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EBI CoE – Innovation and Emerging Technology IBM Confidential © 2006 IBM Corporation
Enterprise Data and Information Architecture:Why is it important? What could be learned from IBM internal
information transformation journey?
Jamshid A. Vayghan, Ph.D.
Senior Technical Staff Member, Chief Enterprise Information ArchitectMaster Certified IT Architect: The Open Group
April 3, 2008
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 2
Before we get started
● Relevance to “Software Process Improvement”
● Doing the right things VS doing the things right
● IBM as a customer not a vendor
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 3
Topics
● Why is Enterprise Information Architecture important?– Business drivers – Enterprise Data and Information Challenges
● IBM’s internal information transformation journey– Business drivers– Enterprise Data Strategy– Enterprise Data and Information Architecture Program– Accomplishments & future steps
● Relevance IBM’s experience and lessons learned to Your Company– Assist you to define its target environment– Define practical steps that you can take now
● Questions
● Next step?
EBI CoE – Innovation and Emerging Technology IBM Confidential © 2006 IBM Corporation
Defining the Challenge
IBM Research
© 2007 IBM Corporation MBI-5
Information Quality is Critical to Business Integrity
Is a high value web customer
Yet… to the call center she is completely unknown
Poor customer serviceHigh cost of service due to “multi call resolution”
Inability to act on customer insight leads to missed sales opportunities
Jane Smith…
Name: Jane F. Smith
Address
Contact Center
Name:
Preferences:
“77% of 144 CIOs surveyed identified single view of customer asthe single most important benefit of MDM”
Inconsistent customer information can cause reduced customer satisfaction, decreased revenue, and hinder relationships
Address: 123 Main St
X-Sell / Up-Sell Items: 5432, 4355
Preferences:
Sales History: Product 1234, 5748, 6574
Customer Value: High
Name: Jane F. Smith
Data Warehouse
Address: 437 Easy St
Sales History: Product1234, 5748
Name: Jane Smith
Customer Value: High
Web Site
IBM Research
© 2007 IBM Corporation MBI-6
Information Quality is Critical to Business Integrity
Product SKU 11111Product short description: Outdoor gas grillFeatures: auto-shut off, rubber wheels, rotisserie, sound systemPrice: Regular $700Price: Sale $550 Expiration Sep. 30Warranty 1 yearReturn Policy 30 days
Name: Jane F. Smith
Inconsistent information across channels can cause inconsistent shopping experience and reduce customer satisfaction
Price: $700
X-Sell / Up-Sell Items:6400, 9345
Features: sound system, rotisserie
Return Policy: 30 days
Product: Gas Grill
Warranty: 1-year
Store
Product: Gas Grill
Price: $550 *Special*
Return Policy: 30 days
Warranty: 1-year
Features: sound system, rotisserie
Contact Center
Price: $550 *Special*
Product: Outdoor Grill
X-Sell / Up-Sell Items: 5432, 4355
Features: auto shut-off, rubber wheels, rotisserie
Return Policy: 30 days
Warranty: 1-year
Web Site
79% of Retailers and 61% of CPG manufacturers rank“item management” as their top priority
IBM Research
© 2007 IBM Corporation MBI-7
A Complementary View of the Enterprise
Core Data Entities
An view of the enterprise in terms of core data entities and associated interdependencies with processes and policies is critical to managing integrity
Processes
Product
attribute
attribute
Customer
attribute
attribute
Employee
attribute
attribute
Enterprise
Component Business Model
Service
attribute
attribute
Governing Policies
HIPAASOX
GAAP Privacy
Business Policies
Understanding the core data entities of the enterprise
Understanding the core data entities of the enterprise
Imperative Model Declarative Model
Customer Accounts
Product FulfillmentSales
Credit Administration
Product DeliveryStaff Administration
Document Management
Fulfillment Planning
Fulfillment Planning
Product Fulfillment
Contract Routing
General Ledger
Customer DialogMarketing Campaigns
Product Administration
EXECUTE
Credit Assessment
Product ManagementStaff Appraisals
Compliance Reconciliation
Sales Management
