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The State of Worldwide SOA Adoption: Is the US Behind?


Document ID: ZAPFLASH-200721 | Document Type: ZapFlash
By Ronald <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  Schmelzer
Posted: Feb. 01, 2007

Is the United States behind the rest of the world with regards to SOA
adoption and maturity? Probably not, but it certainly isn't ahead. Indeed,
most of the largest, advanced, and oft-quoted examples of SOA projects in
both the press and by software vendors in 2006 were in Europe, Canada, Asia,
or Australia. To provide further evidence that the "overseas" markets really
get and are spending real dollars on SOA, ZapThink spent a full six weeks on
the road in the last two months of 2006 providing training, education,
direct advisory, and speaking with end-user clients, of which only one day
was spent in the United States. 

Is it a fluke that the world is moving towards SOA in lockstep, with certain
geographies moving faster than they have before? There might be lots of
factors contributing to worldwide growth of SOA. One macroeconomic issue
might be the weak US dollar and heavily US-dominated base of vendors
contributing to a larger pull of overseas money for SOA. Another issue is
that the US is dominated by most of the large software vendors, and they are
creating so much noise in the local marketplace that it is confusing the
local end-user community. 

Some have posited that traditional, non-SOA efforts such as traditional EAI
and legacy integration approaches are so dominant in the US that SOA is a
much harder sell here than in other countries where EAI didn't make as much
of a dent. In particular, many of the existing vendors selling SOA
technologies still sell older forms of integration and middleware that
compete for dollars, mind share, and organizational support with the
evolutionary approach to SOA. Or it might simply be that US end-user firms
just don't like to talk much about what they are doing with SOA, while the
rest of the world is happier to be chatty. Regardless of the reasons, it is
clear that the SOA phenomenon has reached a global acceptance much faster
than previous technologies. 

Europe: SOA Tiger?
An oft quoted reason for European fervor for SOA is that enterprise
architecture as a practice is more widely respected and practiced in Europe
than it is in the US. Some believe that the IT community in the US is
perceived as developer-centric, coding cowboys that care not a whit about
architecture. ("Architects? We don't need no stinkin' architects.") While
this is a generalization that most likely isn't true, most large
European-based IT shops see enterprise architecture as a way to guarantee
that projects don't go off into the weeds with developers doing their thing
without a central coordinating philosophy and organization. In essence, they
see a distinct difference between architecture and development and the roles
of architects and developers, whereas that precise topic seems to be an item
for debate in the US. 

One other factor contributing to the European dominance of SOA
implementation case studies might be the fact that many large US firms now
have a European center of gravity due to the results of worldwide
acquisition and consolidation activity. Daimler-Chrysler, ING, ABN Amro, BP
Plc, HSBC, and British American Tobacco (BAT) are just some of the
multinational firms with European-based headquarters and significant SOA
case studies. Now, that's not to say that within those firms SOA activity
isn't happening in the US. On the contrary, we are finding many US-based
projects with European-headquartered firms in which both the funding and
impetus for those SOA projects originated and were delivered in the US.
However, many of these organizations centralize enterprise architecture as a
whole within the organization, or at the very least federate such activity
in groups in a way that promotes communication between disparate parts of
the organization. This cross-pollination leads to true globalization of EA
efforts with the result that the US just isn't ahead as much as some would
think. 

Taking a Global SOA Perspective
The information technology-centric world has globalized to the point that
the enabling technologies of the past few decades have made country borders
relatively irrelevant, let alone the boundaries of the organization.
Location-independent Services that can be composed (or mashed up) on an ad
hoc basis in a loosely-coupled manner provide value to an organization
whether their offices are in London, Riyadh, or New Delhi. This freedom of
composition and looseness of corporate boundaries is a relatively new
phenomenon, or at least has only become widespread since the widespread
acceptance of the Internet. 

In prior technology eras, corporate networks served as authoritative
boundaries beyond which information could not flow without significant cost
and effort. As such, while global networks surely existed prior to the
Internet, they had limited reach. The result was technology adoption that
followed the modes of vendor density, marketing dollars, and direct sales
outreach: North America followed by Europe and then Japan, Australia, the
remainder of Asia, and then Middle East and Africa. 

Now, the proliferation of Internet-based application capabilities,
architectures that assume ubiquitous and global access, and Web 2.0
phenomena that encourage the global nature of social networks have resulted
in a global adoption of technology that follows the people rather than the
marketing dollars. In this vein, the cultures and organizations that have
the greatest desire and benefit tend to adopt technologies first leaving the
others behind. In the case of SOA, it seems that Europe might have more to
gain than the US from the adoption of loosely-coupled, composite, and
reusable Services that exist in the face of IT heterogeneity. 

Regardless of the reasons for the global reach of SOA, the net result is
that no multi-national company can afford to avoid or overlook the issues
associated with global distributed computing. Issues related to
international regulatory compliance, internationalization and localization,
support for multi-ethnic cultures, languages, and business practices must be
the method de facto to be supported in any SOA initiative rather than an
after-thought once the application is delivered in a particular language or
cultural bias. 

The ZapThink Take
Now, just so you don't think that global adoption is limited to just North
America and Europe, ZapThink has seen surprising and substantial uptick in
SOA adoption in Australia, India, Korea, China, Singapore, parts of Latin
and South America, and the Middle East. Many of these global initiatives
have a particular industry bent, such as a strong telecommunications
presence in Korea, banking and insurance in Australia, government in
Singapore, manufacturing and services in China and India, and retail in the
Latin and South American regions. But regardless of the reasons why SOA is
being adopted in those regions, it is clear that no particular region is
that far behind the rest of the pack. Indeed, it seems the world is moving
in relative lock-step down the path towards SOA. 

Just as governance is no longer an option for those seriously pursuing SOA,
so too is the option to avoid considering the global impact of the SOA
effort. After all, with the rest of the world leading the charge for SOA,
there's much to be gained by providing the sort of Services that
loosely-couple not just the infrastructure and the business process, but
also the regional biases that are unwittingly encoded into applications.

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