BSCW-Flow: Workflow in Web-based Shared Workspaces
Thomas Kreifelts, Elke Hinrichs, Gerd Woetzel
GMD-FIT
German National Research Center for Computer Science
Sankt Augustin, Germany
{kreifelts, hinrichs, woetzel}@gmd.de
Abstract:
We present a workflow extension to BSCW, a Web-based shared workspace
system.
The workflow component is based on a Petri net process model,
the completion of individual work items is negotiated in a conversation for
action. At the user interface the process instances appear as shared folders
that allow for different types of action depending on the role of the actor
and the state of the process instance.
Integration into BSCW yields several
distinctive advantages: accessibility from anywhere via a standard Web
browser, upload of arbitrary documents into the workflow folder, easy
transition between work coordination via informal sharing and via more
formal workflow.
BSCW-Flow is particularly suited for low effort, ad-hoc workflows across
departmental or organizational boundaries.
Introduction and Motivation
There are different approaches to support cross-organizational business
processes. One approach integrates existing intra-organizational workflows
through implementation of interoperability standards (processes, data types,
management functions; cf. WfMC's standardization work).
This approach is characterized by a high effort
and is justified in case of processes with a high turn-over and frequency,
processes that are well understood and agreed upon. Another approach, which we
follow in this paper, creates cross-organizational workflow through
provision of a cross-platform, self-organized workflow tool. This
approach is characterized by a low effort and is justified in case of
processes with a relatively low frequency and possibly of an explorative
nature. The workflow system which we propose for the support of such
processes is a workflow extension of the Web-based shared workspace
system BSCW.
The BSCW Shared Workspace System
The BSCW system is a Web-based groupware system around the shared workspace
metaphor. Shared workspaces are established by groups of people to organize
and coordinate their work. A BSCW server (a standard Web server
extended by the BSCW functionality through the Common Gateway Interface)
manages a number of shared workspaces - repositories for shared information,
accessible to the members of a group via any normal Web browser. In general, a BSCW server manages
workspaces for different groups, and users may be members of several workspaces
(e.g., one workspace corresponding to each project a user is involved
in).
A workspace may contain different kinds of information, represented
as information objects arranged in a hierarchical order. The objects may
be of various types such as folders, URL links to Web pages, documents,
graphics, spreadsheets, discussion forums or user specific waste
baskets, address books and calendars. The system allows numerous operations
- usually depending on the object type - that can be applied to objects,
e.g., objects may be renamed, deleted and undeleted, documents may be put
under version control,
or users may add a comment to a discussion forum, and many more. The BSCW
server keeps the members of a group informed about each other's relevant
activities in a shared workspace and provides detailed history information.
BSCW supports authentication using a (name, password) scheme and
provides fine-grained access rights settings for end-users.
Registration with a
BSCW server and administration of a workspace user group is performed in
a self-organized manner: by default no system administrator's action is
required for user administration and workspace set-up. The only
pre-requisites to become a BSCW user are an email address and a Web browser.
The BSCW system shall not be described here in more detail; an in-depth
description of the system can be found in
[Bentley, R., Appelt, W., Busbach, U., Hinrichs, E., Kerr, D., Sikkel,
K., Trevor, J., Woetzel, G. "Basic support for cooperative work on the
World Wide Web," Int. J. Human-Computer Studies 46 (1997),
827-846].
BSCW users
The BSCW system is publicly available at
http://bscw.gmd.de/
since October 1995. People are invited to register and create their workspaces
on the BSCW server free of charge. As of November 1998,
about 13000 users have registered on GMD's public BSCW server and the server
software for local installation has been downloaded over 3000 times.
We estimate that the active BSCW user community comprises some ten
thousand people world-wide.
While doubtlessly some of them just playfully explore the system,
a considerable
number of users with most diverse backgrounds - including computer scientists,
researchers and managers with various degrees of computer literacy, many teachers
and students - use BSCW for real work. We have been receiving massive feed-back
via e-mail (more than 5,000 messages until now) and via direct user observation
in field tests carried out in the CoopWWW project which was funded by the
European Commission.
BSCW-Flow and cross-organizational workflow
In the following we present BSCW-Flow, a workflow extension of BSCW.
