For corporate
executives, it is still a very challenging task to fully
understand these new terminologies and how they can deliver all
this brand new magic. After all, everyone is convinced that to
some degree, they already have a custom-built system to provide
this BAM and CEM capability.
The language of the
business culture, or "corporate-lingo," took a dramatic turn with
the advent of the word "software." What changed is history. Now,
once again, techie lingo is teasing our communication skills and
our corporate understanding.
There are terms like
BAM for "Business Activity Monitoring" and CEM for "Complex Event
Management." What these new terms are trying to ask us is how well
we run our corporate circus.
BAM amounts to the
tools to manage a great three-ring circus under a huge tent.
Simply put, it will keep the masters of ceremonies up to date on
what's happening at any given time. They can see why the clowns,
once again, are not behaving properly or why the elephants are
having indigestion again, and even why, despite management
warnings, the risk-taking lion tamer is still alive and laughing
all the way to the bank.
Corporate Circus
That kind of stuff.
Basically it is all about new sets of tools so that the entire
circus activity is simultaneously monitored and displayed
graphically in living colors. It sounds so simple.
For corporate
executives, it is still a very challenging task to fully
understand these new terminologies and how they can deliver all
this brand new magic. After all, everyone is convinced that to
some degree, they already have a custom-built system to provide
this BAM and CEM capability. However, in reality, today's business
activity critically needs much higher-level cross-silo-real-time
integration -- something where traditional software has just about
failed. This new challenge by this new technology starts a brand
new war of the words.
The technology
champions -- or the fine trapeze artists -- of this new corporate
circus boldly claim that this is a brand new revolution. Time will
tell. Best we first relate to the general corporate perceptions
and attitudes, particularly the mindset with computational
understanding before the word software was fully understood and
created a revolution. Here, branding comes into play.
One of the main
applications of this new technology is being tested on the U.S.
requirements under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and on a similar rule
under Bill C6 in Canada. Apparently this technology enables
extraordinary control over things as they occur rather than catch
them in periodic sampling.
Catch
the Culprits
There are too many
emerging issues; Internet fraudsters, motivated by money and armed
with sophisticated technology, pose an increased economic threat,
while corporations have exhausted their resources on these
ever-growing problems.
Bashir Fancy,
Bashir Fancy who
in the past has been EVP, Risk Management of Visa Management, SVP
and Head of Internal Audit for Visa International globally and
previous to that Head of Risk Management Visa Canada, and other
senior roles in Financial and Airline Industry. He strongly
claims that this new BAM technology is the way to go. He explains:
"We can catch the crooks before they disappear, this technology,
once applied, allows you to have your compliance monitored in real
time ... just as it happens." Bashir, now chief operating officer
of www.nmiinc.com , flags his
out-of-box product, "ATMA," as a toolkit for Sarbanes-Oxley. His
solution fully leverages the client's existing infrastructure and
non-intrusively offers compliance, enabling a real-time sample
mode. "Fraud is an abnormal behavior in a normal environment, and
with BAM, we can catch it in time" Bashir says. "We bring BAI, or
Business Activity Integration, as the new real game." The
compliance and fraud sectors both require a major shift in
thinking as it is no longer a question of just maintenance, rather
it is all about prevention. Real time monitoring across silos now
provides this opportunity.
Variations of BAM,
such as BSC for service components and BPM for process management,
are all the new big ideas on the horizon. It seems that BAM or its
related components must be clearly understood by corporate
executives before they can fully appreciate the power behind these
simple acronyms.
New
Order of Business
The application of
these new technologies will dramatically enhance and improve
customer relationship management (CRM), cross-selling, security
and compliance. Eventually, they will change the thinking for the
entire corporate body about how to run operations designed to
oversee all activities in real time across the total enterprise.
It might sound too good to be true -- just like the early concept
of the Web.
Marketing new
concepts takes a long time, and once they are understood, they
take off like a rocket. Today there are hundreds of new technology
companies all claiming some kind of dramatic improvements in
operations with the use of BAM and CEP. For those technology
companies that really have this side of the technology mastered
and have the tools ready to go, these new platforms will work and
they will do wonderful things. Like anything else, once properly
applied, they can certainly kick start a new kind of a revolution.
While the term "IT"
along with its existing software and hardware is almost at a
standstill, perhaps there is something very powerful and secretly
hidden in the "B" word along with these new terminologies. This
new corpo-lingo pushes the envelope for a global mindshare and how
to manage business activity integration in real time while
creating better business models, all aimed to create real power.
Something never seen
before? Will it create a new world for the business empires? Will
it create new real-time monitoring standards and control and set
new order? For now, let the real clocks chime in real time.
Remember, in the
early start up stage, the terms software, hardware, Internet,
e-mail or Web were all just some strange lingo. BAM anyone?
Naseem Javed,
author Naming for Power and also Domain Wars, is
recognized as a world authority on global name identities and
domain issues. Javed founded
ABC Namebank,
a consultancy he established a quarter century ago, and conducts
executive
workshops on image and name identity issues. Contact him at
njabc@njabc.com.