Title: Bridging the Business to IT Gap
1Bridging the Business to IT Gap
- Ray Harishankar
- Distinguished Engineer Partner
- Member IBM Academy of Technology
- IBM Global Business Services
- harishan_at_us.ibm.com
2Abstract
- During the last several years, the IT industry
has focused significant attention on the problem
known as the "Business/IT Gap". This gap is
primarily one of semantics, such that business
people and IT people appear to speak and think in
entirely different languages. IBM has
specifically addressed "the Gap" within numerous
technical forums and studies. These studies have
typically concluded that, while the company and
the industry have continued to make significant
progress, there is still a long way to go. After
studying this subject, and reflecting on the
studies themselves, the presenter and his team
have reached two, possibly controversial,
conclusions. One conclusion discussed will be
that there will always be a gap. The other
conclusion is that there is not just one gap, but
many. Even though the gap is inevitable, the
concepts of service orientation when applied at a
business level may help bridge the gap
significantly and bring business and IT much
closer than ever before.
3Topics Covered
- The Landscape
- Characteristics of the Gap
- Service Orientation at the Enterprise Level
- References
4Current industry trends point to growth, need for
agility and broader innovation.
- Growth is back on the CEO agenda
- 8 in 10 view growth as a key focus area
- Companies are concerned that they are not agile
enough - 8 in 10 rate rapid response as a high or very
high priority - Clients view product service innovation as a
top priority - Nearly two-thirds view products/service
improvement as one of the greatest opportunities
for revenue growth - Clients seek company wide transformation with a
very short time horizon - About 9 in 10 believe they need to achieve their
transformation goals in less than 5 years nearly
half think they need to do so in less than 2 years
5Recently it has become increasingly urgent to
bridge the Business / IT gap. Trends in the use
of IT by business has accelerated the need but
also encouraged solutions.
- Technology has become a key business value
enabler. Business is very dependent upon IT, with
some businesses being close to 100 IT (e-Bay,
Amazon, Schwab, etc.) - The time to implement basic new processes or
change existing one is governed by the speed of
development The closer the business
representation is to ITs understanding, the
faster it is. - Internet connectivity, new channels-to-market and
now the reduced business cycle time and B2B
integration have further focused attention on the
gap.
6As enterprises have expanded their geographic,
product, and channel breadth, business models
have become complex, limiting their flexibility
agility.
The Reality Disjointed operations, product
manufacture, and distribution resulting in
hit-or-miss efforts to serve target clients.
Overlapping capabilities in the product silos
drive an inefficient cost structure.
Mass Retail Segment
Private Banking Segment
Sub-Prime Segment
Mass Affluent Segment
Ultra High Net Worth Segment
Product Specific Delivery
Marketing Sales Distribution
Product Manufacture
Operations
Shared Facilities
Product Silo 1
Product Silo 2
Product Silo 3
Simplify to Succeed - Published in May, 2002,
IBM
7Service orientation has become increasingly
attractive has been adopted, primarily as the
basis for IT systems.
- A service-oriented architecture (SOA) is an
architectural framework and approach that takes
everyday business applications and breaks them
down into individual business functions called
services. An SOA lets you build, deploy and
integrate these services independent of
applications and the computing platforms on which
they run.
8Topics Covered
- The Landscape
- Characteristics of the Gap
- Service Orientation at the Enterprise Level
- References
9There are numerous aspects to this gap
- Business Speak vs. Technology Speak
- Organizational Factors
- Business artifacts Technology artifacts
- Roles responsibilities within business IT
- Culture the social system
- While we need specialists in business
technology domains, we also need them to connect,
communicate understand each other perfectly.
10Transforming business intent into IT systems
solutions that address them is a multilayered a
multi-dimensional problem
- Industry hot spots
- Industry Imperatives
- Business Solution Priorities
Business Model
- Functionality expressed as Services
- Map to Business Processes
- Based on industry standards(ACORD, iXRetail,
eTOM)
Functional Aspect
Service Oriented Architecture
Operational Aspect
- Model Driven Development
- Middleware and Software
- Technology Platforms Frameworks
- Network Hardware
Solutions Realized on an Infrastructure
11A semantic architecture identifies domain
specific business terms from documents
conversations and classifies links them into
meaningful patterns based on pre-defined business
concepts extended by industry-specific and
discipline-specific concepts.
What do we need to bridge this gap?
- A structured view of the business, which both
expedites its strategic and operational analysis
and is a familiar representation to IT
professionals - A rigorous method to translate this structured
business view to the evolving, well suited
information technologies (SOA) - New build and run time technologies suited to the
new design and programming model.
Doug McDavid
12Topics Covered
- The Landscape
- Characteristics of the Gap
- Service Orientation at the Enterprise Level
- References
13Existing business models limit the flexibility
agility of enterprises.
Existing business models limit the flexibility
agility of enterprises. They need to deconstruct
themselves and re-construct across the value net.
14Service Oriented Enterprise Primary
Characteristics
- Supports a discrete set of business services
- Has been deconstructed and componentized
- Has discrete self contained components
- Has flexible dynamic business processes
- Has alignment between business IT
- Has SOA as the underpinnings of its IT
- Has governance for IT business services
- Has services provider and/or consumer
relationships with partners - Has organized itself to be optimal and efficient
15Service Oriented Enterprise Additional
Characteristics
- Has retrained and retooled its workforce to
function efficiently as an SOE. - Has changed its culture or adapted its culture to
be an SOE - Has plans and processes in place to match skills
to services, redefined metrics to measure
performance, etc. - Has strategies and plans to drive increased
business value through service orientation
dynamic collaboration - Has adopted standards and best practices at all
levels of the organization
16Realization of a true service oriented enterprise
requires research and innovation in several areas
- Understanding of collaboration of business
services to produce new ones with added business
value - Understanding and modeling of business contracts
between services - Organizational structures, new roles and
responsibilities - Business performance monitoring and measurements
- Tools capabilities required to support such an
environment and organization
17Techniques such as SOMA, which link business
intent with its realization through IT help align
business and IT and bridge the gap.
Business Innovation Optimization Services
Facilitates better decision-making with real-time
business information
Interaction Services
Process Services
Information Services
DevelopmentServices
IT ServiceManagement
Enables collaboration between people, processes
information
Manages diverse data and content in a unified
manner
Orchestrate and automate business processes
Component Business Model
Integrated environment for design and creation of
solution assets
Manage and secure services, applications
resources
Partner Services
Business App Services
Access Services
Services
SOMA
Services
Facilitates interactions with existing
information and application assets
Connect with trading partners
Services
Build on a robust, scaleable, and secure services
environment
Services
Services
Services
Services
Infrastructure Services
Services
Optimizes throughput, availability and performance
Services
Services
Services
SOA Reference Architecture
SOMA Service Oriented Modeling Architecture
18Are we there yet?
- We have made and continue to make progress in
bridging the gap - IT continues to become an inextricable part of
business - Business Design continues to become more and more
sophisticated thereby increasing the complexity
19Topics Covered
- The Landscape
- Characteristics of the Gap
- Service Orientation at the Enterprise Level
- References
20References
- Impact of Services Orientation at the business
level and its influence on IT - Cherbakov,
Galambos, Harishankar and Kalyana. IBM Systems
Journal, Nov 2005. - Simplify to Succeed May 2003, IBM
- The Business-IT Gap A Key Challenge Doug
McDavid, IBM - IBMs Vision of the on demand enterprise
Michael D. Zisman - Towards a Service Oriented Organization
Richard Veryard, Jan 2004 CBDI.
21www.oasis-open.org
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