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Smart Architect

2 Posts tagged with the integration tag
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Did you hear the one about the clinical psychologist who became an enterprise architect? No? Well, if this were a joke, the punchline might be that the poor guy’s spending more time in therapy now than ever before. Only this time he’s on the other end of the couch, trying to work through the pain of resistance and rejection by senior business people who tell him that they understand architecture matters but they just don’t have time for it.


As it happens, MIT’s  Jeanne Ross, one of the premier researchers in the field of enterprise architecture and IT, actually did once meet an architect who started out as a clinical psychologist — and he told her that his earlier training really helped him in his current role. Point being that much of what an EA does is as much the art of persuasion as the science of integrating data and processes, as much about gaining insight into people’s hot buttons as it is about bringing standardization into the organization.

 

As Ross, Director and Principal Research Scientist at the Center for Information Systems Research, explains, they have to “know how to get buy-in for something people don’t think they have time for and think that you [the enterprise architect] will take care of for them.” The problem with that is that while architects can do a lot, they can’t have a positive impact all by themselves. Says Ross, “I would urge architects to recognize that their success totally depends on other people’s behaviors, and thus they can never give up working on other people’s behaviors.” (Are you seeing the psychology connection now?)


Ross, who gave a keynote presentation on how enterprise architects can design business success at The Open Group Conference in San Francisco in January, says that architects don’t always recognize that not everyone necessarily gets what it means to have enterprise processes and what it takes to get enterprise data. That’s not to say that their business peers aren’t logical and smart people, but, Ross says, “they’re thinking in silos and silo-thinking works against all that architecture tries to do.”


To counter this, Ross says you need to be prepared to go against some natural inclinations of what you think you should be spending all your time doing — focusing on design — and what you actually should be spending time doing. The great architects, she says, are in the field, spending time with the people designing processes, for instance, or heading up call centers. They’re stepping back from the big-picture view of creating enterprise value and instead first asking themselves who it is in the organization that is best positioned to make things happen — “Who wants something in the worst way that will be better accomplished if it’s well-architected,” she says. So, your plan should be to get them to recognize that the best way forward is to think end-to-end, about integrated processes or shared data. “Invariably there’s some piece that some people will get,” she says. And those movers and shakers become your champions. 


Being proactive with the business side also means that chief architects likely will find themselves in the position of constantly forcing more clarity around the operational decisions of senior executives that, frankly, in many cases aren’t very clear. Their desire to take steps to transform the business, which includes transforming the architecture, is real but doesn’t always take into account long-term impact and the metrics that will be used to gauge it. “Architecture comes down fundamentally to two things: standardization and integration. Many senior executives think about neither in the long term, and because they don’t think of it, in a way architecture is impossible,” Ross says. “If a company has made no decision on what to integrate and standardize, you can’t go forward.”


The job, then, is to make it plain that integration and standardization will be in vain unless the business understands the real commitment this entails, and the impact that it will have on the company in terms of what it can and can’t do going forward. “A lot of companies haven’t gone the step beyond to talk about how we operate, how people’s jobs would change, about how their relationships with customers would change,” she explains. “Architects have to articulate that if I do this, then that is the result. You can help them understand the implications of their decisions.”


In other words, you have more leverage than you may think. Ross says that in her experience working with companies that have succeeded in IT-enabled transformation initiatives, the CIOs had good architects working with them. As one example, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia began a transformation in 2006 focused on meeting its customers’ need to be treated as one entity across all the divisions they dealt with. The inclination of many architects, she says, would have been to do a major overhaul, consisting of ripping out the legacy system and putting in a new banking engine, but here they focused on getting to the big impact through smaller initiatives with more immediate results. The bank began with doing just enough of an architecture revision on the back end to deliver a friendlier Internet interface to the customer. “They said, let’s fix just what we need to fix [to create] a single interface for the customer so it looks better in the back end than it is. That is brilliant,” she says. A few years later, having met their desired operational metrics — operational costs as a percentage of revenue and customer satisfaction — they’re ready to take on the banking engine itself.

 

Bottom line: “In companies where leaders have religion about architecture, it has a huge impact, and individual architects have a huge impact,” says Ross.


To be successful at proselytizing requires knowing your audience well, of course. To gain that insight, perhaps it wouldn’t be a bad idea to sign up for a Psych 101 refresher online, or reflecting on a couch before diving into the EA challenge.

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A few weeks ago, Editor and Community Manager Paula Klein wrote here that you could expect to see some new interest groups surface on Smart Enterprise Exchange this year. Making good on that promise, this week I’m happy to be part of the debut of new, exclusive resources for the enterprise architect community. Smart Architect is a group we have created to enumerate, explore and engage with you on the many issues enterprise architects face as they strive to bring greater agility to the business.


Those issues can be pretty monumental, I know. Enterprises have accumulated innumerable legacy business processes and stand-alone services in silo applications that often are linked only by point-to-point integrations. On top of that, the frameworks, reference models and other forms of documentation that have been the traditional outcomes of enterprise architecture (EA) were likely to be treated tactically instead of strategically.


The result of such past portfolio practices? IT organizations’ budgets now stagger under the weight of operational expenses that result from maintaining stove-piped systems, even as IT leaders face new pressures to embrace modern design paradigms — like the cloud — that promise to accelerate business opportunities.


The good news, I think, is that there’s never been a better time for enterprise architects to demonstrate that their discipline can — and should — have strong application to a dynamic business strategy. Today, EA skills are firmly focused on building organic plans to deliver adaptable business capabilities for the organization. This work should prepare the enterprise to reduce IT complexity so that the business can function with efficiency and agility. Those two features are critical today when business-adoption cycles are fast-paced; when the cost-lowering proposition of reusable business services is increasingly critical; and when a consistent and logical view of exploding enterprise data sets matter — as it undeniably does — to help inform corporate next-steps.


All of this sets the stage for your new Smart Enterprise Exchange group. In the coming months, you’ll find informative articles featuring real-world insight from your peers about how they’re forming their EA strategies and preparing for new challenges. You’ll find slide-casts to help you lead your EA modernization efforts. We’ll also feature blogs by expert architects on timely topics, from making way for cloud services to maximizing service-oriented architecture (SOA) returns.


Above all, we hope you’ll join this group, offer comments and actively participate in its content. I’m looking forward to making your voice a part of our vision. Please feel free to contact me with your ideas, comment on my blog, or maybe even start a discussion thread of your own. Thanks!



We encourage your feedback. Reach out via the "Contact the Editor" and "Contact the Concierge" services for any needs, questions or comments. We look forward to serving you!

Paula Klein, Smart Enterprise Exchange Editor
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Ellen Lalier, Smart Enterprise Exchange Concierge
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phone 516-562-5727; fax 516-562-5466