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| Home > SOA News > Focus SOA on business value – IBM's LeBlanc | |
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Read part two. Looking back at the past three years of SOA, what has surprised you?Robert LeBlanc: SOA has shifted from being pure technology to be a combination of business and IT. We saw that shift starting to happen back in 2006. That's when we had a discussion at the senior level with Sam Palmisano, the [IBM] CEO, about the shift coming in the market with the business side coming forward. That's when it was decided that they would bring me over to the consulting side, but I kept my SOA responsibilities. So now I could drive it not only from the technology side, but also focus of the business platform. I think what's surprising is how widespread SOA is. Usually with technology it starts with one industry, such as financial services, which has more money to invest. Or it starts in one particular geography, and usually if it's technology oriented it tends to emanate from the U.S. But in this case every industry we look at, every geography we look at, has jumped all over SOA. I think the reason is that for the first time we started talking about technology in terms of business services in a way that the line of business understands. They understand that if they combine services in new and innovative ways they can drive new business processes, lower costs, create new products and ultimately improve the business. That has happened and the technology is finally there with open standards for Web services. The other thing that happened is the Web caused the globalization phenomenon. So it's almost like the perfect storm. Technology is finally there and open standards-based. There's market globalization and businesses understand they have to change to stay competitive no matter what industry they're in. So it's been surprising how quickly SOA spread across every industry. It accelerated on the business side much faster than we originally thought it would. It's gone from something that was perceived in the early days as just technology that the line of business didn't want to talk about. Now, they want to talk to us. What still needs to happen in the next two or three years? Do you find when you go into those engagements that IT doesn't have near enough visibility, and if so what needs to change? We hear a lot that people think SOA is about getting the right technology, such as an enterprise services bus (ESB), since moving to global services do you find yourself having a different perspective on technology?
When talking to CIOs I always use this analogy. I'm a car nut. I could buy a Ferrari, a great car, and I could put you in that Ferrari race car and you wouldn't win any Formula One races. I could take Michael Schumacher, one of the greatest race car drivers in the world, and put him in a Hyundai and he wouldn't win any Formula One races either. You need the combination of the right driver and the right car. In SOA, the car is the technology and the driver is the business. You can have an elegant infrastructure and not get any business value. Don't focus on the technology first, focus on the business value. If you decompose your services and then need to connect them, then you have to have an ESB. But an ESB is a commodity. It's like an engine in a car. Yeah, I've got an engine in my car, but I don't buy the engine separate. If a client says all they want to do is implement an ESB, I consider them to be at the very early stage and there isn't that much business value there. Focus on the problem you're trying to solve, not just the technology. I tell people, technology is an enabler, and it's a great enabler. In part 2 tomorrow, LeBlanc discusses issues of scalability and reliability and why some SOA implementations are hitting roadblocks in adoption.
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