<<OK, I'm a bit early, but I figured I would get a jump on the other
SOA blogs making predictions for 2009 -- which seems to be a holiday
tradition. I want you to know that I've been about 90 percent right in
the past few years (fingers crossed and knock wood). Also, I get to be
first, and thus steal the thunder from my other blogging friends. :-)

So in 2009:

   1. The interest in cloud computing (or WOA, Web 2.0, or insert
current Webby buzzword here) will drive many enterprises toward SOA.
Those enterprises that want to take advantage of resources existing in
"the cloud" will understand quickly that they need to service-enabled
their existing architectures to do so. Although agility and reuse will
still continue to be the drivers, many new SOAs will be launched
flying the flag of cloud computing. Anne and I talk about this in this
week's podcast, so make sure to give that a listen.
   2. The explosion in PaaS (platform-as-a-service) will leave many
enterprise architects and CIOs scratching their heads. As much of the
application development and hosting moves outside the firewall, those
charged with maintaining enterprise IT will find this trend disruptive
but, like SaaS, unstoppable. Those charged will building SOAs will
find that trend to be a huge opportunity. Watch this space for more
details.
   3. The economy will recover, but most enterprises out there will
focus on cost reduction. Thus, SOA will be divided up into smaller,
more tactical projects, but provide better speed-to-value and thus
some visible wins for the SOA guys. Hopefully, the larger strategy
will stay on the radar screen.
   4. There will be a larger focus on inter-domain SOA technology, or
highly scalable and secure middleware technology that will provide
scalable service and information access between the instances of SOAs
within the enterprise, and perhaps intercompany as well. The fact is
that much of the SOA solutions out there can't scale much past a
single problem domain, thus this technology will become key to the
strategic success of SOA.
   5. Jig will be up for poor SOA governance solutions out there.
There are good solutions out there, and some that need a lot of work.
The poor SOA governance solutions, until 2009, just hide behind the
hype, which is waning. I think the focus will be on the process and
the approach, and thus the technology that best supports the people
and processes will win out. It's a systemic change in what we do, and
who does what -- not what we use. For those of you with SOA governance
technology that won't make the cut, there is still time to capture the
market; it's just a matter of making aggressive changes now. Fair warning.
   6. Most failed SOA projects will be traced to unqualified SOA
architects. Not that this is a big stretch, it's really that way
today. However, in 2009 this will be more visible. Get the training
you need now, hire a mentor, or get a good staff of experienced
consultants.
   7. SOA the buzzword will become a bit less relevant and will begin
to morph with concepts, such as enterprise architecture and cloud
computing. Had to happen. EAI morphed into SOA, SOA will morph into
other things, but these concepts will still have value as core
architectural patterns. In IT, nothing every goes away, we just us it
in different ways. 

OK, that's my story, and I'm sticking to it.>>

You can read this at:

http://weblog.infoworld.com/realworldsoa/archives/2008/10/my_soa_predicti_1.html?source=NLC-DAILY&cgd=2008-10-27

Gervas

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