possible to model the Selection phase and to identify
the issues that related to it (e.g. that it has no
specialized IT support and that applications could
get stuck in this phase).
Each IT manager could model with precision the
phase that the application he was responsible for
supported. This phase relates directly to his
conceptualization because it corresponds to his
specialization. One of the challenges during the
workshop was to enable all IT managers to represent
their phase at the same level of detail as the other
phases.
One of the participants offered an additional
conceptualization. His training as an auditor enabled
him to discover a flaw in the sequence diagram of
the process by attentively analyzing the dates of the
documents provided as evidence. Without this
specialization the sequence diagram would have not
been challenged.
In summary, to have the viewpoints of the
multiple stakeholders (including the non-IT one) is
essential to understand the issues related to the
process. This includes the IT issues. For example,
the applicant has to submit his documents to ISA
and to SAP. This leads to errors and delays. A
technical solution can be found to link ISA and SAP.
This problem can be identified only if the process is
analyzed end-to-end. So, all viewpoints are
necessary.
The use of concrete evidences: Some of the
documents collected by that the way the process is
executed leads to major issues for the applicant. For
example, the applicant does not receive the
necessary documents on time to find a housing. This
level of concreteness motivates the other
stakeholders to address the issues. They can relate to
the applicant’s problems. All the participants were
able to relate to the feeling the applicant has when
the document that would allow her to find an
apartment is not received on time. This is much
more concrete than the concept of “hard to find an
apartment” that would usually be found in abstract
models.
Without the evidence provided by the documents
collected by Ms. Tapandjieva the auditor would not
have found the flaw in the sequence diagram.
5 CONCLUSIONS
In this paper we emphasized the need to have a
philosophical grounding for business-IT alignment
because it is a crosscutting concern that potentially
requires the collaboration of the entire organization.
We described one such grounding, called the
systemic modeling paradigm, which is based on
general systems principles, and is the foundation of
SEAM, an enterprise architecture method. The main
originality of the systemic modeling paradigm is its
breadth. It proposes 4 dimensions for underpinning a
general-purpose method that can be effectively used
in concrete projects. These dimensions are, theory,
philosophy, methodology and discipline specific
theories. Together they enable to transcend the
divisions within an organization, while also
understanding the specificities of each department or
individual stakeholder. It is our hope that other
researchers would use this paradigm or propose
different paradigms to provide a philosophical
foundation for their methods, an aspect that business
and IT alignment urgently needs.
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