Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
Bookbot

Deborah J Nightingale

    DEBORAH J. NIGHTINGALE est Professeure de Pratique des Systèmes d'Ingénierie et d'Aéronautique et Astronautique au MIT, où elle dirige également le Centre de Politique Technologique et de Développement Industriel. Ses travaux font le lien entre l'innovation technique et la politique, en se concentrant sur les défis critiques auxquels sont confrontées les sociétés modernes. Elle se consacre à l'exploration et au développement de solutions révolutionnaires grâce à l'analyse de systèmes complexes. Son expertise réside dans la compréhension de l'impact sociétal des avancées technologiques.

    Architecting the Future Enterprise
    • Architecting the Future Enterprise

      • 185pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,7(3)Évaluer

      Every enterprise evolves continuously, driven by changing needs or new opportunities. Most often this happens gradually, with small adjustments to strategy, organization, processes, or infrastructure. But sometimes enterprises need to go beyond minor fixes and transform themselves, in response to a disruptive event or dramatically changing circumstances �a merger, for example, or a new competitor. In this book, enterprise architecting experts Deborah Nightingale and Donna Rhodes offer a framework for enterprise transformation. Successful transformation, they believe, starts with a holistic approach, taking into consideration all facets of the enterprise and its environment rather than focusing solely on one factor �information technology, for example, or organizational structure. This is architecting the future enterprise: creating a blueprint for what the enterprise will look like after the transformation. Nightingale and Rhodes introduce the ARIES (Architecting Innovative Enterprise Strategy) framework, including a ten enterprise element model and an architecting process model, and show how to apply it, from start to finish. They explain how to create a holistic vision for the future enterprise and how to generate concepts and alternative architectures; they describe techniques for evaluating possible architectures, tools for implementation planning, and strategies for communicating with stakeholders. Nightingale and Rhodes offer real-world examples throughout, drawing on their work at MIT, with an extensive case study of enterprise transformation at a medical device manufacturer. An appendix offers two additional architecting projects.-- Provided by publisher

      Architecting the Future Enterprise