Business-Driven Architect

Brenda Michelson

New SOA Consortium Podcast: National Archives and Records Administration Case Study

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Over on SOA Consortium Insights, I announced the publication of a new podcast from the September meeting.  The speaker is Dr. Michael J. Kurtz, Assistant Assistant Archivist for Records Services, Washington DC, National Archives and Records Administration.  Dr. Kurtz shared an interesting case study on on establishing Records Management in a Federal Service Oriented Environment.  Their success hinged on service definition techniques and cross agency collaboration.  From my post on SOA Consortium Insights:

In an era of electronic war fighting, homeland security and expanding reach of the federal government, the need to share information is vital.  Currently, the 300-plus federal agencies each have their own records management program, all with varying degrees of maturity.  The NARA initiative is tasked with finding efficient and effective ways to manage and share information, and help federal agencies transfer their permanently valuable electronic records to the National Archives.

At the core of the multi-agency initiative was the definition of common records management services for use across all federal government agencies.  Dr. Kurtz spoke of the challenges defining technology independent records management services that have the proper precision, yet are pliable for future requirements.  Keys to the 18-agency community of practice’s success were requirements elicitation through modeling, model-driven architecture (MDA) techniques and creating uniform semantics. 

In addition to the service definitions, the team is evaluating a proposed Records Management Maturity Model (RM3).  The hope is that agencies could use this model, if adopted, to assess their current business processes, tools and techniques to manage records and create transition plans. Dr. Kurtz pointed out that both the records management services and maturity models are envisioned as not necessarily government specific and therefore could be applicable to all industries.

Throughout the presentation, Dr. Kurtz engaged in Q&A with meeting attendees on cross-agency information sharing, funding models, MDA model formats and organizational change.

To listen to an audio recording of Dr. Kurtz’s presentation and view the slides please go here.

 

[Disclosure: The SOA Consortium is a client of my company, Elemental Links.]

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Brenda Michelson, Principal of Elemental Links, shares her view on architectural strategies, technology trends, business, and relevance.

Brenda Michelson

Brenda Michelson is the principal of Elemental Links an advisory & consulting practice focused on business-driven IT. Brenda spent 19 years in corporate IT, most recently as Chief Enterprise Architect for L.L. Bean. At L.L. Bean, Brenda was responsible for the articulation and execution of the enterprise architecture strategy (J2EE transformation, enterprise integration, SOA and EDA), strategic planning, portfolio management and talent development. Previous to L.L. Bean, over the span of 10 years, Brenda provided development services for Insurance, Banking, a Chip Manufacturer and a world leader in Aircraft Engine Design & Manufacturing. Email Brenda. Follow her on Twitter.

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