Nature of Enterprise Architecture

From Enterprise Systems Engineering Wiki
Revision as of 11:01, 30 October 2013 by Dr Peter Bryant (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Architecture of the Enterprise

Topic Owner: Peter Bryant

Theme: Influencing TOGAF Next

The Open Group is revising and restructuring The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) standard. It is experimenting with an ultra-simple set of definitions along the following lines.

System = a collection of components — which can also be called parts — working together to fulfil a mission

System has Architecture

Architecture = fundamental concepts or properties of a system in its environment embodied in its elements, their relationships, and in the principles of its design and evolution

Enterprise = any group of organizations with a common set of goals. For example, an enterprise could be a government agency, a whole corporation, a division of a corporation, a single department, or a chain of geographically distant organizations linked together by common ownership. A large project, or endeavour involving multiple agencies, could also be an enterprise, e.g. London Olympics 2012.

Is this characterisation sufficiently explicit and general for our usage?

Enterprise is a class of System

Enterprise Architecture = Architecture of Enterprise (as System)

At first sight this would seem an ideal definition of Enterprise Architecture from a ESE perspective

  • Do you agree?
  • Is this characterisation sufficiently explicit and general for normal usage?
  • Does this conflict with ‘standard’ definitions of EA from the literature? If so, what will be missed?
  • How could the characterisation be improved?

I look forward to your comments

Enterprise Systems Engineering Wiki

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox