Title: Enterprise Architecture and Design
1Enterprise Architecture and Design
- Vince Kellen
- Vice President, Information Services, DePaul
University - Instructor, DePaul CTI
- http//www.kellen.net
2Introduction to EAP
3Enterprise Architecture Planning
- What is it?
- Spewak
- EAP is the process of defining architectures for
the use of information in support of the business
and the plan for implementing those architectures - Handbook on Enterprise Architecture (HEA)
- On Enterprise Engineering It is the collection
of those tools and methods which one can use to
design and continually maintain an integrated
state of the enterprise. - Boar
- On IT Architecture It is a series of principles,
guidelines, drawings, standards and rules that
guide an organization through acquiring,
building, modifying and the interfacing of IT
resources throughout the enterprise.
4EAP Scope
- Information is the life blood of a business.
Information management is the essence of business
management. EAP can refer to a business or to IT.
Can you model IT architecture separate from
business architecture? Where does one begin and
the other end? -
- Scope for EAP can be
- A virtual enterprise (7.2 HEA)
- The enterprise
- A business unit (or collection of business units)
- IT only
- Can the scope for EAP be a cluster of enterprise
(18.5.3 HEA)?
5EAP Whats in it?
- EAP does not define one architecture, but
multiple architectures - There is not one perspective for EAP, but many
- Planner, owner, designer, builder, subcontractor1
- Each level is not just more detail, but with
essential differences2 - There is not one tool for EAP, but many
- Many modeling languages (3.5, table 3.1 HEA, p
133) - Several modeling methodologies/frameworks (3.3,
3.6 HEA) - Several software packages (3.9.1, 3.9.2 - HEA)
- 1Sowa, J.F. Zachman, J.A. Extending and
formalizing the framework for information systems
architecture. IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 31, No.
3, 1992. - 2Zachman, J.A. A framework for information
systems architecture IBM Systems Journal, Vol.
26, No. 3, 1987.
6What do architects do? Roles
- Technology life-cycle management
- Identify emerging technologies, defining
standards, retiring technologies - Technology procurement
- Purchasing, managing the vendor relationship
- Methodologies
- Gartner is referring to design methodologies
- Life cycle process and standards
- Project management, reuse, metrics and testing
- Skills planning
- Architectures perspective helps plan future
skill development - Data architecture
- Identify common standards to ensure
interoperability - Interfaces and modularization
- City planning how do parts relate to each other?
7What do IT architects do? Organization
- Architecture is not monolithic. Planning may be
carried out by groups other than the core team - Software architecture
- Business architecture and functional
rationalization - Establish repositories of knowledge management
and best practice - Shared software component development
- Activities in architecture
- Identify potential architecture investments and
cost-justify them - Communicate the architecture and maintenance
process to users, stakeholders - Road map management
- Conflict resolution and exception handling
- Deploying the architecture
- Monitoring the effectiveness of the architecture
8GERAM
- Generalized Enterprise Reference Architecture and
Methodology (GERAM) - Became part of ISO standards in the mid 1990s,
history is in manufacturing industries - Think of it as a specification to compare with
any architecture methodology. GERAM is likely to
be more complete and robust.
9Some points to consider
- Internet is highly decentralized. But
decentralization without structure is chaos
(Zachman, 1987). - Computing architectures are complex and ever
changing. Integration between computing
architectures, while increasing in richness and
benefit, is also getting more complex - Architecture is a needed response to prevent
disintegration of the enterprise, virtual or
otherwise.
10Strategy
11Strategy
- What is strategy?
- A pattern in a stream of decisions. (4.2.2,
Mintzberg) - Behind every successful company lies a successful
strategy - It is an interdisciplinary field involving
economics, management, organizational theory,
law, (cognitive sciences) - Many different schools of strategy
- Strategy is pragmatic. Strategies exist to give
organizations (businesses) advantage in their
ecosystems (markets). Profit motive - The role of IT in strategy has had much debate
both recently and historically
12Different schools
Design Senior management formulates clear, simple and unique strategies in a deliberate process of conscious thought
Planning Formal, decomposable into discrete steps, checklists, techniques.
