Business Rules, Business Processes, and Business Agility: Basic Principles — Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Business Rules Manifesto (Part 3)

Ronald G.  Ross
Ronald G. Ross Co-Founder & Principal, Business Rule Solutions, LLC , Executive Editor, Business Rules Journal and Co-Chair, Building Business Capability (BBC) Read Author Bio       || Read All Articles by Ronald G. Ross
The Manifesto is free, only 2 pages long, translated into 15 languages.  Have a quick look (or re-look!).  No sign up required.  Well worth your time.  Visit www.BusinessRulesGroup.org/brmanifesto.htm

Reverse-engineering business rules from legacy systems accurately is virtually impossible.  The full, original business intent is simply lost.  Reconstruction of business logic has been tried time and time again — often aided by automated tools — but, measured against time and cost, seldom achieves satisfactory results.  What a waste!

The solution is simply to stop hard-coding business rules into procedural languages.  Rules will change and they will be needed for new business initiatives and platforms.  The opportunity costs of continuing to follow traditional practices — not to mention the 'maintenance' costs — is simply too great.  The alternative is applying rule technology that can support rules expressed in more natural (declarative) form.

The Manifesto summarizes these points as follows …

6.2.  Executing rules directly — for example in a rules engine — is a better implementation strategy than transcribing the rules into some procedural form.

With computing power so vastly improved, there is less and less reason every day to support business rules using procedural languages.  Why are we still programming the evaluation of rules ourselves?!  Just as a DBMS removes data management as an application concern, so too does a rule technology for the evaluation of rules.

A related issue is compliance — not just regulatory compliance but compliance with contractual obligations, deals, agreements, licenses, warranties, and so on.  If you want to delight customers, keep your commitments.

To do so you must be able to determine how your systems actually got the outcomes they did.  That way, if there's a mistake you can correct it.  So the Manifesto says …

6.3.  A business rule system must always be able to explain the reasoning by which it arrives at conclusions or takes action.

Today, demonstrating compliance is a largely hit-or-miss affair, always after the fact.  Does it have to be?  No!  A state-of-the-art enterprise architecture is one that logs the rules used to make evaluations and decisions just as a DBMS logs all transactions.  Compliance based on rules can and should be built-in.

Another related issue is knowledge retention.  The classic test of whether knowledge is tacit or explicit is this:  If you lose the person, do you lose the knowledge?  Clearly, you want basic business know-how to be explicit, so a basic principle of the Manifesto is …

3.3.  Rules must be explicit.  No rule is ever assumed about any concept or fact.

Rules capture and encode operational business know-how in a form that can be retained, managed, and re-used.

What are rules really about?  A well-expressed rule is based on terms and facts (or more accurately, noun concepts and verb concepts).  These concepts represent the basic stuff of the business — operational-level things that are talked about, managed, and processed day-in and day-out, often many, many thousands of times.  Rules provide criteria that guide this operational activity in a consistent way.  So the Manifesto emphasizes …

3.4.  Rules are basic to what the business knows about itself — that is, to basic business knowledge.

In business, of course, knowledge is not an end in and of itself.  Rather, the goal is consistent application of the knowledge — as well as its continuous improvement.  Achieving these goals requires that the people who understand the knowledge — business people, subject matter experts, and business analysts — be able to work with it directly and effectively.  After all, the true test of knowledge quality is not whether an application program runs, but whether you get the right (or best) results.  So the Manifesto says …

9.3.  Business people should have tools available to help them verify business rules against each other for consistency.

In the plainest possible terms, IT professionals simply shouldn't be the ones to determine whether business logic 'works'.

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Standard citation for this article:


citations icon
Ronald G. Ross, "Business Rules, Business Processes, and Business Agility: Basic Principles — Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Business Rules Manifesto (Part 3)" Business Rules Journal, Vol. 14, No. 1, (Jan. 2013)
URL: http://www.brcommunity.com/a2013/b684.html

About our Contributor:


Ronald  G. Ross
Ronald G. Ross Co-Founder & Principal, Business Rule Solutions, LLC , Executive Editor, Business Rules Journal and Co-Chair, Building Business Capability (BBC)

Ronald G. Ross is Principal and Co-Founder of Business Rule Solutions, LLC, where he actively develops and applies the BRS Methodology including RuleSpeak®, DecisionSpeak and TableSpeak.

Ron is recognized internationally as the "father of business rules." He is the author of ten professional books including the groundbreaking first book on business rules The Business Rule Book in 1994. His newest are:


Ron serves as Executive Editor of BRCommunity.com and its flagship publication, Business Rules Journal. He is a sought-after speaker at conferences world-wide. More than 50,000 people have heard him speak; many more have attended his seminars and read his books.

Ron has served as Chair of the annual International Business Rules & Decisions Forum conference since 1997, now part of the Building Business Capability (BBC) conference where he serves as Co-Chair. He was a charter member of the Business Rules Group (BRG) in the 1980s, and an editor of its Business Motivation Model (BMM) standard and the Business Rules Manifesto. He is active in OMG standards development, with core involvement in SBVR.

Ron holds a BA from Rice University and an MS in information science from Illinois Institute of Technology. Find Ron's blog on http://www.brsolutions.com/category/blog/. For more information about Ron visit www.RonRoss.info. Tweets: @Ronald_G_Ross

Read All Articles by Ronald G. Ross

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