ARIS relies mainly on its own five-view architecture (ARIS house). These five views are based on function, organization, data, product or service views of a process, and the process view itself, that integrates the other views. The classification is made to break down the complexity of the model into five facets and thus make business process modeling simpler.
Each view of the ARIS concept represents the model of a business process under a specific aspect:
Each description view of the ARIS house is divided into three description levels:
Concept
Structured representation of the business processes by means of description models that are understandable for the business side (depending on the view, e.g.: ERM, EPC, organization chart, function tree)
Data Concept (= data processing concept, IT concept)
Implementation of the technical concept in IT-related description models (depending on the view e.g. relations, structure charts, topologies)
Implementation
IT-technical realization of the described process parts (depending on the view, e.g. by creating program code, database systems, use of protocols)
The ARIS concept forms the basis of various software products, including the ARIS Toolset from Software AG, which has been the owner of ARIS trademarks since IDS Scheer AG was acquired. At the end of 2004, part of the concept was reflected in the graphical process integration of SAP Exchange Infrastructure.
Although ARIS is a well-known approach for the description of information system architectures, especially in German-speaking countries, it is not as well known on a larger scale. With in the Management Frameworks group it is one of over fifty existing frameworks for information management on the market.3 The architecture of interoperable information systems (AIOS) was also published in 2010 at the Institut für Wirtschaftsinformatik (Institute for Information Systems) in Saarbrücken, which was founded by Scheer. While ARIS describes company-internal information systems and business processes, AIOS describes how cross-company business processes can be realized by adapting and loosely coupling information systems.
With the "Model-to-Execute" approach, business processes can be modelled in ARIS and automatically transferred to webMethods BPM for technical execution.
As one of the Enterprise Modeling methods, ARIS provides four different aspects of applications:
Dirk Matthes: . 2011. Auflage. Springer Science+Business Media, 2011, ISBN 978-3-642-12954-4, S. 44. /wiki/ISBN_(identifier) ↩
Software AG (Hrsg.). "ARIS Platform" (PDF). http://documentation.softwareag.com/aris/platform_72sr2d/method_manual_aris_s.pdf ↩
Dirk., Matthes (2011). Enterprise Architecture Frameworks Kompendium Über 50 Rahmenwerke für das IT-Management. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. ISBN 9783642129551. OCLC 723286135. 9783642129551 ↩