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NYC Technology Forum Enterprise Architecture

NYC Technology Forum Enterprise Architecture. Greg Lomow Chief Architect BearingPoint, Inc. November 6 th , 2008. Enterprise Architecture Session Agenda.

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NYC Technology Forum Enterprise Architecture

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  1. NYC Technology ForumEnterprise Architecture Greg Lomow Chief Architect BearingPoint, Inc. November 6th, 2008

  2. Enterprise Architecture SessionAgenda • The purpose of Enterprise Architecture is to manage and align business processes with software components, systems, networks, operations and projects. • The goal is simple: to operate better, faster and cheaper by leveraging a consistent architecture throughout the enterprise. • This session will focus specifically on the newly created Enterprise Architecture from DoITT • Speakers • Greg Lomow, Senior Manager, Public Services Solutions Group, BearingPoint, Inc. • Anthony Insolia, Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT), City of New York • Jane L. Landon, Deputy Commissioner and Chief Information Officer, Department of Finance, City of New York

  3. Tight budgets “Do more with less” Cost overruns Non-Compliance Redundant Processes, Data, Systems Rework, re-entry of data Out-dated, non-supported technologies Stove-piped, non-integrated systems Lack of standardization Enterprise Architecture is integral to improving the government’s efficiency and effectiveness by Improving mission outcomes Helping to deliver better services to citizens and business Promoting collaboration among agencies for government-wide improvement Maximizing technology investments to achieve better mission results Facilitating horizontal and vertical integration of IT resources Obtaining cost savings by eliminating or consolidating duplicative processes or systems. Government Challenges

  4. Enterprise Architecture is … A planning framework for ensuring that an organization’s use of and investment in information resources and technologies align with and support its business needs A means of looking holistically at an entire enterprise, across barriers that have developed over time in many organizations (functional, programmatic, or organizational stovepipes) A view of the current environment (baseline), a vision for the future (target), and a plan for moving from the baseline to the target environment (implementation plan, migration plan, or transition plan) Just one interlocking piece of a broader planning framework that includes strategic planning, capital planning and investment control, budgeting, systems development/ acquisition life cycle management, and other key processes Enterprise Architecture IS NOT … Business process reengineering A simple one-size-fits-all approach Detailed system-level designs or architectures A panacea that will solve all of an organization’s information management problems What is Enterprise Architecture

  5. Why Enterprise Architecture • Reduced time and cost of change • Adaptive to market changes • Platform that enables efficient changes to the business process • Leverage existing IT investment and exploit commonality • Do more with less • Lower deployment and maintenance costs • Speed of execution and deployment • Platform that allows reusing and redeploying assets across business initiatives • Ability to realize and monitor targeted benefits and ROI • Unlock IP from proprietary vendor technologies • Increased % of IT spend on business innovation

  6. Enterprise Architecture andEnterprise Governance • Enterprise Architecture provides structure to ensure that investment decisions and project efforts are in line with strategic goals, organizational standards, core principles, mission performance goals, and ability to execute. GOVERNANCE Mission Execution Strategic Plan Mission Goals Principles Enterprise Architecture Business Improvements Technology Standards Initiatives GOVERNANCE GOVERNANCE Investment Decisions Lessons Learned New Systems & Processes Portfolio Management Performance Measures Financial & Performance Measures Business Intelligence Measure & Evaluate Enterprise Performance GOVERNANCE

  7. Enterprise Architecture Uses Strategic: Portfolio Management Select Control Evaluate Solution: Solution Development Requirements Analysis/Design Develop Test Deploy O&M Technical: IT Infrastructure Identify Specify Configure Test Deploy O&M

  8. Enterprise Architecture Methodology Strategic: Portfolio Management Solution: Solution Development Technical: IT Infrastructure

  9. Environmental Trends ET-19: Lack of Qualified Treatment Providers in the District Enterprise Business Strategies EBS-8: Treatment and Service Quality Management Program EBS-10: Partner Evaluation Strategy Modernization Approaches MA-11: Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Alignment Between Strategy, Performance Goals, Constraints and Proposed Investments

  10. Meta Data An Illustration of the Execution Framework: Identification of Different Architecture Views Organizational View Communities of Interest, Roles, Organizational Structure PerformanceView Information View Subject Areas Security View Goals &Objectives BusinessView Value Chain Disaster Recovery Privacy Impact Controls Authentication Certification & Accreditation BusinessServicesProcessThreads Use Case(UML) ERD/ IER Re-engineeredProcess &Activities Business Processes • Cash Mgmt. • Inspections • Compliance • Enforcement • Compensation SharedTechnical Services Enterprise Applications Solution View Supply Chain HRMS Case Mgmt. Finance Technology Enterprise Service Bus Technology View Integration, Infrastructure & Technology Reference Model

  11. Enterprise Architecture Frameworks:DoDAF, FEA and Zachman Frameworks

  12. Enterprise Architecture Frameworks:Zachman Framework Who When Why How What Where List of Business Objects and Subjects Contextual Business Drivers, Mission Alignment List of Roles, COIs & Organization ConOps, Value Chain List of Key Business Events List of Locations Business Services Process Flow, Process Definitions (BPMN) ERD, Information Exchange Matrix, Business Vocabularies Requirements, Performance Objectives, Service Descriptions Mapping of roles and processes to COIs and Organization Locations mapped to roles and processes Business Domain Event Models Conceptual Data Flow Diagrams, Business Taxonomy, Ontology, & Semantics Business Rules, Business & Technical Service Levels Process Simulation (BPEL & UML) Use Cases (UML) Systems Architecture, Managed Services locations Logical Process Orchestration User Profiles Business Process Management, COTS Applications Business Process Management, COTS Applications Security Domain Services (SSO) Physical Business Activity Monitoring Data Domain Services Infrastructure Domain Services

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