Component-Oriented Development for IT Business Value
Need to bridge the chasm between business and IT? This is a bottom up approach toward that end.










Need to bridge the chasm between business and IT? This is a bottom up approach toward that end.
Ever wonder: What is enterprise architecture? How does enterprise architecture fit into other enterprise processes? What is necessary to make enterprise architecture work in the complex environments where it is deployed?<br />
Wonder no more…
This outsourcing guide provides an overview of technology outsourcing and the key steps for evaluation and implementation. It helps understand the drivers behind outsourcing i.e. factors that drive organizations to outsource IT services, implementation considerations, and important steps to take.
This presentation provides a good overview of scenarios and planning for server, application and hardware virtualization. It is a very good resource for anyone who wants to understand the rationale behind virtualization – server, application and hardware.
A presentation on the federal SOA initiative – some good discussion on SOA in general. Good read!
Implementing SOA? Measure business value before you do! Read On…
Explore the SABSA® methodology for aligning security architecture with business objectives. This whitepaper presents the SABSA methodology, explains its benefits, and compares them to the classical EA methodology.
An excellent overview of SOA from the CIO’s perspective. The good professor delivers yet again!
This whitepaper provides an analysis of the business drivers behind SOA, the challenges that<br /> Service Orientation places on enterprises, the need for SOA Governance, and the requirements<br /> an SOA Governance solution needs to meet.
Summary: The alignment between Business Processes (BP) and Information Technologies (IT) is a major issue in most organizations, as it directly impacts on the organization’s agility and flexibility to change according to business needs. The concepts upon which alignment is perceived are addressed in what is called today the “Enterprise