The document discusses using LEGO bricks to illustrate concepts for a consulting company. It provides challenges and instructions for building models with LEGO bricks to represent innovation processes and collaborate to build taller structures by integrating individual models. The goals are to share stories about the models and collaborate through a community process so the integrated model represents value for all.
For years I've been fascinated by the usage of EA as a means to document and structure all aspects of an enterprise. There are many good sources of information out there today that will show you how to do that. But what about reasoning about the enterprise, what models exists to do that
Effektanalysen stödjer det fjärde steget i den agila verksamhetsutvecklingenJörgen Dahlberg
Omvärlden, kunden, uppdragsgivaren och uppdragstagaren är alla en del av samma helhet. Vi samverkar i en ändlig loop.
1. Förstå frågeställningarna
2. Beskriv hela kundresan (horisontellt)
3. Beskriv stegen (vertikalt) = Uppdragskort
4. Prioritera på effekt (h&v) = Uppdragspoäng
5. Bearbeta uppdragskort
6. Gör om och gör rätt
1. The document discusses different approaches for how organizations should structure themselves based on the rate of change in different parts of the business.
2. It suggests evaluating how fast different areas change and focusing organizational resources on the highest value, fastest changing areas.
3. The key approaches proposed are setting up teams, rules, funding, and missions tailored to the specific rate of change for areas like the web, GUI, workflows, integration, and data.
This document outlines the customer journey for building a custom pair of skis at Community Skis in Mammoth Lakes, CA. The summary includes:
1. The thinking stage involves researching ski building options online, talking to friends, and planning the design of the skis.
2. In the acting stage, customers book a workshop, confirm their design, make payments, and prepare for the experience.
3. During the workshop, customers participate in hands-on activities to build their skis, including routing the core, applying fiberglass, and mounting bindings.
The document is an enterprise architecture dashboard that provides status updates on various metrics including business capabilities, projects, events, wiki activity, and business news. It tracks metrics like the number of compliant projects, work delivered, and training conducted. It also lists the top projects in the work queue, upcoming events, and statuses of business capabilities.
How to use Business Model Canvas to design projectsJörgen Dahlberg
A project is a delivery format for change acceleration and gives people and organizations possibilities to focus on a specific result with a specific timeline and dedicated resources. The key to success as we believe is to actually use the same design pattern as we do when we design companies and organizations, namely the Business Model Canvas.
The document introduces the concept of a business capability model for normalizing business exchanges. It discusses how capabilities abstract away how business is carried out by focusing on what a business can deliver. Capabilities are longer-term concepts that represent a company's ability to provide value to the market. Requests represent a specific instance of a capability being utilized, with an implicit relationship between the request and producer. The capability model promotes flexibility, agility, and competition between providers by allowing consumers to easily change providers.
This document introduces The Brand Canvas, a tool for visualizing brand architecture. The Brand Canvas is used to communicate a brand both internally and externally. It examines a brand from internal and external perspectives focusing on key areas like differentiation, proposition, awareness, experience, emotions, customer views, learning, quality, and value requirements from investors. The goal is to grow the brand, increase revenue, secure profit, and reduce costs.
The Change Canvas is a tool for planning and managing change. It is made up of nine elements: stakeholders, effects, results, drivers, motivation activation, enablers, risks, timings, and KPIs. The canvas is used to identify who is affected by the change, what the change will enable, what needs to be accomplished to achieve the effects, what is driving the need for change, how motivation will be activated, what enablers are required for success, associated risks, important timings, and what metrics will be used to track the change. The tool was created by Jorgen Dahlberg to help visualize change.
The Capability Canvas is a tool created by Jörgen Dahlberg to visualize capability architecture. It provides a framework for mapping out the key values, risks, investments, services, organizational structures, information, processes, technologies, business requirements, resource constraints, and quality associated with a given capability. The goal is to help ensure an organization is doing the right things and doing things right.
