Michael Rosemann

Michael Rosemann (born 7 October 1967) is a German information systems researcher and professor at the Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. His research interests include revenue resilience, business process management, trust management and innovation systems. Rosemann is also the honorary consul of the Federal Republic of Germany for Brisbane.[1]

Michael Rosemann
Born (1967-10-07) October 7, 1967
NationalityGerman
Known forBPM maturity, configurable BPM, ambidextrous BPM, revenue resilience
Scientific career
FieldsInformation systems, Business Process Management, Innovation systems.
InstitutionsWestphalian-Wilhelms University Muenster
Thesis"Complexity Management of Process Models" (1992)
Doctoral advisorJoerg Becker and Klaus Backhaus
Websitehttp://www.michaelrosemann.com

Biography

Born in Bremen, Germany, Rosemann received degrees in business administration (1992) and a PhD in information systems (1995) from the Westphalian-Wilhelms University Muenster.[2] In 1992 he started working at the Westphalian-Wilhelms University Muenster in the Department of Information Systems. In 1993, he co-authored his first book with Joerg Becker called 'Logistics and CIM'. During his time in Muenster, Rosemann conducted research in the areas of reference modelling, the quality of conceptual models, process monitoring and large-scale enterprise systems management. He taught in the areas of information systems, operations management and logistics.

In 1999, Rosemann started as a senior lecturer at the Queensland University of Technology, where he was promoted to associate professor (2001) and professor (2004). He was the head of QUT's Information Systems School from 2010 to 2016 and executive director, corporate engagement, in 2017–2018. Since 1 January 2019, he is a professor in QUT's School of Management. He became the head of QUT's Centre for Future Enterprise, one of QUT's nine research centres, in January 2020.

Rosemann spent sabbaticals at Babson College, USA, (with Tom Davenport) and the Technical University of Eindhoven[3], the Netherlands (with Wil van der Aalst).

In 2007, he was the chair of the first International Conference on Business Process Management (BPM 2007) outside Europe. He also was the co-chair of the Austral-Asian Conference on Information Systems (ACIS) in 2010 and program co-chair of the International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS) in December 2018. Rosemann was a visiting professor at Victoria Swedish ICT, Gothenburg, between 2010-2019.

Rosemann is a Fellow of the Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Fellow of the Australian Computer Society.

Rosemann became the honorary consul of the Federal Republic of Germany in Brisbane in May 2016. Rosemann's home town of Weyhe honored his role with an entry into the 'Golden Book' of Weyhe in July 2017. As the honorary consul he initiated and is responsible for the Brisbane German Week.

Work

Rosemann's research is in the fields of business process management, revenue resilience, trust management and innovation systems.

His main contributions are the concept of a series of process innovation patterns, seven traits of a digital mind, a revenue resilience assessment, value-driven BPM, the rapid redesign method NESTT, customer process management, a BPM maturity model, guidelines of business process modelling, configurable reference models, ambidextrous BPM, context-aware BPM and trust aware process design.

Michael's PhD students have won the Australian award for the best PhD thesis in Information Systems in 2007, 2008 and 2010.

In November 2011, he was interviewed as part of Gartner's Fellow Interview series. His paper on 'Toward improving the relevance of information systems research to proactive: the role of applicability checks', published in the MIS Quarterly (2008) and co-authored with Iris Vessey, won the Emerald Management Reviews Citations of Excellence Awards for 2012. Rosemann has been the co-author of conference papers that won the best paper award at CAiSE 1999 (Heidelberg). PACIS 2004 (Shanghai), ACIS 2005 (Manly) and BPM 2010 (New York). His paper on trust aware process design was the best paper in the BPM 2019 management track of the conference (Vienna).

Publications

Rosemann has published in total more than 300 books, journal papers, book chapters, conference papers, and reports on these topics. Some of his books are available in English, German, Mandarin, Russian and Portuguese.[4] Books, a selection:

  • Vom Brocke, J, and M. Rosemann (editors). Handbook of Business Process Management. 2nd edition, two volumes. Springer 2014.
  • Becker, J., Kugeler, M., and M. Rosemann (editors). Process management (in German). 7th edition. Springer 2012.
  • Green, P., and M.Rosemann. Business Systems Analysis with Ontologies. Idea Group 2005.

Articles, a selection:

  • Rosemann, M.Proposals for Future BPM Research Directions. In: Proceedings of the 2nd Asia Pacific Business Process Management Conference, Brisbane, 3-4 July 2014, pp. 1- 15.
  • Recker, J., Safrudin, N., Rosemann, M. (2012): How Novices Design Business Processes. In: Information Systems, Vol 37, No. 6, pp. 557-573.
  • Recker, J., Rosemann, M., Green, P., and M. Indulska (2011): "Do ontological deficiencies in modeling grammars matter?" In: MIS Quarterly 35 (1), pp. 57–79.
  • Rosemann, M., and I. Vessey (2008). "Toward improving the relevance of information systems research to practive: the role of applicability checks". MIS Quarterly 32 (1): pp. 1–22.
  • Rosemann, M., and W.MP van der Aalst (2007). "A configurable reference modeling language". In: Information Systems 32 (1): pp. 1–23.
  • Rosemann, M., and P. Green (2002). "Developing a meta model for the Bunge-Wand-Weber ontological constructs". In: Information Systems 27 (2), pp. 75-91.
  • Klaus, H., Rosemann, M., and G. G Gable (2000). "What is ERP". In: Information Systems Frontiers 2 (2):pp. 141–162.
gollark: It's not like it magically goes to the V O I D.
gollark: Wouldn't it just *absorb* it, not *block* it?
gollark: As far as I know, water vapour does have a big effect on heating but is regulated by feedback loops which don't control CO2.
gollark: If they behaved *really* differently, stuff like weather balloons and satellites would fail in bizarre ways.
gollark: That would be very impractical.

References

  1. "Michael Rosemann". www.michaelrosemann.com. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  2. Management, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, University of Münster, Web Content. "University of Münster". www.uni-muenster.de. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  3. "TU/e". www.tue.nl. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  4. "Michael Rosemann - Google Scholar Citations". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
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