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Assessing business process complexity based on textual data: Evidence from ITIL IT ticket processing

Nina Rizun (Gdansk University of Technology, Gdansk, Poland)
Aleksandra Revina (Brandenburg University of Applied Sciences, Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany) (Technical University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany)
Vera G. Meister (Brandenburg University of Applied Sciences, Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany)

Business Process Management Journal

ISSN: 1463-7154

Article publication date: 24 September 2021

Issue publication date: 22 October 2021

645

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to draw the attention of business process management (BPM) research and practice to the textual data generated in the processes and the potential of meaningful insights extraction. The authors apply standard natural language processing (NLP) approaches to gain valuable knowledge in the form of business process (BP) complexity concept suggested in the study. It is built on the objective, subjective and meta-knowledge extracted from the BP textual data and encompassing semantics, syntax and stylistics. As a result, the authors aim to create awareness about cognitive, attention and reading efforts forming the textual data-based BP complexity. The concept serves as a basis for the development of various decision-support solutions for BP workers.

Design/methodology/approach

The starting point is an investigation of the complexity concept in the BPM literature to develop an understanding of the related complexity research and to put the textual data-based BP complexity in its context. Afterward, utilizing the linguistic foundations and the theory of situation awareness (SA), the concept is empirically developed and evaluated in a real-world application case using qualitative interview-based and quantitative data-based methods.

Findings

In the practical, real-world application, the authors confirmed that BP textual data could be used to predict BP complexity from the semantic, syntactic and stylistic viewpoints. The authors were able to prove the value of this knowledge about the BP complexity formed based on the (1) professional contextual experience of the BP worker enriched by the awareness of cognitive efforts required for BP execution (objective knowledge), (2) business emotions enriched by attention efforts (subjective knowledge) and (3) quality of the text, i.e. professionalism, expertise and stress level of the text author, enriched by reading efforts (meta-knowledge). In particular, the BP complexity concept has been applied to an industrial example of Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) change management (CHM) Information Technology (IT) ticket processing. The authors used IT ticket texts from two samples of 28,157 and 4,625 tickets as the basis for the analysis. The authors evaluated the concept with the help of manually labeled tickets and a rule-based approach using historical ticket execution data. Having a recommendation character, the results showed to be useful in creating awareness regarding cognitive, attention and reading efforts for ITIL CHM BP workers coordinating the IT ticket processing.

Originality/value

While aiming to draw attention to those valuable insights inherent in BP textual data, the authors propose an unconventional approach to BP complexity definition through the lens of textual data. Hereby, the authors address the challenges specified by BPM researchers, i.e. focus on semantics in the development of vocabularies and organization- and sector-specific adaptation of standard NLP techniques.

Keywords

Citation

Rizun, N., Revina, A. and Meister, V.G. (2021), "Assessing business process complexity based on textual data: Evidence from ITIL IT ticket processing", Business Process Management Journal, Vol. 27 No. 7, pp. 1966-1998. https://doi.org/10.1108/BPMJ-04-2021-0217

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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