Gaining Competitive Advantage from Enterprise Architecture

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Welcome, everyone, to the executive seminar at Weatherhead School of Management on enabling IT value through enterprise architecture. I think we're going to have a great seminar today. We have some really distinguished speakers and panelist today. And I want to talk a little bit about how this seminar came out to be, the background behind it. I'm an enterprise architect at Westbuilt Insurance. And I suspect as most enterprise architects, I did not start off as one, I developed into the role. [COUGH] And as I was developing into the role, I read up a lot on enterprise architecture. [COUGH] And there were glowing remarks about it being the nexus of business and IT, the enabler of corporate strategies and all kinds of wonderful things. And I thought to myself, this is great [COUGH]. I'm going to be in a profession that is going to be really helping out companies realize their corporate strategies [COUGH]. And then came across Jeannie Ross's book, Enterprise Architectural strategy. And there are numerous examples in this book of companies that have successfully leveraged enterprise architecture to enable their corporate strategies. Well worth a read. However, there was an outset of messages I also heard. Companies that were having real struggles [COUGH] realizing the value from their enterprise architecture teams. And some of the companies that I worked for sadly were going through that struggle. [COUGH] I'd go to Gartner and Forrester conferences on enterprise architecture, and constantly the message will be coming through. Companies that have EA teams are struggling to get value out of EA. The Carter Group recently had a survey published, [COUGH] where they showed that, they had interviewed a number of companies, or surveyed a number of companies on the value that they got out of enterprise architecture. And only 5%, amazingly 5%, said that they felt that they were getting real value out of enterprise architecture. So, of course it begs the question, why the other 95% have an architecture group at all. [COUGH] But it creates a puzzle because here is this function that is supposed to be the nexus of business and IT, and the enabler of corporate strategies and all of these things. And yet, most companies are struggling to actually realize value out of this function. And my colleagues and I talked about it, and we said, how about we have a seminar to discuss this topic. In fact, let's invite Dr. Ross here to talk about the companies that she has worked with that have actually realized value. And then a number of other speakers who have started some environments in which it has worked, some environments in which they are still struggling. And then have a panel discussion on the challenges of leveraging enterprise architecture to gain value. And I'm sure we won't answer all the questions today, but at least we can get a discussion going. So, that was the basis for the seminar. I want to thank Case Western Reserve University for hosting this event, and for the great spread and facilities they have put together for this. And the event is sponsored today, including your free lunches and everything by a number of companies. I want to particularly acknowledge them for enabling this conversation. There's IBM, Highland Software, Progressive Insurance, Wipro and a company that I work for, Westfield Insurance. So, let's give a big hand to our event sponsors. >> [APPLAUSE] >> The organizers, Case Western Reserve University, Dr. Kalle Lyytinen, did a tremendous amount of work getting this seminar off the ground. And extended an invitation to Dr. Ross to come and speak here. So we're much obliged. There is the Northeast Ohio Society for Information Management. I'm not sure if Laura Rusick is here. She reached out to a number of people. And I think we have as big a list as we have because of her efforts. And then the Northeast Ohio IT and Enterprise architecture group. Nour Laaroubi, my colleague from Westfield Insurance. Myself and Bruce. Could Nour and Bruce just stand up please. Thank you. And since I'm with New IT, I'm going to plug it a little bit. It's a group that we started out to promote IT and enterprise architecture here in Northeast Ohio. And I would suggest that you talk to Bruce and Nour about joining this organization if you have an interest in enterprise architecture and promoting it, and having a conversation about it. They will be available during the breaks. We got some excellent support from Case Western Reserve University. Some folks I want to recognize. Stacey Manns, who did all the event coordination, the binders and everything you see was coordinated by her and the room. Laura Watt who was responsible for the room and the audiovisual. Veeresh Thummadi and James Gaskin who were manning the registration desk when you came in. And Andy Fabian who is doing the event video. And I've also been told to recognize Dan who was a director of audiovisual who setup all the heavy equipment that you seen in the room. So, a round of applause for them as well, please. >> [APPLAUSE] >> Next we are going to hear from Fred Collopy who is the Senior Associate Dean for the Business School. >> I just wanna welcome you on behalf of the faculty and the staff, the students who have given up their lounge to Weatherhead School. And this kind of moment is really our school at its best in that when ideas that have been developed, thought about, wrestled with in often academic environments and contexts. Have an impact on value in the world and bring together large groups of people who have to make the world work to talk and interact and engage around those. We think we're at our best and we're honored and pleased that you're here and that you want to engage in this conversation. We really appreciate Kalle as a long time colleague on this faculty, who makes things happen. We appreciate Jeanne Ross for making the trip here and for her ongoing friendship with our department. And without any further adieu, I give you over to her. Thank you for being here, Jeanne. >> Thank you. >> [APPLAUSE] >> Well, good afternoon. I have to tell you I am really, really delighted to be here, my idea of a dream afternoon is being in a room full of people who wanna talk about Enterprise Architecture. And I have to tell you, that would surprise my mother I don't I don't think there was any time in my childhood that there was any indication this was going to be my fate but it's really a thrill to be here. And I never really, I thought it was interesting that Benku kinda found the enterprise architecture and said, wow, look what I have kind of stumbled into. I had the very same experience when I started studying enterprise architecture. It was never my intention to study enterprise architecture. In fact, I had studied it for five years before I gave it a name. And thought I had come up with such a great name only to find out that it had been a name that had been around for a long time. Zachman and others had created the concept probably ten years earlier than I had. But it was a great synergistic moment because we were coming at things from very different angles and getting kinda to the same place, different perspectives on the same concept. And I do think that enterprise architecture now, is just out of place in history where we got to get it. It's time, and I agree, Banku that we aren't there yet. I didn't realize it was as bad as only 5% of companies thought they were getting value from it. I thought it was ten. But- >> [LAUGH] >> So here we are, and I think the phenomenon is so interesting because we in so many ways accept that we are in a digital economy. We talk about it all the time. We take it for granted, and yet companies as a whole have not really adjusted. Because before the digital economy, people just got things done. If something went wrong, no problem somebody would figure it out, they'd fix it. In a digital economy, that doesn't work. In a digital economy everything is moving digitally, so if we haven't architected our systems and processes and information properly, something goes wrong, and it's just playing wrong, it's not gonna work. So it's time for companies to get serious about this. This is not something we can think about whether we want to get value from it. This is something we have to get right. I call this part competitive advantage, you might say, for survival. And this is our great challenge. Those of us in the room today, our next great challenge is making sure everybody gets this. Because I would say in general, people don't. Now, I know, I think it was Bruce last night said that you had worked at bringing non-IT people here, but that it was hard to generate that kind of interest. Can I just see whether they had any success at all, any non-IT people in the room? Thank you for coming, we have three. Okay, [LAUGH] percentage is small, but, Bruce, I think you can pat yourself on the back, you had some success. And so here is the thing, next year we want that percent up. I think that's the simple mandate here is that somehow we have to make clear that as long as enterprise architecture exists in IT, it's not going anywhere. This is our problem. IT people get it and they've treasured it but they've also hidden under the barrel. And our job at this moment in time is to get it out of there. So to a large stand, that's what I wanna talk about today. I'm gonna do a mix of all the new things. I thought a bit about my sights and realized I had too many. So there a few I'm just gonna zip by, they are the ones that are in the book and other material I've written. And so I wanted to get kind of up to them, kinda through them quickly and then close with where we're going in our research these days. I just wanna do a time check. Collie or whoever is in charge, what time am I acquited? Am I acquitted at 2:15? Anybody say yes? >> [INAUDIBLE] >> A little bit more? Okay, all right, and the other thing I wanna do is keep