With the growing use of Web services, organizations are increasingly choosing Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) for modeling business processes within the Web services architecture. In addition to orchestrating organizations’ Web services, BPEL’s strengths include asynchronous message handling, reliability, and recovery. By developing Web services with BPEL in mind, organizations can implement aspects of Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) that might previously have been difficult to achieve. EIS believes organizations can extend their legacy applications and organize information flows across various applications providing clear concise consolidated business process views to end users.