Oracle yesterday moved to extend the business process management (BPM) and
service-oriented architecture (SOA) management capabilities of its Fusion
Middleware line, inking a major original equipment manufacturing (OEM) agreement
with BPM software specialist IDS Scheer.
Under the deal, Oracle's BPM product portfolio will now include IDS Scheer's
BPM Aris platform, providing customers with functionality for modelling,
deploying and optimising business processes across multiple IT systems.
The alliance will also see Oracle develop a new Business Process Analysis
suite, featuring Aris functionality, which will be integrated with Oracle's
existing BPM products as well as its SOA management toolsets and Business
Process Execution Language (BPEL) Process Manager.
David Keene, director of Fusion Middleware Solutions at Oracle, said the new
suite would be launched in the autumn and would include: business architect
tools to allow business users to model processes; a business process
collaboration environment; a business process simulation toolset to help users
simulate the impact of process changes; and process publishing tool to allow
users to distribute finalised process plans.
Keene said tight integration with the BPEL process manager, which provides
developers with a process design environment, would allow business users to
communicate their requirements effectively to development teams looking to
modify applications in line with process changes.
The alliance is also likely to extend Oracle's SOA governance functionality.
BPM has emerged as a critical part of SOA governance toolsets, helping IT
directors ensure the SOAs they build fit into the process requirements of the
business. In a separate move, BEA acquired BPM specialist Fuego earlier this
year to improve its own SOA suite.
Oracle’s move also underlines IDS Scheer's burgeoning reputation as a
provider of BPM software. The BPM vendor is a long-standing technology partner
of SAP, recently inked a major alliance with IT management specialist BMC, has
been the subject of speculation about an extended relationship with Microsoft's
business applications arm, and has now added Oracle to the roster of partners
embedding its software.
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