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Collaborative Enterprise Architecture: Enriching EA with Lean, Agile, and Enterprise 2.0 practicesSeptember 2012
Publisher:
  • Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc.
  • 340 Pine Street, Sixth Floor
  • San Francisco
  • CA
  • United States
ISBN:978-0-12-415934-1
Published:12 September 2012
Pages:
328
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Abstract

Ever-changing business needs have prompted large companies to rethink their enterprise IT. Today, businesses must allow interaction with their customers, partners, and employees at more touch points and at a depth never thought previously. At the same time, rapid advances in information technologies, like business digitization, cloud computing, and Web 2.0, demand fundamental changes in the enterprises' management practices. These changes have a drastic effect not only on IT and business, but also on policies, processes, and people. Many companies therefore embark on enterprise-wide transformation initiatives. The role of Enterprise Architecture (EA) is to architect and supervise this transformational journey. Unfortunately, today's EA is often a ponderous and detached exercise, with most of the EA initiatives failing to create visible impact. The enterprises need an EA that is agile and responsive to business dynamics. Collaborative Enterprise Architecture provides the innovative solutions today's enterprises require, informed by real-world experiences and experts' insights. This book, in its first part, provides a systematic compendium of the current best practices in EA, analyzes current ways of doing EA, and identifies its constraints and shortcomings. In the second part, it leaves the beaten tracks of EA by introducing Lean, Agile, and Enterprise 2.0 concepts to the traditional EA methods. This blended approach to EA focuses on practical aspects, with recommendations derived from real-world experiences. A truly thought provoking and pragmatic guide to manage EA, Collaborative Enterprise Architecture effectively merges the long-term oriented top-down approach with pragmatic bottom-up thinking, and that way offers real solutions to businesses undergoing enterprise-wide change. Covers the latest emerging technologies affecting business practice, including digitization, cloud computing, agile software development, and Web 2.0 Focuses on the practical implementation of EAM rather than theory, with recommendations based on real-world case studies Addresses changing business demands and practices, including Enterprise 2.0, open source, global sourcing, and more Takes an innovative approach to EAM, merging standard top-down and pragmatic, bottom-up strategies, offering real solutions to businesses undergoing enterprise-wide changes

Contributors

Recommendations

Eric Wayne Yocam

Over time, organizations become more complex, driving the need for collaboration to develop a consistent enterprise architecture (EA). Collaboration involves working closely with others to produce something of meaning and value to those involved. In some organizations, the inability of enterprise architects to collaborate effectively can reduce the usefulness of their efforts. Fortunately, the authors of this book go a long way to dispel existing popular corporate lore surrounding enterprise architects and their products. They note that enterprise architecture is an evolving art that combines the expertise and skill of enterprise architects. In fact, enterprise architecture actually depends on collaboration with others to achieve mutual objectives, such as meeting the needs of business leaders in a given enterprise at a given moment. However, practicing enterprise architects will tell you that this task is much easier said than done. The book consists of nine chapters grouped in two parts. In chapter 1, the authors recommend evolving current enterprise architecture practice into a more contemporary collaborative process. They explore this through a series of contrasting perspectives under the umbrella term "The Gray Reality." Topics include perspective, governance, strategy, and transformation. In chapters 2 through 5, the authors describe EA building blocks, including definitions, activities, measures, frameworks, and maturity models, paving the way to the next part of the book. Up to this point, the authors have not only established a foundation of traditional EA (or what they might call not-so-collaborative EA), but they have also introduced the fundamental notion of collaborative EA. In chapters 6 through 8, they suggest that complexity is due in part to organizational interdependency and in part to the chaotic activity observed in the mix of people, processes, and technologies involved in any given enterprise, large or small. In chapter 9, the authors challenge enterprise architects to become change agents, to evangelize collaborative EA by taking this innovative collaborative approach forward. Doing so will help overcome the observed phenomenon of deterioration that marks current EA practices, which operate without the enrichment of collaboration. This collaborative EA vision highlights the path forward, building awareness and forming collaborative habits. Collaborative enterprise architects will not only build confidence and enrich their experiences, but they can also realize true transformative value by incorporating lean, agile, and enterprise 2.0 methods into their best-practice repertoire. I recommend this book to those readers looking to enhance their existing understanding of collaborative enterprise architecture, and those interested in the benefits of incorporating lean, agile, and enterprise 2.0 methods into their practice. I applaud the authors for illustrating their arguments throughout the book with a fictional company and situation to help translate theory into practical use. The book seems oriented toward those readers who are interested in enterprise architecture, but are not necessarily practicing enterprise architects. Online Computing Reviews Service

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