Architecture and Engineering
It seems that I am having to take side journeys whilst trying to get back to the issue of complexity. It seems necessary, however, for me to assert a position regarding the linkage between architecture and engineering in the context of the enterprise.
Within the Enterprise Architecture community and the wider information systems architectural community, there seems to be a developing trend to move away from the term Enterprise Architecture and towards Enterprise Engineering. I have considerd this move and actually started moving towards it in the language of my client work. However, a recent experience has reasserted for me the view that architecture is the language we seek at the interface between the business, its aspirations, and the information systems which support the achievement of those aspirations.
Recently I attended a traditional latin mass at a Cathedral in Melbourne with all its attendant mystery and ritual. I realised as I sat there transfixed by the experience, that here was a process being applied to the use of a technology (and great Cathedrals are certainly technological achievements) that was a perfect expression of the aspirations of a community.
In like manner, the discipline of Enterprise Architecture was intended to express the vision of the enterprise in a means that would allow it to be translated into the relevant technologies to deliver that vision or aspiration.
One of the conclusions I have drawn is that the push to move to the use of the term enterprise engineering instead of enterprise architecture is flawed. The discipline of EA was intended to be the means for expressing the vision of the enterprise. As you will see my thinking has evolved to encapsulate techno-social systems. Such systems have a deep impact on the evolution of human communities. And once you put the pieces together it becomes obvious that what we are actually talking about is the evolution of the human enterprise. Ever since those earliest ancestors of homo sapien sapien picked up rock and bone and turned them into tools, the ascent of man has been the story of human evolution through the application of process to the use of tools to either shape or respond to the environment. The very use of those tools has even shaped the evolution of our own bodies - the opposable thumb being a great example.
The discipline of architecture in the built environment is one of expressing the aspirations of a community, group or family in the shape of a built environment. Engineering is about taking the architectural vision and translating it into pipes and bricks and cement and all of the other materials that make up a built environment. Therefore, to try and reframe EA as an engineering discipline is to remove the business vision from the organisation. We are then back to the IT centric view which expresses the solution in terms of databases and transactions and communication systems. Engineering at the solution layer is right. The concept of a solution architect has never been about anything more than working out how to put the pieces together.
It is fundamentally wrong to try and reframe EA though. If we remove the architecture from the concept then where does the enterprise go to, to express the linkage between the enterprise goals and aspirations and the processes and technologies used to deliver that vision. To further try and reframe it because the IT industry has done a poor job of providing EA services is, again, a flawed approach.
EA expresses the concept of Aristotle's "holon" in it's holistic intent. With Husserl I believe that the disciplines of information systems are the source for the philosophy of our time. For that philosophy to be relevant it must, as expressed by Hegel, represent "it's very age comprehended in thought". EA is the right frame of reference for expressing the aspirations of the organisation. Enterprise engineering does not in my humble opinion.
The Practice of Enterprise Architecture
The practice of Enterprise Architecture is rapidly becoming established in the Corporate environmnent as a basis for linking the development of systems and capabilities to business outcomes. However EA as a field is still relatively new and the field is developing rapidly as Enterprise Architects gain experience in the application of the discipline to resolve business problems and identify new capability requirements. EcoThought is contributing to the development of that body of knowledge in corporate environments.
However, whilst the field of Enterprise Architecture is comparatively new, it has it's roots in the basis of the Human Enterprise itself. This linkage will be explored in a later post. This blog explores the Enterprise Architecture model itself.
The Role of the Enterprise Architect
I recently sat in a meeting where a group of Information System architects were discussing their experiences with developing Enterprise Level architectures. During the discussion and in the period following, I have contemplated the travesty that the information technology industry has made of the concept of an Architect. During the discussion there were questions about catalogues of terms, management of repositories etc.
The intent of this brief discussion is to suggest that a focus on these things, the province of the engineer, suggests a total lack of understanding regarding what it means to be an architect.
Human Philosophy and Architectural Design
I was recently asked by an Architect what I thought I was doing as an IT geek looking at issues of building design. I tried to relate my thinking around the relationship between human behaviour, human performance, human values and the design of work and living spaces. He indicated that he felt that these things were not relevant to the design of modern office buildings. This discussion led me to ponder my own views on this question.
Several years ago I was lucky enough to go the Balkans and Wien (Vienna, Austria) for work. As I always do, I spent a great deal of time understanding the societies in which I was working. One of the questions that was high in my mind at that time was the relationship between the Medieval Christian church and the people. I was lucky enough to have several experiences that helped me understand this.
Of Accountants, Project Managers and Long Term Thinking
During the past week I was asked to sit in a value management workshop for the design of a new facility for emergency management. While sitting in the workshop I was struck by the short term viewpoints which seem to dominate our thinking as a society. As discussed elsewhere in this website, the design of new working environments needs to incorporate human considerations in its design. There is a fine balance between form and function and the need to provide work environments in which humans can act and work effectively for sustained periods of time. This is no more evident than in the context of emergency management centres where high information workloads are combined with long hours and high impact decision to create difficult working environments.
During the workshop I was struck, however, by the dominance of short term thinking which seems to dominate our present modes of thinking.