this interactive. It's warm in here, I'm real nervous about you falling asleep. So just feel free to jump up and down, say anything you want, and we'll keep this lively, okay? All right, so before I start, I do have to thank my research center and any sponsors who might be here today. The Center for Information Systems Research is part of the Sloane School of Management. We've been in existence now for over 36 years, and during that entire 36 years we have studied one question. How do companies get value from information technology? And I know you business people are going, thirty-six years, one question and you don't have the answer yet? That's because if we found the answer of course, there would be no reason for our existence. So we just keep plugging along and we could be around for another 36 years, the way we see it. But I do wanna thank our 80 sponsors and patrons, who have made our research possible. And are any of you in the audience, any sponsors out there? >> NASA. >> NASA how wonderful. Okay? >> IBM, no. >> Microsoft, sorry, that was really a mistake on my part. [LAUGH] All right, so thank you all for your support over the years. And they make our research possible. Okay, so here's our fundamental dilemma as I see it. Is that the reason architecture is so important is because it makes us agile, it allows us to be agile. And part of the reason it's been a hard sell is people don't get that. So they get that maybe you could save us some money. They get that it might mitigate some risks, but they don't quite get that it will make us agile. And fundamentally, that allows us to survive, if not thrive, in a digital economy. So our dilemma is we have to sell agility. And it's not an easy thing to sell, because people have trouble getting their arms around it. And note that the way we think of agility, is just the ability to regularly use capabilities to generate new business value while limiting costs and risks. So it's this idea that we get things in place and basically they become new habits, successful habits for the digital economy. That's what we're trying to get across and it's a kind of gooey idea. So what we're trying to do is add some substance to it, make it real for business people. And as I note in the final statement here, we cannot drive benefits if everyone in our organizations is not on board. And I think, what we've tended to do is give up, okay? I go well, okay, everybody doesn't get it, I'll do what I can do. Actually, wrong answer. What we've learned from the people who do succeed, is they make the most important thing getting everybody on board, even though it is often the most frustrating thing. So we're gonna talk a bit about how we're going to get everybody on board with enterprise architecture. Because I think you already know once you accomplish that, really good things are going to happen. So let's talk about how we're going to make that happen. First of all, I think there's three very important question we have to ask every business person. The first question is, in your firm, how long do business strategies last? How about in your firm? How long does a business strategy last? Sir? >> Three years. >> Three years. Ma'am, how long does one last in your firm? >> Five. >> Five years, that's pretty good. In your firm? >> We're not really good at making business strategies. >> You don't even have business strategies. This is also a fundamental problem. Yes, so maybe Maybe a year, maybe three years, maybe five years, anybody would say twenty thirty years? In your organization? No, okay, so we're going to talk it, three to five years. In your firm, how long do you typically use a system once it's in place? Twenty years? Twenty five years? Thirty years? Right? Yeah forever. Okay so here's our fundamental disconnect, right? How do we align IT with business strategy? How do you do that? Let me see if your firm is like both, go ahead. >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Aha, and how do those get started? Who has the ideas for those? >> Generally business people [INAUDIBLE]. >> Okay. So a business person has a great idea. It's associated with some strategy that's gonna last three to five years and they have a great idea for a system that will enable that strategy to work. And how long will that be before you get the system in place? >> Three to five years, okay. >> [LAUGH] >> Okay, I think I don't have to explain that anymore. So this is what we get. This is what we get we get. We get a system that delivered on a great idea, and another system that delivered on a great idea, a strategy, we'll call it. And another one and another one and another one. And of course this is a very simplified picture. And so we have all of these systems that are aligned with strategies that no longer exist. We then got some more strategies and what we realized was that this system was gonna have to talk to this system. And so the IT people tied it together, they wired it and then other things had to talk with other things and the next thing we knew all of our systems are wired together, right? They work this is the amazing thing they work but they also are very messy. And this is not just our system world. This is our business processes. This is how we do business. And then we wonder why things go wrong. Why is the data bad? Because this is the way we function. And I will argue that it is because we align IT with business strategy and not the reverse. There's our problem. We align IT with business strategy, not the reverse. Now how are you gonna sell this one, right? Okay. Let me give you some idea. So obviously nobody wants this. I once showed this picture to an architect at an investment bank and he said to me, yeah yeah that's about right. And he said 80% of our code is the wires. 80%. And then he paused and he said it is a miracle our systems work. Think about it. It's a miracle our systems work. So all of us IT people miracle workers. Not the fate we really want it. So I would argue what we really intended to have emerged from all those systems that were aligned with strategies was something like this, I call it a digitized platform. The idea being that, we have this core underlying infrastructure on which we have. This set of, excuse me, shared technology, shared application, shared data, shared processes. It's the essence of our organization. The things that we just have to get right all the time. I mean there's nothing glamorous about this. This is basically our core transaction processes, or one way of thinking of it is the things in our company that are not changing, or at least should not be changing. We have customers, we plan to have customers forever, if we're an airline, we're gonna put people on planes, we're gonna be putting people on planes forever. So there's just a set of things that in fact is stable. If we're in an old industry, it's probably a lot of things, big platform. If we're in a fairly new technology based industry, maybe it's new enough that the platform's actually fairly minimalist. But part of what we're trying to figure out is what's stable about our organization and how do we wire that in very neatly so that it just works every time? Management shouldn't pay any attention to it, because it works, and then they put all of their attention on the things that they can do to make themselves unique. This is what we're aiming for, right? So what we're looking for is a digitized platform that takes care of making us a digital business, that ensures that our transactions will be accurate, consistent, high quality, low risk. That's what we're looking for. And in some companies this is one big thing. I mean, in some companies this is SAP, right? And other companies it's highly customized. But in either case we should have some kind of digitized platform, unless we're such a new business that we can't quite figure out how we're gonna succeed as a business, in which case this won't do us any good. But once we're kind of established, we have to be efficient and all that, we need this to survive in a digital economy. Okay, so if we look at UPS, we get a good sense of how this works. In 1987, UPS, which has been around for 80 years, is being challenged by Federal Express. Not because Federal Express is better at delivering packages, but because Federal Express can track them. And UPS goes, what a dumb idea. What would a customer wanna know where their package is unless it's in their hands? This their attitude for two, three years. And then one day the CEO wakes up and says, nope, our customers care. They want package tracking. So he goes out, hires his first CIO, and he says Frank, I want you to build me a package tracking application. Now Frank, who was actually expecting to become the CFO, says, I don't know anything about package tracking applications, or IT for that matter. I'm gonna go study this. So he goes off and he studies it, and he comes back to the CEO, and he says, Oz, I have an important message for you, and the CEO says, what's that? He says, you don't want a package tracking application, and the CEO says, of course I do, that's why I hired you. And he said no, you want a package tracking capability, What's the difference? And he said well, a package tracking capability begins with a package database, one, forever and ever. And of course, this is the first he's ever really thought about IT. So he goes well yeah, good idea, of course. And he said, no, you don't understand. It will quickly not be just one, unless we make sure that anybody who ever needs information or has data that goes into our systems, can get to the one database. And he says, sounds good. So that means global telecommunications, okay, it means everybody who is running around and needs to get to data can get to it, handheld device, okay. And then only then does it need an application, got it. Of course the only way this can work is if everybody who puts data in and gets data out does it the same way or we're going to destroy the data. And it all made sense because UPS is the