Business capability mapping and business architectureSatyaIluri
Business architecture and capabilities mapping captures and encapsulates the essence of a business. Using capabilities enterprises can model their current and desired business capabilities with rich semantics and leverage these as Lego blocks to compose products/ initiatives, overlay them with value streams and processes, and capture requirements to evolve capabilities. Business capability mapping helps companies establish a common language, fosters business/IT alignment, helps reduce redundancy and rework, and aligns execution with strategy.
It's never been as important to reach outside of the business as it is in the digital world of today. From an architects perspective it is vital to be able to connect the dots between what is servicing and what is being served. This little card is designed to help you go fast by staying small and keeping it nimble. The design of the card does some heavy lifting by tying the outside to the inside through services and value requirements.
Whatever business you are in innovation is the name of the game. Today it's even more important than ever that you innovate fast and somewhat accurate. This little card is designed to help you go fast by staying small and keeping it nimble
Don't be scared, level zero in a capability map is just a way to structure the map so that we have a consistent way of communicating. It's really not that important if all you wish todo is create an excellent set of capabilities for your business. However if you are intent on changing the foundation of your business then level zero is absolutely imperative to get right. Capabilities and capability maps are not organization structures, they do however serve as a powerful instrument when one need to create an organization architecture, in fact they are best thought of as organizing structures.
This document discusses common myths and facts about diet and nutrition. It addresses myths such as organic food being healthier, salad being a healthy meal choice, and potatoes/bread being fattening. It provides facts to counter each myth, such as organic foods not necessarily being more nutritious, salads containing unhealthy ingredients like croutons and dressing, and excess calories rather than carbs causing weight gain. The document recommends a balanced diet with fruits and vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins and healthy fats for optimal health.
Business Value Measurements and the Solution Design FrameworkLeo Barella
The presentation covers a process and artifacts to establish better communication between business and IT and improve the quality and consistency of solutions. It also includes a tool to measure business value of the solutions that are being proposed and allows the business audience to make educated choices based on overall IT Business impact.
The first thing for EA professional to do is to map the Enterprise for every one to comprehend a tangible enterprise. This presentation shares Enterprise Map experience which has been useful for both business and technical community. In the speaker’s experience, the Enterprise Map is the few EA artifact that has retained its value long after delivery. While other EA artifacts end up as shelf-ware (and hence long forgotten in the EA repository), sets of Enterprise Maps make it much easier to explain EA concepts (at least in comparison to the Zachman framework).
Not only does the Enterprise Map help to unravel the “big picture” of the enterprise, but it also facilitates enterprise collaboration. Gaining a true understanding of the enterprise is a collaborate process; this process is well-illustrated in the story of the blind man and the elephant. Thus, the formulation of the Enterprise Map also serves to create a culture of collaboration throughout the enterprise.
One can draw parallels between the Enterprise Map (and its function as the “ground work” of EA) and an engineering survey. The Enterprise Map is not just a glorified diagram output from a complicated EA system; rather, it is built piece-by-piece from the hard work and total participation of various stakeholders. In fact, the Enterprise Map does not require a complicated EA system – it can be prepared with basic tools and manual processes (e.g., Microsoft Visio / SmartDraw).
How to use Business Model Canvas to design projectsJörgen Dahlberg
A project is a delivery format for change acceleration and gives people and organizations possibilities to focus on a specific result with a specific timeline and dedicated resources. The key to success as we believe is to actually use the same design pattern as we do when we design companies and organizations, namely the Business Model Canvas.
The document introduces the concept of a business capability model for normalizing business exchanges. It discusses how capabilities abstract away how business is carried out by focusing on what a business can deliver. Capabilities are longer-term concepts that represent a company's ability to provide value to the market. Requests represent a specific instance of a capability being utilized, with an implicit relationship between the request and producer. The capability model promotes flexibility, agility, and competition between providers by allowing consumers to easily change providers.
This document introduces The Brand Canvas, a tool for visualizing brand architecture. The Brand Canvas is used to communicate a brand both internally and externally. It examines a brand from internal and external perspectives focusing on key areas like differentiation, proposition, awareness, experience, emotions, customer views, learning, quality, and value requirements from investors. The goal is to grow the brand, increase revenue, secure profit, and reduce costs.
