<<Adoption of the hard-to-explain technology is down, but it's still
possible to make a convincing business strategy case.Service Oriented
Architecture. The term, typically abbreviated to SOA, is a mouthful.
It turns out it's hard to explain as well, and as a result, making a
case to customers for return on investment isn't exactly easy.

Determining ROI, in fact, is the greatest challenge developers working
on SOA implementations say they face, according to a recent survey by
Evans Data, which polled 368 developers working with SOA and Web
services in September and October. So great is the challenge,
according to participants, that it tops identifying available Web
services, testing and validation, and paying for the technology.

So selling an SOA project to the customer takes some work.

"It's a long-term initiative, it's not a short-term quick hit," says
Evans Data CEO John Andrews. "It's hard to understand, and it's hard
to describe."

With that in mind, it doesn't take much to understand why the adoption
of SOA is in decline. A survey by Gartner found that the number of
enterprises planning SOA adoption this year dropped by more than half,
to 25 percent from 53 percent in 2007. The number of companies with no
plans to adopt SOA jumped to 16 percent from 7 percent.

But all is not lost, says Andrews. It is still possible to make a
convincing case for SOA, so long as the focus is on value and business
gains rather than simply cutting costs.

And Saru Seshadri, president of Ultramatics, a solution provider in
Oldsmar, Fla., says if there ever was a time to persuade customers
that SOA makes sense, it is now that the economy has slumped and
businesses are looking to do more with less.

"The need now is much more pronounced than ever," he says.

To understand how it's possible to achieve more with less through SOA,
let's see if we can shed some light on what SOA is.

Let's start with the service part: A service, in this context, is a
software function designed for a specific business need. With Service
Oriented Architecture, the same service is reusable elsewhere in the
business without an unnecessary duplication of processes. In developer
lingo, allowing the service to function autonomously of the process
but still using the process is called "loose coupling."

To illustrate this, Seshadri uses an example in which a bank checks
the credit rating of a loan applicant. Through the approval process, a
credit check may take place at different points in the process. Often,
the credit check uses a different set of criteria and is done
differently depending on the stage of the process, creating an
imperfect duplication that ties up staff and system resources.

Automation through SOA, Seshadri says, streamlines the process by
eliminating the unnecessary steps and making the "service" – the
credit check, in this case – repeatable.

Illustrating these types of improvements, says Seshadri, is a
meaningful way to make the SOA case to the customer.

Through an evaluation of a customer's systems, Ultramatics looks at
the sum of the business processes, then figuring out which projects
the customer needs but is unable to undertake because of the resources
that its inefficient processes ties up.

The solution provider then assesses how that affects the way a
business delivers services to its customers. Seshadri says the
customer receives before-and-after scenarios that help turn an SOA
project's proposed outcome from abstract to tangible.

In doing so, Seshadri says Ultramatics addresses two important metrics
– IT cost savings and revenue simplification. If the processes are
straightforward and unnecessary duplication is eliminated, Seshadri
says, the "order-to-cash" process for a business improves, which
ultimately may have a positive impact on the bottom line.

"We don't see SOA as a technology issue at all," says Seshadri. "It's
a business challenge first."

Andrews says because SOA is so intrinsically tied to business
processes, as opposed to an IT-centric discussion, solution providers
trying to sell SOA must make their case to the non-IT executives, such
as CEOs, COOs and CFOs.

Adopting SOA is part of a strategy, not simply a solution for a
specific IT problem, and as such, it's necessary to open the eyes of
the executives in charge of company strategy to the possibilities the
technology opens up. Providers must make the case effectively that SOA
makes the applications within the IT environment more adaptable and
agile, he says.

"SOA is all about reuse and consolidating systems across the system,"
Andrews says.

Once businesses buy into the SOA concept and agree to an
implementation, Seshadri says it's important to avoid complacency.
Because of the long-term nature of the projects, communication with
the customer is critical.

"The key is to go back constantly and give feedback," he says.>>

You can read this at:

http://www.channelinsider.com/c/a/News/SOA-Could-Rebound-as-RecessionBusting-Strategy/

Gervas

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