Business-Driven Architect

Brenda Michelson

Business Architecture and Nick Malik's Enterprise Business Motivation Model

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For the last two weeks, I've had a tab open to Nick Malik's Toward an Enterprise Business Motivation Model article in The Architecture Journal, and finally, this afternoon I had time to give the work the attention it deserves.  Read: I'm quite impressed.  Too often, people confuse business architecture with business process modeling.  While process modeling is a facet of business architecture, it is far from the whole picture. 

Your business architecture needs to include aspects to plan (strategy, operating model), execute (business units, business capabilities, business information, resources, processes & chains, products & services), interact (suppliers, channels, markets, customers, shareholders, financiers), manage (measurement systems, policies, rules) and change (assess, design, implement) in the context of expected outcomes and outcome disrupters (internal and external change forces).  And of course, the business architecture must account for the relationships between the various aspects in the context of the scenario being addressed (designed, implemented, measured).

When I speak to business architecture, I often share a version of the following, continuously evolving Business Architecture Domain (simplified) picture.  [Click on picture to enlarge]

And while I still like my Business Architecture Domain picture, it's just that, a picture.  Nick's work is a set of seven core models that comprise an Enterprise Business Motivation Model.  The key concepts included in the model are Influencer, Driver, Business Unit, Business Unit Capability, Business Model, Directive, Business Process and Assessment. 

If you are interested in Business Architecture, Business Analysis and/or evolving your Enterprise Architecture practice to be business-driven, I highly recommend (a) reading Nick's article and (b) considering how you can utilize the proposed Enterprise Business Motivation Model in your work. 

Me, I'll be testing my "business architecture domain picture" against the Enterprise Business Motivation Model and evolving as appropriate.  Thanks to Nick for sharing this excellent work!

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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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