world's leading industrial engineering company. So they completely got this. So off they go, they already had standardized processes. That's really a huge benefit when you're putting this in. And the next thing we know, UPS, $11 billion later, has a digitized platform. This, we believe, is what every company eventually wants to build. Now UPS was lucky in the late 1980s. It didn't have much legacy. Now this gets harder and harder, because most of the companies that are trying to build this are building it in an environment where they have to tear a lot out and put it in. So it's a more gradual experience. But this, I would argue, is what every company needs in order to function as a digital business. Now, here's what's gonna challenge our efforts. We are obviously in a world where every day we have to be innovating with technology. And as we do that, there is a real likelihood that we're just gonna keep building things that everybody wants. And we're gonna create that mess that I showed you, I call it the cold spaghetti diagram. So here's the cold spaghetti. I call it that because of course if I try to extract anything, there's a huge risk that I'm gonna break it. So here's my cold spaghetti diagram, and that does not make me agile because anytime I need to change something, I'm gonna have to figure out how to extract something, put something new in, and not break anything. If I want this, these individual innovations to make me agile, I gotta go about this by taking individual innovations that are gonna contribute to or leverage my digitized platform. And the only way I'm gonna succeed at that is if I go through an architectural compliance process. Figure out how these pieces fit together, or say to myself, I'm really talking about a totally different part of business. So I'm really not gonna relate it back later to everything else in the business. I have that option. Okay? So this is how we want our entire organization to be thinking. If we can get them all thinking this way, we can build a platform, we can leverage a platform. And that means we gotta get them thinking about architecture. And notice, I wanna make sure that everybody understands that architecture is the design of our IT and business process capabilities. It's the blueprint for our process and IT capabilities. If we can get that language across as opposed to letting people think that this has something to do with, say, technology standards, which if we go deep enough it does, but they don't even know that. This is about designing how we're gonna get the organization's business done. That's what we're designing, okay? So in essence provides the design of our digitized platform. That's the kind of the simple way of thinking about enterprise architecture. Okay, so some of you would have seen this picture before. Let me just explain why I think this is important for every business person to understand. We want business people to understand that when we are a brand new business, we're looking for good ways to make money. And we're gonna respond with any kind of technology solution that works. We're just gonna build it. And that's gonna be cool because if we're lucky like Google, we're gonna make a ton of money doing this kind of thing. But after a while we try this, we try that, we try that, we try that. We respond to another moment. We acquire another company. The next thing we know we have a mess. And then we say, now that we've kind of figured out our niche. We've got competitors, they're coming in with a cheaper business model, we've got to become efficient, we've got to get faster. That means, we're gonna have to clean up our environment, our spaghetti, we start with a technology piece of this. I actually thought companies were starting with the technology piece of it, just because it was easy. It was a scapegoat, let's just blame IT, our systems are a mess, our processes are a mess. Let's just say it's ITs fault, we'll blame them. But I've learned that actually that might be part of the story, it's not the whole story. The rest of it is, you can't build a company to rely on technology if IT is not deploying world class processes and methodologies. So you really have to do that first. It actually is essential. So all the effort we see going into ITIL and all that kind of stuff, very well spent because it provides us with the underlying technology capability to be a digital business, but it's certainly nowhere close to enough. Once we get kind of our core technology capability in place, then we become a digital business by defining and building that digitized platform. And for some companies, this is pretty simple. We got the diversified businesses and there's not a whole that we want them all to do the same. So we're not talking about a lot of standardization across the entire organization but we want to say a platform of shared services to cut out cost and enable requirement. So, that's kind of the simplest into where a package delivery company where every single transaction could at sometime be affected by some other transaction. So everything in the company has to be end to end, integrated, standardized disciplined the whole bit. So the third stage is very different depending on who you are but in the end, you're building a digitized platform. And then we get to this stage where we say, all right, we kinda got the core in place. How do we drive benefits from it? How do we start to find the components that if we reuse them, we become a really successful business? That's our fourth stage. And we have studied now around 75 to 100 companies, I've lost track, going through these stages. The mini and sometimes maxi case studies of companies going through these stages, and they fundamentally transform. They are totally different businesses by the middle of the third stage, when they really start to get their platform in place, they are fundamentally different. And notice, there are companies that go out and put in SAP and never really fundamentally transform themselves, they go backwards. Then there are other companies that say, we're putting in a platform and they behave differently and they reorganize themselves and they think differently, they're ready to go for it. Now these stages we've learned are actually really important to understand because if you decide you just wanna be a componentized modular business, you would be inclined to go from wherever you were. Let's say stage one to stage four. And in fact, I had an investment banker to tell me he was gonna do that, he was a CIO, and he said, I got this figured out. I can't get the business leaders to take any interests in disciplining their thinking, there's just no interest in that. He said, they don't wanna work together, they don't wanna share data, they don't wanna think alike, they don't wanna standardize any processes, but they want a single face to the customer and they wanna operate like a digital business. So we're gonna skip from stage one to stage four by putting in web services. Because you can take these little components and you can reuse them. I went that's an interesting idea. I wanna understand how that goes, so I'll be back in two years. So two years later, I went back, and I talked to his successor, >> [LAUGH] >> And he said, yeah, those web services, that was a dumb idea. He said, you can make web services, you can make thousands of web services, the trick is getting them reused and of course, it is. I don't have to tell this to an enterprise architect. So our problem is that we have to go through the stages but the real Bonanza is really at the end. That's where we get the operational excellence, the business agility, the managerial satisfaction. And we have done multiple statistical studies on this, and it's really true. All of those things go up as companies go through the stages. But the good news is, they start going up right away. As soon as you start disciplining an organization, and make them think about architecture in that second stage, your performance does start going up, you do not have to wait till you're done. So I would argue that this is a journey that is well worth while. I did once have a CIO say to me, Jean, I do not believe you that you have to go through all those stages. We were in stage one, we put in SAP, to get stage three. I said, did that work? She said well you mean the first time, the second time, the third time or the fourth time we put in SAP? Think about it. This is the pain we put our organizations through if we don't quite get what we're doing, right? So here's what we've learned. Now these are our latest numbers. We collected these last fall with CIO Magazine. Trying to do understand where companies are in the journey and you get a sense of the distribution. This is a huge progression, I probably should have put in the 2007 numbers, but it's a huge progression from three years ago. Three years ago, we had 2% of companies here and 27% here. So we had fewer than a third of the companies had really made progress on a digitized platform. And now we see significant movement. The reason this is notable I think is it means that more and more companies are building platforms and thus, it is becoming a competitive necessity. The problem we run into is that it is possible to slide backward. You go out and acquire another company and you probably will. So this is not totally ensured that you'll just keep moving forward and you'll get really good at reusing your components. But this is the journey that we are on. Okay, now I wanna go quickly through a few slides. Before I do that are there any questions, comments, challenges to any of this? Okay, I just wanna slip through a few slides here quickly. The main point of this slide is part of the reason we're gonna have trouble convincing business people about the stages and the journey they need to go on. And the reason they have to care about enterprise architecture is because it hurts. When you are in stage one, you're a business person that gets to go to IT and say this is what I