What is a Business Process? Definition and Examples

Every organization runs on processes. Most of them are invisible. Here is how to see them, name them, and start improving them.

A business process in one sentence

A business process is a repeatable series of steps that transforms inputs into outputs to achieve a specific business goal. An order comes in (input), work happens (process), a product ships (output).

Business processes exist whether you document them or not. The question is whether they are visible, understood, and optimized — or hidden, inconsistent, and wasteful.

Examples of business processes

Order-to-Cash

Customer places order → order is fulfilled → invoice is sent → payment is collected. Spans sales, warehouse, and finance.

Hire-to-Retire

Job posting → screening → interviews → offer → onboarding → employment → offboarding. The full employee lifecycle.

Procure-to-Pay

Purchase request → approval → vendor selection → purchase order → goods receipt → invoice → payment.

Incident Management

Issue reported → triaged → assigned → investigated → resolved → closed. Common in IT and customer service.

Loan Approval

Application → credit check → risk assessment → approval/rejection → disbursement. Common in banking.

Characteristics of a good process

  • -Clear trigger — something specific starts it (an order arrives, a request is submitted, a date is reached).
  • -Defined outcome — it produces a measurable result (product shipped, employee onboarded, claim resolved).
  • -Repeatable — it happens more than once and follows a consistent pattern.
  • -Assigned roles — someone is responsible for each step.
  • -Measurable — you can track cycle time, error rate, cost, and throughput.

Process vs project vs task

ProcessProjectTask
Repeatable?Yes — runs many timesNo — one-time effortYes — part of a process
DurationOngoingHas start and end dateMinutes to hours
ExampleHandle customer complaintLaunch new productReview application form

Why this matters

If you cannot name your processes, you cannot improve them. If you cannot see them, you cannot find the bottlenecks, redundancies, and waste. Process identification is the first step in any improvement initiative.

The standard way to make processes visible is process mapping — and the standard notation for that is BPMN.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a business process and a workflow?

A business process is the end-to-end sequence of steps achieving a business goal. A workflow is the automation of part or all of that process using software. All workflows are part of processes, but not all processes are automated workflows.

How many business processes does a typical company have?

A mid-sized company typically has 50 to 200 identifiable business processes. Most are undocumented. The core processes (10-20) that directly serve customers or generate revenue are the most important to map and optimize.

What is the difference between a core process and a support process?

Core processes directly deliver value to customers (order fulfillment, service delivery). Support processes enable core processes to function (IT support, HR, accounting). Both are important, but core processes are prioritized for improvement.