By
Andy McCue
Friday, August 11 2006 11:31 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/business/0,39044229,39388823,00.htm
Businesses are struggling to cope with the complexity of implementing a service-oriented
architecture (SOA), according to a new study by analyst firm Ovum.
Ovum's survey of 333 U.S. IT decision-makers found that 27 percent of large
enterprises and 17 percent of medium-sized companies have SOA operationally
deployed in at least some areas of the IT infrastructure.
But satisfaction with the results is patchy with almost one in five of the
total sample saying SOA has created unexpected complexity.
The problem, according to Ovum, is that traditional IT management processes
and tools are not always up to the task of monitoring and managing SOA
applications and that SOA deployments require as much support and investment in
infrastructure management as they do in developer kits and testing tools.
Mary Johnston Turner, vice president at Ovum's Summit research unit, said it is important
to approach SOA as part of a broader infrastructure architecture and management
programme rather than as a standalone application.
She told Silicon.com: "It's a modular transition. It's really thinking very
differently about the IT organization's roles and responsibilities."
The Ovum survey found a high correlation between a business' level of
satisfaction with SOA and their commitment to managing IT as a set of services.
Examples of best practice amongst leading edge adopters include IT
infrastructure library (ITIL), service desks, asset and configuration
management tools, IT portfolio management tools and business service management
performance monitoring dashboards.
Johnston Turner said: "ITIL provides a very well defined framework for
operational business processes in a number of areas. That's a great way to get
started. It gives people a common language and common framework."
Andy McCue of Silicon.com reported from London.