This paper presents a manifesto that articulates the conceptual foundations of Agentic Business Process Management (APM), an extension of Business Process Management (BPM) for governing autonomous agents executing processes in organizations. From a management perspective, APM represents a paradigm shift from the traditional view on business processes. This shift is driven by the realization of process awareness by agent-oriented abstractions: software and human agents act as primary functional entities that perceive, reason, and act within explicit process frames. Thus, APM moves away from automation-oriented BPM towards systems in which autonomy is constrained, aligned, and made operational through process aware agents. We introduce the core abstractions and architectural elements required to realize APM systems and elaborate on four key capabilities that agents in APM systems must support: framed autonomy, explainability, conversational actionability, and self-modification. These capabilities jointly ensure that agents’ goals are aligned with organizational goals and that agents behave in a framed yet proactive manner in pursuing those goals. We discuss the extent to which the capabilities can be realized and identify research challenges whose resolution requires further advances in BPM, AI, and multi-agent systems. The manifesto thus serves as a roadmap for bridging these communities and for guiding the development of APM systems in practice.

Agentic Business Process Management: A research manifesto / Calvanese, Diego; Casciani, Angelo; De Giacomo, Giuseppe; Dumas, Marlon; Fournier, Fabiana; Kampik, Timotheus; La Malfa, Emanuele; Limonad, Lior; Marrella, Andrea; Metzger, Andreas; Montali, Marco; Amyot, Daniel; Fettke, Peter; Polyvyanyy, Artem; Rinderle-Ma, Stefanie; Sardiña, Sebastian; Tax, Niek; Weber, Barbara. - In: INFORMATION SYSTEMS. - ISSN 0306-4379. - 140:(2026). [10.1016/j.is.2026.102738]

Agentic Business Process Management: A research manifesto

Diego Calvanese;Angelo Casciani;Giuseppe De Giacomo;Andrea Marrella;Marco Montali;Artem Polyvyanyy;
2026

Abstract

This paper presents a manifesto that articulates the conceptual foundations of Agentic Business Process Management (APM), an extension of Business Process Management (BPM) for governing autonomous agents executing processes in organizations. From a management perspective, APM represents a paradigm shift from the traditional view on business processes. This shift is driven by the realization of process awareness by agent-oriented abstractions: software and human agents act as primary functional entities that perceive, reason, and act within explicit process frames. Thus, APM moves away from automation-oriented BPM towards systems in which autonomy is constrained, aligned, and made operational through process aware agents. We introduce the core abstractions and architectural elements required to realize APM systems and elaborate on four key capabilities that agents in APM systems must support: framed autonomy, explainability, conversational actionability, and self-modification. These capabilities jointly ensure that agents’ goals are aligned with organizational goals and that agents behave in a framed yet proactive manner in pursuing those goals. We discuss the extent to which the capabilities can be realized and identify research challenges whose resolution requires further advances in BPM, AI, and multi-agent systems. The manifesto thus serves as a roadmap for bridging these communities and for guiding the development of APM systems in practice.
2026
Business process management; Autonomous agents; Agentic AI; Framed autonomy; Explainability; Conversational actionability; Self-modification
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Agentic Business Process Management: A research manifesto / Calvanese, Diego; Casciani, Angelo; De Giacomo, Giuseppe; Dumas, Marlon; Fournier, Fabiana; Kampik, Timotheus; La Malfa, Emanuele; Limonad, Lior; Marrella, Andrea; Metzger, Andreas; Montali, Marco; Amyot, Daniel; Fettke, Peter; Polyvyanyy, Artem; Rinderle-Ma, Stefanie; Sardiña, Sebastian; Tax, Niek; Weber, Barbara. - In: INFORMATION SYSTEMS. - ISSN 0306-4379. - 140:(2026). [10.1016/j.is.2026.102738]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1766708
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