want, I've got the money, you do it and IT does. Many IT organizations have described themselves to me as order takers. This is our job, in stage one that is exactly the job. When we get to stage two, we already have IT pushing back, ITs saying things like well we have our technology standards. We can do this for you, but we can't quite do it the way you want it, but not to worry, it'll be good, but in effect, we're saying, IT is gonna push back, you're gonna get the 80% solution instead of the 100% solution. And the immediate reaction is, I don't like that. Why should I do business that way? Now, most business people will get over that pretty quickly when they see that it's lower cost and faster, but the immediate reaction is quite negative. Then, what tends to happen, and I think we've learned a lot, so it doesn't always happen, is there's this awful moment where we say, and now that we've got the technology base in, we're gonna put in something big like SAP. We're gonna rip out everything you ever knew and we're gonna put in new systems. And you're gonna do it the way we tell the entire organization to do it. And it might be a lot of processes or just a few, it doesn't matter, they don't like it. And so we show they're kinda attitude there towards architecture maturity as very negative in this third stage. It turns out that if you get through it okay, if you don't give up, you do rebound, and we don't have enough history yet in stage four but we suspect that red line goes very high. There is a sense that life is good again. We got this base that we don't have to worry about, and we have these opportunities to do new and better things. Yeah? >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yes. >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yeah. >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yeah, well, so a couple things are going Going on here. When we get to the third stage, we have certainly seen some corporate decisions that are not quite sensible. So we're just gonna put a SAP out there, everybody's gonna behave the same, there are no real differences, they should just do it our way. And in fact, it's just not enlightened, it's not really true, there are differences. They're important differences, and you shouldn't be doing that to the business. So part of this, reflects a very real situation situation where people are trying to do things that don't make sense for the business. And I think part of the answer to your specific question is we gotta be careful, we gotta be careful about our reach. And if we try to do either too much, things that shouldn't be done, we're gonna run into problems. If we try to do it too fast we're gonna run into problems. And if we try to include things that we could just say, well, there's some You need things there, let's do 80% not 100%. Let's unusual things go on, because we're gonna start defining how we're gonna do business. It's good to keep experimenting with other options, and we should keep that straight. So sometimes it really is that we've defined the vision badly, and we just kind of bulldoze in there, and try to make it happen, and it shouldn't. So I think that's part, I think the answer's really more complex than I've just given, but in the short one I will go with that. So sometimes for good reason sometimes for bad reason, the people involved in this are really pushing back. And when I first started studying PRP's in 1997, I was told I was gonna find huge resistance because people don't wanna change. I will tell you that is not what I found. What I found was huge confusion, because people didn't know what the heck was expected of them. That's what I found, they wanted their company to succeed. And sure there's exceptions to that, but realistically people want their business to succeed. And to just say it's resistance is really over simplifying the problem here. As one business person told me, you know, I get why we did this, I get why we totally transform that company, I get why we changed all our systems. And in the future it's gonna be great, but I have to tell you the experiences. I have been here 27 years, I learned a lot about this business, and I retained it, and I felt smart about the business, and when there was a problem I knew how to solve it. They took all of my knowledge, and threw it in a dump, it's gone, it's worthless. And now, they're trying to teach me new things. They give me a week's worth of training, they tell me to go off and do it. I don't know what I'm doing. I don't know what I'm doing, and we're asking about resistance. So part of this is effective change management, and I'll talk in a minute about Campbell when we get there, okay? This is too busy slide for me to spend any time on. But the point it was supposed to make is that it will be a transformation. We're gonna change the way we spend money. We're gonna change the way we think about IT. We're gonna spend the amount of money we spend on IT. This number I think is stunning. We did this on a consumer price index basis and said, well everybody saves money in stage two. We spend less on IT in stage two than in stage one. Because in my most cases, the reason you even went to stage two is business got frustrated with IT, fired the CIO, and brought in somebody who promised to cut costs. And so they did, and it turned out to be a really good thing. Because business people were told, well, there's no budget for this, that and the other thing, and suddenly they had to curb their appetites. Then we went off and we built some big platform started spending more and IT, and by the time we got stage four we were spending a fortune on IT. But here's the good news, nobody minded. By then they're all going, wow, IT is so valuable to this firm that they've expanded IT's responsibilities that includes manufacturing shop controls. It includes operations, it includes business process outsourcing, it includes all kinds of things. So we are spending more on that IT budget. But the IT budget is defined so differently, we just don't think about it anymore. It's not that we don't think about how much we spend anymore, we don't think about it the way we used to think about it. So this is what we're trying to take our companies through, and in the process, we are gonna learn a lot about how to do business differently. And I'm gonna summarize this whole thing. I'm glad they handed it out, because if I had to explain this whole thing, it would take a lot of time, but you can reference later. The essence of this table is that your world changes, and you stop thinking about one project with one ROI. And one person leading the change to how's our enterprise gonna behave differently. And how are we fundamentally gonna rethink things so that we do enterprise strategic priorities instead of individual strategic priorities. How are we gonna make that happen? Because this is not easy, it's a learning process. We're gonna learn it by acquiring entirely new competencies. So the companies then, like I said, it's about 10% now that are good at it, 11% if you look at our statistics there. What is companies have, are competencies that others are just starting to build? They actually have a competency in architectural planning and design. We have this concept we call the operating model, it says to senior management just tell us two things. What do you want standardized in this company process wise? What do you want standardized, and what do you want integrated? Just answer that question, what do you want standardized, what do you want integrated? It turns out companies in the fourth stage can answer that question. Anybody in that company can answer that question, but most companies never stop to think about it. And so it's very hard to build systems that create a platform when you don't know what you want integrated and standardized. That's the essence of the challenge. The second competency they've built is around project management. They have a lot of discipline, they know how much value they are getting from their projects. I once interviewed a CTO who said, you know I just started this new job and I said to the IT people. So how did we do in this company last year on delivering the business case for each of the projects? And they all said to me well, that's not our job, we just deliver and then business drives the value. And she said, yeah, how much, how did we do, what percent of the new systems delivered their business case? She said they had no idea. So I said well, you have to go out and find out. We need to know this, this is a critical metrical. So they did, they went out and checked. What percent do you think met their business case? A quarter? Zero, zero. Why would any of them? Nobody was checking. And in fact, the extraordinary companies start measuring the business value, and tweaking their expectations about the day that they start the project. Every major stage gate, they stop and they say, okay, is the business case still right? Is this still what we expect? Is it still realistic? Do we still care? Because if any of the answers are no, we gotta fix something. We either stop the project, or we change the expectation, or we do something different. We've got to be watching this from day one. There should be no surprise when this thing is delivered. And yet, when we go from company to company, this is the discipline we don't have in most of our organizations essential. The CIO at South West Airlines spend every Wednesday doing nothing, but going through projects with stakeholders that need to be responsible for the ultimate outcome saying, where is this project? What are the problems its having, what should we be changing, do we need help? Let's get these things done. 50 projects, all 50 major projects in their company go through these stage gates. And they don't get any surprises, there are no surprises there. So I think this is the essence of what we need to be doing. Standards management, they know how to define standards, they know how to retire standards, they know