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Apromore

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki

Apromore is a business process discovery and process mining software platform supported and developed by a community of researchers.[1] It is available as an open-source community edition as well as an enterprise edition for commercial licensing.[2][3]

The Apromore platform[4] includes features such as the automated discovery of process maps and as-is BPMN models, performance mining to analyze frequencies and durations of activities, variant analysis to identify structural differences between business process variants, and conformance checking to identify deviations between as-is processes recorded in event logs and normative processes captured as BPMN models.[5][6]

It was developed in 2009 at the University of Melbourne and spun off from the university in 2019 by Marcello La Rosa and Marlon Dumas.[1]

History[edit]

The initial ideas behind Apromore originate from a research project involving Wil van der Aalst, Marcello La Rosa, Hajo Reijers and Remco Dijkman at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), which included a deliverable titled "Advanced Process Model Repository (AProMoRe)".[7][8] In 2009, Marcello La Rosa started a research project with the same name at Queensland University of Technology. This latter project led to the first working prototype of Apromore in July 2010. The initial design and development of this prototype was done in collaboration with Marlon Dumas and his team from the University of Tartu, as well as groups from other research institutions.[6][9]

In July 2020, Apromore received $4.77 million in Series A financing.[10] In the same year, Apromore received InfoWorld's Open Source Software Award, also known as the Bossies.[11]

In September 2021, Apromore established its headquarters at Melbourne Connect.[1]

Software[edit]

Apromore software is available in a free-to-download community edition and subscription-based software as a service (SaaS) enterprise edition.[6] An additional open-source tool named RPA UI Logger can help in task mining capabilities.[5]

In June 2021, Apromore released the 7.20 version of its enterprise edition which includes graphical no-code extract, transform, and load (ETL) tools and other platform capabilities that make it easier to aggregate data that is used for process mining.[12] Subsequently, version 8.0 was released in November 2021, including a delta analysis feature for comparison of process models and additional integration functionality.[13]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Smith, Katherine (September 20, 2021). "Process mining platform Apromore to take up residence at Melbourne Connect". About us.
  2. "Australia's Apromore partners with Vietnam's FPT Software for process mining automation". www.arnnet.com.au.
  3. https://apromore.com/editions-and-pricing/
  4. https://apromore.com/key-features/
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Apromore - Process Discovery & Mining Technology Evaluation 2021(#81573) - NelsonHall". research.nelson-hall.com.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Improving business performance using process-mining software". research.unimelb.edu.au.
  7. "From Research Vision to Startup: The Story of Apromore - IEEE Task Force on Process Mining". www.tf-pm.org.
  8. Annab, Rachid (August 12, 2021). "Business Process Management: Information Systems Group, The University of Melbourne". School of Computing and Information Systems.
  9. https://apromore.com/acknowledgments/
  10. https://www.jumpstartmag.com/australian-open-source-process-mining-startup-apromore-bags-us4-8m-series-a/
  11. Wayner, James R. Borck, Martin Heller, Steven Nuñez, Andrew C. Oliver, Ian Pointer and Peter (October 5, 2020). "The best open source software of 2020". InfoWorld.
  12. "Apromore simplifies pulling data into open source process mining platform". June 4, 2021.
  13. https://www.yahoo.com/now/apromore-announces-version-8-further-061500276.html


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