<<Which brings us back to SOA. Cape Clear Software's recent
announcement of embedding a business activity monitoring (BAM)
solution into the Cape Clear ESB platform smacks of a renewed focus on
the applications' value, as a way of then seeding demand for the
appropriate back-end infrastructure TeaLeaf let's you see exactly what
your customers experience on your site. Find out how..

We seem to have lost our way on SOA evangelism so far, with an ongoing
focus on the back-end infrastructure first, and then the promise of
better applications and services, someday, some way, to come.

An ESB, as Cape Clear demonstrates, offers some great benefits when it
comes to visibility into wide and deep business activities. You could
think of BAM, then, as a next-generation business productivity
application -- and not even mention SOA.

SOA- and BPEL-empowered BAM, to me, is only the beginning of a new
class of highly productive and powerful applications and
business-benefits functions that were not really possible (or were too
costly or complex) without SOA as a supporting framework and methodology.

Yet the talk has too often fallen back to the business process
management (BPM) nirvana that SOA will provide, but even that is too
nebulous, with more "soft" than "hard" ROI (return on investment)
benefits. Let's focus anew on the tangible, clear business benefits of
business applications so that the line-of-business managers can demand
-- and get -- their uniquely SOA-enabled applications.
Business Buy-In

It's now clear: SOA needs a better market driver. As former BEA 
executive Jeff Pendleton recently said on a BriefingsDirect SOA
Insights podcast:

"When I looked at SOA and talked to a lot of customers, we were all in
agreement that SOA was very, very disruptive -- and, in fact, probably
will be the defining element of the 21st-century enterprise. But for
some reason we weren't able to bring that message to the
line-of-business guy, who still had this parochial, or somewhat
skeptical, view of IT. They just weren't hearing and understanding the
potential.

"...One of the things that we've noticed is that the vendor community
is preaching to the choir for the most part. They're talking about the
power of SOA to folks who kind of understand the potential of SOA,"
said Pendleton. "But when you go to the people that really need to see
IT as strategic again, we're delivering messages like 'agility,'
'flexibility,' 'adaptive,' 'liquid' -- which are like motherhood and
apple pie. The real challenge is telling what it is about SOA that's
so disruptive, because I'm not sure line-of-business guys are going to
care about SOA any more than they cared about client-server during the
second wave.

"...How do we start to make the potential of SOA a practical and
pragmatic strategy? ... Make it something that IT people can bring to
the business, so that the business people can say, 'I get it, and
what's more, I can measure it, and I can see how it's going to affect
the various financial statements.'

"That's what the industry is struggling with -- to break out of this
preaching-to-the-choir marketing and really being able to take these
very generalized notions of agility and LEGO-like use and translate
them into something that's consistent with what we saw with the second
wave of IT, where we were talking about quality and the customer, and
the notion of process core-competencies. We need things that business
people can get their heads wrapped around, that are aspirational
enough, but also practical enough that they can execute over a couple
of years," said Pendleton.>>

You can read this in full at:

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/54370.html

Gervas

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