| By Dan Foody, Alex Rosen | Article Rating: |
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| December 26, 2005 09:45 AM EST | Reads: |
33,467 |
Step 4: Quantify Pilot Results
The most important deliverable for an SOA pilot is quantified results. Senior management often requires ROI calculations as well as tangible proof of your pilot's success. Create a method for ongoing data capture, particularly if a pilot is conducted over a large period of time, so that the data is both accurate and readily available at the completion of the project. Gathering and compiling these figures is the key to budget justification for the next phase of any SOA initiative (see Figure 4).
SOA Can Be Measured by Several Factors
Reuse of Shared Services
The number of instances in which a shared service is reused is an effective SOA measurement for ROI. Each reuse results in cost avoidance or reduction of building, maintaining, and operating a single-purpose service. In order to properly calculate ROI of shared services, some additional base metrics are needed:
- Costs to build/operate/maintain a shared service. This is the cost of having a shared service.
- Cost to build/operate/maintain a single-purpose service. This should be similar to that of a shared service if your SOA infrastructure is effective.
- Cost to use an existing service built by someone else. This is the cost incurred by reusing a service (the alternative would have been to build a single-purpose custom service). Controlling this metric is critical to SOA success. The reuse of a service is effectively an integration - and so your SOA needs to be structured to control the costs of integration.
The number of shared service consumers (relative to total consumers) measures the breadth of SOA adoption. That is, it measures how well the "cultural shift" of SOA has permeated the organization. This is not directly correlated to SOA business benefit, but it is an important metric nonetheless.
Web Services Adoption
The number of Web services created is not actually a measurement of SOA. Instead, it primarily reflects the breadth of adoption of the underlying technology. In many cases, this metric can actually be used as a negative indicator of SOA failure. That is, if a large number of services exist, but few are reused, this may be an indication that your SOA initiative needs some revision.
Business Responsiveness
Compare the time it takes to change or add a feature to a non-SOA-based application with a similar features change to a service.
Conclusion
In addition to the aforementioned methods of measurement, every project will have its own unique business justifications and associated measurements. For example, exposing customer information via a service in order to create a self-service customer portal may be used to significantly reduce call center operations costs. These benefits will, of course, differ for each project. Even if you define a formal SOA pilot project, don't do this for the sake of moving to SOA - the project should provide value to the business.
Published December 26, 2005 Reads 33,467
Copyright © 2005 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Dan Foody
Dan Foody, CTO of Sonic and Actional products, leverages his extensive experience in enterprise systems software toward designing robust and manageable service-oriented architectures. Foody's experience with distributed systems technologies including middleware, integration and Web services, gives him a broad knowledge of the complexities and requirements for managing real-world enterprise software deployments. He is the author of various standards, and contributed significantly to the OMG standard for COM/CORBA interworking. Most recently, Foody was the recipient of InfoWorld's 2005 CTO 25 award. Foody holds a BSEE and MSEE from Cornell University.
More Stories By Alex Rosen
Alex Rosen is the manager of the service-oriented architecture practice at MomentumSI. Alex has architected and led teams in developing solutions for large enterprise clients for content management, e-commerce, and the development of service-oriented environments. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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news desk 12/26/05 11:10:30 AM EST | |||
Day by day, company by company, IT organization by IT organization, today's enterprise is busy architecting for business-solution agility and the alignment of key assets around the emerging service-oriented architecture (SOA) umbrella. The ability to embrace SOA leads to the ability to rapidly capitalize on future IT investments and leverage existing technologies both inside and outside of your organization. Many organizations will struggle as they seek to identify, implement, and build on their first SOA forays into the new environment. |
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news desk 12/26/05 10:35:18 AM EST | |||
Day by day, company by company, IT organization by IT organization, today's enterprise is busy architecting for business-solution agility and the alignment of key assets around the emerging service-oriented architecture (SOA) umbrella. The ability to embrace SOA leads to the ability to rapidly capitalize on future IT investments and leverage existing technologies both inside and outside of your organization. Many organizations will struggle as they seek to identify, implement, and build on their first SOA forays into the new environment. |
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SOA Web Services Journal News Desk 12/25/05 10:45:51 PM EST | |||
Day by day, company by company, IT organization by IT organization, today's enterprise is busy architecting for business-solution agility and the alignment of key assets around the emerging service-oriented architecture (SOA) umbrella. The ability to embrace SOA leads to the ability to rapidly capitalize on future IT investments and leverage existing technologies both inside and outside of your organization. Many organizations will struggle as they seek to identify, implement, and build on their first SOA forays into the new environment. |
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