Title: Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA):
1- Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA)
- Opportunity for Better Automation
- Opportunity for Better Ways of Doing Business
- Presentation to the MD CFUG
June 10, 2003
Dorothy Firsching Ursa Major Consulting,
LLC Dorothy_at_Firsching.com (703) 425-6236
2Agenda
- Why We need a Federal Enterprise Architecture
- The Presidents Agenda and Vision
- The Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) and its
Components - Our Current Project, the Enterprise Architecture
for the JWOD Program - Where the FEA is taking us Future Potential
Note the FEA part of the presentation draws from
numerous FEA briefings over the past several
months, mostly by Bob Haycock, FEA Program
Manager, OMB
3Architecture Stories User Requirements Are
Not Enough, or Why We Need a Federal Enterprise
Architecture
- Unnamed Govt. Agencies
- Our department is different
- Our department has the correct data
- Our people already know this database
- Buy the equipment and software quickly with End
of FY , well use them anyway - What do you mean, Access wont scale?
- We can get Perl scripts for free
- Why is the system so slow?
- Who designed this, anyway?
4Results
- Working systems that meet specific requirements,
but are not optimal for the overall organization - Clumsy systems for the ultimate user
- Automating the Wrong Thing
- Re-inventing the Wheel
- Stovepipes
- Personal Systems, Spreadsheets
- Duplicated, inconsistent data
- Litigation
- But the Developers met the stated User
Requirements at the time!
5Extensive duplication, overlap and gaps in
critical Government functions
- ?50 agencies implement Federal drug control
strategies - ?29 agencies administer 541 clean air, water,
and waste programs - ?23 agencies administer 200 programs that provide
assistance to countries formerly part of the
Soviet Union - ?13 agencies administer 342 Federal economic
- development-related programs
- ?12 agencies administer more than 35 food safety
laws
Urgent Business for America Revitalizing the
Federal Government for the 21st Century. The
Report of the National Commission on the Public
Service, January 2003.
Page 5
6Extensive duplication, overlap and gaps in
critical Government functions (continued)
- ?11 agencies administer 90 early childhood
programs - ?9 agencies administer 86 teacher training
- programs
- ?9 agencies administer 27 teen pregnancy programs
- ?8 agencies administer 50 different programs
to - aid the homeless
- ?7 agencies administer 40 different job training
- programs
7This is not a technical problem! (or is it?)
- Systems are specified without an
enterprise-level understanding of the - How they support the Mission Objectives
- Business processes (e.g., supply chain)
- Existing technical architecture
- New technology initiatives
- In the Federal Government, there is no good way
today to gain cross-agency, cross-organization
insight. - and the supply chain today goes BEYOND the
Federal Government - Post-911 coordination between Office of Homeland
Security, other Federal agencies, State, and
Local law enforcement, Fire departments, etc.
8The Presidents Management Agenda
- Strategic Management of Human Capital
- Restructure agencies to be citizen-centered
- Adopt IT to capture employees knowledge and
skills - Competitive Sourcing
- Improved Financial Performance
- Expanded Electronic Government
- Simplify and unify around citizen needs
- Support projects that offer performance gains
across agency boundaries - Maximize interoperability and minimize redundancy
- Budget and Performance Integration
- Use performance information to make budget
decisions - Link performance and cost in a performance budget
9E-Government Unification and simplification
around citizen needs
- For individuals
- Easy to find, one-stop shops for citizens
creating single points of easy entry to access
high-quality governmental services - For businesses
- Reduce the burden on businesses through the use
of Internet protocols, simplifying interactions,
and consolidating redundant reporting
requirements - For government agencies
- Make it easier for states and localities to meet
reporting requirements, while enabling better
performance measurement and results (e.g.,
grants) - Internal efficiency and effectiveness
- Reduce costs for Federal Government
administration by using best practices in areas
such as supply chain management, financial
management, and knowledge management
Page 9
10The Vision
- Order of magnitude improvement in the federal
governments value to the citizen with decisions
in minutes or hours, not weeks or months
11How?