how to have exceptions to standards. These are things we all work on. There is a qualitative difference in the companies who do it well. And finally, IT funding, we really do learn how to fund enterprise priorities, and let the rest go. We learn how to say no, and we learn how to get people together. One of the case studies we've down that fascinated me was at PepsiAmericas, which sadly has been bought by PepsiCo, so I can't study them anymore. But their CIO started in 2001 on an enterprise architecture journey. And I was fortunate to get to meet him very early in his journey. And he was describing what he wanted to do. And the information that he thought that was gonna be essential to the organization, and how the company was gonna have to recreate itself. Because the design of the company at the time was around truck drivers who would load up their trucks, run to little stores and empty them out. He said, the model is broken because we used to have 30 SKUs, and now we have 300, and the drivers can't possibly guess right, they just can't know. Meanwhile, you've got Walmart, and do not bring things to the store, bring them to our warehouse, and only the things we want. We're not designed to do this. So we say, we have to totally change the way we do business here. So he started on this journey of working with senior management about his vision, about their vision, about how they were gonna do things. And he said, at first it was awful, I bring people together, and I'd say, now together, we have to define how we're gonna do business. And he said, we had these 13 regional managers because the company had been formed by the mergers of 13 companies, so 13 regions. And they would get in the room and one guy would say, okay, here's what I want, Johnny you vote for mine, I'll vote for whatever you want. And that was the way the whole conversation went. And here's this poor CIO, who really has vision, going [SOUND] no, but he just kept working at it, and working at it, and working at it. He had great technologists developing new capabilities, and then he'd go in and say, now look what you can do, you can do something you could never do before. And ten years later, nine years later, they were phenomenal. They had an information backbone with great data that from which they were developing algorithms. That not only improved their performance in terms of accurate estimates of how much Pepsi they needed. It enabled them to price it better to differentiate TA by customer. It improved their customers out of stocks from 14% down to 3. Their customers, they were telling their customers what to order. And they were doing all of this because they had stopped thinking about what everybody wanted and said, we gotta start thinking about what our customers want. That's the essence of what we have to do differently. And then we build this capability and we learn how to operate appropriately, and we introduced some process standards, and then we introduced data standards. And then we get people who care about those data standards, and then we start using the data, and that helps us improve the data. And we just get better, and better, and better. And he said, it took nine years and then he said to me, and the most important thing it was that there was no turnover. In senior management. He said, I cannot imagine what would've happened to me if the guys had started leaving and I had to start over again training someone. Because it took me nine years. But at about the fifth year we went in and interviewed the senior management team and they would say things like, we were so lucky we had put in this system that helped us do things right. I'm going lucky, [LAUGH] what an interesting term. So this is the journey. It's about persistence. It's about learning. It's about sticking with it. It's about vision and we just don't give up. And then everything we do we drive value from. We make sure somebody out there is going to take it and do something great with it because if nobody's gonna do something great with it. Here's the thing that's hard for an IT person to believe but if nobody's gonna do anything great with a capability don't build it, it will be wasted. It will be money spent and then it will be wasted. Now you wanna get a little bit ahead of the curve. So that's the tricky part. But this is the dilemma that every great IT person faces, every great architect. Okay, so here's what we learned, and I think this is kind of fascinating, about how we progress in our learning. We learned, we said so what distinguishes the great companies. And we learned that it turns out when you're in that first stage, just building systems so you can see what works, you only have to do two things well. Learn how to build a business case, and develop a good methodology. Now, in fact, most companies do not do that in stage one. But if you did, you'd get more from stage one and it would make the transition to stage two easier. Then at stage two, learn how to manage your standards. Start thinking about funding infrastructure. Teach people how to do exceptions to standard. If we get good at that, we're ready to move into stage three, where we can start thinking about process ownership and enterprise vision and senior executive oversight of IT initiative. That's going on in stage three. I don't actually know why the things in stage four turned out statistically there. But I will tell you that those are the things that it turned out people didn't get value from. That was the question, are you getting value from these initiatives? They were not getting value from them til stage four. Notice that one of the things in there is full time enterprise architecture team. That's the five percent I guess. That data was probably when there was still five percent in stage four. Now, hopefully it's up to 11. But this is the problem that the enterprise architecture team, until the company gets mature, isn't really appreciated. I would bet it's because the enterprise architecture team is in IT. If it was somewhere else it would work better. At Swiss Re, the CIO said to me, when I realized I needed an architect, and they already had a platform in place. It's quite an impressive platform. Said when I needed, I realized I had to have an enterprise architect. I asked the COO to hire one. I said we need an architect you should hire one. And we'll tell you how to do business. And the COO unbelievably said, good idea. Went out and hired an architect. Architect was brilliant. He had all these ideas about end to end processes and how they could do process optimization and how they would have process owners and how they could componetize processes. He was brilliant. And the COO is just going, wow, this is great, and introducing really good architectural concepts. The CIO said to me after they've been doing this for about three years and he said I could really feel the improvement. When they came to me they understood what they wanted. And we could put in systems and make a difference and build capabilities like we'd never been able to do before. But he said now I'm going to bring the architect into IT. And I said you are? And he said yeah, architecture is way too important to trust it to the business people. >> [LAUGH] >> It will probably work because the CIO, is very respected, and now that they all get architecture it's probably fine. But it was an interesting development from where I was sitting. So here's what we learned about the best firms. This was a study of just 103 firms where we did one on one interview, rather than just statistical Although we did some statistical analysis here too. And it turns out there are just three things that really matter if you want to get IT, value from IT nations, I should say the three things that matter. Three things that matter the most. All these things are correlated. All these best practices are correlated. But the three things that matter the most will not surprise. First of all, senior management involvement, and maybe we should call it leadership, they just get it. They take charge. Those of you who know Charlie Feld, he's gone from organization to organization transforming the company with IT. But he will only do it if the CEO basically begs him. If he's got a CEO who goes, we really need this, we really need this, then he knows he's got the right person. Otherwise, you gotta CIO who really cares, when I really don't know if it's gonna happen. So, he makes the CEO say, yeah I wanna lead this and I want you by my side doing it and then he goes in. So, we're looking for senior management taking charge. And I think the inclination for a lot of IT people is go well, I can't do that. And I actually don't think that's true. I think I have seen great IT leaders bring business people on. They just keep preaching it. They don't give up. They just don't give up. And they do little things and say we did something little for you. You should see what you can do now. Just go out and see what you can do. And they just find little things. At Toyota Europe they had 28 companies. 