The purpose of Phase A-B is to develop a Business Architecture.
The objectives of Phase A-B are:
To describe the current Baseline Business Architecture
To develop a Target Business Architecture, describing the product and/or service strategy, and the organizational, functional, process, information, and geographic aspects of the business environment, based on the business principles, business goals, and strategic drivers
To analyze the gaps between the Baseline and Target Business Architectures
To select the relevant architectural viewpoints that will enable the architect to demonstrate how the stakeholder concerns are addressed in the Business Architecture
To select the relevant tools and techniques to be used in association with the selected viewpoints
A knowledge of the Business Architecture is a prerequisite for architecture work in any other domain (Data, Applications, Technology), and is therefore the first architecture activity that needs to be undertaken, if not catered for already in other organizational processes (enterprise planning, strategic business planning, business process re-engineering, etc.).
In practical terms, the Business Architecture is also often necessary as a means of demonstrating the business value of subsequent Technology Architecture work to key stakeholders, and the return on investment to those stakeholders from supporting and participating in the subsequent work.
The extent of the work in Phase A-B will depend to a large extent on the enterprise environment. In some cases, key elements of the Business Architecture may be done in other activities; for example, the enterprise mission, vision, strategy, and goals may be documented as part of some wider business strategy or enterprise planning activity that has its own lifecycle within the enterprise.
In such cases, there may be a need to verify and update the currently documented business strategy and plans, and/or to bridge between high-level business drivers, business strategy, and goals on the one hand, and the specific business requirements that are relevant to this architecture development effort. (The business strategy typically defines what to achieve - the goals and drivers, and the metrics for success - but not how to get there. That is role of the Business Architecture.)
In other cases, little or no Business Architecture work may have been done to date. In such cases, there will be a need for the architecture team to research, verify, and gain buy-in to the key business objectives and processes that the architecture is to support. This may be done as a free-standing exercise, either preceding architecture development, or as part of Phase A-A.
In both of these cases, the Business Scenario technique (see Book 3: Business Scenarios), or any other method that illuminates the key business requirements and indicates the implied technical requirements for IT architecture, may be used.
A key objective is to re-use existing material as much as possible. In architecturally more mature environments, there will be existing architecture definitions, which (hopefully) will have been maintained since the last architecture development cycle. Where existing architectural descriptions exist, these can be used as a starting point, and verified and updated if necessary; see Book 3: The Architecture Continuum.
Gather and analyze only that information that allows informed decisions to be made relevant to the scope of this architecture effort. If this effort is focused on the definition of (possibly new) business processes, then Phase A-B will necessarily involve a lot of detailed work. If the focus is more on the Target Architectures in other domains (data/information, application systems, infrastructure) to support an essentially existing Business Architecture, then it is important to build a complete picture in Phase A-B without going into unnecessary detail.
In architecturally more mature environments, there will be existing architecture definitions, which (hopefully) will have been maintained since the last architecture development cycle. Where there are existing architectural descriptions, they can be used as a starting point, and verified and updated if necessary. Any such existing descriptions will already have been used in Phase A-A in developing an Architecture Vision, and this work should provide a sound basis for the Baseline Description, and may even be sufficient in itself.
Where there are no such existing descriptions, information will have to be gathered in whatever format comes to hand.
The normal approach to Target Architecture development is top-down. In the Baseline Description, however, the analysis of the current state often has to be done bottom-up, particularly where little or no existing architecture assets exist. In such a case, the architect simply has to document the working assumptions about high-level architectures, and the process is one of gathering evidence to turn the working assumptions into fact, until the law of diminishing returns sets in.
Business processes that are not to be carried forward have no intrinsic value. However, when developing Baseline Descriptions in other architecture domains, architectural components (principles, models, standards, and current inventory) that are not to be carried forward may still have an intrinsic value, and an inventory may be needed in order to understand the residual value (if any) of those components.
Whatever the approach, the goal should be to re-use existing material as much as possible, and to gather and analyze only that information that allows informed decisions to be made regarding the Target Business Architecture. It is important to build a complete picture without going into unnecessary detail.
A variety of modeling tools and techniques may be employed, if deemed appropriate (bearing in mind the above caution not to go into unnecessary detail). For example:
Activity Models (also called Business Process Models): Refer to Activity Models.
Use-Case Models: Refer to Use-Case Models.
Class Models: Refer to Class Models.
(This figure is taken from the Practical Guide to Federal Enterprise Architecture.)
All three types of model types above can be represented in Unified Modeling Language (UML), and a variety of tools exist for generating such models.
Certain industry sectors have modeling techniques specific to the sector concerned. For example, the Defense sector uses the following models:
The Node Connectivity Diagram describes the business locations (nodes), the "needlines" between them, and the characteristics of the information exchanged. Node connectivity can be described at three levels: conceptual, logical, and physical. Each needline indicates the need for some kind of information transfer between the two connected nodes. A node can represent a role (e.g., a CIO); an organizational unit; a business location or facility; and so on. An arrow indicating the direction of information flow is annotated to describe the characteristics of the data or information - for example, its content, media, security or classification level, timeliness, and requirements for information system interoperability.