Relationship Management
Sector Management
Business Unity Tracking
CONTROL
Portfolio PlanningSales PlanningAccount
PlanningSector PlanningBusiness Administration
DIRECT
Financial Control and Accounting
Servicing and Sales
Relationship Management
New Business Development
Business Administration
Customer Accounts
Product FulfillmentSales
Credit Administration
Product DeliveryStaff Administration
Document Management
Fulfillment Planning
Fulfillment Planning
Product Fulfillment
Contract Routing
General Ledger
Customer DialogMarketing Campaigns
Product Administration
EXECUTE
Credit Assessment
Product ManagementStaff Appraisals
Compliance Reconciliation
Sales Management
Relationship Management
Sector Management
Business Unity Tracking
CONTROL
Portfolio PlanningSales PlanningAccount
PlanningSector PlanningBusiness Administration
DIRECT
Financial Control and Accounting
Servicing and Sales
Relationship Management
New Business Development
Business Administration
Understanding the business services of the enterprise
Understanding the business services of the enterprise
IBM Research
© 2007 IBM Corporation MBI-8
Managing Business Integrity
Having the right information and basis for doing things –Information Integrity
Information integrity ensures correct and consistent information with appropriate access controlNeeds information management that properly and completely represents core business entities
Doing things in the right way – Process IntegrityProcess integrity ensures actions follow intended paths and applicable policyNeeds regular and complete monitoring and management of appropriate metrics
A basis for defining “doing the right thing” – Policy IntegrityPolicies include business practices, government regulations, andethical policiesNeeds well-defined policies that can be translated to be measurable and actionable
Business integrity links fundamental issues of high-level business policy to practical, operational matters of processes, data and IT
Information Integrity
Process Integrity
Policy Integrity
IT Integrity
Business Integrity
Business integrity is:
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 9
Enterprise Information Architecture: Business Drivers
Increase agility, responsiveness and flexibility
Reduce and contain cost to rapidly create new business solutions
Simplify enterprise end-to-end integration to adopt new business
models
Legacy: Modernize and extend ROI
Efficiently integrate 3rd party productsImprove partner interoperability
Business DriversGlobally Distributed Operations, Shortage of Skilled Resources, Market Conditions, Competitive Threats,
Increasing and diverse Government Regulations, Merger and Acquisitions, Selling business
Business Integrity1. Policy Integrity: Doing the right thing2. Process Integrity: Doing things in the right way3. Information integrity: Having the right basis for doing things
Disconnect between Structured and Unstructured data
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 10
Business Integrity Management: Evolution
● Today information, processes and policies are typically inconsistent and incomplete
Process Integrity
Information Integrity
Processes
Master Information Management: a single semantic definition of core entities
Formal standards and process management solutions
Today
DataData
Business Integrity
Business Integrity
PolicyPolicy
ProcessProcess Core EntitiesCore
Entities
Emerging Future
● Emerging solutions address consistencies and management of policies, processes and core data entities independently
● An integrated and automated approach to policy, process and core data entity management will emerge to ensure business integrity is maintained at all levels of the enterprise
Policy IntegrityPoliciesFormal standards and policy
management solutions
?
Information
? ?
?Policies not consistently understood or followed
Incomplete view of process execution
Inconsistent information in multiple sources
EBI CoE – Innovation and Emerging Technology IBM Confidential © 2006 IBM Corporation
Defining the Challenge:
1. Lack of a holistic approach to enterprise information management which is essential to establishment of business integrity in an enterprise.
