ABSTRACT

The most difficult questions facing organizations today do not have scientifically or mathematically provable solutions. Many answers that do exist depend upon time and circumstance.

Systems Architecting of Organizations: Why Eagles Can't Swim tackles a very difficult dilemma: how do even highly respected organizations maintain their vaunted excellence, accommodate the new world of global communications, transportation, economics and multinational security, and still survive against stiff competition already in place? As they are finding out, depending upon the circumstances, the demands of excellence on the one hand, and of change on the other, can be cruelly irreconcilable.
This book does not just describe business strengths and weaknesses. First, it identifies potential weaknesses, then offers guidelines and insights to address them. Its approach is architectural and heuristic. Second, this book is about maintaining success in a dynamic world, not about achieving it in a static one; few are clear on what to do and not to do in the face of major change.

Systems Architecting of Organizations: Why Eagles Can't Swim helps professionals gain new perspectives when reviewing their own organizations and to see problems and opportunities previously not apparent.

Features

part 1|42 pages

Treating organizations as systems

part 2|45 pages

An architect’s perspective of the world outside

part 3|48 pages

Internal constraints and opportunities

part 4|36 pages

The foundations of organizational architecting

part 5|40 pages

Stay the course or change it?

chapter |4 pages

Setting the stage

chapter 10|15 pages

The why and when of architectural change

chapter 11|18 pages

The what and how of radical change