| [February 14, 2012] |
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Gartner Says Adopting a Pace-Layered Application Strategy Can Accelerate Innovation
STAMFORD, Conn. --(Business Wire)--
Many organizations are finding themselves with an enterprise application
strategy that no longer satisfies the needs and desires of the business
community, and this often leads to poor decisions and bad investments,
according to Gartner (News - Alert), Inc.
"There is a gap developing between the business users of enterprise
applications and the IT professionals charged with providing these
applications," said Yvonne Genovese, vice president and distinguished
analyst at Gartner. "The business leaders are looking for modern,
easy-to-use applications that can be quickly deployed to solve a
specific problem or respond to a market opportunity. The IT organization
is typically working toward a strategic goal of standardizing on a
limited set of comprehensive application suites in order to minimize
integration issues, maximize security and reduce IT costs. These
competing goals often lead to strategic misalignment."
In the Gartner Special Report, "Accelerating Innovation by Adopting a
Pace-Layered Application Strategy," (http://www.gartner.com/technology/research/pace-layered-application-strategy/),
Gartner analysts explain that Gartner's Pace-Layered Application
Strategy is a new methodology for categorizing applications and
developing a differentiated management and governance process that
reflects how they are used and their rate of change.
In the past, many companies had a single strategy for selecting,
deploying and managing applications. They may have had methodologies for
classifying applications by value or technological viability, but they
did not recognize that applications are fundamentally different based on
how they are used by the organization.
Gartner believes the idea of pace layers can be used to build a business
application strategy that delivers a faster response and a better ROI,
without sacrificing integration, integrity and/or governance. Similar to
the concepts in building architecture, Gartner has defined three
application categories, or "layers," to distinguish application types
and help organizations develop more appropriate strategies for each:
-
Systems of Record - Established packaged applications or legacy
homegrown systems that support core transaction processing and manage
the organization's critical master data. The rate of change is low,
because the processes are well-established and common to most
organizations, and often are subject to regulatory requirements.
-
Systems of Differentiation - Applications that enable unique
company processes or industry-specific capabilities. They have a
medium life cycle (one to three years), but need to be reconfigured
frequently to accommodate changing business practices or customer
requirements.
-
Systems of Innovation - New applications that are built on an
ad hoc basis to address new business requirements or opportunities.
These are typically short life cycle projects (zero to 12 months)
using departmental or outside resources and consumer-grade
technologies.
"These layers correspond to the notion of business leaders having common
ideas, different ideas and new ideas," said Dennis Gaughan, managing
vice president at Gartner. "The same application may b classified
differently in one company than in another, based on its usage and
relationship to the business model. We expect to see applications move
among layers as they mature, or as the business process shifts from
experimental to well-established to industry standard."
Gartner analysts said that one of the keys to developing this strategy
is listening carefully to the way business people describe their vision
for particular parts of the business. These categories of ideas include:
-
Common ideas - aspects of the business in which leaders are
happy to follow commonly accepted ways of doing things that change
fairly slowly.
-
Different ideas - aspects of the business in which leaders not
only want to do things differently from comparable organizations, but
also can specify the details of how the different approach should be
taken, and can expect these details to change on a regular basis.
-
New ideas - aspects of the business in which leaders are
thinking of an early stage concept, and are not at the point where
they can be specific regarding the details of how things should work.
Organizations must establish a new strategy for business applications
that responds to the desire of the business to use technology to
establish sustainable differentiation and drive innovative new
processes, while providing a secure and cost-effective environment to
support core business processes.
One of the keys to using pace layering is to take a more granular
approach to thinking about applications. She said that organizations are
accustomed to using common, three-letter acronym application categories
(such as ERP and CRM) but, when classifying applications in pace layers,
they must be broken down into individual processes or functions.
For example, financial accounting, order entry and collaborative demand
planning are often part of a single ERP package, but are separate
application modules that belong in three different layers in the
Pace-Layered Application Strategy. This approach should also be used to
classify individually packaged or custom-developed applications. It is
important to determine whether they support a common requirement, a
unique business methodology or an innovative new business process. This
allows the organization to apply the appropriate governance, funding and
data models, based on the characteristics of each application.
"As organizations look to pace layers to help their application
portfolios evolve from the rigid nature of current monolithic
application strategy, it will be important to establish process and data
integrity requirements within and between each," Mr. Gaughan said. "The
pace-layered approach acknowledges that process and data integrity
requirements will be different within each layer, and defines a set of
architectural standards at each level to accelerate an organization's
ability to adapt."
"For each layer of the portfolio to be managed effectively, a strong
governance structure must unite all stakeholders," Ms. Genovese said.
"The challenge for IT management teams is to develop a culture of
governance that encourages consistent and persistent participation. This
means that governance cannot be about IT telling the business
stakeholders what needs to be funded - rather; there must be a true
partnership that includes respect."
The Gartner Special Report "Accelerating Innovation by Adopting a
Pace-Layered Application Strategy" (http://www.gartner.com/technology/research/pace-layered-application-strategy/?prm=gcom_classic&ref=g_homelink).
The special report includes video commentary, and links to more than 20
reports examining various aspects of a Pace-Layered Application Strategy.
Gartner analysts will provide additional commentary during the Gartner
webinar, "A New Application Strategy to Accelerate Innovation," March 1,
at 10 a.m. EST and 1 p.m. EST. To register for this complimentary
webinar, please visit http://my.gartner.com/portal/server.pt?open=512&objID=202&mode=2&PageID=5553&ref=webinar-rss&resId=1897216&prm=WB_PLS11R.
Mr. Gaughan explains why the Pace-Layered Application Strategy framework
was developed in his Gartner blog post, "Introducing the Pace Layered
Application Strategy Special Report." The blog post is available at http://blogs.gartner.com/dennis-gaughan/2012/02/03/introducing-the-pace-layered-application-strategy-special-report/.
About Gartner
Gartner, Inc. (NYSE: IT) is the world's leading information technology
research and advisory company. Gartner delivers the technology-related
insight necessary for its clients to make the right decisions, every
day. From CIOs and senior IT leaders in corporations and government
agencies, to business leaders in high-tech and telecom enterprises and
professional services firms, to technology investors, Gartner is a
valuable partner to 60,000 clients in 11,500 distinct organizations.
Through the resources of Gartner Research, Gartner Executive Programs,
Gartner Consulting and Gartner Events, Gartner works with every client
to research, analyze and interpret the business of IT within the context
of their individual role. Founded in 1979, Gartner is headquartered in
Stamford, Connecticut, USA, and has 4,500 associates, including 1,250
research analysts and consultants, and clients in 85 countries. For more
information, visit www.gartner.com.

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