GCN has an interview with Malcolm Fry, who's considered the "father" of the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL). Fry says that "ITIL is, to some degree, enterprise architecture". But as Wikipedia accurately describes, ITIL is a set of service management best practices. It's got nothing to do with describing the performance, business, services, technology, and data structures that support an organization. It's everything to do with process and nothing to do with architecture.
I will certainly concede that the tools that support ITIL (change management databases, incident reporting systems, etc.) realize some elements of an EA but they aren't the EA itself.
There's enough confusion about what EA is without this kind of muddying-the-waters. I'm by no means an EA expert but I know enough to see that claiming "ITIL is EA" is complete hooey. It's like saying that CMMI is EA -- total nonsense.
I hope to investigate ITIL in a bit more depth in coming weeks. It originated in the UK and I suspect it can be well applied here in the US to fill in the gaps between the PMBOK (which describes how to run an IT project organization) and CMMI process areas (which describe how to conduct systems integration work). Has anyone got experience in mapping these against each other?
I have. See www.erp4it.com
Posted by: Charles Betz | March 19, 2007 at 23:03
Where on the site is the CMMI-PMBOK-ITIL mapping? I don't see it...
Posted by: Dave | March 20, 2007 at 16:05