Process mining, data mining, and business process management: what’s the difference?
Since process mining is often confused with data mining and business process management (BPM), it will help to know the difference amongst all three and what each actually does.
For clarity, let’s start with data mining.
Data mining is the umbrella term for the practice of analyzing large volumes of data to find patterns, discover trends, and gain insights for future use. Process mining on the other hand is simply a form of data mining that is used specifically to find patterns inside an organization’s processes.
In process mining, the goal is to find information about business processes to discover, compare, or enhance a certain business process, whereas data mining involves a much broader set of data to do things that include predicting customer behaviors, examining customer churn, detecting fraud, and finding other advantageous personal information about your customers.
In other words, process mining is an internal process that improves the business from the inside, while data mining is the broader generic term used for analyzing all data sets but may also include improving external opportunities outside of the business, like improving sales or leads.
Business process management (BPM) on the other hand refers to your organization’s human efforts to analyze, accelerate, and optimize processes.
In business process management, these processes are usually logged manually in a software tracking system through interviews, workshops, and questionnaires. The data from business process management is usually much more qualitative, since it’s input is from actual humans, but process mining provides a much more quantitative approach to that same data.
In other words, business process management is the human operations view of the business processes, while process mining reveals what the actual process is based on objective data.
Another way to understand the difference between the two is this—business process management is what companies believe they are to be, while process mining helps them discover who and what they actually are from an objective standpoint.
To learn more about business process management, please read “What is business process management?”
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