Maybe I bit off a bit more than I could chew.  I launched my BPMN training this spring and simultaneously the update of my BPMS Reports on BPMInstitute.org.  Plus actual paying work.  It was stuffing 10 pounds into a five-pound bag, and the BPMS Watch blog was what fell on the floor.  But now version 2.1 of the BPMN training is about to go live, and the first 7 of 12 or 13 BPMS Reports are done, and I can at least come up for air.

In the past 2-3 months, not only have I not had time to write my blog, I haven’t even had time to read the blogs.  It just made me feel guiltier.  I started to dip into it today, but my Bloglines notifier still lists over 1500 unread.  It will take me a few weeks to dig through it.  I start as always with Sandy (moved back to her own domain! who knew?) and Steinar Carlsen’s links – the best.  I’ll be updating the blogroll once I have a chance to work through it all, but I already detect new energy in the BPM blogosphere since I last tuned in.

OMG’s BPM Think Tank was last week, as usual my favorite BPM conference – great networking, absence of BPM newbies and hustling for leads – and a great inspiration for blogging.  Sandy covered the talks and panels in her usual excellent fashion, but the real info exchange at this event takes place in the hallways and bars.

I plan to post soon about the standards confusion – BPDM, BPMN 1.1, XPDL, BPEL4People – and how it’s actually making some progress, as well as about the new training – what I learned from version 1 – and something I promised when I started the blog but have never delivered in a consistent way: capsule reviews of leading BPMS offerings and what is the essential strength of each.  That’s the plan, anyway.