Conference Question

 Psesee attached – does not have to be long. just a paragraph or two.

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Why two thirds of Enterprise Architecture
projects fail

An explanation for the limited success of
architecture projects

ARIS Expert Paper

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This is the conclusion of a study for the Rotterdam University carried out by
Jonathan Broer in the summer of 2008, ordered by BPM and EA software vendor
IDS Scheer. Broer questioned 161 respondents from 89 organizations represent-
ing a range of industries about their vision and implementation of the enterprise
architecture concept.

A clear majority of respondents – 92 percent – believes that EA should be deter-
mined by the vision, strategy and objectives of the company. Yet only 40 percent
of them actually included objectives and policies in their EA program. The align-
ment of Business and IT is seen as the most important argument for organiza-
tions to start using EA. At the same time connecting IT architecture and business
elements, and arriving at important decisions about structure and layout on that
basis, is found to be one of the biggest problems confronting businesses. Among
the reasons for the failure of EA programs to fulfill expectations were a lack of
EA awareness and the fact that it took longer than expected to set up an archi-
tecture.

Why two thirds of Enterprise Architecture projects fail

An explanation for the limited success of architecture projects

Large and medium-sized organizations regard the alignment of business and
IT as the most important motive for working on an enterprise architecture
(EA). Other important reasons for putting EA on the agenda are support for
change processes and strengthening the flexibility of the company. In spite
of the huge interest in EA it turns out that 66 percent of programs did not ful-
fill expectations.

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ARIS Expert Paper

This ARIS Expert Paper comprises:
� an overview of typical Enterprise Architecture project roles and

drivers

� main targets of Enterprise Architecture projects and initiatives
� critical success factors derived out of the survey

About the authors:

Sven Roeleven
is Global Solutions Manager at IDS
Scheer. After graduating in Public

Administration from Erasmus
University Rotterdam (the

Netherlands), he went on to spe-
cialize in business process man-

agement within ERP environ-
ments. Since joining IDS Scheer in

2002, Sven has gained extensive
hands-on experience covering all
ARIS platform products through-
out the course of dozens of proj-

ects within medium-sized and
larger organizations across a vari-

ety of industries.

Jonathan Broer
completed his studies in Business

Informatics at the Rotterdam
University in 2008 (with a minor in
BPM). For his practical training in

the final year of his degree, he
carried out a study of enterprise
architecture at IDS Scheer. Since

September 2008 he has been
employed by Capgemini as a con-

sultant in the field of Architecture,
Governance & Infrastructure.

Contact:
arisproductmarketing@ids-scheer.com

Fig. 1: Industries that participated in the study

Drivers for EA

Organizations start using EA for different reasons.
Business and IT streamlining, supporting change
processes and achieving greater flexibility are
the three most important reasons for starting an
EA project. This fits the definition of EA used by
research agency Gartner:

“Enterprise architecture is the process of trans-
lating business vision and strategy into effective
enterprise change [..]”.

The fact that EA is determined by vision, strategy
and objectives is also affirmed by 92 percent of
the organizations taking part in the study. In other
words, organizations have a clear understanding
of the reasons for starting an EA project, and they
know that these drivers are partly determined by
the business strategy. In their vision EA is there-
fore a holistic, business-driven discipline.

Older organizations have higher integration of architectures

Apart from their well-developed vision, organizations have also come quite far in the implementation of enterprise archi-
tectures. 74 percent already use a framework for EA, and the majority of those without a framework are in the process of
choosing one. The most commonly used standard frameworks are TOGAF (The Open Group Architecture Framework) and
ArchiMate (adopted by TOGAF in 2008 as standard modeling language).

The older organizations (more than 50 years old) are often further ahead in the integration of domain architectures. In
many cases they have been involved in mergers or takeovers which necessitate a good integration. The presence of lega-
cy systems also plays an important role. It is important after all to know what the consequences of phasing out a system
will be for the entire operational management – the consequences for data exchanged with the system for example, or
for the infrastructure on which it runs, or for the processes supported by the system which is about to be phased out.

Large organizations have more EA roles

There is also a connection between the size of
an organization and the presence of EA relat-
ed roles. The larger the organization, the larg-
er the presence of these roles in the EA work
field.

For small organizations the information archi-
tect is used the most. For large organizations it
is the business architect. Respondent com-
ments show that small organizations approach
EA much more from an IT point of view. Larger
organizations which appear to be more mature
in their enterprise architecture have a more
business-oriented approach, and they cite the
business architect as the most common role.

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ARIS Expert Paper

Fig. 2: Drivers for EA projects

Fig. 3: Presence of EA related roles

Who is responsible for the purchasing of an EA tool?

As regards the responsibility for purchasing an
EA tool, it is notable that the IT manager and
CIO play a far bigger role in the purchase of an
EA tool than in the purchase of an ERP pack-
age for example. When purchasing an ERP
package there is a larger contribution from the
business, whereas EA tooling is primarily
approached from the IT perspective. This is
rather surprising considering that the older,
larger companies tend to approach EA from a
business perspective. One possible explana-
tion for this is that the business reality has
already been reproduced in a process model-
ing tool, and this is the responsibility of the CIO
and the IT manager in most organizations.

Explanations for disappointing results

In spite of the fact that organizations already have a reason-
ably mature vision and implementation, the expected results
are not achieved in 66 percent of the EA projects. The most fre-
quent explanation given for this failure is that connecting EA to
business elements such as strategy and BPM is found to be
difficult in practice.

Other reasons given by many respondents for the failure to meet expectations were:

� Not enough support from C-level (CIO and CFO for example) so that EA is not given enough status and expectations
cannot be fulfilled in practice.

