News Desk
Early Adopters View Governance as Key to Creating Sustainable SOA Implementations
Software AG Surveyed Global Customer Base to Identify Emerging Best Practices for SOA Governance
Jul. 17, 2008 11:45 AM
A new global survey issued by Software AG suggests that
enterprise adoption of service-oriented architecture (SOA) has ‘crossed the
chasm’. Users also identified SOA governance as a key component of sustainable
implementations with holistic, lifecycle approaches viewed as a core
requirement. However, the overall maturity of their adoption was regarded as
moderate with the state of their governance practices considered lacking.
According to the survey, more than 90% of respondents
indicated some level of SOA planning underway within their organizations. More
than half of all enterprises have already implemented successful SOA-based
projects and/or an enterprise-wide SOA. Respondents also reported considerable
satisfaction with their progress to date. Less than 10% were explicitly unhappy
with their results so far as satisfaction with SOA beat dissatisfaction by a
four-to-one margin. Among those reporting having an enterprise-wide SOA in
place, approximately two-thirds said that they were satisfied with their
results to date with the remainder reporting that it was “too early to tell”.
The survey also found that users overwhelmingly view
governance as being a key component to creating sustainable SOA implementations
at the enterprise level with over 90% reporting that it was either critically
(54%) or moderately important. Despite this importance, nearly two-thirds rate
their own SOA governance practices as either “non-existent” or “insufficient”.
Among the best practices identified by the survey was the importance of having
a SOA Competency
Center or Center of Excellence
in place to build cross-organizational support for these initiatives. Somewhat
surprisingly, the survey also found that senior IT management appeared to be
missing from these discussions with less than 20% enjoying active support from
the Office of the CIO as just one example.
“With organizations just beginning to embrace SOA
governance, a significant void exists in terms of well-established and widely
disseminated best practices. The purpose of this survey was to overcome these
gaps by determining which approaches are being used in the field to
successfully implement SOA governance,” said Björn Brauel, vice president and
Deputy CTO, Software AG. “These results show that it’s never too early to start
in terms of governance, with a holistic, lifecycle approach to managing
services most often needed. Reflecting the business-critical nature of most
implementations, the need to consistently meet service-level agreements for
performance was cited as the most common driver for SOA governance. Findings
such as these can be invaluable to users struggling to define their own
enterprises’ SOA governance strategy.”
Among the survey’s other findings were:
- Interest in SOA was widespread as only one industry out of
14 reported that more than 15% of its respondents had “no plans to adopt SOA”.
- Top drivers for SOA adoption were a desire to improve
business agility, simplify integration, and support business process management
(BPM) initiatives.
- SOA has yet to expand far beyond the firewall as only a
small minority (19.5%) report having exposed more than a quarter of their
existing services externally.
- There was a strong correlation between SOA maturity and
governance adoption with more than 80% of enterprises having a
fully-implemented SOA in place calling their governance practices “mature” or “adequate”
versus 33% overall.
- Enterprises with the most advanced adoption of SOA
governance were the least likely to identify governance as a set of
technologies alone.
- Full lifecycle governance was deemed critical with 70% of
respondents concluding that each stage of the lifecycle – design, run, and
change-time governance – were of equal importance.
- Over half believe that governance should be implemented
before the first service is created.
- SOAP and WSDL were described as the most important standards
for SOA followed by UDDI.
- WSDLs and XML Schemas were the most commonly stored
repository items followed by additional documentation and associated policies.
- In terms of key inhibitors to more widespread adoption, users
identified the lack of needed skills, the complexity of their current IT
environments, the lack of business support and the difficulty in quantify ROI
as key challenges.
“The good news is that 91% recognize that governance is
either critically or moderately important to their SOA strategy. The challenge
is that only seven percent rate their governance practices as mature,” said
Miko Matsumura, vice president and Deputy CTO, Software AG. “Enterprises have
taken the first step in admitting that there is a problem. Now they can take
the additional steps needed to address the issues highlighted by the report,
such as overwhelming IT complexity, lack of business buy-in and a genuine
skills shortage.”
The survey was conducted in April/May 2008 and received 176
qualified responses. Overall, the majority of the respondents were from large
enterprises with revenue greater than $1B, with 37% coming from enterprises
with annual revenue of $5B or greater. Responses were drawn from fourteen
distinct industry sectors with no market representing more than 16% of the
responses.
The full report, Best
Practices for SOA Governance User Survey (July 2008), is available for
download at www.SoftwareAG.com/soagovernancesurvey.
About SOA News DeskSOA World Magazine News Desk trawls the world of distributed computing and SOA-related developments for the latest word on technologies, standards, products, and services and brings key information to you in a timely and convenient summary form.