IT-business alignment, and the four levels of SOA capability
By: Neil Ward-Dutton, Partner
Macehiter Ward-Dutton
Published: 2nd December, 2005
<http://www.it-analysis.com/technology/infrastructure/content.php?
cid=8200>

Having done quite a lot of research and analysis around how SOA can 
improve IT-business alignment if "done right", it's become apparent 
to me that organisations think and talk about the ability of SOA to 
improve IT-business alignment from four perspectives. The perspective 
they use depends on the amount of time they've had to work with the 
concepts and the technologies involved. This appears to be true for 
both suppliers and users of IT!

The capabilities they refer to form a kind of "stepladder", with each 
capability providing a foundation for the next.

The four capabilities are – from the "bottom up":

Improved flexibility. This is one of the most-talked about potential 
capabilities of SOA, and it is the first one that most people 
consider. Flexibility of course concerns the ability of solutions to 
be altered in the face of changing business and technology 
requirements, and is boosted by the loosely-coupled nature of the 
services which are composed to meet solution requirements in a SOA 
environment.

Large-scale reuse. Along with flexibility, reuse is the other 
commonly talked-about SOA potential capability. With effective 
service-based solution design efforts in place, IT delivery 
organisations have the potential to build up libraries of business-
meaningful functionality. These libraries will not be tied to 
particular usage scenarios, and (crucially, unlike earlier attempts 
at object-based reuse) are easily composable and re-composable to 
meet new business requirements; and can be hosted remotely or 
locally. With these libraries, organisations can reduce the 
investment required to address new business software requirements; 
make delivery of new solutions quicker and more reliable; and also 
improve the accuracy and speed with which solutions can be changed.

Improved comprehensibility. Successful SOA initiatives create groups 
of services which can be clearly linked to individual tasks within 
business processes, as well as lower-level technical services. In 
other words, strong service portfolios have many key elements which 
are easily comprehensible to business audiences (examples might 
include services which manage customer information, or which validate 
orders). Software comprehensibility is not often talked about as a 
benefit of SOA, but it has a massive impact on the ability of a SOA 
initiative to improve IT-business alignment. When software 
functionality is easily comprehensible, it is much easier to build a 
common language between business and IT – which makes it easier to 
engage business stakeholders in real investment discussions and 
solution design work; and to show how particular "pieces" of software 
contribute to business activity

Improved value visibility. Beyond providing more comprehensible 
software solutions, successful SOA initiatives also have the 
potential to increase the visibility of IT's value to the business. 
At the heart of this possibility is the fact that the idea of 
a "service" is both a business-meaningful unit of software design 
when a solution is being conceived and built; and a business-
meaningful unit of reporting when a solution design is in production. 
With SOA, organisations have the ability to clearly relate the 
production of solutions in an IT environment to the operation of 
solutions in a business environment. Together with the promise of 
comprehensibility, the visibility that an SOA initiative brings 
enables business stakeholders, administrators, designers and 
developers to share a common view of solutions which makes sense to 
all of them. This has implications for improving the "business-
alignment" of IT investment and IT service delivery, and for the co-
operative management of change.

Moving from one step to the next requires a change in thinking as 
well as the utilisation of different technologies. As you move 
towards thinking about "value visibility", your thinking and approach 
to SOA has to change from one predominantly focused on software 
development concerns (which is where most people are today) to one 
focused on the entire delivery lifecycle.







------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Fair play? Video games influencing politics. Click and talk back!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/2jUsvC/tzNLAA/TtwFAA/NhFolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/service-orientated-architecture/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to