Positioning Positions selected through formalized analysis of industry situations. Porters five forces, PIMS, Boston Consulting Group.
Entrepreneurial Focus on the CEO, intuition, metaphor. Forceful leader. Start-up, niche. Leader maintains close control on his or her formulated vision
Cognitive Strategies originate in peoples minds as frames, models, maps, concepts, schemas. Cognitive biases, heuristics, naturalistic decision making. Creativity.
Learning Disjointed incrementalism, logical incrementalism, muddling-through, emergent strategies, the learning organization.
Power Development of strategy is political, a process involving bargaining, persuasion and confrontation among actors who divide power.
Cultural Focus on common interest and integration, strategy formation is a social process rooted in culture. The threat of Japan in the 1980s spurred this.
Environmental How organizations use degrees of freedom to maneuver through environments. Limits to strategic choice due to environmental conditions.
Configuration Configure an approach to strategy by adopting one or more schools. Shift from one mode to another depending on the life-cycle of the firm.
From Reflecting on the strategy process,
Mintzberg, Henry. Sloan Management Review. Vol.
40 No. 3. Spring 1999.
13Types of strategies
Intended Strategy
Realized Strategy
Deliberate Strategy
Unrealized Strategy
Emergent Strategy
From Of strategies, deliberate and emergent.
Mintzberg, Henry Waters, James. Strategic
Management Journal. Vol. 6, 1985.
14Introvert approach to strategy
- Resource-based view (RBV) of the firm, dynamic
capabilities approach (DCA) - Firms compete on resources and capabilities
(4.3.2.1 HEA) - Resources are assets, tangible or intangible
- Capabilities are a capacity to deploy resources,
know-how - Functional capabilities deepens specific
knowledge - Integrative capabilities combines functional
capabilities and absorbs external knowledge - Firms gain access to resources and capabilities
through networks (or relationships) . Managing
this network may be considered a capability.
Could a network be thought of as a resource? - Capabilities and resources are not singular items
considered in isolation. They interact with each
other and comprise a complex system. - Capabilities and resources which are
non-tradable, rare, inimitable or
non-substitutable can be a source of competitive
advantage - Is this sounding mystic, unmanageable, tacit?
15Additional arguments
- While an introverted view may be warranted, a
competency that is emerging as significant is
knowledge of market opportunities. This is
different than knowledge of product engineering - Markets are collections of customers. Customers
demonstrate their power in making choices.
Customers choice-making is increasing in power - Commoditization of complex manufacturing,
imitable globally - Diversity of choices due to many manufacturers is
giving customers more choices - Diversity of choices increases consumption and
overall market opportunity (post-modern
consumerism) - Knowledge of customer choices is a key capability
- This capability is focused on external
information (integrative capability) - Systems, data and information is the overwhelming
means by which this integrative capability is
executed
16Knowledge and capabilities
- Capabilities are a key component to competitive
advantage - Knowledge is a significant ingredient within
capabilities - Therefore, knowledge is important
17Two views
- Dominant view of knowledge management
- Tacit knowledge conversion to explicit storage,
retrieval and diffusion of explicit knowledge - Focus on the production versus consumption of
knowledge - How is knowledge produced? (innovation)
- Knowledge can be managed
- Some reactions to the dominant view
- Knowledge grows via a series of unplanned,
indeterminate interactions between people - Knowledge is acted upon in tacit form without
full awareness or validity - Learning is fraught with difficulties
- Cognitive biases, organizational and individual
defensiveness - Knowledge cant be managed
18Knowledge and behavior
- Can you see someone acquire knowledge when it
occurs? - Knowledge must lead to observable behavior change
that can be linked to business success. - Learning occurs when people produce what they say
they know (C. Argyis) - Two forms of behavior change intrinsic and
coerced - Coerced behavior change
- We will pay you more if you do X
- We will accept you in the group if you behave in
following X ways - Intrinsic behavior change
- I want to earn more money, so I will do X
- In the name of my religious beliefs, I will do
X - I want to rule the earth and coerce others, so I
will do X - Questions
- Is it easier to acquire knowledge or get
knowledge acted upon with coercion? - Is intrinsically motivated behavior better? Is it
harder to get the behavior started or stopped?