The Information Exchange Matrix documents the information exchange requirements for an enterprise architecture. Information exchange requirements express the relationships across three basic entities (activities, business nodes and their elements, and information flow), and focus on characteristics of the information exchange, such as performance and security. They identify who exchanges what information with whom, why the information is necessary, and in what manner.
Although originally developed for use in the Defense sector, these models are finding increasing use in other sectors of government, and may also be considered for use in non-government environments.
As part of Phase A-B, the architecture team will need to consider what relevant Business Architecture resources are available from the Enterprise Continuum, in particular:
Generic business models relevant to the organization's industry sector. (These are Industry Architectures in terms of the Enterprise Continuum.) For example:
The Object Management Group (OMG) has a number of vertical Domain Task Forces developing business models relevant to specific vertical domains such as Healthcare, Transportation, Finance, etc.
The TeleManagement Forum (TMF) has developed detailed business models relevant to the Telecommunications industry.
Government departments and agencies in different countries have reference models and frameworks mandated for use, intended to promote cross-departmental integration and interoperability. An example is the Federal Enterprise Architecture Business Reference Model (www.feapmo.gov/feaBrm.htm), which is a function-driven framework for describing the business operations of the Federal Government independent of the agencies that perform them.
Business models relevant to common high-level business domains - such as electronic commerce, supply chain management, etc. - that are published within the IT industry. (These are Common Systems Architectures in terms of the Enterprise Continuum) For example:
The Resource-Event-Agent (REA) business model was originally created by William E. McCarthy (www.msu.edu/user/mccarth4) of Michigan State University, mainly for modeling of accounting systems. It has proved so useful for better understanding of business processes that it has become one of the major modeling frameworks for both traditional enterprises and e-Commerce systems. In particular, it has been extended by Robert Haugen and McCarthy for supply chain management (refer to www.jeffsutherland.org/oopsla2000/mccarthy/mccarthy.htm).
The STEP Framework (STandard for the Exchange of Product model data) is concerned with product design and supply chain interworking. STEP is an ISO standard (ISO 10303). Implementation of the STEP standard has been led by some large aerospace manufacturers, and has also been taken up in other industries that have a need for complex graphic and process data, such as the construction industry.
The Open Applications Group (OAG - www.openapplications.org) is focused on defining a framework for allowing heterogeneous business applications to communicate together. Its OAGIS integration model and specification address the needs of traditional Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) integration, as well as supply chain management and electronic commerce.
RosettaNet (www.rosettanet.org) is a consortium created by leading companies in the computer, electronic component, and semiconductor manufacturing supply chains. Its mission is to develop a complete set of standard e-Business processes for these supply chains, and to promote and support their adoption and use.
Enterprise-specific building blocks (process components, business rules, job descriptions, etc.).
A key step in validating an architecture is to consider what may have been forgotten. The architecture must support all of the essential information processing needs of the organization. The most critical source of gaps that should be considered is stakeholder concerns that have not been addressed in prior architectural work.
Other potential sources of gaps:
People gaps (e.g., cross-training requirements)
Process gaps (e.g., process inefficiencies)
Tools gaps (e.g., duplicate or missing tool functionality)
Information gaps
Measurement gaps
Financial gaps
Facilities gaps (buildings, office space, etc.)
Gap analysis highlights services and/or functions that have been accidentally left out, deliberately eliminated, or are yet to be developed or procured. Gap Analysis Matrix in Phase A-D, Step 8 illustrates an example of a gap analysis matrix. The suggested steps are as follows:
Draw up a matrix with all the Business Architecture building blocks of the current architecture on the vertical axis, and all the Business Architecture building blocks of the Target Business Architecture on the horizontal axis. In creating the matrix it is imperative to use terminology that is accurate and consistent.
Add to the Current Architecture axis a final row labeled "New Business Architecture Building Blocks", and to the Target Architecture axis a final column labeled "Eliminated Business Architecture Building Blocks".
Where a Business Architecture building block is available in both the Current and Target Architectures, record this with "Included" at the intersecting cell.
Where a Business Architecture building block from the Current Architecture is missing in the Target Architecture, each must be reviewed. If it was correctly eliminated, mark it as such in the appropriate "Eliminated" cell. If it was not, you have uncovered an accidental omission in your new architecture that must be addressed by reinstating the Business Architecture building block in the next iteration of the architecture design - mark it as such in the appropriate "Eliminated" cell.
Where a Business Architecture building block from the Target Architecture cannot be found in the Current Architecture, mark it at the intersection with the "New" row, as a gap that needs to be filled, either by developing or procuring the building block.
When the exercise is complete, anything under "Eliminated Services" or "New Services" is a gap, which should either be explained as correctly eliminated, or marked as to be addressed by reinstating or developing/procuring the function.
INSERT NEW GRAPHIC HERE
The level of detail addressed in Phase A-B will depend on the scope and goals of the overall architecture effort.
New business processes being introduced as part of this effort will need to be defined in detail during Phase A-B. Existing business processes to be carried over and supported in the target environment may already have been adequately defined in previous architectural work; but, if not, they too will need to be defined in Phase A-B.
