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A Case Study of Stakeholder Concerns on EAM
Type
conference paper
Date Issued
2017-10-10
Author(s)
Editor(s)
Hallé, Sylvain
Dijkman, Remco
Lapalme, James
Research Team
ACG, IWI1
Abstract
As a result of growing complexities in business processes, information systems, and the technical infrastructure, a key challenge for enterprise architecture management (EAM) is to guide stakeholders from different hierarchical levels with heterogeneous concerns. EA deliverables, such as models or frameworks, are often highly comprehensive and standardized. However, these can hardly be applied without greater adaption. Although the literature selectively covers approaches for tailoring EA deliverables closer to the concerns of affected stakeholders, these approaches are often vague or not very differentiated. In the paper at hand, we aim at introducing a stakeholder perspective to EAM research that considers stakeholder concerns on EAM across hierarchical levels. To this end, we conduct a case study: Our results show homogenous concerns among stakeholders on EA deliverables. In turn, we found different concerns on the role of EAM in applying these deliverables, dependent on the hierarchical level of stakeholders. These findings stress the necessity for a more differentiated understanding of stakeholder concerns on EAM. Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings for an exemplary EAM approach.
Language
English
Keywords
enterprise architecture management (EAM)
stakeholder concerns
hierarchical level
case study
stakeholder concerns
hierarchical level
case study
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
SoM - Business Innovation
Book title
Proceedings of the 2017 IEEE 21st International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference Workshops and Demonstrations (EDOCW 2017)
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society
Publisher place
Los Alamitos, CA
Start page
50
End page
56
Event Title
Trends in Enterprise Architecture Management (TEAR) hosted in Quebec
Event Date
October 10-13, 2017
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
251333