The Change Canvas is a tool for planning and managing change. It is made up of nine elements: stakeholders, effects, results, drivers, motivation activation, enablers, risks, timings, and KPIs. The canvas is used to identify who is affected by the change, what the change will enable, what needs to be accomplished to achieve the effects, what is driving the need for change, how motivation will be activated, what enablers are required for success, associated risks, important timings, and what metrics will be used to track the change. The tool was created by Jorgen Dahlberg to help visualize change.
The Capability Canvas is a tool created by Jörgen Dahlberg to visualize capability architecture. It provides a framework for mapping out the key values, risks, investments, services, organizational structures, information, processes, technologies, business requirements, resource constraints, and quality associated with a given capability. The goal is to help ensure an organization is doing the right things and doing things right.
Business capability mapping and business architectureSatyaIluri
Business architecture and capabilities mapping captures and encapsulates the essence of a business. Using capabilities enterprises can model their current and desired business capabilities with rich semantics and leverage these as Lego blocks to compose products/ initiatives, overlay them with value streams and processes, and capture requirements to evolve capabilities. Business capability mapping helps companies establish a common language, fosters business/IT alignment, helps reduce redundancy and rework, and aligns execution with strategy.
It's never been as important to reach outside of the business as it is in the digital world of today. From an architects perspective it is vital to be able to connect the dots between what is servicing and what is being served. This little card is designed to help you go fast by staying small and keeping it nimble. The design of the card does some heavy lifting by tying the outside to the inside through services and value requirements.
Whatever business you are in innovation is the name of the game. Today it's even more important than ever that you innovate fast and somewhat accurate. This little card is designed to help you go fast by staying small and keeping it nimble
Don't be scared, level zero in a capability map is just a way to structure the map so that we have a consistent way of communicating. It's really not that important if all you wish todo is create an excellent set of capabilities for your business. However if you are intent on changing the foundation of your business then level zero is absolutely imperative to get right. Capabilities and capability maps are not organization structures, they do however serve as a powerful instrument when one need to create an organization architecture, in fact they are best thought of as organizing structures.
This document discusses common myths and facts about diet and nutrition. It addresses myths such as organic food being healthier, salad being a healthy meal choice, and potatoes/bread being fattening. It provides facts to counter each myth, such as organic foods not necessarily being more nutritious, salads containing unhealthy ingredients like croutons and dressing, and excess calories rather than carbs causing weight gain. The document recommends a balanced diet with fruits and vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins and healthy fats for optimal health.
Business Value Measurements and the Solution Design FrameworkLeo Barella
The presentation covers a process and artifacts to establish better communication between business and IT and improve the quality and consistency of solutions. It also includes a tool to measure business value of the solutions that are being proposed and allows the business audience to make educated choices based on overall IT Business impact.
The first thing for EA professional to do is to map the Enterprise for every one to comprehend a tangible enterprise. This presentation shares Enterprise Map experience which has been useful for both business and technical community. In the speaker’s experience, the Enterprise Map is the few EA artifact that has retained its value long after delivery. While other EA artifacts end up as shelf-ware (and hence long forgotten in the EA repository), sets of Enterprise Maps make it much easier to explain EA concepts (at least in comparison to the Zachman framework).
Not only does the Enterprise Map help to unravel the “big picture” of the enterprise, but it also facilitates enterprise collaboration. Gaining a true understanding of the enterprise is a collaborate process; this process is well-illustrated in the story of the blind man and the elephant. Thus, the formulation of the Enterprise Map also serves to create a culture of collaboration throughout the enterprise.
One can draw parallels between the Enterprise Map (and its function as the “ground work” of EA) and an engineering survey. The Enterprise Map is not just a glorified diagram output from a complicated EA system; rather, it is built piece-by-piece from the hard work and total participation of various stakeholders. In fact, the Enterprise Map does not require a complicated EA system – it can be prepared with basic tools and manual processes (e.g., Microsoft Visio / SmartDraw).
