Business Transformation in Action

Joe McKendrick

SOA and SaaS Will Open Up New Vistas We Haven't Thought of Yet

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The convergence of service-oriented architecture and Software as a Service lays open the possibilities of bringing in services from outside the firewall, which can be “snapped� into place within a company’s infrastructure. This also means that services a company creates can be introduced to a broader market beyond the firewall. Miko Matsumara, vice president of product marketing for SOA at webMethods, says that as SOA and SaaS mature, the two will open up vast new markets that no one is even thinking of today.

As part of our series of podcasts with industry leaders that we launched in conjunction with InfoWorld's SOA Executive Forum (held May 22-23 in New York), I had the chance to speak with Miko, who applies his Yale training in Neuroscience discover new truths about the way services organically interact with each other. And he had plenty to say about the way SOA is evolving in the context of SaaS. (Link to the podcast here from InfoWorld.)

"We're seeing an entire transition in the industry towards business services residing on the Internet," Miko said. First, he said, look at how “you consume Software as a Service in your enterprise.� One of the most exciting aspects of SOA, he said, is that “organized capabilities may be under the control of different ownership domains. It means that you can actually bring services into your company from the outside. At the same time, because of the integration and component architecture and the use of standards, you could just snap it into place and consume software services much like you would consume internal IT services. It all snaps together like LEGOs.�

But the story gets even more interesting as SOA-SaaS evolves, Miko continued. “Organizations are now beginning to deploy what they have to offer into the economy, deploying their business services onto a network deployed model,� he explained. “This actually takes it beyond Software as a Service and it starts to get into business services on the Internet.

“We're starting to see that the entire economy is not just moving to delivering software as services, but delivering packages, books, and anything that you can imagine in products and services as Internet-connected service interfaces.�

Miko also pointed out that governance and planning was important right from the beginning when deploying SOA. "Out of the box, people need to start architecting and engineering for this future state," Miko explained. "People who favor speed and scale before they start thinking of structure and governance could be at risk of having their projects falling apart."

(Click here at the InfoWorld site to hear the entire seven-minute podcast.)

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In this blog (formerly known as "SOA in Action"), Joe McKendrick examines how BPM and related business and IT approaches can promote business transformation.

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an author and independent analyst who tracks the impact of information technology on management and markets. View more

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