dc.description.abstract |
Enterprise architecture is a relatively new concept that arose in the latter half of the
twentieth century as a means of managing the information technology resources within
the enterprise. Borrowing from the disciplines of brick and mortar architecture, software
engineering, software architecture, and systems engineering, the enterprise architecture
discipline struggles to define itself and demonstrate that it is a worthwhile endeavor that
is capable of producing measurable benefits for the enterprise.
Studies continue to show that most large IT projects are laborious struggles that are
perpetually overdue, over-budget and deliver functionality that consistently under
performs what was intended. Enterprise architecture is supposed to help lead to order out
of the chaos, but the current success rate does not appear to be appreciably higher than it
was before enterprise architecture was widely employed.
The key to developing a successful enterprise architecture lies in making it more
beneficial as well as less costly. This requires not only knowing how enterprise
architecture should be developed, but also knowing what obstacles lay in the path of
success. There are many reasons why an enterprise architecture effort can fail, but there
are three challenges in particular that obstruct enterprise architecture efforts greatly.
These challenges are wicked problems, complexity, and the enterprise learning curve.
The goal of this research has been to discover strategies that can help attenuate the
difficulties that result from wicked problems, complexity, and the enterprise learning
curve and also to improve the chances of developing an enterprise architecture that
delivers a positive return on investment for the enterprise. Towards this goal, this
research makes the following contributions:
• It establishes the focus and scope of enterprise architecture by defining the bounds
of what enterprise architecture should address.
• It develops a core set of enterprise business questions from which to begin
enterprise architecture development.
• It develops an enterprise architecture metamodel named the Maintain
Accountability, Produce Product, and Manage Resources enterprise architecture
metamodel that supports enterprise architecture metamodel development.
• It develops a methodology that aids the enterprise architect in focusing the
development effort on obtaining significant value while reducing the risk of
expending resources developing architectural artifacts of little or no value.
• It develops an enterprise architecture case study framework that extends both the
Freidman-Sage and Martin case study frameworks for systems engineering case
study research, and provides an enterprise architecture case study framework that
shares a common basis for evaluating enterprise architecture case studies in the
same conceptual framework as prior system engineering case study research. |
|