Business Architecture
Business architecture is explicitly representing an organization’s desired state and as-is state, through a set of independent, non-redundant artifacts, defining how these artifacts relate with each other and developing a set of prioritized, aligned capabilities needed to meet the organization’s goals, communicating this understanding to stakeholders, and advancing the organization from its as-is state to its desired state.
Business architecture helps in laying out a clear framework of a company’s structure, personnel, technology, and business.
Business architecture thus provides graphic detail of an organization’s working and helps in planning and improving for optimizing business.
It provides a comprehensive view of an enterprise's policies, principles, services and solutions, standards, and guidelines.
It promotes and aligns IT initiatives throughout the enterprise.
Elements of Business Architecture
Main core elements of business architecture include:
Information – the vocabulary it uses to communicate. Asks the question “What”?
Capability – what a business does. Ask the questions “What”?
Organisation – the structure of the business. Asks the questions “Who and Where”?
Value Stream – how it delivers value to stakeholders. Asks the question “How”?
Principles of Business Architecture
What are the principles of business architecture? Business architecture follows certain fundamental business architectural principles:
The scope of business architecture is the entire enterprise. It is not a single project, initiative, process, or piece of information.
Business architecture separates concerns within its context. It specifically separates what the business does from:
The information the business uses.
How the business is performed.
Who does it and where in the enterprise it is done.
When it is done.
Why it is done, an.
How well it is done.