Checkpoints:
Business Architecture Document
In general, the business architecture appears to be reasonable if:
- The business architecture appears to be stable.
Past experience with the architecture can be a good indicator: if the rate of
change in the architecture is low, and remains low as new scenarios are covered,
there is good reason to believe that the architecture is stabilizing.
Conversely, if each new scenario causes changes in the architecture, it is still
evolving and baselining is not yet warranted.
- The complexity of the business architecture
matches the functionality and value it provides to its customers.
- The conceptual complexity is appropriate given the skill and
experience of its:
- users
- operators
- developers
- The business has a single consistent, coherent business
architecture definition.
- The business has a consistent enterprise-wide security
facility. All the security components work together to safeguard the
business.
- The products and techniques on which the business and its
automation is based matches its expected life.
- The business architecture provided defines clear interfaces to
enable partitioning for parallel team development.
- The business designer of a model element can understand enough
from the business architecture to successfully design and develop the model
element (business worker or business entity).
- Packages (organization units) have been defined to be highly
cohesive within the package, while the packages themselves are loosely
coupled.
- Similar solutions within the common business domain have been
considered.
- The proposed solution can be easily understood by someone
generally knowledgeable in the problem domain.
- All people on the team share the same view of the business
architecture as the one presented by the business-process analyst(s).
- The Business Architecture Document is current.
- The Business-Modeling Guidelines have been followed.
- All risks been either mitigated or have been addressed in a
contingency plan. New risk discovered have been documented and analyzed for
their potential impact.
- The key performance requirements (established budgets) have
been satisfied.
- There are routines in place for verifying the business works as
specified.
- The business architecture does not appear to be
"over-designed".
- The mechanisms in place appear to be simple enough to
use.
- The number of mechanisms is modest and consistent with the
scope of the system and the demands of the problem domain.
- All business use-case realizations defined for the current
iteration can be executed by the business architecture.
Copyright
© 1987 - 2001 Rational Software Corporation
| |
|