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Make your IT environment SOA effective, says BEA

Make your IT environment SOA effective, says BEA

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 06 Feb 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

When it comes to IT services, BEA Inc. says it's a big supporter of the three Rs: reduce, reuse and recycle.

"Framework trumps technology," the BEA executive said.

At least one analyst agrees. "SOA is architecture, and SOA is hard. It’s not a one-off software project,” said Ron Schmelzer, a senior analyst with ZapThink LLC, an IT consulting firm based in Baltimore.

However, despite the implementation challenges, it seems the huge payback can make the effort worthwhile.

For instance, Holmstrom told of a BEA client – a North American financial company he did not name – that "saved at least US$20,000 for every service it was able to reuse."

The savings came from reduced account development efforts and man hours.

A pre-requisite for SOA success, is being able to identify services that can be reused, noted Robert Ashall, partner at Softworx Technology Group, a Toronto-based SOA consulting firm that works with BEA.

Ashall said his company helps businesses with this identification process by deploying SOA management and validation software from AmberPoint Inc. of Oakland California.

While BEA products and services handle the SOA design, AmberPoint provides the "runtime policy controls," Ashall said.

AmberPoint's key strengths are in its ability to manage service use through policy-based controls, and to report back on service activities and co-relations, said Mark Segal of Softworx's R&D department.

He said the product informs administrators what services are running, who's using the service and how.

It reports on which services are frequently used and which aren't, and provides a graph illustrating how services throughout the enterprise affect one another.

"This feature is really powerful when it comes to deciding which services to remove and which ones to augment," said Segal.

A participant at the Toronto BEA event from a leading Canadian telecom company, however, was more skeptical and said despite SOA's touted benefits the method is often stymied by people on the ground. "Some people are set in their ways. How do you get users to adopt this system?" said the participant (name withheld at request).

Holmstrom said one way to get buy in from all levels of the organization is by appointing a program director. This person would oversee the initiative, making sure it is in line with the company's goals and the various needs of its department. "Governance needs a governor."

Procedures also have to be established to determine "who does what and when," said Holstrom.

"This prevents the designers and programmers from creating thousands of services that no ever uses."

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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more
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