- Unify Infrastructure
- Unify access to data stores
- Collect the data once (requires agreement on data
definitions) - Integrate customer interface
- Monitor and measure (define success and measure)
- Simplify Processes
- Define and build integrated delivery channels
- The Teeth
- If you dont play, you dont get funded
- The FEA is a framework for making IT investment
decisions for FY 2005 Budget (Form 300s)
12The Federal Enterprise Architecture
13The Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) is
- A Business-Focused Framework for Cross-Agency,
Government-wide Improvement - A new way of describing, analyzing, and improving
the Federal Government and its ability to serve
the citizen
The FEA will provide the ability, for the first
time, to look across the Federal Government and
identify opportunities to collaborate,
consolidate, and leverage IT investments
14The FEA is a set of inter-related reference
models to facilitate collaboration and
information sharing
15The FEA Business Reference Model (BRM) is a
framework for describing the Lines of Business
performed by the Federal Government independent
of the Agencies that perform them
Internet/ Portal
Citizen to Government Access Channels
Services for Citizens
Services to Citizens
Program Admin
Compliance
Program Admin
Compliance
Public Asset Management
Public Asset Management
Regulated Activity Approval
Regulated Activity Approval
Marketable Asset Management
Marketable Asset Management
Consumer Safety
Consumer Safety
Defense Natl Security Ops
Defense Natl Security Ops
Environmental Management
Environmental Management
Diplomacy Foreign Relations
Diplomacy Foreign Relations
Law Enforcement
Law Enforcement
Disaster Management
Disaster Management
Legal
Legal
Domestic Economy
Domestic Economy
Revenue Collection
Revenue Collection
Education
Education
Trade (Import/Export)
Trade (Import/Export)
Energy Management
Energy Management
Transportation
Transportation
Insurance
Insurance
Workforce Management
Workforce Management
Public Health
Public Health
Recreation National Resources
Recreation National Resources
Government Employee to Employee Access Channels
Social Services
Social Services
RD Science
RD Science
- Telephone
- Voice
- Interactive
Web Services
E-system to System
Public/Private Partnerships
Face to Face
Intranet/ Portal
Fax
Mail
Support Delivery of Services
Legislative Management Business Management of
Information IT Management, Regulator
Management Planning and Resource Allocation
Controls and Oversight Public Affairs Internal
Risk Management and Mitigation Federal Financial
Assistance
Internal Operations / Infrastructure
Inter-Agency
Human Resources, Financial Management Admin
Supply Chain Management
Human Resources, Financial Management Admin
Supply Chain Management
16Business Reference Model (BRM) Status
- Version 1.0 published in July 2002
- Used in the FY 2004 budget process
- Analysis of agencies FY 2004 budget submissions
revealed multi-billion dollar consolidation
opportunities across the Federal Government - Financial Management
- Human Resources
- Data and Statistics Development
- Monetary Benefits
- Criminal Investigations
- Public Health Monitoring
- Need for Enterprise licensing
- Version 2.0 is in Final Agency Review
17The Performance Reference Model (PRM) will help
agencies identify the performance improvement
opportunities that will drive Government
transformation
Customer
Customer
OUTCOMES Mission-critical results measured from
a business, program, or customer perspective
Results
Results
Business
Business
- Customer Satisfaction
- Service Coverage
- Timeliness Responsiveness
- Service Quality
- Service Accessibility
Customer
Results
Results
Satisfaction
- Mission Achievement
- Outcomes
- Financial
Mission Achievement
Service Coverage
/ Outcomes
Timeliness
Financial
Responsiveness
Service Quality
Service Accessibility
OUTPUTS Measurement of day-to-day activities
agencies conduct, as driven by desired business
and customer results
Processes and Activities
Processes and Activities
- Financial
- Productivity Efficiency
- Cycle and Resource Time
- Quality
- Security Privacy
- Mgmt. Innovation
Financial
Productivity and Efficiency
Cycle and Resource Time
INPUTS People, technology, and other assets,
measured by their contribution
Technology
Technology
Other Fixed
Other Fixed
- Financial
- Quality Efficiency
- Information Data
- Security Privacy
- Reliability Availability
- User Satisfaction
- IT Management
People
People
Assets
Financial
Assets
- Employee Satisfaction
- Recruitment Retention
- Employee Development
- Employee Ratios
Technology
Quality Efficiency
Employee Satisfaction
- Financial
- Quality, Maintenance Efficiency
- Security Safety Utilization
Technology
Financial
Quality of Worklife
Information Data
Quality, Maintenance,
Recruitment Retention
Security Privacy
Efficiency
Employee Development
Reliability Availability
Security Safety
Employee Ratios
User Satisfaction
Utilization
IT Management
Value
18The Service Component Reference Model (SRM)
classifies capabilities (or service components)
Performance Reference Model ( PRM ) Outcomes and
Measures
Business Reference Model ( BRM )
Service Component Reference Model ( SRM )
Technical Reference Model ( TRM )