19Knowledge chain or knowledge network?
Identify
Catalog
Store
Distribute
Or
What is the precise sequence of interactions that
produces the knowledge needed by the
organization? What comprises the interactions?
Can you repeat the sequence each time? What rules
govern the sequence?
20IT does not matter. Or does it?
- Resource view of IT
- It is not scarce, it is ubiquitous. It is
imitable. - The advantage is short-lived due to ubiquity and
imitability. - IT is looking like railways and electric power
markets - Spend less, follow (dont lead), work on
vulnerabilities and not opportunities - IMHO Wrong view of IT!
- Capability view of IT
- It powers others and is in and of itself an
integrative capability. It lets firms know
their environments and react or proact in
them. - It is complex. Processes in and around IT are
complex. No normative frameworks exist for the
development of these processes. Success is scarce
and not imitable. Success emerges, often
unpredictably. - The range between high and low cost/performance
firms may be 41 or higher, suggesting no
commoditization of use has occurred - IT is perpetually mutable. It can be molded into
an infinite array of products/offerings. It is
NOT a railway or an electric power company.
From IT doesnt matter, Carr, Nicholas G.
Harvard Business Review. May, 2003.
21Change is collective
- Designing change is a collaborative exercise.
Many IT staff need to be involved, as do many
non-IT staff - Implementing change is surely a collaborative
exercise. Unproductive resistance to change can
surface in many forms from the obvious to the
extremely subtle consciously and nonconsiously - New IT architectures introduce and come along
with other organizational changes. In fact, the
technology is usually not the reason for
architecture failures - In times of change, we need zones of stability
communicating the goal, seeking alignment between
teams and individuals is important
22Attitudes and behavior
Attitudes
Behavior
Do we adjust our behavior to align with our
attitudes? Or Do we adjust our attitudes to
align with our behavior?
23EAP Frameworks
24GERAM
- GERAM is a comprehensive framework for
producing or managing enterprises, projects,
products, new methodologies any entity - An ontology
- An explicit formal specification of how to
represent the objects, concepts and other
entities that are assumed to exist in some area
of interest and the relationships that hold among
them1 - The hierarchical structuring of knowledge about
things by subcategorizing them according to their
essential (or at least relevant and/or cognitive)
qualities1 - Ontologies are simply hierarchal description of
the important concepts in a domain, coupled with
a description of each of these concepts.
Ontologies consist of various concepts that
include class, subclass, class hierarchy,
instance, slot, value, defaults value, facet,
type, cardinality, inheritance, variable and
relation. The word ontology first appeared in
Aristotles philosophical essays, where it used
to describe the nature and organization of
being.2 - 1 http//www.dictionary.com
- 2 Ontologies for Supply Chain Management,
Ahmad, A., Mollaghasemi, M., Rabelo, L.,
http//www.isye.gatech.edu/faculty/Leon_McGinnis/
8851/Sources/Ontology/Ontologies.pdf
25GERAM
- GERA General Enterprise Reference Architecture
- Identifies the concepts for enterprise
integration. Human, process and technology
oriented concepts - EEM Enterprise Engineering Methodology
- Describes process of enterprise engineering.
