Skins

Business Process Outsourcing enables organizations and Shared Service Centers that have several core processes to have many views of the same process typically for different products and customers.

When processes have the same structure but different rules on resourcing, SLAs, and others, then skins allow you to create different variants of the process without having to manage and maintain separate copies of the process. This greatly reduces the maintenance overhead and allows changes to the template to be immediately reflected across all skins.

For example, if for a gold customer, the process needs to be completed in one day and for the silver customer it needs to be completed in two days, OR if the process is critical, it must be routed to a specialized group, otherwise, to a general group, then you can create two variants of the same process.

You can tag skins so that you can add some text to describe what the skin is about and make it easier to find. See Tag an item.

Templates

A process can be marked as a template. Once set as a template, you can create skins on it. Any changes to the template are automatically applied to each skin.

Skins always apply to the latest version of the process.

Within a skin, you can override the properties of the process, variables, and activities.

If there is a part of the process that might require structural change, you can achieve this by using embedded processes, as the embedded processes can be overridden in a skin.

Rules

Skins are invoked based on the defined skin rules. For example, for a gold customer, gold skin is used, and for a silver customer, silver skin is used.

When a job is created on a template, the rules are evaluated. In case of multiple versions of skin, the job must be created on the latest active version of the skin. The first rule that evaluates to true uses this skin and any overrides set for the skin are used. If the rule does not evaluate to true on this skin, it moves to the next skin and so on until the rule is passed. If no rule evaluates to true, the process continues without any overrides.

During the lifetime of a job, the skin can be reevaluated. For example, when the data changes, this could potentially invoke a different skin or no skin.

How to: