| By J. Todd Hay | Article Rating: |
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| February 4, 2008 11:30 AM EST | Reads: |
15,306 |
Within the past few years, Web 2.0 has become a major
technology trend, dramatically impacting the way consumers interact with
information and applications. This consumer trend is now extending into the
enterprise; however, businesses have been more reluctant than consumers to
adopt these new technologies. The Business tools of the ’90s have not kept pace with the Web revolution. For Web 2.0 technologies to garner adoption in the
enterprise, new requirements must be met.
A recent survey of IT professionals found that 90 percent of
participants see building Web-based internal applications as a high priority, yet
82 percent are having difficulty doing it. Unlike the consumer world, new
business tools must meet the requirements of CIOs. Those requirements include
the ability to meet existing policies, leverage existing IT investments, and
respond rapidly to changing business needs.
Meeting Policy Requirements
Any tools brought into an organization must conform to the
architecture, data, and security policies established by the CIO. Maintaining
reliability and manageability of the infrastructure depends upon standardizing
on an enterprise architecture, typically either Java EE or .NET. Development
tools that don’t align with these standards (i.e., “rip-and-replace” platforms)
have little chance of acceptance within the organization.
Modern CIOs face an ever-increasing challenge to comply with government and corporate regulations around security. These include internal privacy guidelines as well as external policies mandated by SOX, HIPAA, Gramm-Leach-Bliley and others. Significant effort has gone into implementing IT controls to conform to these policies, and any tools that fail to integrate with security standards simply will not be acceptable.
Maintaining control over data in a Web 2.0 environment seems to be an oxymoron! Web 2.0 is characterized by the democratization of content. Finding, updating, and acting on operational data defines the business application. Yet, data is at the very heart of IT’s compliance and security concerns. For CIOs to accept Web 2.0, development tools need to bridge these expectations.
Finally, CIOs will no longer accept proprietary, “black-box” solutions that lock them into a single vendor for the life of the tool.
Leveraging Existing IT Investments
CIOs have invested huge amounts of time and budget in
developing their infrastructure. They want to ensure that any new project takes
advantage of work that has come before. They want the efficiencies of reuse and
to avoid starting over. In the past, most rapid application development (RAD)
tools were complete, standalone platforms that were unable to utilize existing
infrastructure. They required their own security mechanism, or yet another
server – as well as the incremental resources to maintain them.
Today’s CIOs look for development tools that leverage their infrastructure, integrating seamlessly with, for example, existing security systems or identity management systems. They want to take advantage of existing and approved server infrastructure such as Java EE and Apache.
Often overlooked, the most critical investment CIOs have made is the knowledge, skill sets, processes and tools of the current staff. Unfortunately, many Web 2.0 technologies (like Adobe Flex or any of the numerous AJAX frameworks) require new skills and tools. CIOs look to solutions that build on their existing team’s knowledgebase to reduce the cost and risk of new projects.
Moving at the Speed of Business
Business is rapidly moving and ever-changing. CIOs serve the
needs of the business and must react quickly. A lot of the business
applications aren’t expected to live more than a few months. Yet it can take
three months (or more) to deliver them using traditional Java tools. Alas, business
team requests for new applications receive a resounding “no” again and
again.
CIOs want tools that can meet the timetables that business demands and deliver new, improved applications. The requirements are quick ramp-up, rapid deployment, and the ability to iterate as business needs change. Sometimes, CIOs relax standards for the promise of a “short-lived” application. It is often exactly these “temporary” applications that end up living forever.
Underlying these requirements is the need for a different approach to development. RAD tools of the ’90s proved that developers could be efficient using visual assembly, eliminating the time-consuming process of writing and maintaining thousands of lines of code. In the rush to the Web, that concept has been lost. It’s time for RAD to return.
Conclusion
The shift from client/server computing to Web-centric
computing has brought amazing changes over the past decade, fundamentally
transforming the way business operates. Web 2.0 promises to bring the same
level of change over the next few years. Web 2.0 technologies have only
recently reached the level of maturity required to receive consideration within
the enterprise. The tipping point for the adoption of Web 2.0 in the enterprise
will come with the arrival of visual development tools that meet the
requirements of the CIO.
Published February 4, 2008 Reads 15,306
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By J. Todd Hay
J. Todd Hay is vice president of marketing at WaveMaker Software. He has more than 15 years of technology, sales, and marketing experience, most recently leading Adobe's RIA platform marketing strategy and next-generation Flash and PDF technologies. He was also a former General Manager at BEA Systems, where he launched the company's Enterprise Security line and drove new revenue opportunities.
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