1 / 13

Enterprise Architecture in Defence

Enterprise Architecture in Defence. Katie de Bourcier Director Information Exploitation 24 th Feb 2009. A non-technical perspective on EA. It’s about Understanding the business Sharing that understanding Seeing how we can do our business better It helps in making decisions about

coye
Télécharger la présentation

Enterprise Architecture in Defence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Enterprise Architecture in Defence Katie de Bourcier Director Information Exploitation 24th Feb 2009

  2. A non-technical perspective on EA • It’s about • Understanding the business • Sharing that understanding • Seeing how we can do our business better • It helps in making decisions about • Structures • Processes • Human factors • Information solutions • Or any other aspect of the organisation or activity • It’s a means to an end – does it pass the “so what” test?

  3. Defence – the Challenge • Changing nature of the threat – international terrorism – demands a joined-up response across: • The three Services and the MOD Civil Service • Government • Allies and coalition partners • Continuing pressure to improve departmental efficiency and focus resources on the front line • Drive to increase departmental effectiveness • Capability Review in 2007, re-review currently underway • Internal transformation programmes

  4. Information is the Key • Effective management, assurance and exploitation of information recognised as fundamental to achieving Defence objectives • Integrating sensors, decision-makers, and weapons in the battlespace • Increasing interoperability nationally and internationally • Optimizing the use of resources in a robust operational support structure • Improving information-sharing and decision-making in the non-operational environment • Ensuring effective performance measurement and a clear audit trail for decisions and actions • A new Government Knowledge and Information Management strategy – “Information Matters” – launched November 2008

  5. Enterprise Architecture in Defence • EA in Defence has been developing since 2004 – • Prompted by the Network Enabled Capability Programme • Original focus on equipment acquisition and support domain, with a strong systems engineering focus • MODAF developed as the MOD’s architecture framework • Recognition that this was not full use of the potential of enterprise architecture to put technical solutions in the context of business objectives, strategy and process • Set up programme to promote wider exploitation of EA – pilot projects carried out to test the concept • Now seen as key part of future role of the MOD CIO

  6. Testing EA in Defence- Casualty Information Management

  7. Casualty Information Management - Background • Pilot project to evaluate EA to address real issue of managing information about operational casualties from the battlefield back to NHS hospitals in the UK • Complex: • Global • Multinational • Multiple agencies • Multiple stakeholder perspectives (eg clinical, personnel management)

  8. The Approach • Strategic goals and approved doctrine used to model the “As should be” architecture • Observation in the field used to derive the “As is” process • Analysis used to develop a proposed architecture for improved casualty information management • Proposals validated with medical and other stakeholders

  9. HQ ISAF RC (SOUTH) KANDAHAR UK COMMAND HQS FORWARD OPERATING BASES ISAF RC(South) J3/J4 Med Ops HQ Kandahar Battle Group HQ Permanent Joint HQ MOD Centre / DCMC Patrol Commander Combat Medical Team UK MEDICAL AND WELFARE ORGANISATIONS Welfare Co-ord NSCCC Innsworth ROLE 2 FACILITY – CAMP BASTION Combined Military / NHS Hospitals (UK) Medical Emergency Response Team Role 2 Field Hospital National HQ RC(South) HQ Kandahar STRATEGIC AIR MDU Selly Oak AeroMed Evacuation Medical Care Rehabilitation Headley Court Casualty Tracking Pilot Study

  10. Outcomes from the Pilot • Replacement field hospital system developed and rolled out quickly (47 days) – continuity from outgoing system • Required architectures (business process and technical solution) must be developed in a coherent manner • People are critical to the process - wall to wall IT is not always the best solution: • Post-it notes on a white board visually more effective than laptops • Satellite phones made medical evacuation tasking more effective - allows in-flight reprioritisation

  11. MODAF-The MOD’s Architecture Framework

  12. MODAF • Developed by the MOD from US DoDAF - extended and modified to support EA approach to planning and change management in MOD. • Provided the template against which NATO Architecture Framework version 3.0 has been developed. • Now used by a wide range of government and industry organisations . . .

  13. Who Uses MODAF ? UK Ministry of Defence & its suppliers Thales, BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, Serco, Boeing, General Dynamics, etc. etc. Intelligence Services GCHQ and others National Air Traffic Control (NATS) Swedish Armed Forces Critical National Infrastructure UK e-borders project Adapted by NATO to become NAF Rev 3 MODAF has since moved on with the release of v1.2 V1.2 uses the same SOA meta-model elements as NAF

More Related