<<ZDNet blogging colleague Dion Hinchcliffe predicts 2007 is the year
SOA will begin to open up more to the Internet cloud, and I'm inclined
to agree with him. And I want to take this scenario a step further and
look at what this means for the SOA business case.

Things will be different than the scenarios imagined when Web services
first hit the scene seven or eight years ago. Back then, during the
frenzy of the dot-com era, it was thought the main purpose of Web
services was to help smooth the friction of e-business between
organizations or between suppliers and consumers. And, they have to
some extent — ask anyone who deals with Wal-Mart or Amazon.

But when talking about gelling those services into a service-oriented
architecture, we're talking about integration and access inside the
walls of the enterprise, limited to pilots, demos, or specific
business process flows.

So, Web services started out as an external play, was turned into an
internal play, and now things will be turned inside-out to once again.

Dion cites a new survey that shows a lot of interest in extending
services established within the bounds of enterprises to trading
partners. A McKinsey and Company survey found that nearly half of CIOs
(48 percent) are planning to open their SOAs "to the cloud" in 2007 —
the cloud being "where their current and potential trading partners are."

Dion's prediction raises some interesting questions around the ROI and
business case for SOA projects. Right now, many SOA proponents are
struggling with these issues, and regular readers of this blog have
seen many of the arguments around what makes SOA worthwhile, or less
than worthwhile. Reuse? Developer productivity? Lower-cost
integration? Streamlining?

Dion, along with another fellow ZDNet blogger, Phil Wainewright, point
to a convergence of SOA with software as a service and other Web 2.0
paradigms as internally shared services become externally shared
services. "Once your software becomes a service in the cloud, it opens
up the potential to link it up with other services that are out there.
In many ways, the Internet cloud is one great global SOA."

Thus, the business case for SOA may become very similar to that of
SaaS — avoiding large upfront investments in systems and software in
favor of more incremental costs. SOA is SaaS behind the firewall, and
will blend with SaaS in the cloud. It's about infrastructure, or
avoiding infrastructure.

The business big picture — the promised land of agility — still
remains a blur in the distance, as it does for internal SOA. The new
efficiencies promised by e-business are well documented, and often
debated. But how deeply can such efficiencies reach into the guts of
the business?>>

You can read Joe's blog (and see his latest mugshot:) at:

http://blogs.zdnet.com/service-oriented/?p=800

Gervas

Reply via email to