Process instances in BSCW-Flow appear as a particular type of shared
folder. These process folders contain
the process definition, the work items that
have been completed or are about to be completed, and relevant documents
that have been attached to the process instance.
Users participating in the process are members of the process folder.
Worklists are also represented by BSCW folders: they can be individually
configured to receive work items pertaining to particular process types.
Via a forms-based interface to the work items, process data may be viewed
and entered by the workflow participant responsible.
The completion of individual work items is negotiated in a conversation for
action with the workflow engine.
BSCW-Flow as a Web-based tool provides the well-known advantages
of Web-based workflow:
accessibility from anywhere (home, travel) via a standard Web browser,
zero deployment costs for client software, and
cross-platform interoperability.
These properties make it a good candidate for the support of
cross-organizational processes.
In addition,
we argue that BSCW-Flow is particularly suited for a more "light-weight"
cross-organizational workflow for the following reasons:
-
BSCW-Flow facilitates start-up of cross-organizational workflow by way of a
low-overhead tool.
Cross-organizational workflows correspond to cross-organizational business
processes; within the respective organizations, these processes interface
to intra-organizational processes. In many cases the overall processes
are not so well understood that the implementation of a
fully integrated workflow is justified.
A low-cost, low-overhead system tackles much simpler cross-organizational workflow: thus it does not incur too much extra effort while still being able to support serious
cross-organizational processes. The simple (but full-fledged) workflow
component of BSCW does not directly interface to existing workflow systems,
but operates like a cross-organizational glue between people that represent
their organizations in the overall process.
-
BSCW-Flow supports self-organized set-up of
workflow processes across organizational boundaries.
Cross-organizational workflow in its start-up phase could suffer
from the necessity of setting up user ids and logins in different
administrative domains involving the respective IT departments.
BSCW-Flow overcomes that cumbersome restriction by making use of BSCW's self-organized
user administration.
Workflow participants are simply specified by their e-mail address;
registration, authentication, and access control are taken care of by BSCW.
-
BSCW-Flow is very well suited for virtual teams and virtual enterprises.
Virtual teams and virtual enterprises characterize new forms of work
organization that rely on the Web for communication and coordination.
BSCW-Flow is particularly suited for workflow support in these virtual
organizations
because of its low-overhead and self-organized way of installing and
executing workflow processes.
-
BSCW-Flow brings together formalized workflow and informal groupware.
BSCW-Flow allows easy transition between two coordination paradigms:
formal coordination based on workflow processes, and more informal
coordination based on information sharing, mutual awareness,
and synchronous communication support as offered by BSCW.
This is particularly
useful in cross-organizational business processes that often involve
peer-to-peer relations (as opposed to hierarchical relations or relations
based on organizational rules or contracts within organizations).
-
BSCW-Flow piggy-backs cross-organizational workflow on a successful
cross-organizational groupware tool.
BSCW is a well introduced shared workspace system that has proven to work
across organizational
boundaries for purposes of information sharing and work coordination. A
workflow extension adds important functionality to this successful tool and
profits from BSCW's wide acceptance.
We would like to point out that BSCW-Flow as a simple workflow tool also
has some restrictions: it relies on a centralized server
(as does BSCW itself),
it supports essentially document-centered workflow, and it does
not integrate external applications into the workflow (at least in its
first implementation).
BSCW-Flow Functionality and User Interface
Process instances as shared folders
BSCW is based on the notion of shared folders that contain arbitrary
documents and to which a certain group of people have access. Membership
to a folder may change over time (new people get invited, old members leave
or are thrown out), access rights of members may be different and may also
be changed. Changes are effected by actions of people who share a
folder.
BSCW workflows are also based on the notion of shared folders: a process
folder is a special shared folder where membership is defined by the
workflow process instance and access depends on the role of the member
and the state of the process.
A process folder is acted upon by its members within the process
activities and in addition is managed by a workflow engine.
At the user interface, a process folder represents a
process instance along with the process definition, attached documents
and notes, and links to active or completed work items. Work items are
only accessible for the workflow participants that are responsible.
Attached documents and notes are accessible for every participant.
Process folders are grouped in worklists which again are BSCW folders.
Using shared folders for representing processes and worklists provides
the following advantages:
-
Easy integration of arbitrary documents into workflows (particularly useful for
processes that have not been or cannot be fully formalized),
-
Ad-hoc invitation of other individuals to workflow folders who may then view
state and information attached to the process instance without being directly
involved in the process.
