BOOKS
BOOK SERIES
JOURNALS
PROCEEDINGS
TEACHING CASES
PAY-PER-VIEW
REFERENCE
E-RESOURCES
ABOUT IGI
BECOME AN AUTHOR/EDITOR  |   MAILING LIST  |   HOW TO ORDER  |   LIBRARY SUGGESTION | EXAMINATION REQUESTS/COURSE ADOPTION | DISTRIBUTORS
IGI Online Bookstore
Click here to PLAY Demo Click here to Start Search Search 30,000+ chapters, articles, and cases - available for download today!

IGI Global Online Symposium!



  Browse Our Bookstore
IGI Catalogs & Newsletters
Forthcoming Titles
Featured Book
By Category
Advanced Search

  Shop
My Profile
View My Cart

  Contact Us
IGI Global
Main Office
701 E. Chocolate Avenue
Hershey, PA 17033, USA
Tel: 717-533-8845 x100
Toll Free: 1-866-342-6657
Fax: 717-533-8661
    or 717-533-7115
 

Conflicts, Compromises and Political Decisions: Methodological Challenges of Enterprise-Wide E-Business Architecture:
Our Price:    $30.00 US
Article #:    ITJ4028
Number of pages:    19-40 pages
Source:    Journal of Database Management, Vol. 19, Issue 1
Author(s):    Smolander, Kari; Rossi, Matti
Affiliation(s):    Lappeenranta University of Technology, Finland; Helsinki School of Economics, Finland

Order Now! This document will be delivered electronically. Terms of Delivery
 

Description
This article describes the architecture development process in an international ICT company, which is building a comprehensive e-business system for its customers. The implementation includes the integration of data and legacy systems from independent business units and the construction of a uniform Web-based customer interface. We followed the early process of architecture analysis and definition over a year. The research focuses on the creation of e-business architecture and observes that instead of guided by a prescribed method, the architecture emerges through somewhat non-deliberate actions obliged by the situation and its constraints, conflicts, compromises, and political decisions. The interview-based qualitative data is analyzed using grounded theory and a coherent story explaining the situation and its forces is extracted. Conclusions are drawn from the observations and possibilities and weaknesses of the support that UML and RUP provide for the process are pointed out.

 
Books  |  Book Series  |  Journals  |  Proceedings  |  Teaching Cases  |  Pay-Per-View  |  Reference  |  E-Resources  |  About IGI
Become An Author/Editor  |  Mailing List  |  How To Order  |  Library Suggestion  |  Examination Requests

IGI Global - All Rights Reserved ©2001-2010