2. Much of research on software architecture excludes data as an important architectural element.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 12
The Elephant Metaphor of Reality
Observations of 6 blind men who touched an elephant:1. "Hey, the elephant is a pillar," said the first man who touched his leg. 2. "Oh, no! it is like a rope," said the second man who touched the tail. 3. "Oh, no! it is like a thick branch of a tree," said the third man who touched the trunk of the elephant. 4. "It is like a big hand fan" said the fourth man who touched the ear of the elephant. 5. "It is like a huge wall," said the fifth man who touched the belly of the elephant. 6. "It is like a solid pipe," Said the sixth man who touched the tusk of the elephant
Their observations were different because each one of them touched the different part of the elephant. So, actually the elephant has all those features but none of those features describe the elephant.
What does this story have to do with describing enterprise data challenges?
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 13
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 1
Information connects people to their work but there are Information connects people to their work but there are challengeschallenges
● Information overload – World has just hit the 161 billion gigabytes of data!– IDC found that the largest chunk of the 161 billion gigabytes of data the world created in 2006 is e-mail – IDC found that person-to-person communications alone accounted for six exabytes -- or six billion gigabytes -- of data
in 2006, and growth continues to be rapid.
● Fragmented user experiences– Understanding what the company and its employees are paying attention to and responding to are critical – Different brands, different portals, different businesses (looking for our attention)– Web is an everyday tool – not a marvel of innovation so we differentiate ourselves by providing both better content and
better solutions to users' problems
● Grass roots collaboration actually increase the amount of information (feeds, blogs, wikis)– Finding information is critical to understanding the current state and making decisions about the future– Worldwide blog growth: 01/2004 – less than 2 million blogs 01/2006 - 24 million blogs 0/2006 – 57 million blogs!– Social networking collaboration spaces (MySpace): May 2004 – 2 million January 2006 – 48 million
February 2007 – 160 million
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 14
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 2
● There are multiple web content management tools:– Each group has its own content management ideas and their own web sites:
– Tools from a variety of vendors– Home grown CM Tools– Hand Coded HTML Pages
– Mergers and acquisitions increasingly fragmented the content and introduced new CM systems
● Issues with multiple CM systems:– No content sharing– Difficulty with cross-branding– Inconsistent navigation and content– Many broken links– Overlap in spending; Associated cost of duplicate systems, including vendor products– Reduced operational efficiency– Redundant effort and content– Low customer satisfaction
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 15
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 3
● Tight coupling of applications to data sources (due to embedded data access code in application logic) results in inflexibility to evolve data model and to use new data sources with changing business needs
● Lack of data quality – Tied to a fixed data source that may not provide quality data anymore– Inconsistent use of data validation and cleansing rules across applications
● Lack of reuse of information processing code
● Explicit audit and control of access to data (Data Governance)
● Lack of ease-of-development of information processing tasks
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 16
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 4
● Lack of information standards– Different formats & structures across
different systems
● Data surprises in individual fields– Data misplaced in the database
● Information buried in free-form fields
● Data myopia– Lack of consistent identifiers inhibit a
single view–
● The redundancy nightmare– Duplicate records with a lack of
standards
Kate A. Roberts 416 Columbus Ave #2, Boston, Mass 02116
Catherine Roberts Four sixteen Columbus APT2, Boston, MA 02116
Mrs. K. Roberts 416 Columbus Suite #2, Suffolk County 02116
Name Tax ID Telephone
J Smith DBA Lime Cons. 228-02-1975 6173380300Williams & Co. C/O Bill 025-37-1888 415-392-20001st Natl Provident 34-2671434 3380321HP 15 State St. 508-466-1200 Orlando
WING ASSY DRILL 4 HOLE USE 5J868A HEXBOLT 1/4 INCH
WING ASSEMBY, USE 5J868-A HEX BOLT .25” - DRILL FOUR HOLES
USE 4 5J868A BOLTS (HEX .25) - DRILL HOLES FOR EA ON WING ASSEM
RUDER, TAP 6 WHOLES, SECURE W/KL2301 RIVETS (10 CM)
19-84-103 RS232 Cable 6' M-F CandS
CS-89641 6 ft. Cable Male-F, RS232 #87951
C&SUCH6 Male/Female 25 PIN 6 Foot Cable
90328574 IBM 187 N.Pk. Str. Salem NH 0145690328575 I.B.M. Inc. 187 N.Pk. St. Salem NH 0145690238495 Int. Bus. Machines 187 No. Park St Salem NH 0415690233479 International Bus. M. 187 Park Ave Salem NH 0415690233489 Inter-Nation Consults 15 Main Street Andover MA 0234190345672 I.B. Manufacturing Park Blvd. Bostno MA 04106
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 17
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 5
● Need to provide more accurate inventory availability information to their dealers in order to better optimize inventory.
● Required the integration of external market and parts information with internal order forecasts and shipments in their Supply Chain Management system.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 18
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 6
Order Processing Application
Customer Lookup - 1
Invoicing Application
Customer Lookup - 2
CRM Application
Customer Lookup - 3
Customer Lookup Service
How to replace redundant
services with a reusable and equivalent
functionality?
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 19
Enterprise Data Challenges: Observation 7
Without managed data standards and a corporate data dictionary..
- Each application defines their own data names, structures, relationships, …
- The meaning of the data will vary.. based on the developer’s definition..
- From a messaging perspective, each interfacing application will need to go through a process of understanding the data definitions for the interfacing program, and then develop a “mapping program” to translate to and from the interfacing application.
- There can be up to n*(n-1) message interfaces between n applications.
- Making changes are difficult, expensive, and might have unpredictable side effects.
A
B
C
D H
G
F
E A E
F
G
H
B
C
D
N*(N-1)Message Interfaces 2*N
Message Interfaces
EBI CoE – Innovation and Emerging Technology IBM Confidential © 2006 IBM Corporation
IBM’s Internal Information Transformation Journey
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 21
IBM Internal transformation simplified infrastructure and governance
128128CIOsCIOs
16,00016,000ApplicationsApplications
155155Host Data CentersHost Data Centers
8080Web Hosting CentersWeb Hosting Centers
3131NetworkNetwork
1992
11
4,190
6
76
1
2005
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 22
Business and Technical Drivers for IBM Internal Information transformation Journey
● For some environments, data and information architecture were not explicitly defined. When existed, it was a reflection of organizational structure.
● Lack of well defined trustedtrusted data sources.
● Missing clarity on ownershipownership of information.
● Poor qualityquality of information.
● InconsistentInconsistent information across applications.
● Existing tower solutions that result in end-to-end solutions which are complex, costlycomplex, costly and redundant. redundant. Lack of endend--toto--endend visibility of information.
● ExcessiveExcessive reporting solutions.
● Poor governancegovernance of information.
● Difficult to reuse and share information assets.
● Too many data warehouses and data marts.
● Most of IT budget spent on operations not transformation.
● Shortage of critical data and information skills.
