defining the Virtual Business and Its Benefits, Enterprise Networks and Servers
(This article also appeared on TMCnet.com.)
Online Sample Chapter
The Role of Business Process Virtualization in Your Business
Downloadable Sample Chapter
Download - 2.07 MB -- Chapter 1: The Role of Business Process Virtualization in Your Business
Table of Contents
Foreword.
Introduction.
1. The Role of Business Process Virtualization in Your Business.
What Is Business Process Virtualization? What Is Incrementalization? What Is Technology's Impact on Business Models? Technology and BPV. Summary. References.
2. History Lessons: Why Conventional Business Models No Longer Work.
What Business Are You In? Why Firms Should Focus on Their Core Business and Not Make IT a Core Competency. Internet-Based Business Models. Why More Data Is Not the Answer. Summary. Case Study: vCustomer Corporation, Seattle, Washington (www.vcustomer.com). References.
3. Capitalizing on Enabling Technologies.
A Day in the Life of a Virtual Employee. Scott, You Were Right: The Network as a Computer. Summary. Case Study: Teletext, United Kingdom (www.teletext.com).
4. Capitalizing on Enabling Applications.
VoIP. Streaming Media. Follow-Me IP Addresses. Summary. Case Study: KnowledgeNet (www.knowledgenet.com).
5. Capitalizing on a Virtual Presence.
Telecommuting. VLANs. Webification and Portals. Summary. Case Study: ARUP Laboratories, Inc. Reference.
6. Capitalizing on Outsourcing.
Why You Don't Want to Manage 100 Percent of Your Infrastructure. Ways to Safeguard Your Business Infrastructure. How to Select an Outsourcer. Summary. Case Study: InfoWorld Media Group.
7. Internal Security Implications of Managing the BPV-Centric Company.
The Importance of Internal Security. Safeguarding the Company's. Intellectual Property. Quality of Service. Summary. Case Study: Motorola (www.motorola.com).
8. Financial Implications of BPV on Conventional Businesses.
Reduced Costs. The True Total Cost of Ownership. The ROI for a Virtualized Business. Knowledge of Customer Issues. Improved Decision Making. Competitive Advantages of a Virtualized Corporation. Summary.
Survey Instrument.
Survey Instrument Format. The BPV Survey Instrument.
Appendix B: BPV Providers
Glossary
Index.
Index
Download - 100 KB -- Index
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