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Decisions Required vs. Decisions Made: Connecting Enterprise Architects and Solution Architects via Guidance Models

Decisions Required vs. Decisions Made: Connecting Enterprise Architects and Solution Architects via Guidance Models

Olaf Zimmermann, Christoph Miksovic
Copyright: © 2013 |Pages: 33
ISBN13: 9781466621992|ISBN10: 1466621990|EISBN13: 9781466622005
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-2199-2.ch010
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MLA

Zimmermann, Olaf, and Christoph Miksovic. "Decisions Required vs. Decisions Made: Connecting Enterprise Architects and Solution Architects via Guidance Models." Aligning Enterprise, System, and Software Architectures, edited by Ivan Mistrik, et al., IGI Global, 2013, pp. 176-208. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2199-2.ch010

APA

Zimmermann, O. & Miksovic, C. (2013). Decisions Required vs. Decisions Made: Connecting Enterprise Architects and Solution Architects via Guidance Models. In I. Mistrik, A. Tang, R. Bahsoon, & J. Stafford (Eds.), Aligning Enterprise, System, and Software Architectures (pp. 176-208). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2199-2.ch010

Chicago

Zimmermann, Olaf, and Christoph Miksovic. "Decisions Required vs. Decisions Made: Connecting Enterprise Architects and Solution Architects via Guidance Models." In Aligning Enterprise, System, and Software Architectures, edited by Ivan Mistrik, et al., 176-208. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2013. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2199-2.ch010

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Abstract

Contemporary enterprise architecture frameworks excel at inventorying as-is and at specifying to-be architecture landscapes; they also help enterprise architects to establish governance processes and architectural principles. Solution architects, however, expect mature frameworks not only to express such fundamental design constraints, but also to provide concrete and tangible guidance how to comply with framework building blocks, processes, and principles – a route planner is needed in addition to maps of destinations. In this chapter, the authors show how to extend an existing enterprise architecture framework with decision guidance models that capture architectural decisions recurring in a particular domain. Such guidance models codify architectural knowledge by recommending proven patterns, technologies, and products; architectural principles are represented as decision drivers. Owned by enterprise architects but populated and consumed by solution architects, guidance models are living artifacts (reusable assets) that realize a lightweight knowledge exchange between the two communities – and provide the desired route planners for architectural analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.

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