Got Culture?

Cultural context is the contextual element we hear about most. It represents what the majority of employees believe about the organization and what it takes to be successful there. One way to think about it is as the organization’s reaction to the structural context. Culture can be tightly aligned with and support the structural context […]

You Don’t Have to Be a Psychic to Read our Mind Map

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By: Ben Geller, VP Marketing, Troux
 

crystal ball 103113Obviously, important strategic planning and decision making should not be driven by palm reading or a crystal ball. But, what if I told you that you have all the information right at your fingertips?

Let Your Data Be Your Medium

The business world runs on data. Whether you are analyzing customer behavior, looking at trends across departments, or just keeping track of applications, information and projects, today’s technology driven culture results in massive amounts of collected data.

Understanding how all the data points relate to and impact one another means we don’t have to rely on reading the tea leaves to make a wise decision. Every day we see business leaders use empirical data more and more to make decisions that affect their business and its customers. But as the amount of data increases exponentially in volume and complexity, extracting valuable and actionable information becomes a difficult task.

At Troux we find that the biggest challenge for our customers is figuring out what information is important and understanding how that information can be presented to other stakeholders to promote better decision-making.  It is our experience that a mind map usually does the trick.

Seeking Answers

Creating a mind map does not require the use of electrodes or hypnosis. We simply work with our customers to identify the business outcomes they seek.  The ability to achieve these outcomes can usually be tied to finding the answers to important questions.

Our mind map is a simple way to illustrate this approach – showing how the answers to important question drives desired business outcomes.   Mind maps are powerful tools that can be used to communicate Enterprise Architecture strategy and results to key stakeholders, regardless of their technical prowess or business acumen. They allow everyone to easily get on the same page and look at all the moving parts that affect the desired outcome, no matter how many or how complex.  

Find the answers that you seek with a visualization or analytic report created and maintained through Troux solutions. It’s our own version of a crystal ball… based on the facts –  packaged to reveal and predict.

Take a look at our Mind Map here

 



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Introducing Two New Security Standards for Risk Analysis—Part II – Risk Analysis Standard

By Jim Hietala, VP Security, The Open Group Last week we took a look at one of the new risk standards recently introduced by The Open Group® Security Forum at the The Open Group London Conference 2013, the Risk Taxonomy … Continue reading

EA: past and future, money and story

One more comment on the ‘certification for enterprise-architecture’ farrago, and then I’d better move on. The other day I spotted a one-liner from ‘gamechanger‘ Mike Bonifer that I can only describe as quietly brilliant – and painfully pertinent to this

Why not call that which you’ve named the cup’s architecture, the cup’s essence? (Essence: the intrinsic nature or indispensable quality of something, especially something abstract, which determines its character.)

(skiplumley’s question refers to this post: What is Architecture)
There isn’t any strong reason to avoid using the word essence to describe something definitive. 
As long as we recognise that ‘essence’ is a philosophical term. It’s meaning depends on o…

Why not call that which you’ve named the cup’s architecture, the cup’s essence? (Essence: the intrinsic nature or indispensable quality of something, especially something abstract, which determines its character.)

(skiplumley’s question refers to this post: What is Architecture)

There isn’t any strong reason to avoid using the word essence to describe something definitive. 

As long as we recognise that ‘essence’ is a philosophical term. It’s meaning depends on one’s ontological commitments.

Architecture intends structure. In the built world I think architecture is an appropriate term. In the video I posted the word architecture does the job very nicely. It is clear, to the point and does not invite too many digressions.

To quote a nineteenth-century american revivalist, “That is perfect that best suits the purpose for which it is intended.” As the purpose of the video is to get the viewer to think more deeply about what architecture is – I should think, by definition, architecture is a fine word to use in this context. 

Which is not to say it is the perfect term to use in every possible answer to the question “What makes a cup a cup?”

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LeanCoach. Define – Projectteam

What is it?The project team is a group of people who are going to take up this improvement project. By choosing team participants wisely, you can create the right balance of fundamental knowledge. Besides, by involving users from the workfloor, you cr…

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And more on EA certification…

What is the profession of enterprise-architecture? And what should we do about certification, to define and protect that profession? Yeah, it’s much the same questions as before – but perhaps becoming a bit more urgent as the thrust from Open Group

The curse of the Zombie Projects

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What is a zombie project? How do you know one when you see one? (you might even smell them before you’ve seen it)

1) It conforms to Sagey’s law of dysfunctional project reporting

2) People have tried to kill it previously, but it just keeps coming!

3) It has sucked the brains of some of your best people

4) It has been lurking in your change pipeline for too long distracting resource from other projects with its mindless flailing

5) It has eaten project managers (this isn’t necessarily always a bad thing)

6) It has just made no perceptible, meaningful progress and yet is consuming people, money and focus

7) It has delivered no tangible value to your org or your customers since its inception

A Zombie project looks like a normal project from a distance, it will shuffle along consuming brains making similar noises to other projects. Its only when you get close that you realise that those noises that you thought was distant talk is the mindless mumblings of the un-dead.

How do I avoid a Zombie Project?

Easy, there are only a couple of questions to ask yourself:

1) Is everyone clear on the objective(s) of the change?

2) Are you really sure everyone is clear on the objective(s) of the change?

3) Sure your are sure??

4) Does the change have a realistic amount of resource to achieve its objective?

To help answer this question answer this one first, was project resource assigned to the project before the scope and definition and the vision and initial requirements were defined? (if the answer is yes to this question then the answer is no to the first question). Change without the appropriate oxygen with which to exist will quickly become a zombie project.

5) Are the team members happy? This is a really f-ing simple question that is really f-ing simple to answer, it involves strange skills such as listening, empathy and talking to people

6) (important but less important than number 5) Are the stakeholders happy?

Answer ‘nope’ to any of the 6 questions above and the chances are if you don’t already have a zombie project you may well have one soon. Check for bite marks, drooling, distance stares and any mention of ‘brrraaaiiinzzzz’ in the project documentation.

Oh and if you do find one, do yourself a favour and shoot it in the head. it might resemble a project but its humanity departed long ago.

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