The book, the 2nd in the Enterprise Architecture Matters Blog series, reviews the state of the Enterprise which, due to its organic growth, has become unnecessarily complex. A consequence is that over 70% of the Enterprise IT Transformations fail today. The causes are analysed through the eyes of analysts and cures are debated and suggested in the book. Enterprise Architecture (EA) is proposed as a a tool to manage and reduce the today's enterprise complexity and technology debt.
Then Gartner's Enterprise Architecture hypecycle is debated, as is their "Smarter with Gartner" approach.Under the assault of the Digital, the Value Chain of IT itself changes though from the legacy Design-Build-Run (DBR) to the Broker-Integrate-Orchestrate (BIO) in KPMG's view. The novel Model-Integrate-Assure (MIA) Value Chain is predicted though in the book because one has to model the Enterprise Architecture before even engaging in change an Enterprise Transformation today. These three mode of IT operation (DBR, BIO and MIA)would co-exist for a long while though. The new and changing roles of CIO, Digital Officer are the object of further discussion.
MIT Sloan's takes on Digital Maturity and Decoupling and McKinsey's view on the Digital Transformation and their Two Speed IT concept are further discussed.The enterprise is today in search of flatter kinds of organisation in order to increase its output and employee motivation. The Tragedy of Commons, Holacracy organisation paradigms are discussed in this context. The serviced based enterprise approach, enabled and aligned to the Enterprise Architecture, is proposed though in the book to address the enterprise problems of today. Google's thoughts on what a good manager and an effective team are discussed at this stage.
The aim of the book though is to discuss the enterprise Digital Transformation and its failures. UK's Government Digital Initiative is discussed at large.