Process model or structured procedure with
detailed instructions for each enterprise
engineering and integration activity. - EMLs Enterprise Modeling Languages
- Provides modeling constructs for modeling of
human roles, processes and technologies - GEMCs Generic Enterprise Modeling Concepts
- Define the meaning of enterprise modeling
constructs. Natural language explanation of
meaning of modeling concepts (glossaries), meta
model (ER diagram) of concepts available in
modeling languages - PEMs Partial Enterprise Model
- Provide reusable reference models and designs of
human roles, processes and technology. Capture
characteristics common to many enterprises within
or across one or more sectors. Aka reference
models, reference architectures. Speed up the
process of engineering (reusability) - EET Enterprise Engineering Tools
- Support enterprise engineering analysis, design
and use of enterprise models - EMs Enterprise Models
- Represent the particular enterprise, expressed
using enterprise modeling languages. May consist
of several enterprise designs and models to
support analysis and operations of the
enterprise. - EMOs Enterprise Modules
- Provide implementable modules of human
professions, operational processes, technologies.
PS or SAP product modules are an example of an
EM. - EOS Enterprise Operational Systems
- Support the operation of the particular enterprise
26(No Transcript)
27Zachman Framework
- ISA Information Systems Architecture
- A taxonomy with 30 boxes or cells 6 columns, 5
row
Data What Function How Network Where People Who Time When Motivation Why
Scope Planner / contextual
Business model Owner / conceptual
System model Designer / logical
Technology model Builder / physical
Detailed presentations Subcontractor / out-of context
Taxonomy 1) The classification of organisms in
an ordered system that indicates natural
relationships, 2) The science, laws, or
principles of classification systematics. 3)
Division into ordered groups or categories
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29"Extending and Formalizing the Framework for
Information Systems Architecture." J.F. Sowa and
J. A. Zachman. IBM Systems Journal, vol. 31, no.
3, 1992. http//www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/31
3/sowa.pdf
30Zachman rules
- Columns have no order (or bias)
- Each column has a simple, basic model
- The basic model of each column must be unique
- Each row represents a distinct, unique
perspective - Each cell is unique
- The composite or integration of all cell models
in one row constitutes a complete model from the
perspective of the row - The logic is recursive.
- Models in a perspectives (row) map into higher
perspectives - As-is and to-be versions of each cell model are
possible - The logic of the framework can be applied to
itself, to analyze the design and construction
issues that affect that cell
"Extending and Formalizing the Framework for
Information Systems Architecture." J.F. Sowa and
J. A. Zachman. IBM Systems Journal, vol. 31, no.
3, 1992. http//www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/31
3/sowa.pdf
31Gartners Architecture Perspective
32The expanded Gartner Framework
33Patterns
- Patterns are logical models of technology, design
ideas that can be reused and leveraged across the
enterprise. They are usually industry standard
and endure for a long time. We can think of them
as blueprints that identify components, show
roles, interactions and relationships - Within a specific pattern, where is the emphasis
and intensity?
34Bricks
- Bricks provide device specificity for the pattern
- The following elements should be captured in a
brick - A description of the technology and its role
- Specific implications, dependencies, and
deployment and management strategies - Information about the state of the technology
- Vendor stability and asset management information
- Measure the technologys maturity at the brick
level and then measure the maturity level of the
portfolio of bricks. This provides an index of
the organizations overall technology maturity - Four maturity states
- Mainstream, retirement, containment, emergence
35EAP tools
36Gartner review of EA tools
- ASG Rochade
- Casewise Corporate Modeler
- Computas Metis
- IDS Scheer ARIS
- MEGA International
- Popkin Software System Architect
- Proforma ProVision
- Ptech Enterprise Framework
37Gartner MarketScope ratings
38Gartner EAP Tools Ratings
39Vendors, criteria
- Companies
- Adaptive
- Agilense
- Alfabet
- Casewise
- IDS Scheer
- Mega International
- Popkin
- Proforma
- Select Business Solutions
- Simon Labs
- TeleLogic
- Troux
- Criteria
- Frameworks supported
- Zachman
- FEAF/TEAF
- C4ISR, DoDAF
- TOGAF
- Others
- Modeling languages
- UML
- MDA (OMG)
- BPML
- BPEL4WS
- BPMN
- ADML
- IDEF family
- ER/ DFD
40Modeling languages
41Basic concepts
- A modeling language is a set of constructs for
building models of systems - Models can be prepared at various stages of the
system life-cycle - The modeling language should be suited for the
modeling task - The modeling language should have sufficient
expressive power to capture all the information
needed in the model - The modeling language should be easily understood
by the intended audience - Modeling languages fall into three categories a)
data and object modeling (information view), b)
activity and process modeling (function view) and
c) multi-view modeling (multi-level)
42Information modeling
- Information base
- A repository that contains accumulated,
disseminated, structured information - Physical models
- Records, arrays, strings, lists, etc.
