
Business Process Engineer – Intermediate
CACI International Inc
full-time
Posted on:
Location Type: Office
Location: Scott AFB • Illinois • United States
Visit company websiteExplore more
Salary
💰 $57,500 - $117,900 per year
About the role
- Member of Business Process Reengineering (BPR) team in the reengineering of transportation and financial business processes
- Validate AS-IS processes, identify and address capability gaps, ensuring alignment with JTMS objectives
- Conduct BPR related activity required as part of the systems engineering process to support use case development, end-to-end process modeling, and detailed functional and system requirements decomposition.
- Perform analysis on business or systems process to identify opportunities for process automation, improvement, and increased efficiency and auditability
- Produce TO-BE models for the material solution to streamline operations across 86 lines of business within the Joint Deployment and Distribution Enterprise (JDDE)
Requirements
- Bachelor’s Degree in mathematics, statistics, business, law, computer science, engineering, physical/applied sciences or management discipline such as business administration, accounting, finance, economics or management information technology
- 3+ years of experience in Data Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Problem Solving, and Business Process Reengineering or other relevant area
- Experience with process mapping and analysis tools, project management software, and data visualization and reporting tools
- US Citizen with ability to successfully pass Tier 1 investigation
Benefits
- healthcare
- wellness
- financial
- retirement
- family support
- continuing education
- time off benefits
Applicant Tracking System Keywords
Tip: use these terms in your resume and cover letter to boost ATS matches.
Hard Skills & Tools
Data AnalysisStatistical AnalysisBusiness Process ReengineeringProcess MappingRequirements DecompositionEnd-to-End Process ModelingProcess AutomationProcess ImprovementEfficiency AnalysisAuditability
Soft Skills
Problem Solving