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Connecting Strategy To Execution Business By Design Business Architecture in Practice - 101 6/10/2009 1 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect

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Business Architecture 101

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Page 1: On Kue Business Architecture101

Connecting Strategy To Execution

Business By DesignBusiness Architecture in Practice - 101

6/10/2009 1Carolyn Evans, Business Architect

Page 2: On Kue Business Architecture101

Agenda

Business Architecture Defined

How Do Organizations Approach Business Architecture?◦ Bottom Up/Grass Roots Approach◦ Top Down Approach

Getting Stuck in the Middle…◦ Why Do Organizations Get Stuck in the Middle? ◦ How Do They Avoid It?

What Does it Take to Do Business Architecture in an Organization?◦ Culture Change◦ Resource Skill Set

How Does an Organization Get Started With Business Architecture?

Q & A

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 2

Page 3: On Kue Business Architecture101

List Diagram

•A disciplined approach to creating and maintaining a set of business-owned information assets that serve as a blueprint for the planning and execution of strategy

Business Architecture is

•First and foremost, Business Architecture is developed by the business for the business

•Business Architecture provides a common, enterprise-level business language and framework for documenting how the business is structured

Owned by the Business and

•Plainly said, Business Architecture is the information about how the business is structured, what it does to deliver customer value (processes) and what it needs to do to meet its goals

Communicates Structure,

Process & Goals

Business Architecture Defined

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 3

Page 4: On Kue Business Architecture101

Bottom Up Approach

Bottom Up (“Grass Roots”) Business Architecture Approach

An approach to executing Business Architecture which focuses on techniques and best practices among the “doers.” It is then “sold” to higher levels of management after successful results are achieved from pilot efforts

• Typically driven by tactical business objectives such as:– Improving the quality of IT solutions– Reducing project lifecycles– Building better RFPs/RFIs

• Results in a more tactical view of the business

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 4

Page 5: On Kue Business Architecture101

Bottom Up Approach

BenefitsTactical issues are addressed quickly

A strong base of techniques, best practices and skills are developed

Techniques and content are executed/documented more consistently

Less global organization buy-in is required to start

ChallengesRequires a lot of “selling” to upper management to institutionalize

Entire value proposition is difficult to realize

Is not fully utilized by entire organization

Is extremely difficult to put governance in place for techniques and content

Fundamentally lacks a strong tie to strategy

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 5

Business Cases

Business Cases

Business Unit

Operations

Business Unit

Operations

• Workflow/Swimlanes• Business Requirements

• Business Rules• Business Data Elements

ProjectProjectProjectProject ProjectProjectProjectProject

Page 6: On Kue Business Architecture101

Top Down Approach

Top Down Business Architecture Approach: What is it?

An approach to executing Business Architecture in which the highest levels of Business Architecture documentation is tied to vision, goals, strategy and roadmaps.

• Typically driven by strategic business objectives such as:– Creating an agile organization– Reducing costs– Gaining an understanding of who the organization is and

what they do• Results in a high level view of the business

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 6

Page 7: On Kue Business Architecture101

Top Down Approach

BenefitsIs treated as a single enterprise focus; viewed as a priority

Value is perceived to be greater because it is addressing strategic issues

Change Management is easier

Governance is easier to put in place

ChallengesDoes not address tactical issues quickly

Takes time to develop techniques and best practices and grow skill base at the execution level

Lacks consistency across techniques to start

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 7

StrategyStrategy

Business Cases

Business Cases

Business Unit

Operations

Business Unit

Operations

• Enterprise Processes• Integrated Roadmaps (capabilities)

• Enterprise Business Activity Model• Enterprise Organizational Structure

Page 8: On Kue Business Architecture101

Getting Stuck in the Middle

Why Does It Happen?

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect

8

Strategy

Business Cases

Business Unit

Operations

• Enterprise Processes• Integrated Roadmaps (capabilities)

• Enterprise Business Activity Model• Enterprise Organizational Structure

• Workflow/Swimlanes• Business Requirements

• Business Rules• Business Data Elements

ProjectProject

Strategic Business Architecture

Tactical Business Architecture

ProjectProject

No matter which approach is taken, organizations tend to get “stuck in the middle”

Top Down Approaches usually do not produce common language/ content or utilize common techniques. If “apples-to-apples” comparisons cannot be made across content at the tactical level, it cannot be tied to or utilized at the strategic level.

Bottom Up Approaches do support “apples-to-apples” comparisons of content, but the typical mindset of Bottom Up thinkers, their lack of clout and the sheer numbers of people that need to be influenced at higher levels within the organization prohibit the tactical level from being tied to or utilized at the strategic level.