- Logical models
- Sets, relations, mathematical symbol structures
- Conceptual models
- More expressive, semantic terms such as Entity,
Activity, Agent, Goal
43Semantic networks
- Ross Quillian proposed them in 1968
- Directed, labeled graphs
- Nodes in a semantic network represent concepts
- Links between nodes have semantic meaning (e.g.,
isA, has, eats) - horse -isA-gt animal -eats-gt food
- horse isA-gt animal madeOf-gt meat isA-gtfood
- Spreading activation
- http//www.jfsowa.com/pubs/semnet.htm
- http//www.semanticresearch.com/semantic/
44Express
- ISO standard 10303-11
- Formal modeling language for the specification of
static aspects of an informational model - Object oriented constructs
- Basic element is the entity type, used to
represent objects of the real world. Entities
describe groups of instances - http//www.infoloom.com/gcaconfs/WEB/granada99/ber
.HTMN17
45Object role modeling (ORM/NIAM)
- NAIM natural language information analysis
method - Unlike E/R diagrams, in ORM, attributes do not
exist, but instead are expressed as a
relationship - Person country born
- Person was Born in Country
- Step-wise process
- Transform familiar information into facts, draw
the fact types - Add uniqueness constraints, check arity of fact
types - Add various constraints
- Final check
- Rich notational system,language
- http//www.agilemodeling.com/artifacts/ormDiagram.
htm
46Database Language SQL
- Originally not a complete programming language,
but a data sublanguage - The relational model gained prominence with a
1974 paper by E.F. Codd, mathematical
underpinnings - Relational concepts relation, attribute, tuple
- SQL concepts table, column row
- DDL data definition language
- DML data manipulation language
- Semantic integrity constraints
- Referential integrity, triggers, constraints,
47Petri Nets
- Introduced by C. A. Petri in 1962
- Discrete event systems (DES), such as
manufacturing systems or information networks - Modeling facilities
- Quantitative analysis performance (throughput),
responsiveness (turn around time), utilization
(size of queues), - Qualitative analysis absence of deadlocks,
ability to reach some states (reachability),
ability to return to some pre-defined states
(reversibility, home states) - Places, transitions, arcs, weights, initial
marking - http//www.daimi.au.dk/PetriNets/introductions/aal
st/
48State transition diagrams
- Introduced in the 1950s
- Have played a major role in hardware design
- A STD is a graph whose nodes represent states of
a system and whose arrows represents state
transitions - Related terms finite machine, finite automaton
- UML state machine http//www.agilemodeling.com/ar
tifacts/stateMachineDiagram.htm
49Data flow diagram
- Popular in the late 1970s, Gane and Sarson
- Used to show how processes communicate and store
data - Four concepts
- External entities (squares, sources or
destinations of data) - Processes (circles or rounded rectangles)
- Data flows (arrows)
- Data stores (open-ended rectangles)
- http//www.agilemodeling.com/artifacts/dataFlowDia
gram.htm
50IDEF family
- IDEF0 Function modeling
- Model decisions, actions, activities of an
organization, derived from SADT - IDEF1 Information modeling
- E/R modeling and relational model are influences
- Designed to capture information that exists in
the enterprise - Not a database design method
- IDEF1X Data modeling
- Most useful for logical database design
- IDEF2 System dynamics modeling
- Simulation modeling, what if analysis, predict
what a system would do - IDEF3 Process description capture
- Process flow, object state transitions
scenario-driven - IDEF4 Object oriented design
- Targets OO technology, not relational
- IDEF5 Ontology description
- Extracting the nature of a problem domain and
storing it isA, system kind and relation type
diagrams - IDEF6 Information system design rationale
capture - Models why or why not a design is the way it is
and how one arrived at that design - http//www.idef.com/
51Virtual enterprises
- Source Tolle, M. Bernus, P. (2003). Reference
models supporting enterprise networks and virtual
enterprises. International Journal of Networking
and Virtual Organizations, Vol. 2, No.1.
