Joe McKendrick: Hello! This is Joe
McKendrick, contributor to ebizQ's "SOA in Action" site. Thank you for
joining us for this podcast on the important issues as well as
tremendous opportunities enterprises face around service-oriented
architectures today. It’s my pleasure to introduce Mighael
Botha, technology evangelist at Software AG. Software AG is a premiere
sponsor of InfoWorld's upcoming SOA Executive Forum, and Mighael will
be providing some of his insights on the state of SOA progress in 2007.
Mighael will also be joining one of the panels at InfoWorld Executive
Forum. Welcome, Mighael.
Mighael Botha: Hi, Joe.
JM: Can you describe how exactly governance
keeps SOA initiatives on track, and why is governance so important?
MB: Well, I think governance is important
because there are some rules that govern any organization as far as
what's the financial data that they need to report to the SEC and all
kinds of other things around that. I think within an IT organization,
governance is important to make sure that the decision-making authority
around the artifact are really controlled in a manner that management
as well as the users of those artifacts have insight into what they can
and cannot do.
One of the main drivers, I would think, around SOA governance
is to make sure that the services that are being delivered are really
quality services. At the end of the day, when we have all these
distributor services and we get into a situation where we use an
enterprise service bus and now start getting reuse of services as far
as using fine-grained service to create coarse-grained services, the
challenge I think without governance, would be if we want to change a
specific service in our implementation. How would we go and do an
impact analysis? To make sure that if we change the get employee
service that none of the other operations and services within the
organization would break.
So within governance, the main piece that is important is to
keep our initiatives on track is to have a very clear defined
implementation of policy management, service-level agreements and then
also life cycle management. To make sure that if business, the business
users request a service or if a data analyst requests a service, that
there is a clear defined path within SOA and within the governance
where we can actually go off and make sure that we control the life
cycle of that service, from development through deployment and then
basically, a year or two years from now, we would want to maybe replace
the service with a new service, be able to do impact analysis to say
okay, these are the services we need to change that I'm actually
utilizing.
JM: Another term that is often discussed is
the notion of right-sizing services and it seems to be especially a
challenge for large companies. How do you make sure that the services
that are being created and supported within various business units are
the right fit and can scale with the requirements of the business?
MB: You work with your business users to
define a business service that would really be used by business. When
you go through and you develop, and go through your testing phase and
might realize that a significant amount of data that is being returned
by the service. Or that the underlying functionality of the service
doesn't really fit the way that you have may have implemented it or as
requested by IT, to be implemented might not fit within your
organizations infrastructure.
And I see right-sizing as an iterative process where once
you've got a service implemented, there is a constant measurement and
making sure that you optimize the service. And eventually, I think--you
know, it's like any other software product or software component out
there. After a third or fourth iteration of the release of a service or
a software package, you typically get into a situation where everything
has been optimized and that piece of software is right-sized.
JM: Another emerging area or something
that, a trend that's getting a lot of attention these days, is the Web
2.0 and Enterprise 2.0 phenomena. And one of the methodologies involves
the use of mash-ups, front end applications that draw data from
different sources and are brought together on some type of front end
presentation. Do you see mash-ups playing a role in SOA and are they
are governable?
MB: Yeah! I think mash-ups are really
important for SOA. You know, typically when you talk to a business user
about SOA, they don't really get the concepts about SOA because a lot
of this happens in the background. If we start talking to a business
user about an enterprise service bus and you need to have a governance
tool to govern all of your services and all those kinds of things,
business users find that very difficult to relate to those kinds of IT
terms.
The mash-up is the real face of SOA, bringing business
closer to maybe a portal or event-driven architecture, to show them that
they can really get useful information from the new technology that is
being implemented." --Mighael Botha, Software AG
I see mash-ups as being the face of SOA. Something that I can
take to a user, and say, "Okay, this is a mash-up that shows a single
view of a customer within your organization." And the user might not
understand what a mash-up is but when they view, let's say, the Web 2.0
or the Ajax front-end and they see that they can get all kinds of data,
as far as biographical data, about their customer, or a product. And at
the end of the day, they use just that front-end, and that front-end
goes to five or six or seven different systems in the back end. That
clearly puts a face to SOA. Especially if you think of our customers
these days that would say, okay, I need to switch out maybe my legacy
application that I have with a new purchased SAP application. Mash-ups
would make that, in a sense, a little bit more fluent, that I can
create a mash-up of both systems and present that to a user. The user
would never know that Ajax is being extracted from the legacy system as
well as the SAP system to be presented to them.
But the mash-up is the real face of SOA, bringing business
closer to maybe a portal or event-driven architecture to show them that
they can really get useful information from the new technology that is
being implemented.
JM: Okay, great! Well, thank you, Mighael.
Once again, this is Joe McKendrick for ebizQ, and I've been speaking
with Mighael Botha, technology evangelist at Software AG and Mighael
will be joining us at InfoWorld's SOA Executive Forum. I look forward
to seeing you in New York, and thank you for your insights.
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