28 marketing companies and 9 manufacturing companies in Europe. That's a lot of companies in a small area. And they weren't making any money. They were selling a ton of cars but there weren't making any money. And they're going this isn't right. This is early 2000, so it's before the recent issues. This architect, they had a very small headquarters group in Europe, and the architect says, no, we got to do something about this. We should build some systems that help people communicate with one another. I don't know if any of you are from Europe, but the concern was that they didn't like one another, the different companies and that they wouldn't work together well. And he's European so he's kinda recognizing that this could be a problem and he says, okay I got a better idea. We're gonna go to all the companies and we're gonna say there's a new rule. One year from today, you have to send us every night, electronically, the following inventory file. It was very detailed but it was doable. He said, in a year, you can do this. You've already got the data, you just got to clean it up so it's accurate. And you need to send it to us. And if you need any help, we'll come in, we'll put in SAP. We'll take care of you. Three of the companies actually had them do that. They went in. But the 28 manufacturing, marketing companies and nine manufacturing companies were responsible for submitting that file at the end of the day, everyday, one year hence. Sure enough they did. A year later, they get all this data. And the next day, they send back to all of the manufacturing and marketing companies the data. So what suddenly happened was instead of saying, okay, I need this car, or I need this part, I'll call a manufacturing company. I'll order it. They'll put it in their queue. They'll get it to me when when it's ready. They started looking at the data and saying, these guys have the part I need, I think I'm just gonna call them. I'll get it here tomorrow instead of lord knows when, or that car. I can actually use that car. I'll just take it off their lot. And the manufacturing companies could get more strategic about their planning. If a car was already ordered, it would get moved to the front instead of people ordering. Cars for the lap. So suddenly, and we're talking one year later, they went from a lost to a significant house of operating income. And I used yo know the numbers, but I'd have to bring them up. So this is the kind of thinking that the great architects are doing. Let's not ask them to do something they're all gonna say, way too much trouble, won't have any benefits. Let's do something little and of course, what started happening. Now, this was 2004 that they turned their first profit in a long time. By 2008, they had become a single Toyota Europe. It was just one company. It had evolved very naturally from that point. So this is our challenge is to get people taking the lead, at Scissor we call it leading from behind. You're kinda going here, look at how you could be doing business. Now, look over here, you could be doing business this way and we can build you these capabilities. This is what the great architects are doing. The second thing is, we build architecture into everything. It just becomes part of the way we do business. There are a lot of architecture teams that are off to the side, that is as far as we can tell pretty worthless. We need the architecture teams on every single project. You go to a place like UPS or USAA and every project has an architect. The architect is constantly accessing the technology, the systems, the data and looking for where you have to go with standards and where you can't go with standards. Recognizing when a standard is gonna be needed that's never been established. Talking to what they call their technology fellows to go off and establish a standard and get all the research done in advance. So these companies are moving systems and capabilities through much faster than companies that aren't doing architecture in every single project. So we did see a huge difference there. And then finally the other difference we see, and of course, this is very exciting for people studying. Architecture is we really did see that the most profitable companies were those that were more mature. And this is actually rather amazing given that stage one companies, in their early years, are going to be very profitable. They're gonna be very successful. It's just that they don't change as their fortunes change. And they tend to keep the habits that they had, that worked for them early on. So that's what's going on. Stage 1 companies are really happy and then hate to let go and then they do. So we see Stage 3 companies that more profitable. So let me just tell a very quick story about Campbell Soup because I think this is just what companies have to go through. I honestly believe that if you existed, your company existed, before 1995, and possibly if it was created afterwards. Because sooner or later, even most new companies, even if you were born in the digital economy, you find that you did create the mess. You did start letting things go because you acquired or you changed directions or whatever the case may be. So pretty much every company finds themselves in this stage one environment that's just kinda messy and they have to transform. And transforming is really hard. It's very hard to just say while you're also acquiring or divesting, because that's also really hard. So this is a matter of putting management attention into building this platform, and changing the way the company operates as a result. So in 2001, Douglas Conant comes into Campbell Soup and says we're in trouble. We have no pipeline of new products. Financially we're performing poorly. It's time to get serious. They're 132 years old and they gotta do something. So he hires his first global CIO, Doreen Wright. Brings her in and says I think we've got to think about the role of technology in all of this. And she starts working with him to redefine how they're gonna do business going forward. And she cleans up IT first, she centralizes it, she improves their processes, she outsources it, and then she just takes them forward. And basically she says, this is what we had, this is her spaghetti diagram. This is what we want, this is FAP in the middle. And everything else componentize because she said, the essence of Campbell Soup is where a global supply chain that's basically just fulfilling order that in any manufacturers and thing. This is the essence of our company if we get this right and digitized then we can worry about new products and trade agreements and things that make us unique, this is all the stuff that doesn't, okay? And so they go through the stages there's a first stage for their clean up IT. In the second stage, the first thing senior management did to really take charge was to say, there are three things we gotta get right. Three things that are stable and if we get them right, we can function far more effectively. And that is order to cash, make to ship, account to report. Just get them right and they designed them and they worked with SAP to configure them. They later added hire to retire and they put these things in, one side at a time throughout North America which is 60% of their business. And they said, the way we did this is we brought in the deployment team from the site, we redefined all the roles. We said who's gonna do what? Let's take things they know. Let's give them new things. Let's train them on their new roles and responsibilities. And then we're gonna take the team out there and then we're also gonna have people from the prior implementation and people from the next implementation. And together they're gonna make sure that this implementation is better than the one before and they did this 25 times. By the time they were finished, they had it on a roll. There were no problems, every implementation except one was better than the one before. And not only that, people who had never met one another but had the same job, had met one another, and had started to communicate with one another on how to take their ideas forward. And so they are simply getting better and better. Well, of course, you do this successfully, then you say, all right, let's do the rest of the world. And they say, well, let's go to Australia, they speak English there. That actually was their thinking. Let's pick it up, it'll be just the same. We'll go, we're really good at this, we'll take the people, we're gonna drop it into Australia, it doesn't work. They're going, Australia is different. This was the shock, is like, they speak English, they have the same products, mostly. They have a lot of similar things. Can't we just go drop it in like we did in the last 25? And they said, actually, it didn't work, there are some things different. And we had to slow down, figure it out again, start all over. We saw what we could reuse, what we couldn't reuse and then we got it going. There was a second installation in Australia. Then we were able to go to New Zealand. And we're going, okay, now we get it again. And then they said, we feel like we kinda got the international thing, but it will be slower. Every country is gonna be different, we're gonna have to relearn some things in every site. But then the other thing they started doing was empower their employees to get real value from their information. And this is the concept that I call Working Smarter. So how many of you have what you would call a platform in place in your companies? Some kind of digitized platform. Should be about a third of you, I hope. Little like you're being modest. It's not quite in, right? Okay, so even as it goes in, we have to start driving benefits. This is the mistake we're making, we're so exhausted from getting it in it's kinda like I'll worry about getting benefits later. But in fact it doesn't really go in, if people don't quite get what the benefits are. So as it's going in, we have to be driving value. And we refer to this as working smarter. Now, here's what, These four stages that I described to you, look like, to the people on the ground, okay, they're saying to themselves, all right, the company cares about two things in a big way. Efficiency, gotta get the cost down, gotta get the risk down, and strategic agility. We have to act faster in this new economy. So they say, well, if we look at there are this is kinda stage one and into stage two, if we look at the way we use technology, we put in these solutions. But in all honesty, they only solve part of the problem and that's okay because we have all these great people and they just solve problems. This is your pre-digital world, heroics. You just say to people, if something goes wrong, fix it, and they do, they just rise to the occasion. So our organizations are full of heroes, wonderful people, who make the business work. And why don't they love stage three? Because in stage three, we start implementing processes, and we say do the standard