� Limited commitment from interested parties so that there is a return to old habits, and agreements are not complied
with.

� Not enough EA awareness among interested parties inside the organization. EA not a generally accepted concept
in daily business activities.

� Financial and political issues that thwart EA projects.

� Setting up an architecture takes longer than expected. This means it takes longer for the results to become visible,
which means there is a considerable risk factor for EA.

Another possible explanation is the discrep-
ancy between initial intentions for EA on the
one hand and the actual realization of the
architectures and degree of compliance with
agreements on the other. For example: 92 per-
cent of the organizations believe that vision,
strategy and objectives are determining fac-
tors for EA, yet only 40 percent incorporated
them in the architecture. On this basis it is of
course impossible to define the direct impact
of strategic choices on the architectural lay-
out. The following histogram provides an
overview of the most frequently recorded
domain architectures, including those for
objective and policies.

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ARIS Expert Paper

Fig. 4: Responsibility for IT investments

Fig. 5: Most common EA problems

Fig 6: Most commonly recorded domain architectures

The three most frequently recorded architectures are found to be the application architecture, process architecture and
information architecture.

The recording of domain architectures does not mean there is a successful enterprise architecture in place however.
Agreements also have to be complied with about the use of one another’s information, the methods to be used, owner-

ship, and procedures for arriving at innovations. All
this is collectively referred to as EA Governance. In the
following graph, four principles of EA Governance
show that the organizations do not score highly for
maturity. This may help to explain the disappointing
results of EA projects. Even when a big effort has been
made to sort out EA, a lack of (compliance with) agree-
ments leads to relatively low yields.

Since the recorded EA is not an integrated component
of operational management, there is a lack of commit-
ment. This undermines the status of EA inside the
organization. Also, architectures are often constructed
which bear no relation to other architectures inside
the organization. As a result there are no gains from
rapid impact analyses, coordination between domain

owners and integrated project scheduling. Structural monitoring of compliance with architectural principles can help in
this regard, but this is not sufficiently applied in practice.

How can we ensure the success of an EA project?

The study shows that the following three rules will help to create the right conditions for making EA successful in an
organization:

1. Set clear, enterprise-wide EA objectives before you start, and manage expectations inside the organization. The
objectives affect the choice of the EA concept, including the choice of domain architectures and the degree of inte-
gration between them. With clear objectives it is easier to manage expectations in relation to EA inside the organi-
zation. In this way disappointment is avoided and the organization does not have to spend a lot of time and energy
trying to create an architecture which is never realized. By deploying EA enterprise-wide it is also easier to demon-
strate that a shared approach to EA pays off, in comparison to the silos of documentation in Excel, Word and niche
tools, with all the duplication and inconsistencies these involve. Use it to raise the level of commitment and cele-
brate the successes achieved.

2. Set up EA Governance and comply with it. If the methods and agreements drawn up are not complied with by the EA
roles, the yield from the EA initiative will be inadequate. Appoint a Chief EA to oversee compliance who also reports
to higher management (C-level). Higher management can in turn ask for feedback through the Chief EA about the
impact of strategic management choices on operational management and operational structures. In the context of
EA Governance, it is important to specify in the standard project approach that it is mandatory to check what infor-
mation has already been recorded on the scope of the project; this information should be used as a starting point
for the TO-BE situation. It is also important of course that EA owners validate innovations according to a fixed
release procedure, and for the new AS-IS situation to be documented in the EA tool before discharging responsibil-
ity for the project.

3. Make sure the business is sufficiently involved in these initiatives, starting with the choice of the EA tool. Do not
allow EA procedures and tooling to become an IT matter, otherwise the EA will not serve as driver of business and
IT streamlining. Choose a tool that supports all domain architectures and is able to connect them in a single repos-
itory. Also make sure the tool can incorporate ownership, combine the different methods used, and produce flexible
reports. Tools that already provide standard EA frameworks such as TOGAF, IAF and ArchiMate are preferable in this
regard.

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ARIS Expert Paper

Fig 7: The way EA is implemented

ARIS Expert Paper
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IDS Scheer AG

Headquarters
Altenkesseler Str. 17
66115 Saarbruecken
Phone: +49 681 210-0
Fax: +49 681 210-1000
E-mail: info@ids-scheer.com

www.ids-scheer.com

© Copyright (C) IDS Scheer AG, 2001 – 2009. All rights reserved. The contents of this document is subject to copyright law. Changes, abridgments, extensions and sup-
plements require the prior written consent from IDS Scheer AG, Saarbrücken, Germany. Reproduction is only permitted provided that this copyright notice is retained
on the reproduced document. Each publication or translation requires the prior written consent from IDS Scheer AG, Saarbrücken, Germany. “ARIS”, “IDS”,
“ProcessWorld”, “PPM”, “MashZone”, ARIS with Platform symbol and Y symbol are trademarks or registered trademarks of IDS Scheer AG in Germany and in many
countries all over the world. “SAP NetWeaver” is a trademark of SAP AG, Walldorf. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
U.S. pat. D561,778, pat. D561,777, pat. D547,322, pat. D547,323, pat. D547,324

ID-Number: EP-EA-0609-EN

 

Please review the following article:

 

The Failure Of The FBI’s Virtual Case File Project

· Based on what we’ve covered so far in class, what technique(s) would YOU have used to ensure the FBI’s Virtual Case file project was a success? Who should be held liable for its failure?

· Research another example of a failed EA project and share it with the class.

 

Note:

Please use the attached document as a reference in answering the discussion questions.

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