A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made

This dissertation presents the findings of a descriptive study in enterprise architecture decision-making processes. Decisions regarding enterprise systems architecture are among the most complex decisions in the IS domain. Enterprise architecture evaluations and recommendations such as choice of an...

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Main Author: Tanigawa, Utako
Published: NSUWorks 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/874
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spelling ndltd-nova.edu-oai-nsuworks.nova.edu-gscis_etd-18732016-04-25T19:42:03Z A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made Tanigawa, Utako This dissertation presents the findings of a descriptive study in enterprise architecture decision-making processes. Decisions regarding enterprise systems architecture are among the most complex decisions in the IS domain. Enterprise architecture evaluations and recommendations such as choice of an enterprise system and buy-versus-build applications are strategic decisions in the sense that they influence and constrain corporate decisions. Formal and informal methodologies are discussed in this dissertation regarding how enterprise architecture decisions ought to be made in an abstract, ideal situation (i.e., normatively) and in describing best practices (i.e., prescriptively). How enterprise architecture decisions are made in practice, however, has not been rigorously studied (i.e., descriptively). The first purpose of this research is to examine the processes by which enterprise architects make decisions in practice. Drawing on concepts from complex decision-making (e.g., heuristics, scripts, schema, etc.) and sociology (e.g., mimetic isomorphism), the aim of this paper is to understand architectural decision-making in practice from the descriptive view. A second purpose of this research is to provide at least the beginnings of a new theory for enterprise architecture decision-making processes. Using a grounded theory approach, the study uses systematically collected field data to clarify and refine concepts of architecture decision processes and how organizational issues influence them. This descriptive and empirical study was used to propose a new theory for conceptualizing the organizational environmental issues on enterprise architecture. The paper thus has important implications for research and practice. 2004-01-01T08:00:00Z text http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/874 CEC Theses and Dissertations NSUWorks Computer Sciences
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Computer Sciences
spellingShingle Computer Sciences
Tanigawa, Utako
A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made
description This dissertation presents the findings of a descriptive study in enterprise architecture decision-making processes. Decisions regarding enterprise systems architecture are among the most complex decisions in the IS domain. Enterprise architecture evaluations and recommendations such as choice of an enterprise system and buy-versus-build applications are strategic decisions in the sense that they influence and constrain corporate decisions. Formal and informal methodologies are discussed in this dissertation regarding how enterprise architecture decisions ought to be made in an abstract, ideal situation (i.e., normatively) and in describing best practices (i.e., prescriptively). How enterprise architecture decisions are made in practice, however, has not been rigorously studied (i.e., descriptively). The first purpose of this research is to examine the processes by which enterprise architects make decisions in practice. Drawing on concepts from complex decision-making (e.g., heuristics, scripts, schema, etc.) and sociology (e.g., mimetic isomorphism), the aim of this paper is to understand architectural decision-making in practice from the descriptive view. A second purpose of this research is to provide at least the beginnings of a new theory for enterprise architecture decision-making processes. Using a grounded theory approach, the study uses systematically collected field data to clarify and refine concepts of architecture decision processes and how organizational issues influence them. This descriptive and empirical study was used to propose a new theory for conceptualizing the organizational environmental issues on enterprise architecture. The paper thus has important implications for research and practice.
author Tanigawa, Utako
author_facet Tanigawa, Utako
author_sort Tanigawa, Utako
title A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made
title_short A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made
title_full A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made
title_fullStr A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made
title_full_unstemmed A Study of the Processes by Which Enterprise Architecture Decisions are Made
title_sort study of the processes by which enterprise architecture decisions are made
publisher NSUWorks
publishDate 2004
url http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/874
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AT tanigawautako studyoftheprocessesbywhichenterprisearchitecturedecisionsaremade
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