-
Easy and ad-hoc assignment of deputies for workflow participants using
the group mechanism of BSCW: boss and deputy may as a group
participate in the workflow .
-
Easy transition from a shared workspace folder in informal use to a
formalized workflow folder by associating a process to the folder.
Defining, executing, and monitoring workflow in BSCW-Flow
-
Process definition
-
A process definition in BSCW-Flow is specified as a text document using
the process definition language of the DOMINO system
[Kreifelts, Th., Hinrichs, E., Klein, K.-H., Seuffert, P., Woetzel, G.
"Experiences with the DOMINO office procedure system," in L. Bannon,
M. Robertson, K. Schmidt (eds.) ECSCW '91, Proc. Second European
Conf. on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work,
Kluwer, Dordrecht, 1991, pp. 117-130]
whose workflow engine will be used for BSCW-Flow.
Process definition and management in DOMINO is based on Petri net models.
They may be collaboratively edited using standard BSCW information sharing functionality. Future versions of BSCW-Flow will include a graphical editor for process
definition.
-
Process initiation
-
Processes are initiated by assigning BSCW users (or
e-mail addresses for participants that are not yet BSCW users)
to the roles of the process, and by providing the
initial process data. This is done using the process definition
document. The workflow engine creates a process folder and takes over
the management of the process instance.
-
Worklist handling and work item processing
-
In BSCW-Flow, worklists are ordinary folders into which the workflow engine
may insert process folders.
A user may have several worklists, and may configure personally
into which worklist process folders concerning a specific process
are to be inserted.
Process folders contain work items as specific
objects that are accessible only to the workflow participants which
are responsible. Work items are presented as forms where relevant
process data may be viewed and filled in. Work items may be declared
completed, but also rejected or cancelled in case of exceptions.
Workflow participants are alerted of the arrival of new process folders
or events within existing process folders via the standard BSCW
awareness mechanisms: event icons attached to worklist folders within
BSCW, and BSCW activity reports sent by e-mail upon request.
-
Process monitoring
-
Process folders remain in the worklist after completion of work items
(unless destroyed by the user). Process state per work item is visible
and a process history report is generated on request.
BSCW-Flow user interface
The BSCW-Flow user interface is embedded in the BSCW user interface, and is
like the latter entirely HTML-based.
The following example shows how BSCW-Flow can be used
to support the reviewing process for a scientific conference.
The process is instantiated
by the author of a paper who fills in a form with his name,
affiliation, and other personal data, attaches the paper
(a word processor document)
and uploads both to the BSCW-Flow server.
The author identifies to the system
with his email address and a password only, he needs not be a BSCW user, but
appears as anonymous user.
The next step is the program chair (Wanda Woe, together with her co-chair John Doe)
whose user interface to
the process instance is shown in figure 1: she has a new work item
"Assign reviewers" in her process folder. She also sees the previous
work item of the process, the initial submission by the author, and
the process definition which to a certain degree may be changed during
run-time.
While access to the work items and their forms is restricted
to the respective roles of the process instance, all process participants have
equal access to the other objects of the process folder by
dafault. In our example there are two text documents and a link to the
conference home page. At any time objects may be added, removed or changed,
restricted only by access rights which the creators may set.
Wanda checks the form filled out by the author and has a look at the
submitted paper. She then opens the work item form "Assign reviewers",
selects three reviewers from a list provided and sends the process on
its way by pressing the submit button.
The work item switches its state to "Done" and
it is removed from the "To Do" list at the bottom of figure 1.
Figure 1. A BSCW-Flow process folder
Implementation and Outlook
BSCW-Flow is currently being designed and implemented.
The first BSCW-Flow prototype will
make use of the existent implementation of the DOMINO workflow
engine via a BSCW software agent interface
that has been successfully used to incorporate other agent
functionality into BSCW.
Further versions will integrate the workflow engine into BSCW to ease
operation and maintenance of a workflow-enabled BSCW server.
Extensions of the BSCW-Flow functionality as outlined above could
include graphical editing facilities for process definition, integration
of external applications for process execution, or implementation
of workflow interoperability standards. User interface and functionality
modification will be subject to user feedback to be gathered in
experimental use within selected BSCW user communities.