Support Delivery of Services
Rule Publication
Technologies
Platforms J2EE .NET Windows NT
Knowledge Mgmt CRM Content Mgmt Collaboration Sear
ch Portal Personalization
Regulatory Management
Policy and Guidance Devel. Public Comment
Tracking Regulatory Development Rule Publication
Data Mgmt ODBC JDBC Business Logic
Business lines and functions
Supporting technology and standards
Enabling capabilities, components, and services
Data and Information Reference Model
(DRM) Classification, Categorization, XML, Sharing
Component-Based Architecture
Service Layers
Service Types
Service Components
19Examples of Service Components of a Business
Function (Technology and Agency Independent)
Business Function Regulatory Management
Customer Relationship Management
Personalization / Subscriptions
BRM
Search Engine
SRM (Service Components)
Content Management
Access Control, User Management
Document Library
A Service Component is a functional capability
which assists the business in accomplishing its
mission
Problem Tracking, Case Management
Payment Collection (Pay.Gov)
20The FEA Technical Reference Model (TRM) is a
component-driven, technical framework that
identifies the standards and specifications that
comprise a Service Component
21Each tier is comprised of multiple categories
that describe the technologies, standards, and
specifications that support the service component
FEA Technical Reference Model (TRM) - Snapshot
Service Access and Delivery
Service Framework
Service Platforms
Access Channels
Service Transport
Supporting Platforms
Component-Based Architecture
Web Servers
Delivery Channels
Application Servers
Security
Service Requirements
Development Environment
Presentation / Interface
Database / Storage
Business Logic
Data Interchange
Hardware / Infrastructure
Data Management
Service Interface and Interoperability
22Collectively, the TRM technical tiers provide a
robust and effective foundation to support the
reuse and delivery of service components
FEA Technical Reference Model
How to leverage and access Service Components
Service Access and Delivery
Access Channels
Delivery Channels
Service Requirements
How to build, deploy, and exchange Service
Components
Service Framework
Component Architecture
Security
Service Interface / Interoperability
Service Transport
Presentation / Interface
Business Logic
How to support and maintain Service Components
Data Interchange
Service Platforms
Data Management
Service Platforms
23As a foundation, the tiers within the FEA TRM
reside across a typical network and application
topology
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
Internal Network
Outside World
Leveraging or Using A Service Component
Components
Synchronous / Asynchronous
Databases
Service Platforms (J2EE, .NET)
Service Interface
Domain Firewall (ACL, IPs)
Delivery Channels
Service Transport
Access Channels
Protocol Firewall (HTTP, Port 80)
Service Requirements
Directory Services
Business Intelligence
Building a Service Component or Application
Security
Presentation / Interface
Business Logic
Data Interchange
Data Management
24The Federal Enterprise Architecture Management
System (FEAMS)Personalization (My FEAMS),
Content Aggregation
Options to Personalize Content within each dialog
box
Aggregation and roll-ups of data to support rapid
navigation
Downloadable Reports and Guidance
Visualization tools to graphically illustrate
cross-agency synergy possibilities
25The Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework
(FEAF)
26Engineering the Transition
Transitional Processes
Engineer for Agency
As-Is
To-Be
Target To-Be Architecture
Current As-Is Architecture
Perf Business Service Comp. Data/Information Techn
ology
Strategic Direction
Map to FEA (Ultimately, Re-Use)
Standards
27The FEA and Agency Frameworks
- The FEA is the Enterprise Architecture for the
ENTIRE Federal Government (Top-Down
Categorization) - Federal EA Frameworks
- The Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework
(FEAF), developed by the CIO Council - FEAF Version 1.1, September 1999, is Current,
Version 2 is Stalled - Nonrestrictive Agencies Can Interpret
- The DOD Architecture Framework (DODAF), based on
the C4ISR (Command, Control, Communications,
Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and
Reconnaissance) Framework - The Treasury Enterprise Architecture Framework
(TEAF) - The EA Management Maturity Framework (GAO v.1.1
4/2003)
28The Teeth
- Agencies must develop and maintain an enterprise
architecture - Mandated by Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996
- Must be referenced in Budget Submissions
- By collaboration and re-use, can share costs
- FEA will help to identify areas for re-use
- FEAMS will be repository of Agency Architectures
29The FEAF Peeling the Onion based on the Zachman
Framework
Perspective Data Architecture Application Architecture Technology Architecture
Planner (Scope) List of Business Objects List of Business Processes List of Business Locations
Owner (Enterprise) Semantic Model (Model of Enterprise Objects) Business Process Model Business Logistics Model (e.g., types of facilities at locations)
Designer (Information Systems) Logical Data Model Application Architecture System Geographic Deployment Architecture