● Difficulty to make changes in business operations to support emerging business models.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 23
Enterprise Architecture: Alignment of business strategy with IT strategy to realize business integrity
Busi
ness
Arc
hit
ect
ure
Information
Architecture
TechnicalArchitectureS
olu
tion
Arch
itectu
reE
BusinessStrategy
ExternalForces
nterpris
e
Architect
er
u
InternalForces
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 24
Governance
Governance
Data Domains, Directories
Data Domains, Directories
Enterprise Business Information Center of Excellence…EVOLUTION
2004: Integrated Information Management
2003: ConsolidatedInformation Domains Starts
2002: Individual IT Domains Everywhere
2005 – PresentCOE
2005 – PresentCOE
Matured in Enterprise Integration, Enterprise Data Architecture, Enterprise Information Management and GovernanceMatured in Enterprise Integration, Enterprise Data Architecture, Enterprise Information Management and Governance
2005: Enterprise Data Strategy Published & Approved by all LOBS
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 25
EBI COE evolution tied to IBM’s Information On Demand strategyInnovative Use of Information Drives New Business Value
BusinessValue
Maturity ofInformation Use
Information as a Competitive Differentiator
Information to Enable
Innovation
Information as a Strategic Asset
Information On Demand
Information to Manage the Business
Data to Run the Business
Operations &Reporting
“Focus on DataAnd Reporting”
“Basic Information Interaction”
“Information In Business Context”
“Information-Enabled Business Innovation”
“Adaptive Business
Performance”
COECOECOE
Governance
Technology
Metrics
Governance
Technology
Metrics
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 26
If your enterprise looks like this …
● Business: Governance and Process– Integrated governance program– Integrated business integrity
● Organization: People and Culture– Data and information professionals– Eliminate silo mentality
● Information Technology– Enterprise Information Management &
Architecture– Unification of structured & unstructured data– Information integration– Information discovery– Integrated Enterprise Metadata Management
You need an enterprise information strategy to drive definition and realization of a solution that breaks information silos and opens up enterprise data for reuse while maintaining business integrity. Elements of that solution are:
Human-Mediate
d Service
Employees PartnersCustomers
SelfService B2B
We learned that …
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 27
We also learned that enterprise information management is a competency!● Governance is key
– Top down and bottom up– Enterprise integrated governance– Open standards
● End-to-end data/information management is important in large enterprise projects– Lacking in complex enterprise projects– Tight Coupling between data, application, process– Importance of Explicit Enterprise Metadata
● Invest in critical data skills– Data Architects, Data Analysts– Operational Competencies– Process Expertise
● Integrate structured and unstructured data– XML and Hybrid (XML & Relational) databases are key enabling technologies.
● Information as a service
● Invest in critical data skills
● Three myths of Information quality1. Data quality is an IT issue2. We cleaned the data last year, so it is good this year3. Data quality means the same thing to everyone
● Try Enterprise Information Mash-ups “Data is Inside”– Use data services to aggregate and integrate data to create data consumables for Web 2.0 applications.
● We are not alone!– Customers have the same challenges!
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 28
We have accomplished a lot, but journey continues! Here are examples of accomplishments:
● Enterprise Data Strategy approved by all LOBs.
● Enterprise Data Architecture Program in operation.– Project reviews have prevented many redundant initiatives and helped compliance with business and technical data standards.– Current landscape is captured. Information assets are profiled.– Data Warehousing target architecture defined.– Trusted data services and associated processes are defined and being implemented.– Roadmap for critical areas have being defined and implemented. – Enterprise integration messaging specification based on Open Application group being implemented for B2B and A2A within IBM.– Enterprise vocabulary defined.– SAP systems are being consolidated.
● Significant improvements in information quality.
● Information discovery capabilities being deployed.– Much easier to find what you need.– Subscribe to information that you need.
● Significant accomplishments in consolidation content repositories.
● Data governance– Data stewardship program is implemented.– Data stewards for critical subject areas identified.– Enterprise owners for product, customer and worker data named.– Business data standards are defined by data stewards. They are stored in an enterprise repository.
● Consolidation of content management tools in progress.
● Enterprise information mash-ups has started to open up the enterprise data for reuse.
● Many legacy systems were sunset.
● Enterprise wide reporting system for sales opportunities deployed to all level of management.
● Enterprise analytic applications being developed and deployed.
● Cost reductions in operation, maintenance, and development of information assets.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 29
Enterprise Information Management in IBM: Enterprise Business Information Center of Excellence
(EBI CoE)
EBI CoE – Innovation and Emerging Technology IBM Confidential © 2006 IBM Corporation
Our lessons learned, Your action plan!
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 31
Some Strategic Recommendations
1. Define an enterprise data strategy to enable business integrity, unification of structured and unstructured data, plus data archiving.
2. Define an enterprise information maturity model to measure the progress.
3. Complete your enterprise information architecture program. TOGAF and Zachman frameworks do not explicitly define all necessary steps.
