An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA
This study identifies the perceived benefits of Enterprise Architecture (EA) among business stakeholders who are aware of EA but are not specialists in the field of ICT, and proposes a clearly differentiated and comprehensive cluster of stakeholder groups based on these perceptions. It provides an u...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
AOSIS
2013-06-01
|
Series: | South African Journal of Business Management |
Online Access: | https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/155 |
id |
doaj-e13f9e9ccfd34e6399567ef7b8cc415e |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-e13f9e9ccfd34e6399567ef7b8cc415e2021-02-02T02:08:13ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Business Management2078-55852078-59762013-06-01442455610.4102/sajbm.v44i2.155144An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SAS. M. Lehong0E. Dube1G. Angelopoulos2School of Business LeadershipCouncil for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) Modelling and Digital ScienceCENTRUM Católica, Pontificia Universidad Católica de; Perú, Calle Alomia RobleThis study identifies the perceived benefits of Enterprise Architecture (EA) among business stakeholders who are aware of EA but are not specialists in the field of ICT, and proposes a clearly differentiated and comprehensive cluster of stakeholder groups based on these perceptions. It provides an understanding of the benefits of EA from the perspective of business beneficiaries, not the perspective of its practitioners. The study was conducted using Q-methodology, which was developed specifically to uncover subjective perceptions and preferences. Q-methodology correlates people in respect of their perception of a sample of tests, and is particularly useful in bridging the sharp dichotomy between qualitative and quantitative methodologies. The research identifies and describes 9 EA stakeholder types: Transformational Task-Driven Strategist, Universal Risk-Tolerant Pragmatist, Evolutionary Reuse Overseer, Technology Leverager, Simplicity Valuer, IT Commoditiser, Operational Stability Maintainer, Organisational Change Manager, and Siloed Product Manager. The study demonstrates an increasing understanding of EA benefits, and points to strategies that may be deployed when engaging each stakeholder class.https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/155 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
S. M. Lehong E. Dube G. Angelopoulos |
spellingShingle |
S. M. Lehong E. Dube G. Angelopoulos An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA South African Journal of Business Management |
author_facet |
S. M. Lehong E. Dube G. Angelopoulos |
author_sort |
S. M. Lehong |
title |
An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA |
title_short |
An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA |
title_full |
An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA |
title_fullStr |
An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA |
title_full_unstemmed |
An investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: The case of Telkom SA |
title_sort |
investigation into the perceptions of business stakeholders on the benefits of enterprise architecture: the case of telkom sa |
publisher |
AOSIS |
series |
South African Journal of Business Management |
issn |
2078-5585 2078-5976 |
publishDate |
2013-06-01 |
description |
This study identifies the perceived benefits of Enterprise Architecture (EA) among business stakeholders who are aware of EA but are not specialists in the field of ICT, and proposes a clearly differentiated and comprehensive cluster of stakeholder groups based on these perceptions. It provides an understanding of the benefits of EA from the perspective of business beneficiaries, not the perspective of its practitioners.
The study was conducted using Q-methodology, which was developed specifically to uncover subjective perceptions and preferences. Q-methodology correlates people in respect of their perception of a sample of tests, and is particularly useful in bridging the sharp dichotomy between qualitative and quantitative methodologies.
The research identifies and describes 9 EA stakeholder types: Transformational Task-Driven Strategist, Universal Risk-Tolerant Pragmatist, Evolutionary Reuse Overseer, Technology Leverager, Simplicity Valuer, IT Commoditiser, Operational Stability Maintainer, Organisational Change Manager, and Siloed Product Manager. The study demonstrates an increasing understanding of EA benefits, and points to strategies that may be deployed when engaging each stakeholder class. |
url |
https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/155 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT smlehong aninvestigationintotheperceptionsofbusinessstakeholdersonthebenefitsofenterprisearchitecturethecaseoftelkomsa AT edube aninvestigationintotheperceptionsofbusinessstakeholdersonthebenefitsofenterprisearchitecturethecaseoftelkomsa AT gangelopoulos aninvestigationintotheperceptionsofbusinessstakeholdersonthebenefitsofenterprisearchitecturethecaseoftelkomsa AT smlehong investigationintotheperceptionsofbusinessstakeholdersonthebenefitsofenterprisearchitecturethecaseoftelkomsa AT edube investigationintotheperceptionsofbusinessstakeholdersonthebenefitsofenterprisearchitecturethecaseoftelkomsa AT gangelopoulos investigationintotheperceptionsofbusinessstakeholdersonthebenefitsofenterprisearchitecturethecaseoftelkomsa |
_version_ |
1724310382224343040 |