process, don't be a hero. Do the standard process because you'll mess something up, if you don't stick with standard. So, we introduce these enterprise processes, they're global processes, they're standardized. We get all kinds of benefits, scalability, efficiency, end to end process, or straight through processing, single phase to the customer. All these great things will happen, but we have told our people to behave differently. We have told them to be disciplined and this is a very different world. This is a, you threw all my knowledge into a dump thing. And that's all good stuff, but much of the benefit has been on the efficiency side, kinda introduce efficiencies with these platforms. A little on strategic agility, but not a lot. So the next phase from an individual's perspective is, okay, I used to be hero now I do what I'm told, but if I really wanna drive benefits, I'm gonna work smarter. I'm gonna take the data that the new system generates and I am gonna use it for better decisions for our customers. So I'm gonna price things better, I'm gonna deliver things better, I'm gonna service their problems better. I'm gonna do all of that because I have better data because we have disciplined processes. Now it turns out that most people do not have a clue how to do that unless they are coached on doing it. So you cannot take this evidence-based management culture for granted, it is not a natural evolution from putting it in your digitized platform. It is not natural, it has to be taught, and many companies don't do it. So we see a lot of companies get things in, they put in their SAP, they've rebuilt their core banking system or whatever it is, they get here. But they start to regress in terms of actual business performance, cuz they don't start deriving benefits through this evidence-based management culture. So if we wanna go the next step, not just get a platform in, and I realize most of you are saying, I don't think we have a platform in. But bear in mind, as you put it in, this is what you're trying to accomplish. Your platform will be embellished with analytical tools, and algorithms, and constant improvements to the data itself and to the access, so you're building portals and things like that. That wonderful data allows you to identify people who can analyze the data and develop business rules. And you're constantly recognizing better and better and better business rules so that your performance keeps improving, and as you improve those business rules, you get better data. And the better data allows you to improve the business rules, so you've got a nice synergy going there. Then you realize that as you're changing these business rules, you actually have to change roles, different people have to be in charge of processes. One thing that people tend to be slow doing after they put in their platforms, they need process owners and quite often companies assign those too low down or they don't assign them. So if they're not up on the top, nothing great is happening. We gotta put these people in, we give them responsibility for the KPI. They start identifying business rules that are working and not working, so there's some synergy there. And they take responsibility for governing the data and we get better and better data. We have seen many master data management initiatives by companies that say, we need some data. Frankly, you need some data, you gotta build a platform. You go out and do master data management, you will be frustrated because you don't have the discipline, you don't have the platform, you don't have the roles, You can assign the roles but by themselves, they get nowhere. They get nowhere. Now this in fact is still not enough. You're going to have to do the coaching. You gotta coach people, and my favorite story is 7-11 Japan. We are talking about a company that has 12,000 stores in Japan. And it is convenience stores about the size of this area where I'm standing here, tiny. They are gonna succeed, and they know this, from the 1970s. They know they're gonna succeed by rapid inventory turnover. And on top of that, they know the only way they're gonna get rapid inventory turnover at 12,000 different stores is to put the people in stores in charge of it. So even if you're a part time clerk, you own a certain part of that store and you are responsible for ordering goods that will turnover rapidly. New things, old things, whatever you want. And we will give you information. You wanna know what sold yesterday, we got it for you. Wanna know what sold on the street, we got it for you. You wanna know what sold the last rainy day, we got it for you. You wanna know what the temperature is gonna be today, here it is. We're gonna give you information, your job is use that information, order things that are gonna sell rapidly. Now, we do this all the time. Here's all your information, succeed. Not there, twice a week they bring in counselors to work with the people who are placing the orders. And they say, well, what did you hypothesize what's gonna sell? And how did it do? Let's take a look. Did you do well, not so well? How could you do better next week? It's for the rest of their lives, counseling twice a week, twice a week. Think about how much coaching we do at our typical organization and how we get frustrated that people don't use their information well. Twice a week at 7-11 Japan, 30 years running most profitable retailer, just now being challenged, the last couple years being challenged. But this was a company that was divested from the US, 7-11, and now went back and bought the US 7/11, this company is doing just fine. So, this is the evidence based decision. The other thing that's been very fascinating about this research, I got to quit, is the importance of feedback. Pepsi America said that one thing they thought they should do was tell the people in the distribution warehouses how they were performing. Yeah, how many trucks did you fill today? And how accurate was it? We know this now because we have really great information, so we post it on the wall. And the managers are going, my gosh people and what their performance op on the wall. And they're saying, really they don't? They're going, no. They're never gonna to want that. So the IT people who had this idea said, well let me just see how it goes. And so they go into the warehouse and people are going up to this wall and they're going, there it is, and they go off and it's like they are inspired. Inspired, because they know exactly how they're doing. At Allstate they said, I'm sorry this wasn't Allstate this was another insurance company that I can't name. They said, we checked and we found that the number of claims per person, per day in our claims office ranged from three to 32 on average, their average ranged from three to 32. And so we said we're gonna tell them, we're gonna tell them that they have three, that they only have three, the average is 18 and the high is 32. You know what happens? The people who are doing three are suddenly doing 18. Because it occurred to them they're really slow, and they should speed up. And somebody knows, and they should care. The people who are doing 32, still doing 32. They're high performers, they like being high performers. But, and in fact the insurance company said we have to do something about quality. Because some of these really fast people don't have the quality. So we have to introduce a second metric here. But they said, we have this idea that people would never want to know this. And in fact, they are starved for this information because it gives them all the control over their lives. They can tell, it's not somebody subjectively saying, you know you're a little slow. This is somebody saying, I have evidence and you can do something about it, just go do it. So the whole concept of getting these platforms in place and getting information is about feeding it to people who can use it to make the business great. And to spread that responsibility out across everyone in the organization, okay? So let's wrap up then. Four things I'd want you to take away. First all of, maturity matters. We cannot fix our organization in a way. This is in a day, it's a journey. We have to get people on that, as one CEO, CIO said to me, we said get on the train or get under it. I said, okay, [LAUGH] I guess people got the message. But in any case we do want everyone on the train, so that we can make consistent progress. The second thing is to recognize that the impact of architecture is escalating. If you're thinking you're gonna drive value from process optimization efforts or business intelligence or master data management, collaboration, mobility. I will tell you there's a huge difference in how much benefit a company with a platform in place that knows how to use it. There's a huge difference. How much value they can get out of that, versus somebody that's going let's set up a little committee and send them out and have them do a bunch of stuff around collaboration. The difference is monumental, monumental. There are companies with platforms that now have enterprise initiatives around collaboration. There are no companies we've seen yet that have powerful collaboration initiatives that they don't have the platform because people don't know what they're collaborating about. Once we've got the platform in there, we got it, okay? Architecture must move beyond IT. I started there, I wanna end there. IT architecture is a good thing, but it has very limited impact. And if we are willing to stick there because people say I'm not interested, we're not just fighting hard enough, we've gotta take architecture outside. And then finally, what we have to help business people understand is that our whole way of thinking about the alignment between IT and strategy is upside down. We have to get to a place where we do, we start with some kind of strategic vision of how we're going to fundamentally operate. That is very important. We do start with a strategic vision. But then we go ahead and we start