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This is the top level of Proact’s Retail Service Function Model showing the five Capability Areas. Service Functions represent the Essential Operational Capabilities of the Enterprise.
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This is the top level of Proact’s Retail Service Function Model showing the five Capability Areas. Service Functions represent the Essential Operational Capabilities of the Enterprise Each Capability Area is further defined by Major Service Functions accessed by drilling down - # 4 is active for this demonstration
This Service Function Model shows the five Major Service Functions in Capability Area 4 with Service Flows defining the Relationships between SFs and External Entities (Customers) Each Major Service Function is further defined by Service Functions accessed by drilling down - # 4.2 is active for this demonstration
This is the next level of decomposition of the Service Function Model showing the five Service Functions comprising 4.2 Sales Creation and Solution Support and their Service Flows Each Service Function is then further defined by another level of decomposition or as a Basic Service Function. Click Here!
This is a Basic Service Function Model showing all Service Relationships AND all the Information Subjects both Used and Created by this BSF! There are 170 BSFs and over 650 Information Subjects in this Retail Reference Model! Proact builds a Matrix of all Create/Use Relationships from which System Families are identified. Click Here for sample! These models are used to contain business processes and for organizational design
This is a small cross-section of the Create/Use Matrix. It is generated automatically by the Proact Toolkit from the contents of the Basic Service Function (BSF) Models. The Matrix shows the relationship (Creates, Modifies, Used By) between BSF’s and Information Subjects. The Create/Use Matrix is the link from the Operational View into the Systems View as Systems Families are defined here using affinity analysis. The full Matrix identifies 29 Systems Families. This sample show the “Sales Support Systems Family”. To view Reference Models for this Systems Family Click Here.
These are the five System Families in the Customer Experience – Sales and Service Capability Area. Each System Family is used to create Reference System Models. Click Here!
This is Reference System Model for the Sales Support System Family. It shows eight different types of Applications within the Family plus the related group of Information Subjects for which they are responsible. This is used to classify existing inventory of systems and to begin Target Systems Development Continue Each System Family is further modeled to show the Information Exchanges between Families. Click Here for sample!
This is an additional type of System Reference Model called a System Family Spider Diagram. It shows all required information exchanges between the Sales Support System Families and other Systems Families in the model. It is derived from the Create/Use Matrix which reflects the operational requirements At this point we switch to Target System Architecture Development for the System Family. Click Here!
These are the ten Target Systems in the Sales Solution System Family and their associated Data Stores. They represent opportunities for consolidating existing solutions while addressing need for diversification and distribution of applications. Continue Each Reference System Family is also used to create a Target Information Exchange Model. Click Here!
This is a Systems Family Information Exchange model for Sales Solution System Family. It shows how we plan to use Integration Systems (Hubs, Data Ware Houses, Portals, and ETL Systems) to connect System Families Once External Flows are resolved, we address exchanges within the System Family. Click Here!
This is the Systems Information Exchange Model for the Target Systems within the Sales Support System Family. It shows which System is responsible for receiving or requesting information exchanges through the Integration Systems Proact also supports the development of Target IT Infrastructure Models to support these Target Systems based again on Reference Models (Not shown). These Target System Architecture Models are then used to design each Target System, each Data Store and each Information Exchange for each step in the planned Migration. Conclusion
This Concludes the Demo We would like to remind you that this demonstration only covered models in the Operational and Systems Views of the Proact Framework. It also illustrated a small sampling of the Proact Retail Industry Reference Model. For more information on the capabilities of Proact and our extensive Industry Reference Models please contact us Double Click to restart the Demo Close this window to return to the Proact Website