The process steps for Phase A-B are:
Note: The order of the following steps should be adapted to the situation at hand: in particular, determine whether in this situation it is appropriate to do Baseline Description or Target Architecture development first, as described in Introduction to the ADM.
Business Architecture Baseline Description: Develop a Baseline Description of the existing Business Architecture, to the extent necessary to support the Target Business Architecture. The scope and level of detail to be defined will depend on the extent to which existing business elements are likely to be carried over into the Target Business Architecture, and on whether existing architectural descriptions exist, as described in Approach. To the extent possible, identify the relevant Business Architecture building blocks, drawing on the Architecture Continuum.
Reference Models, Viewpoints, and Tools:
Select relevant Business Architecture resources (reference models, patterns, etc.) from the Architecture Continuum, on the basis of the business drivers, and the stakeholders and concerns.
Select relevant Business Architecture viewpoints (e.g., Operations, Management, Financial); i.e., those that will enable the architect to demonstrate how the stakeholder concerns are being addressed in the Business Architecture.
Identify appropriate tools and techniques to be used for capture, modeling, and analysis, in association with the selected viewpoints. Depending on the degree of sophistication warranted, these may comprise simple documents or spreadsheets, or more sophisticated modeling tools and techniques such as activity models, business process models, use-case models, etc.
Architecture Model(s):
For each viewpoint, create the model for the specific view required, using the selected tool or method.
Assure that all stakeholder concerns are covered. If they are not, create new models to address concerns not covered, or augment existing models (see Business Modeling). Business Scenarios are a useful technique to discover and document business requirements, and may be used iteratively, at different levels of detail in the hierarchical decomposition of the Business Architecture. Business Scenarios are described in Book 3: Business Scenarios. Other techniques may be used, if required. Create models of the following:
Organization structure: document the organization structure, identifying business locations and relating them to organizational units.
Business goals and objectives: document business goals and objectives for each organizational unit.
Business functions: identify and define business functions. This is a detailed, recursive step involving successive decomposition of major functional areas into sub-functions.
Business services: the services that each enterprise unit provides to its customers, both internally and externally.
Business processes, including measures and deliverables.
Business roles, including development and modification of skills requirements.
Correlation of organization and functions: relate business functions to organizational units in the form of a matrix report.
Information Requirements: Identify for each business function when, where, how often, and by whom the function is performed; what information is used to perform it, and its source(s); and what opportunities exist for improvements. Include information that needs to be created, retrieved, updated, and deleted. The level of detail to be defined will depend on the scope and focus of the current architecture effort, as described in Approach. Focus on what will be worthwhile collecting for the purpose at hand.
Perform trade-off analysis to resolve conflicts (if any) among the different views.
One method of doing this is CMU/SEI's Architecture Trade-off Analysis (ATA) Method (www.sei.cmu.edu/ata/ata_method.html).
Validate that the models support the principles, objectives, and constraints.
Note changes to the viewpoint represented in the selected models from the Architecture Continuum, and document.
Test architecture models for completeness against requirements.
Select Business Architecture building blocks (e.g., business services):
Identify required building blocks and check against the existing library of building blocks, re-using as appropriate.
Where necessary, define new Business Architecture building blocks.
Conduct a formal checkpoint review of the architecture model and building blocks with stakeholders.
Review non-functional (qualitative) criteria (e.g., performance, costs, volumes). Use to specify required service levels (for example, via formal Service Level Agreements (SLAs)).
Complete the Business Architecture:
Select standards for each of the Architecture Building Blocks, re-using as much as possible from the reference models selected from the Architecture Continuum.
Fully document each Architecture Building Block.
Final cross-check of overall architecture against business goals. Document rationale for building block decisions in the architecture document.
Document final requirements traceability report.
Document final mapping of the architecture within the Architecture Continuum. From the selected Architecture Building Blocks, identify those that might be re-used (working practices, roles, business relationships, job descriptions, etc.), and publish via the architecture repository.
Document rationale for building block decisions in architecture document.
Prepare a Business Architecture Report: Generate the Business Architecture document, comprising some or all of:
A business footprint (a high-level description of the people and locations involved with key business functions)
A detailed description of business functions and their information needs
A management footprint (showing span of control and accountability)
Standards, rules, and guidelines showing working practices, legislation, financial measures, etc.
A skills matrix and set of job descriptions
If appropriate, use reports and/or graphics generated by modeling tools to demonstrate key views of the architecture. Route the Business Architecture document for review by relevant stakeholders, and incorporate feedback.
Checkpoint: Check the original motivation for the architecture project and the Statement of Architecture Work against the proposed Business Architecture, asking if it is fit for the purpose of supporting subsequent work in the other architecture domains. Refine the proposed Business Architecture only if necessary.
Gap analysis (see Approach) and report:
Create gap matrix, as described in Gap Analysis.
Identify building blocks to be carried over, classifying as either changed or unchanged.
Identify eliminated building blocks.
Identify new building blocks.
Identify gaps and classify as those that should be developed and those that should be procured.
Add Business Services Definitions and material.
Add Business Architecture process model here - new material.
Add building block developments from the Architecture Continuum??
IT Strategy Requirements (see IT Strategy Requirements)