52Virtual Enterprise Reference Architecture
- VE a customer solution delivery system created
by a temporary and re-configurable
Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
enabled aggregation of core competencies - Firms create VEs to move quickly
- In order to move quickly, people, process,
technology models need to be built quickly - Reference models are key. They serve as a
blueprint that firms follow in constructing and
managing the VE - VEs might include entire supply chains or just a
collection of partners bringing a product to
market
53A sample VE
54Creating a VE
- Partners must be prepared with the architecture
(technical, human, process) with tested building
blocks - Building a VE architecture should be rules-based,
not ad-hoc - Must map architecture to core competencies (SOA)
- Should establish a set of reference architectures
to support constructing the VE - Rules should cover a range of typical issues
- Loosely coupled/controlled partners versus highly
coupled/controlled - Long term VEs versus short term
- Establish the kowledge management approach
- Data, metrics, lessons learned, alterations,
modifications to the architectures
55VERA
56VERA views
57View descriptions
- Functional
- Activities and business processes
- Information
- Data models, operational database designs
- Resource view
- Hardware, software resources, human resources
- Organizational view
- Models for designing the organization
- Allocation of resources to activities/processes
58Relevant reference models
59Relevant reference models
60Relevant reference models
61Governance, maturity
62Typical situation
Customers
Architecture requirements
??
Functional staff
IS staff
Desired state
Customers
IS staff
Architecture requirements
Functional staff
63Level 1 - Initial
- Informal IT Architecture Process Underway
- Processes are ad hoc and localized. Some IT
Architecture processes are defined. There is no
unified architecture process across technologies
or business processes. Success depends on
individual efforts. - IT Architecture processes, documentation and
standards are established by a variety of ad hoc
means and are localized or informal. - Minimal, or implicit linkage to business
strategies or business drivers. - Limited management team awareness or involvement
in the architecture process. - Limited. Operating Unit acceptance of the IT
Architecture process. - The latest version of the Operating Units IT
Architecture documentation is on the Web. Little
communication exists about the IT Architecture
process and possible process improvements. - IT Security considerations are ad hoc and
localized. - No explicit governance of architectural
standards. - Little or no involvement of strategic planning
and acquisition personnel in enterprise
architecture process. Little or no adherence to
existing Standards.
64Level 2 Under development
- IT Architecture Process Is Under Development
- The architecture process has developed clear
roles and responsibilities. - IT Vision, Principles, Business Linkages,
Baseline, and Target Architecture are identified.
Architecture standards exist, but not necessarily
linked to Target Architecture. Technical
Reference Model and Standards Profile framework
established. - Explicit linkage to business strategies.
- Management awareness of Architecture effort.
- Responsibilities are assigned and work is
underway. - IT Security Architecture has defined clear roles
and responsibilities. - Governance of a few architectural standards and
some adherence to existing Standards Profile. - Little or no formal governance of IT Investment
and Acquisition Strategy. Operating Unit
demonstrates some adherence to existing Standards
Profile
65Level 3 Defined
- Defined IT Architecture Including Detailed
Written Procedures and Technical Reference Model - The architecture is well defined and communicated
to IT staff and business management with
Operating Unit IT responsibilities. The process
is largely followed. - Gap Analysis and Migration Plan are completed.
