Organisations use Enterprise Architecture (EA) to reduce organisational
complexity, improve communication, align business and information
technology (IT), and drive organisational change. Due to the dynamic
nature of environmental and organisational factors, EA descriptions need
to change over time to keep providing value for its stakeholders.
Emerging business and IT trends, such as Service-Oriented Architecture
(SOA), may impact EA frameworks, methodologies, governance and tools.
However, the phenomenon of EA evolution is still poorly understood.
Using Archer's morphogenetic theory as a foundation, this research
conceptualises three analytical phases of EA evolution in organisations,
namely conditioning, interaction and elaboration. Based on a case study
with a government agency, this paper provides new empirically and
theoretically grounded insights into EA evolution, in particular in
relation to the introduction of SOA, and describes relevant generative
mechanisms affecting EA evolution. By doing so, it builds a foundation
to further examine the impact of other IT trends such as mobile or
cloud-based solutions on EA evolution. At a practical level, the
research delivers a model that can be used to guide professionals to
manage EA and continually evolve it.
See here for more information.
Friday, June 30, 2017
Empirical insights into the development of a service-oriented enterprise architecture
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