Good 
data management, 
analytics, and helping to shape the goals of the business are keys to transforming the enterprise through impactful 
enterprise architecture (EA). That was the theme, from different perspectives, presented by a series of plenary speakers this week at 
The Open Group Conference in San Francisco.
Jeanne Ross, Director and Principal Research Scientist at 
MIT's Center for Information System
 Research,  opened Monday's plenary session, telling the attendees that the stakes are  high for EA, which needs to show swift success in the new 
digital economy. 
Enterprise architects  also now need to help their organizations better use new services and instill a  "value cycle." [Disclosure: The Open Group is a sponsor of 
BriefingsDirect podcasts.]
Coming  from the siloed past in IT, companies are now moving to business  service-driven processes across various resources, Ross said. But they need to recognize the forces around consumption of such services, not just the implementation.
Making good data management a priority, a "
single source of truth"  is also at the heart of making EA valuable, said Ross.  Ensuring the quality of data and the speed of data refresh will help  enterprise architects rise in performance appreciation more than just  about anything else, she said. Ross studies how firms develop  competitive advantage through the implementation and reuse of digitized  platforms.
Some day CIOs are going to report to the enterprise architect, because that's the way it ought to be.
She is also the co-author of three books: 
IT Governance: How Top Performers Manage IT Decision Rights for Superior Results, Enterprise Architecture As Strategy: Creating a Foundation for Business Execution, and 
IT Savvy: What Top Executives Must Know to Go from Pain to Gain.I also interviewed Ross on enterprise transformation issues before the conference.
IT-enablement  isn't enough, Ross said, because companies typically under-utilize new  systems and applications. It's not that we can't build them, she said of  systems, but that companies aren't using them to their potential. Architects need to  consider this and then market and evangelize solutions.
And EAs need to be more involved with making quality data center stage in their companies. "You don't get good analytics with bad data,"  Ross said, "The secret to good EA is to put information in every  person's hands so they can use data better." And that in turn will help transform the business and spur added innovation using IT systems and good architecture principles.
Most senior  executives aren't very good at combining business and technology  strategies, Ross said, and she outlined the architect's elevated role in  helping their bosses deliver increased business value:
- Help senior execs clarify business goals
 - Identify architectural capabilities that can be readily exploited
 - Present options and their implications for business goals
 - Build capabilities incrementally
 
She  closed out, getting applause from the audience, by predicting, "Some day  CIOs are going to report to the enterprise architect, because that's the  way it ought to be."
Impressive cost reductionThe second plenary speaker, 
Celso Guiotoko, Corporate Vice President and CIO of 
Nissan 
Motor Co, Ltd.,  told how business value is at the top of IT principles for Nissan,  information as an asset comes next, and then reducing complexity.
Using  these principles, Nissan in 2005 developed "BEST" as an IT mid-term  plan and significantly improved the efficiency of its information  systems. BEST is an acronym for 
business alignment, EA, 
selective sourcing, and technology simplifications.
This  was followed in 2009 with the development of the "Change" program,  which provided the basis for further advances by changing people,  technology, and "process."  And, in 2011, the next IT mid-term plan  "VITESSE" was launched, designed to bring direct profit to the company.  VITESSE encompasses value, innovation, technology, simplification, and  service excellence. Through the various initiatives, Nissan has reduced  IT cost by over 40 percent, going from a cost per user of $1.09 to  $0.63.
The transformed enterpriseAndy Mulholland, Global Chief Technology Officer and Corporate Vice President at 
Capgemini, 

focused on the transformed enterprise and 
cloud trends, as well as the effect of new devices and 
social networking. Forty millions 
tablets and 70 million 
smartphones are having a huge impact on how workers and consumers expect to work and shop.
The "
bring your own device"  phenomenon is forcing a change in thinking for enterprises, Mulholland  said, as two environments are developing -- inside IT and outside IT.  Typically back-end activities operate inside the firewall, while  front-end people and activities operate outside the firewall, yet people  nowadays want to be able to use smartphones and tablets for both  personal and work tasks.
This has led to a situation in which workers are increasingly going outside IT to buy services. Mulholland quoted a 
Gartner prediction that up to 35 percent of IT expenditures will be outside the IT department by 2015. Other industry analysts like 
IDC have placed the figure higher.
IT faces a huge “re-integration project” to bring together the inside and outside services in a rational way.
Because  of this, IT faces a huge “re-integration project” to bring together the  inside and outside services in a rational way, Mulholland said, adding  that the transformed enterprise needs to focus on the productivity of  people and innovative business models.
I 
interviewed Mulholland  a few weeks ago and we delved even deeper into the cloud duality issues  now coming to the fore of enterprise technology issues and planning. I was also 
intrigued by a Wall Street Journal piece today on how the US faces a new tech boom. It was aligned with much of what Mulholland was saying.
The  key to doing this “re-integration project,” according to Mulholland, is 
 governance, and the industry really lacks a good cloud 
governance  model, meaning that many businesses are already in trouble. However,  enterprises shouldn't let that get in the way of progress. Mulholland  advised, "If business wants something radically different from you,  don't try to stop it. Try to understand it and take control of it."
Driving IT transformation
Lauren States, Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, Cloud 