building capabilities, and those things create opportunities. At UPS the CEO said to me, IT has created such a powerful capability here that whenever we talk strategy the IT people are in the room. And they have ideas for things we can do for customers and we can do them fast. He said, I get that kind of happy surprise from IT all the time. Happy surprise from IT, that is what enterprise architecture is all about. Thank you very much. >> [APPLAUSE] >> Thank you Jenny, any questions for Jenny before we take a short break? >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yeah. >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yeah, yeah, actually I think having the technology separated is just not a problem. It does let you introduce it in components which is so much easier. The problem is if they're doing that without a vision, this is like the great danger of software as a service, right? If we have an architecture and we get where we're going, we can introduce components without messing up our data. But, if we just say hey, all business units go ahead and buy software as a service, it's like my Gosh I don't even wanna think about what this organization is gonna be like. And, I think with sap is the same thing, it's just that you used to have this hammer that was SAP. That wouldn't let them do that and now it will. But I think you can use that as asset. Just we can't let go of this idea that we need to fundamentally understand what our core processes are, what we're trying to do and what we're trying to standardize, what we're trying to integrate. If we. We can come to some kind of understanding on that, we can bring it in components and it's a much more agreeable way of doing it. So, bringing in components is great, just understand what you're trying to do. And, yeah, it does require a certain amount of discipline and commitment and perseverance, that's the risk. But, I think it can work out just fine. Yeah. Yeah. >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yes. >> [INAUDIBLE] Are there studies that show the a [INAUDIBLE]? >> We have a number of studies that show positive results in very many different ways. So I could sent you all kinds of statistics. But I will tell you they are simply, there's so many things going on, there's too much noise. So for example, stage one is a good stage for as long as you ought to be there. And that's why, if we just take data. So my next thought is, well I should separate out all the very young companies because they probably belong in stage one. Exclude them and do some more analysis. So we will continue to do analysis but there is a lot going on. There's a lot of industry effects. There's economic cycle effect. And so, we can do kind of general mature firms. We get a lot of powerful results if we just say, can we correlate maturity with some kind of performance, that we get. We don't get the kind of thing you're talking about, which is why the case studies, I think, in the end, are best evidence because you can watch these companies and say, if we're like them we could do the same. >> [INAUDIBLE] >> Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you know right now Campbell is still not what we would call a top performer. We can only tell you they're a whole lot better, they often they were in 2001. And the verdict's still out. I mean they gotta finish implementing, they gotta learn how to use it, and all that kind of stuff. So it's a long journey. I mean Pepsi America is a four billion dollar company. That's not heap five. Five billion dollar company. It wasn't huge and it took him nine years. This is not going to happen overnight. We have to be looking for those intermediate metrics. And we do have that. We could tell you that IT efficiency goes up in stage two more than business impacts. Stage three, you start seeing some effects around efficiencies and operating processes, probably not in revenues. So stage four you should see the revenues. So we can propose what metrics that ought to guide you but we don't have enough powerful statistical evidence of that. Yeah. >> [INAUDIBLE]. >> I think governance has so many meanings to so many people, I try to avoid it, even though I've written a book about it. [LAUGH] But I think it's essential. I actually don't think you can separate architecture and governance. If you don't have architecture, you don't know what you're governing. And that was part of the reason that I kinda drew aback from using the term a lot, cuz people were off going, hey, if we have the right committee will do with great things. Well only if your community all agrees and what they're trying to do. So if you look at that one where I said and here is all the things that happened over time, you would I think classify a lot of those as governance efforts. And yeah it's absolutely essential. But if you aren't clear about where you're going if you don't accompany it with clear enterprise architecture principles you can skip it seriously and nobody's really gonna believe that. But I believe it. Yeah, you got great committees and they don't know what they're doing. But very important though, very important, thanks for bringing that up, yeah. >> [INAUDIBLE] I'm sorry, they're all [INAUDIBLE] for [INAUDIBLE] In speaking about agility [INAUDIBLE]. >> They figure out that what is shorter? >> [INAUDIBLE] multiple line. >> Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay. >> Another line that is an issue [INAUDIBLE]. That's an architecture effectively that [INAUDIBLE]. >> Yeah. I actually think that is in effect what Toyota Europe was doing, was just drawing a line somewhere else. Because they didn't clean up much mess, even though each of the individual businesses would have had to clean up some thing in order to deliver that. So I think that is kind of the clever, how do we start moving in that direction kind of thing. And that is the art in architecture. What could we do that would start making a difference. But I hadn't thought of it as drawing a different line, that's what you were saying didn't quite register at first. But that would be a way of looking at. We're just gonna draw this line that describes where we are going while we basically extract what little mess we can kind of piece by piece. I think that's a much less disruptive and in a successful company far more successful. I mean if you're falling apart, you just tear things out and say, we're starting over. If you're doing reasonably well, then I think what you're describing is absolutely essential. You don't wanna disrupt the business. Yeah. >> You said there are many examples of older companies or companies that have been around for a number of years that have gone through the cycle. Have any of your studies [INAUDIBLE] Many younger companies that have resisted Systems, and >> From the start. >> And then, gone to a more optimized environment? >> You know, I haven't had a chance to spend much time in them, because they don't come seek us out, [LAUGH]. But I actually think Amazon is a really good example of that. This is a company that didn't worry about making money. Wish we all had that benefit. And, from day one, Jeff Bezos said what we care about is our customer and building a capability. We're always think about the long term. We're always gonna think about the customer. Their letter to stakeholders, shareholders is worth reading because he actually says, we don't talk about quarterly returns. We don't talk about our ROI. We don't talk about our ROE. We talk about the customer and in the end I am sure it's better for our shareholders. And I think there's a lot to be said for that, so they are though quite exceptional. I mean, new companies that we would think would grow up a lot smarter don't necessarily do so, often because today it feels like you want to grow and go acquire another company. Well soon as you brought two companies together you got two legacies. So, and in my mind the worst thing that ever happened to architecture is mergers. If we stop that we are making progress, right? So I did promise, my next book's gonna be called, don't make that acquisition [LAUGH]. >> [LAUGH] >> So, that will help all of us. But, so I think there are a few out there but you also have to grow. And if you worry too much about being disciplined and not being siloed, you aren't going to be around to have the problem. So I think Amazon is the exception, and that there are some examples like them that aren't as high profile. But I actually think they're the exception. >> I apologize. >> We have to get going. >> You're running a little bit late on time. So, I'm sure you can talk to Jeanie during one of the breaks. Matt, We are supposed to have a 15 minute break. I'm gonna try to cut it down to ten minutes so we can try to catch up on time. One of the issues we have is that Doc Ross has to leave here at quarter to five, I believe. And so we're kinda restrained on our time. So we'll come back here in ten minutes. >> I just wanted to mention one thing. Just yesterday, we sent out to our sponsors, updates on this data. And I thought it was really exciting, but it was just too close in time for me to include it here. Normally we'd only give it to sponsors, but I so wanted to share it with you. That if you want it, just give me a card. I will mail it to you. It's just a three page briefing that shows some updates on the data. And I think it's very cool stuff, mostly, we don't know what it means yet, it's data that we think it's interesting. But if you want me to send you that briefing, I'd be happy to do so, just hand me a card and I'll send it off to you. Thank you. >> [APPLAUSE]
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Channel: Case Western Reserve University
Views: 44,669
Rating: 4.8852458 out of 5
Keywords: case, western, reserve, university, cwru, weatherhead, Organizations, Business
Id: ScHG63YmJ2k
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Length: 88min 42sec (5322 seconds)
Published: Thu Mar 24 2011
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