1. Truth or Myth? It is not easy to know what is right or wrong when you read about enterprise architecture or hear about it on seminars and lectures. Most often the statements made aren’t based on solid research, sometimes they aren’t even based on best-practice or real world experience. These slide tries to capture some of the truths and myths and explain what is or at least could be truths. Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
2. Myth. Probable cause of the myth is that early efforts in enterprise architecture did not do partitioning and sequencing properly. Resulting in phenomena like analysis paralysis, ivory tower and hide and seek. Today most enterprise architects know techniques for partitioning and sequencing. Good sources of knowledge are Open Groups Togaf, Roger Sessions SIP method and Zachmans concept of cell width, cell depth and cell slivers. Truth or myth? Enterprise architecture takes to long time to be of value to anyone! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
3. Myth. Probable cause of the myth is that any organization has a structure, represented in a visualization or not. Most of the common definitions define enterprise architecture as being some kind of blueprint and associated methods of producing and governing such a blueprint and its implications. Truth or myth? Enterprise architecture exists whether you have defined it or not! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
4. Myth. Probable cause is that it takes a lot of work to do even one piece of enterprise architecture correct. This has led to recommendations that one piece or a select few small pieces of enterprise architected areas is better than none at all. It’s true that even a single piece architected with the whole enterprise in mind is better than none at all. But the problem turns out to be that most who do only a single piece or a select few forget that it must be an enterprise wide piece. Truth or myth? Even a single piece of enterprise architecture is better than none at all! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
5. Myth. Probable cause is people who feel threatened by the promise of an optimized enterprise or people who like to keep the “whole” under control in the project alone. Sure it’s always been known that some of the work products of enterprise architecture is a result of well planned projects. What this mean is that it just doesn’t happen by chance. Truth or myth? Enterprise architecture can be produced as a byproduct of the projects running within the organization! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
6. Truth. Probable cause is that enterprise architects appear to be busy all the time. This leaves operations and projects unable to vent their daily challenges with the only people who could actually make a real difference to the whole enterprise. This mean that an enterprise architect should make time available to get attuned with the people doing the operations and projects. Kicking back and doing email and phone communication will not cut the jam. Truth or myth? The common view of enterprise architects is that “they think they are too important to get involved in the daily operations”! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
7. Myth. Probable cause is that the tools have been (and still are) expensive and often hard to get started with. If you are serious about enterprise architecture there will be so much information produced that not having the support of a dedicated tool, consisting of at least a repository with versioning and configuration management, users and rights maintenance, browsing and searching, publishing and reporting, metamodel and modeling, integration and communication, standard notations and methodologies will stop you from reaching the promise you made to management by starting up with enterprise architecture. Truth or myth? You can do just as well without a specialized enterprise architecture tool! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
8. Myth. Probable cause is that it has been hard to understand how to use the methods available because they have been more or less complete (and still are). Any good methodologist will tell you that it is far more effective to configure an existing method than to invent one of your own. By configure I mean add, subtract, rearrange, translate and rewrite. You don’t have to tell anyone that you used any particular method, you can even put your own internal name on it, just don’t sell it to anyone outside your organization. Truth or myth? It is a lot more effective to invent your own light weight enterprise architecture development method than using any of the methods on the market! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
9. Myth. Probable cause is that different people proposing the use of enterprise architecture came from the field of architecture that centered around one of process, goal, organization or information. It doesn’t matter which one you start with as long as you get the answers to the questions you needed to ask your enterprise architecture. So the proper way would be to start with the questions you’d like to have answers to. Truth or myth? When doing enterprise architecture development you should start with process or goal or organization or information or application or…! Jörgen Dahlberg | [email_address] | http://enklare.wordpress.com
Editor's Notes
#2: This was first published in my blog at: http://enklare.wordpress.com/2009/04/26/truth-or-myth/
#8: Sure you can do all this by using lots of different tools together, but then you have to put effort into integrating them (or use the old human integration pattern).