Executive Education With Penn State: Enterprise Transformation & Integration

Enterprise Transformation & Integration: Beyond IT/Business Alignment. Accelare and Gartner Research have partnered with Pennsylvania State University’s Center for Enterprise Architecture to create a unique program: Enterprise Transformation & Integration: Beyond IT/Business Alignment. This program is designed for CIOs, EAs, business architects, strategists, and other senior business and IT leaders to provide the current theory, […]

Power-issues in EA – tread carefully…

Continuing with the series on power and politics in enterprise-architecture, a brief summary-so-far, some practical suggestions on modelling of power-issues, and a very important warning… The quick summary is as follows: the practice of enterprise-architecture is often ‘relentlessly political’ one

Link Collection — October 21, 2012

  • Some advice from Jeff Bezos by Jason Fried of 37signals

    “[Bezos] said people who were right a lot of the time were people who often changed their minds. He doesn’t think consistency of thought is a particularly positive trait. It’s perfectly healthy — encouraged, even — to have an idea tomorrow that contradicted your idea today.

    He’s observed that the smartest people are constantly revising their understanding, reconsidering a problem they thought they’d already solved. They’re open to new points of view, new information, new ideas, contradictions, and challenges to their own way of thinking.

    This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t have a well formed point of view, but it means you should consider your point of view as temporary.

    What trait signified someone who was wrong a lot of the time? Someone obsessed with details that only support one point of view. If someone can’t climb out of the details, and see the bigger picture from multiple angles, they’re often wrong most of the time.”

    tags: bezos strategy

  • The Future, as Imagined by Google – NYTimes.com

    “Eventually technology just disappears,” Mr. Schmidt said. “It’s the ultimate achievement. No more ports and prompts and plug-ins.”

    tags: google future

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.