Computing and Growth Initiatives, 
IBM, emphasized that transforming the enterprise requires a huge  emphasis on analytics, and a successful integration of analytics and IT.
States  drew on IBM's decades-long journey of constant transformation, relying  on business process excellence, values-based culture, and IT-enablement.  This has led to $1.5 billion in IT savings since 2005 as well as  avoiding over $20 million in expenses over five years with a private  analytics cloud, she said.
According to States, CMOs are overwhelmingly underprepared for the 
data explosion and recognize the need to invest in and integrate technology and analysis and consider analytics as business differentiators.
CEOs  and CIOs are both highly focused on insights, clients, and people  skills, States said, feeding into what she called the "new reality," the  need to harvest and pass insights and build trusted relationships.
States'  takeaway: We're at the beginning of a major change, much like the PC  revolution three decades ago. The cloud's sweet spot now, she says, is  in bringing new innovation and insights to marketing, sales and customer  service.
No need to waitSpeaker 
Bill Rouse, executive director, Tennenbaum Institute at Georgia Tech, said that many enterprises wait too long to change, with the decision to transform dragging on until the damage is beyond repair. As evidence, he said that in the past 25 years, 1000 companies have dropped from the Fortune 500 list -- showing enterprise transformation has high failure rate, and that waiting for the right time change is a risky business plan.
Moreover, for those enterprises seeking transformation, they need to look at the full ecosystem that a business operates in to effectively transform, says Rouse. Business ecosystems are co-creating high-value services, expanding transformation across supply chains, says Rouse. This is an important nee dimension, he added.
Using analytics better to support evidence-based decision making is transformative and should be a priority, says Rouse. And architecture-oriented thinking can be transformative in itself, he said.
Cyber security threatsOn the topic of cyber security, plenary speaker 
Joseph Menn, cyber security correspondent for the Financial Times and author of 
Fatal System Error: The Hunt for the New Crime Lords Who are Bringing Down the Internet, made it clear that business as usual won't do.
Joe has covered security since 1999 for both the Financial Times and then before that, for the 
Los Angeles Times. 
Fatal System Error is his third book, he also wrote 
All the Rave: The Rise and Fall of Shawn Fanning's Napster. I also 
recently interviewed him.
"It's in no one's interest to tell us how bad it really is" when it comes to cyber crime and security, said Menn. And the 
Stuxnet affair is huge as a harbinger of things to come, he said.
As a result, more taxpayer money will be needed for effective government-level defenses against cyber attacks, he suggested. But government intervention won't do the job alone. Increasingly, corporations will need to play more than just defense on attacks, many of which come from Russia and China and from groups that blend state and criminal interests.
Counter attacks may be a strong defense when it comes to cyber risks, and US government may "turn blind eye", says Menn. We may even see cyber crime bounty hunters that corporations hire on the QT to go after those that attack them, he said.
Meanwhile, IT groups and enterprise architects can play a bigger role. Knowing what you have helps you know when something has been taken, so improve tracking of assets, Menn told them.  He also suggusted that companies keep their most critical data offline, and protect their intellectual property by burying it in and among fake data.
Allen Brown, President and CEO of The Open Group, said that more than 400 corporations are now members of The Open Group, showing strong growth over past 12 years since its founding. 
TOGAF 9 certification rates growing rapidly worldwide, he said.
FACE standardIn other news from The Open Group on Monday,  
The Future Airborne Capability Environment (FACE) Consortium, announced the official release of the 
FACE Technical Standard,  which provides guidelines for creating a common operating environment  to support applications across multiple Department of Defense avionics  systems. See 
my interview on FACE as it was just getting under way.
The  standard is designed to enhance the U.S. military aviation community’s  ability to address issues of limited software reuse and accelerate and  enhance warfighter capabilities, as well as enabling the community to  take advantage of new technologies more rapidly and affordably.
It  is our hope this standard will accelerate the open and secure   development of products within the Department of Defense’s Airborne   community by enabling industry-government collaboration.
The  FACE technical standard will enable developers to create and deploy a  wide catalog of applications for use across the spectrum of military  aviation systems through a common operating environment. Product  development efforts by industry and procurements by government customer  organizations are already underway based on the FACE standard.
“The  introduction of the FACE Technical Standard is an important milestone  in extending interoperability among the armed forces and creating a  common platform for avionics that enables systems to work together  across each of the branches of the U.S. military,” said Brown.
And on Tuesday, The Open Group 
announced the arrival of ArchiMate 2.0, the latest version of the organization's open and independent modeling language for enterprise architecture. This version is more tightly aligned to TOGAF, so enterprise architects using the language can improve the way key business and IT stakeholders collaborate and adapt to change.
ArchiMate 2.0 improves collaboration through clearer understanding across multiple functions, including business executives, enterprise architects, systems analysts, software engineers, business process consultants and infrastructure engineers, according to the release. The new standard enables the creation of fully integrated models of an organization's Enterprise Architecture, the motivation behind it, and the programs, projects and migration paths to implement it.
"By combining TOGAF and ArchiMate, TOGAF becomes more easy to apply in any organization," said Harmen van den Berg, partner and co-founder at 
BiZZdesign. "Having a reference model makes them both easier to apply in any industry or vertical."
He added: "Architects like to make models, and this now helps them to use those models to create change in the organization, for something that means more to the business."
Making the EA function a chief weapon of enterprise transformation in a time of roiling change and complexity, that's the main message from the conference. No time to wait.
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