SoEA4EE 2014 - 6th International Workshop on Service Oriented Enterprise Architecture for Enterprise Engineering (SoEA4EE'14)
Date2014-09-01 - 2014-09-05
Deadline2014-04-08
VenueUlm, Germany
Keywords
Websitehttps://www.soea4ee.org
Topics/Call fo Papers
Several developments, such as the success of cloud-computing show that not the ownership of IT resources but their management is the foundation for sustainable competitive advantage[1]. According to Ross et al.[2], smart companies define how they (will) do business (using an operating model) and design the processes and infrastructure critical to their current and future operations (using an enterprise architecture).
Enterprise Engineering (EE) is the application of engineering principles to the design of Enterprise Architectures. It allows deriving the Enterprise Architecture from the enterprise goals and strategy and aligning it with the enterprise resources as shown in Figure 1, Enterprise architecture aims (i) to understand the interactions and all kind of articulations between business and information technology, (ii) to define how to align business components and IT components, as well as business strategy and IT strategy, and more particularly (iii) to develop and support a common understanding and sharing of those purposes of interest. Enterprise architecture is used to map the enterprise goal and strategy to the enterprise’s resources (actors, assets, IT supports) and to take into account the evolution of this mapping. It also provides documentation on the assignment of enterprise resources to the enterprise goals and strategy.
Enterprise Engineering (EE) is the application of engineering principles to the design of Enterprise Architectures. It allows deriving the Enterprise Architecture from the enterprise goals and strategy and aligning it with the enterprise resources as shown in Figure 1, Enterprise architecture aims (i) to understand the interactions and all kind of articulations between business and information technology, (ii) to define how to align business components and IT components, as well as business strategy and IT strategy, and more particularly (iii) to develop and support a common understanding and sharing of those purposes of interest. Enterprise architecture is used to map the enterprise goal and strategy to the enterprise’s resources (actors, assets, IT supports) and to take into account the evolution of this mapping. It also provides documentation on the assignment of enterprise resources to the enterprise goals and strategy.
Other CFPs
- 2nd International Workshop on Methodical Development of Modeling Tools (ModTools'14)
- 7th International Workshop on Evolutionary Business Processes (EVL-BP'14)
- 1st International Workshop on Engineering Cloud Applications and Services (EnCASE'14)
- 1st International Workshop on Enterprise Model Analysis (EMA'14)
- 1st International Workshop on Compliance, Evolution and Security in Cross-Organizational Processes (CeSCoP'14)
Last modified: 2014-04-05 08:55:54