A Quick Glance

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    Recognize and model business processes at an organizational level

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    Analyze and Improve Business Processes Using The Techniques Learned herein

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    Certification from World Leaders in Providing Certification

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    Courses Conducted By Certified Instructors

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    Low cost of Certification

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    Practical sessions included

A business to function, and further to prosper, needs to follow well established and tested rules and regulations. These rules are modelled on some successful processes. Japan, for instance, had lost almost everything in the Second World that came to an end in 1945.However, it came back to normalcy with great thanks to the ‘muda’ (a process started by Toyota to eliminate waste processes).  Today, we have, as a result, techniques like the Lean and Six Sigma helping the businesses achieve the desired results – a situation like “All Profit No Loss”.

Entrepreneurs are constantly looking for professionals having the skills to fulfil their demands. This course instils in the professionals the skills required of them for such a job profile.  We, at Pentagon Training, help the professionals realise their dreams of qualifying for the same by providing them with this course at a very affordable rate.

Who should take this course

This certification course is relevant to anyone requiring an understanding of Business Process Modeling, including Business Analysts, Business Managers and their staff, Business Change Managers and Project Managers. It is also targeted towards the following roles:

  • Quality Manager
  • Test Manager
  • Requirements Engineer
  • Functional Tester
  • User Acceptance Tester
  • Performance Test Specialist
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Prerequisites

The course has no prerequisites for attending. Candidates who wish to sit for the exam must bring with them some kind of photographic evidence as prrof of their identification. Additional time is allowed for specially abled candidates or those who have a different native language than the language of the examination. BCS prohibits the use of  electronic dictionaries in case the candidate has a different national language than that of the examination.

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What Will You Learn

On completion of Modeling Business Processes course, delegates will be able to:

  • Understand the context for business process modeling
  • Identify and model core business processes at an organisation as well at a process level
  • Identify key components to modeling that include actors, triggers, events, process flows, and tasks
  • Identity business rules and how to model them
  • Identify performance measures with tasks
  • Get an overview of popular Process Modeling techniques and Notation (including BPMN)
  • Identify problems with current processes
  • Re-engineer organisational processes to make improvements
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What's included

  Course Overview

BCS Certificate in Modeling Business Processes provides business professionals with the knowledge and toolkit so as to identify, model and improve business processes in the organisation. This is an advanced-level BCS certification leading to the BCS International Diploma in Business Analysis

 The course teaches how to identify, analyse and model business processes at various levels, and to identify process measures and opportunities for improvement. The course is based on  case study based and  discusses the practicalities of applying modelling techniques, including BPMN.

The course has been extensively rewritten to cover the latest BCS Modeling Business Processes syllabus which reflects recent developments in the field of process modelling. It is delivered by professional trainers with significant experience of real world process modelling and analysis projects. Delegates are supplied with course notes containing detailed information about business analysis techniques and providing references for further reading.

Business Analysts learn to deal with changes through this course by equipping delegates with process modelling techniques which are basic requirements for the success of a business.

During the course the candidate is required to do the following:

  • Explain the principles of the technique
  • Document the process according to the correct use of the technique
  • Interpret the documentation derived from the use of the technique
  • Identify when the technique should be used

Exam:

This course is accompanied by a one-hour exam which the candidate needs to clear to get the BCS Certificate Modelling Business Processes. This Practitioner module counts towards the BCS Business Analysis International Diploma.

  • Exam Type: Opening Book
  • Questions: MCQ’s
  • Time Duration: 60 Minutes
  • Pass Percentile: 50%

BCS does not allow the use of any kind of calculators in this exam.

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  Course Content

  • The Context for Business Process Modelling
    • The purpose for process modelling
    • Applying modelling techniques
    • The hierarchy of process modelling
    • The difference between process, task  and functional modelling
    • Relationships between process models in the hierarchy
    • Approaches to business process modelling
  • Business Process Modelling and Notation (BPMN)
    • Strategic context and business objectives
    • Value Chain Analysis
    • Process task and functional modelling
    • Modelling an organisational view of processes
    • Activity diagrams
    • Differences between the process and function
    • Definition of a business process
    • Business process measurements and metrics
    • Processes hierarchies and delivering value
  • Documenting Tasks and Flows
    • Identifying tasks
    • Documenting task steps
    • Identifying business rules
    • Task performance metrics  
  • Evaluating and Improving Business Processes
    • Identifying problems with current processes
    • Analysing the process flow
    • Analysing tasks, handoffs and performance
    • Identifying and questioning business rules
    • Modelling the ‘to be’ process
    • Identifying new measurements and standards
  • Transition
    • Re-engineering organisational processes
    • Defining roles and skills profiling
    • Change management 
    • Integration of process modelling and requirement definition
  • Exam Prep
    • Course review to reinforce key exam topics
    • Hints and tips
    • Practice exam questions
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BCS Certificate in Modelling Business Processes Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Burton Upon Trent

Burton upon Trent is a town on the stream Trent in East Staffordshire. It was having a populance of 72,299 in 2011. Burton is well known for preparing beer. The town previously produced around Burton Abbey. Burton Bridge was also the site of two fights, in 1322 when Edward II overwhelmed the rebel Earl of Lancaster and 1643 when royalists apprehended the town during the First English Civil War. William Lord Paget and his descendants were responsible for dispersal of the manor house within the grounds of abbey and facilitating the delay of the River Trent Navigation to Burton. Burton developed as a busy market town by the early modern period.

Government:

Burton is the managerial centre for the area of East Staffordshire and forms part of the Burton electorate. The local Member of Assembly is the Traditional Party's Andrew Griffiths, who has indicated the Burton electorate since May 2010. The Traditionalists detached the seat from Labor in the 2010 general election with an 8.7% swing.

In 1978 it was combined as a municipal borough. The combined area was divided between the counties of Staffordshire and Derbyshire - the Local Government Act 1888 combined the total of the area in Staffordshire, including the former Derbyshire parishes of Stapenhill and Winshill. It developed a county borough in 1901, having touched the 50,000 population obligatory.

It never significantly exceeded the population of 50,000, and at a population of 50,201 in the 1971 survey was the smallest county area in England after Canterbury. The Local Government Commission for England optional in the 1960s that it be relegated to a non-county borough within Staffordshire, but this was not applied.

Geography:

It is nearly 109 miles north-west of London, approx. 30 miles to northeast of Birmingham, which is  the UK's second largest city and about 23 miles east of the county town Stafford. It is located at the eastern part of the county of Staffordshire; it's an against the course of the River Trent creating part of the county boundary. 

Demography:

The total population of town is  43,784 in the 2001 Survey. Winshill and Stapenhill were treated distinctly and together had a additional population of 21,985. According to the 2001 survey, 71% of the town's population classify themselves as Christian, 12% as a nonbeliever or doubting and 8.5% Muslim. In the 2011 census shows that the population of the town is 72,299.

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