Builder (Technology) Physical Data Model Systems Design Technology Architecture
Subcontractor (Detailed Specification) Data Definition Library Programs / Supporting System Components Network Architecture
30The JWOD EA/BPR Project
31The Javits-Wagner-O-Day Program
- To create jobs for people with disabilities by
providing goods and services to the Federal
Government - Implemented by an independent Federal Agency, The
Committee For Purchase From People Who Are Blind
or Severely Disabled - Two Central Nonprofit Agencies
- National Industries for the Blind
- NISH, which supports people who have other severe
disabilities - People with disabilities working at nonprofit
agencies around the country
32JWOD Products and Services
- Services
- Call centers, janitorial, ground maintenance,
ship stocking, base supply centers, etc. - Products
- Skilcraft pens and other office supplies,
military unique products (e.g., uniforms),
hardware, cleaning products, medical supplies
(e.g., latex gloves), etc. - Distribution
- Staples, Office Depot, GSA Advantage!, jwod.com,
base supply centers, direct to Federal Agencies
33The JWOD EA/BPR Project, from Bottom up --
- Needs from an IT Perspective
- A new, Enterprise-wide IT System
- Consistent, accessible information to all
organizations - Needs from a Business Process Perspective
- Improved business processes, across all
organizations - Coordination and cooperation
- Clarified Roles and Responsibilities
- Needs from a Program Perspective
- Overall Buy-in to Strategic Objectives and
Performance Measures
More Challenging
34EA Supports the JWOD Modernization
- New IT must support Business Processes, which
must support Mission Objectives - Strategic Planning
- Documenting Current Architecture
- Facilitating Development of Improved Business
Processes, Enhancing Cooperation - Defining Target Architecture Across Program
- Business Processes, Performance Measures,
- Service Components / Application Architecture
- Technical / Infrastructure
- Aligning to Federal Enterprise Architecture
35What makes it hard --
- No point in automating processes you dont need
to be doing - Need new strategic plan!
- How should program resources be managed?
- Need organization-wide alignment
- Need integration of automation across multiple
organizations - Including commercial organizations, nonprofits
and government - Entire supply chain?
- Not the whole Federal Government, TODAY
36What makes it possible --
- Senior Leadership Buy-in
- The have an EA Champion
- New Presidential Appointees
- People Want to Have Impact
- Recognition of Benefit of Program-wide
Integration - OMB and Presidential Guidance
- Federal Enterprise Architecture
- E-Gov Focus
- Technology Enablers
- All players want to upgrade technology
- Time to get off that client/server
- Time to break down stovepipes and make services
available over the Web - XML and Web Services for some transactions
37Where the FEA is Taking Us Future Potential
38Huge Future Potential for Improving Federal
Automation over the Long Haul
- As Big of an Impact As The Web
- The Web made Static / Dynamic Information
Available to Users - Cataloged, Architected Web Services make Data and
Processes Available to Developers in Other
Agencies - More Data / Code / Service Sharing
- Cost Savings, Not Re-inventing the Wheel
- More Flexible Boundaries Federal Agencies,
States, Local Government, Private Industry, - Issues of Data Ownership, Data Quality, Data
Privacy and Security - Ownership Issues Who Maintains Services in
Repositories if Multiple Agencies Use Them? - Sensible IT Investment Decisions
39The point people miss!
Enterprise Architecture is NOT about building a
massive inventory of information about IT systems.
Enterprise Architecture is about ALIGNING systems
to support processes that support the MISSION
across agencies, and measuring the performance of
the organization in achieving the mission.
The TARGET Enterprise Architecture includes
reorganizing SOME systems into accessible,
reusable components.
40The Guidance is a Moving Target
- The Business Reference Model version 2.0 is
overdue, but soon! - The Service Component Reference Model version 1.0
is in Draft (out for agency review) - The Technical Reference Model version 1.0 is in
Draft (out for agency review) - The Data Reference Model is not out at all but is
promised this summer - The FEAMS is not ready yet
- The FEAF 2.0 appears to be derailed
41Challenges in Software Engineering
- Increased Focus on Business Objectives and
Business Process - Need to optimize process across the enterprise
- If it is to be shared it has to be generic /
common - Engineer for Re-Use / Sharing
- Need to Select Appropriate Level of Granularity
- Code Re-Use is Downstream, Component Re-Use
- Security, Repositories, Rules of Engagement Need
to be Worked Out - Engineering for Interoperability
- Standards Gaps, Cross-Platform Issues Will Still
Need Working Out
42References
- Federal Enterprise Architecture Program
Management Office (FEAPMO) - http//www.feapmo.gov
- Industry Advisory Council (IAC) Enterprise
Architecture SIG - www.iaconline.org, http//www.ichnet.org/IAC_EA.ht
m - FEA Bibliography (evolving)
- www.ursamajorconsulting.com
43Questions/ Discussion