Fully developed Technical Reference Model and
Standards Profile. IT goals and methods are
identified. - IT Architecture is integrated with capital
planning investment control. - Senior-management team aware of and supportive of
the enterprise-wide architecture process.
Management actively supports architectural
standards. - Most elements of Operating Unit show acceptance
of or are actively participating in the IT
Architecture process. - Architecture documents updated regularly on
Architecture Web Page. - IT Security Architecture Standards Profile is
fully developed and is integrated with IT
Architecture. - Explicit documented governance of majority IT
investments. - IT acquisition strategy exists and includes
compliance measures to IT Enterprise
Architecture. Cost-benefits are considered in
identifying projects.
66Level 4 Managed
- Managed and Measured IT Architecture Process
- IT Architecture process is part of the culture.
Quality metrics associated with the architecture
process are captured. - IT Architecture documentation is updated on a
regular cycle to reflect the updated IT
Architecture. Business, Information, Application
and Technical Architectures defined by
appropriate de-jure and de-facto standards. - Capital planning and investment control are
adjusted based on the feedback received and
lessons learned from updated IT Architecture.
Periodic re-examination of business drivers. - Senior-management team directly involved in the
architecture review process. - The entire Operating Unit accepts and actively
participates in the IT Architecture process. - Architecture documents are updated regularly, and
frequently reviewed for latest architecture
developments/standards. - Performance metrics associated with IT Security
Architecture are captured. - Explicit governance of all IT investments. Formal
processes for managing variances feed back into
IT Architecture. - All planned IT acquisitions and purchases are
guided and governed by the IT Architecture.
67Level 5 - Optimizing
- Continuous Improvement of IT Architecture Process
- Concerted efforts to optimize and continuously
improve architecture process. - A standards and waivers process are used to
improve architecture development process
improvements. - Architecture process metrics are used to optimize
and drive business linkages. Business involved in
the continuous process improvements of IT
Architecture. - Senior management involvement in optimizing
process improvements in Architecture development
and governance. - Feedback on architecture process from all
Operating Unit elements is used to drive
architecture process improvements. - Architecture documents are used by every decision
maker in the organization for every IT-related
business decision. - Feedback from IT Security Architecture metrics
are used to drive architecture process
improvements. - Explicit governance of all IT investments. A
standards and waivers process is used to improve
governance-process improvements. - No unplanned IT investment or acquisition
activity
68Governance models
- EAP governance is largely an IT affair
- EAP governance is run by a broader engineering
group - EAP is sponsored by the CIO, but has strong
functional executive involvement (finance,
marketing, sales, etc.) - EAP is owned by the CEO
- William Shaw, Marriott President and COO We are
beyond alignment. We are into convergence.
69Steps to establishing governance
- Preconditions
- Establish trust and respect in IT leadership
- Improve functional-technical boundary knowledge
- CIO to establish good peer relationships
- The architecture business case must warrant CEO
or board level attention - Steps
- Secure VP-level interest and involvement
- Secure CEO acceptance or sponsorship
- Staff the EAP function
- Establish the governance group, agenda,
engineering methodology - Design monitoring, measurement and feedback
mechanisms into the process
70Unleashing the EAP process
- Unilateral (or anarchical) control over
architecture begins to fade as federated control
over architecture emerges - A federated model?
- Balances local needs and central authority (state
versus federal government rights) - Is focused on systems integration (HEA p 619)
- Flexibility, agility, efficiency, quality
- Requires great team and governance skills
- Relies on multiple disciplines
- What should a federal government do?
- Provide for the common defense
- Provide a common infrastructure otherwise not
possible (road design, railway standards) - Gather and intensify scarce intellectual capital.
Improve certain skills - Use a carrot first and then a stick
71EAP / systems integration methodology
- Use and adopt reference models
- Model the system functional (components and
processes), information, resources, organization - Harmonize component interactions (web services
wrappers to deal with heterogeneity) - Link together information and knowledge.
Establish common ontologies. Planfully overcome
semantic incompatibility between concepts used by
different components - Achieve new coordination levels