4. Define and deploy a comprehensive information discovery program.
5. Define and implement your integrated data governance program through a data stewardship program.
6. Create a common framework for information delivery for analytic applications.
7. Develop a strategy to extend your existing data warehouses instead of creating new ones.
8. In addition to the creation of the enterprise information architecture, the enterprise information architecture team could also be responsible for implementation of the architecture.
9. Use SOA and Event driven architecture principles to extend your enterprise information architecture. Deploy trusted data services that could aggregate and integrate information without creating new copies of the data.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 32
BTOP
Data Governance in Practice: IM Management System
Project Project Project Project Project
BTMS
Concept Plan Qualify
BusinessPlanning
InitiativeDefinition
OperationsMgmt
Architecture Council Review process
Executive Steering Committee (IPMT)
Information Mgmt Review
App
rova
l Pro
cess
Project Lifecycle
IM Review Purpose1.Direction and standards for the IM Disciplines 2.Ensure consistent application of IM disciplines in projects3.Enable integration & reuse of Architecture, Metadata and the data itself
Information
Architecture
Data Requ.
& Migration
Information
Quality
Meta Data
Mgmt
Business
Data Stnd
Data
Stewardship
Security &Privacy
Result:Go, Contingent Go, Redirect, No Go
Application Architecture
Bus Process Review
Readiness Reviews
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 33
Hybrid Architecture Style: Loose Coupling, Agility, Reuse
● SOA– Provide an effective foundation to integrate
application, process, and data by creating loosely coupled components.
– Enable delivery of information as a service by providing the following:
– One to one communication.– Consumer-based triggers.– Synchronous operations.– Standard specification for information
exchange.
● Enterprise Information Architecture (EIA)– Knowing where to find trusted sources of information so
trusted data services can be established.– Metadata to consolidate explicit data about location, structure,
context and usage of data. This data would be essential to creation of metadata services that are needed to establish discoverable trusted data services.
– Data standards to establish a forum for resolving differences in the meaning of data.
– Defining and managing a proactive data quality program.– Integrate and federate data from separate data sources to
create a common view of data when needed.– Establish a mechanism for transforming data into meaningful
business information.– Establish an integrated governance program for data and SOA.
● Event Driven Architecture– Provide event-based triggers.– Decouple interactions between components.– Many to Many communication (e.g.,
Publication/Subscription).– Asynchronous operations.– Sense and response capability.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 34
Some Tactical Recommendations that Could be Taken Now:
● Improve Agility: – Try enterprise information mash-ups for some key business challenges
– Develop REST Web services to open up data. Eliminate unnecessary access control.– Use Web 2.0 technologies including Google Map to rapidly develop solutions.
● Accelerate Information Sharing– Implement social networking (e.g. Wiki, Blogging).– Enable information discovery – Social tagging– Information aggregation
● Prevent creation of new redundant information assets when possible– Define a process to review the rational for creation of new copies of existing data and creation
of new data warehouses– Use the technology to avoid creation of redundant assets– Remember that duplicate copies of the same asset can cause security and quality challenges
while increasing operational costs.
● Enable Data Sharing:– Open up critical enterprise data for reuse by creating REST web services to access the data– Identify a few critical business problems that could benefit from using REST web services to
create data services.
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 35
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 36
10. Create a “sense of urgency” that the company can rally around
9. Create a revisionist history – you’ll be surprised at how far you’ve come
8. While you’re creating, define short-term projectswith near-term results
7. Review business processes to see if changes are needed before you deploy technology
6. Technology enables and hastens transformation5. Set your milestones and metrics with an end-to-end lifecycle view
4. Sunset legacy systems/applications/tools as new ones are deployed
3. Can NOT over-emphasize the importance of culture and fostering innovation
2. Transform constantly or risk extinction – there is no other option
1. Always, always, always listen to your customers and make sure you have
the right perspective
Top 10 lessons learned
EBI CoE | Innovation and Emerging Technology © 2006 IBM Corporation IBM Confidential Page 37
Questions?Comments?Next Step?
Thank you!
Jamshid A. Vayghan, Ph.D.