Enterprise Architecture as a Service
Making Architecture Work for the Organization
Aggregated enterprise architecture wisdom
Making Architecture Work for the Organization
In the ever-evolving automotive industry, the efficiency and agility of a company’s supply chain can significantly impact its success. Traditionally, supply chains were linear and compartmentalized, heavily reliant on manual processes, paper-based documentation, and isolated systems. These traditional models present significant challenges in scalability, visibility, and collaboration—factors that are becoming increasingly critical as the industry…
Enterprise and solution architecture are fields where the amount of work can expand endlessly.
Connecting Enterprise Architecture to Implementation
We need a center to steer explanations, summarise values and focus attention. It comes as naturally as the urge to compare and is closely related to it. Comparing can be explicit — we prefer this over that, and we say so. It can be wishful — something that is not the case, but we want […]
Abstract:
Today, information technology is everywhere in the organization. Our interviews with 40 CIOs of global organization pointed to six forces, primarily the proliferation of AI and the blurring of lines between IT and the business, that are driv…
Every day, public sector organizations across Europe are challenged to provide accessible, high-quality services to their residents while operating efficiently and within tight budgets.As their services become increasingly digitalized, these o…
What Do You Really Need?
I’m currently in the final stages of completing my English-language enterprise architecture book, and it’s been quite the journey!
by Jackie O’Dowd Business and Enterprise Architectures commonly describe the…
What if the principles that transformed software development over the last decade could be the key to successfully implementing AI in your organization? In the latest Mik + One podcast, Dr. Mik Kersten, Chief Technology Officer at Planview, sat down with Patrick Debois, known as the “godfather of DevOps,” to explore this question.
Uncovering Enterprise Architecture Benefit Realization – Part 2