Business rules integration is the implementation of straightforward standards that characterize (or restrict) the operations of an organization. Without well-established business rules and processes, a company would often find itself in a chaotic atmosphere with inconsistent results, employee complaints, and disgruntled consumers.However, regulations in business are not the product of the technological revolution. On the other hand, company standards sprang from grassroots attempts to give the most nuanced possible approach to running a business. Until the early 1990s, business rules were not widely accepted as a notion for organizations.Today, most firms see business rules as a critical need for system flows or procedural flow charts that illustrate how a company will do business.Fortunately, ProcessMaker, a company focused on business process management, has partnered with OpenRules, an open-source business rule, and decision management engine. Customers may use OpenRules, Inc. 's business rules and decision management solutions to build, test, and maintain Operational Decision Services on-premises or in the cloud.
Integrating & Building Business Rules with Open Rules and ProcessMaker
OpenRules Decision Manager can automate complicated business logic, which simplifies day-to-day operational choices. Thus, business-users can quickly build rules-based decision models and deploy them on-premises or in the cloud. End-users do not need to learn any proprietary graphical interfaces or programming languages. In addition, end-users can utilize Microsoft Excel® or Google Sheets® as a binary executable manager.Within ProcessMaker and OpenRules® Decision Manager, end-users receive: Powerful Rule Engine: Implements business rules at the fastest and largest scale feasible.Graphical Explorer: Enables customers to create and test decision models before deploying them.Rule Learner: Analyzes past data to determine business rules.Rule Solver: Offers multiple options so you can address any challenges. Ensures collaboration via relational databases.You can also run decision models as containerized services in the cloud leveraging AWS Lambdas, Azure Functions, RESTful Web Services, Docker, and Kubernetes on cloud frameworks provided by existing cloud hubs like Amazon and Microsoft.