Page 9: On Kue Business Architecture101

Getting Stuck In The Middle6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 9

How Can It Be Avoided?

Employ both Top Down and Bottom Up Business Architecture approaches

Page 10: On Kue Business Architecture101

EBA - What Does It take?

What Does It Take to Do Enterprise Business Architecture?

Culture/Organization:Must have an organizational driverNeed to understand “end-game” of Business Architecture Strong senior leadership buy-in and supportOrganization’s capability to accept change in approach to analysis

People:Senior level experience and capabilitiesExperience with Business Architecture modeling techniquesCapability to tie business strategy with a Business ArchitectureAbility to think outside of typical Business Analyst or process roleMust exhibit strong “soft skills”

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 10

Page 11: On Kue Business Architecture101

Getting Started

• Understand the initial organizational driver:

• Determines Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up approach

• Start small, but plan for the future• Centralize the initial capabilities• Focus on the positive• Communicate, communicate,

communicate

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 11

How Does An Organization Start in Developing Their Business Architecture?

Key Success Factors:

Page 12: On Kue Business Architecture101

Business ArchitectureConnecting Strategy To Execution

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 12

Q & A

Page 13: On Kue Business Architecture101

ExperienceBusiness Architecture

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 13

• Six Sigma Black Belt and Lean Certified – Masters Certification• Process Manager–Practitioner Certificate (CPM-P)• Certified Process Professional (CPP)• Enterprise Content Management Certified (AIIM)• 30+ Years IT and Business Experience• Completed Dozens of Projects in a Variety of Industries:

o Insurance

o Utility Construction

o Professional Services

o Fleet Management

o Financial Services

• Utilize Extensive Set of Frameworks, Methodologies and Tools

Page 14: On Kue Business Architecture101

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 14

Connecting Strategy To Execution

>> ByDesign Disciplines >> Methodologies >> Professional Certifications

• Enterprise Business Architecture• Business Process Management• Business Rules Management• Business Requirements Management• Functional Software Design• Business Technology Analysis

• Six Sigma, Lean• Waterfall SDLC• Agile & Lean SDLC, SCRUM• Rational Unified Process - RUP• Structured & Object-Oriented Analysis & Design

• Six Sigma Green/Black/Lean - Masters Certificate• Process Manager-Practitioner - (CPM-P)• Certified Process Professional - (CPP)• AIIM® - Fundamentals of Enterprise Content

Management System Architecture

>> Frameworks >> Commercial Tools • Zachman Enterprise FrameworkTM

• The Open Group Architecture Framework - TOGAFTM

• Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework - FEAF• Enhanced Telecom Operations Map - eTOM• Process and Enterprise Maturity Assessments - PEMMTM

• Unified Modeling Language - UML• Business Process Modeling Notation - BPMN• Information Technology Infrastructure Library - ITIL

• Microsoft® Office Visio• Process Modeler for Visio• Enterprise Architect (Sparx)• TIBCO Business Studio®

• Metastorm ProVision®

• Ultimus BPM Modeler®

• ILOG JViews BPMN Modeler®

• Embarcadero® EA/StudioTM

• Corticon® Business Rules Studio• Casewise® Corporate Modeler• MindMap, Axure, iRise®

• DB Visualizer

>> Functional Areas >> Vertical Industries >> Commercial Business Software• Enterprise Content Management - ECM• Imaging & Document Management• Collaboration, Portals, Intranets• Knowledge & Records Management• Customer Relationship Management - CRM• Enterprise Resource Planning - ERP• Marketing & Sales Force Automation• Inventory & Warehouse Management• IT Operations Management/Service Desk• Insurance Claims, Policy Administration• Accounting & Finance

• Aerospace• Utilities Construction• Manufacturing• Online Auctions• Insurance: GL - P & C• Wholesale Distribution• Call/Contact Center• Professional Services• Value-Added Reseller• Marketing Services & Media: Online & Print

• Microsoft® SharePoint• Microsoft® Dynamics CRM, SL, AX, GP• Salesforce.com®, Siebel, Vantive• IBM® Content Manager• Vignette® Collaboration• Kofax® Ascent Capture• Stellent/Acorde Imaging and BPM• EMC® Documentum, eRoom, Captiva InputAccel• TIBCO® BPM+• Ultimus® BPMS

Page 15: On Kue Business Architecture101

6/10/2009 Carolyn Evans, Business Architect 15

Carolyn EvansBusiness Architect

[email protected]

770.656.5047

www.OnKue.com