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  The Adaptive Enterprise approach

The Adaptive Enterprise approach: how to turn the real-time vision into a reality

By Charles Manly

Much has been written in the past year about the growing importance on the CXO agenda of
achieving information integration during business change. Information integration is the ability
to link together the information retained in disparate enterprise systems to gain a complete
view of enterprise performance - a challenge to achieve even if the business is at a
(nowadays rare) steady state.
Leading analysts such as Gartner and META Group are promoting the requirement for

 


corporations to focus on this issue as part of their Corporate Performance Management and
Business Process Management concepts centered upon putting in place the right business
processes to become more agile, or more responsive to business change.
In this context, commentators have pointed specifically to the limitations of Enterprise
Resource Planning (ERP) and traditional data warehousing solutions to support the access of
consistent, accurate, up-to-the-minute information - because they are solutions built for a
steady state. Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) and web services have also been
actively promoted as solutions to this information integration problem.
However all of these technologies are generally point solutions, unsuitable for integration of
information from multiple, disparate systems. Arguably these solutions just add to the
complexity, and –critically for the business decision-maker - there is no guarantee that the
actual information integrated will be in appropriate formats.

Moreover, these projects are not
quick-fix and must be constantly updated to account for changing business conditions.
What is needed instead is a strategic approach, championed by executive staff, that is
predicated upon the concept that business change is the norm. This approach calls for the
creation of an adaptive information architecture to provide executives with up-to-date, fully
integrated information necessary for rapid business decision-making.
Vitally, this information framework must itself be fully adaptable to changes in the business,
such as mergers, acquisitions, reorganizations and new product strategies, so that the
information is truly indicative of current, historic and projected business performance.

In
2002 leading international business school INSEAD termed organizations which put in place
this type of “next generation” information strategy as Adaptive Enterprises.
In a departure from above-mentioned traditional integration approaches, leaders of the
Adaptive Enterprise focus upon the integration of information within the systems, not of the
systems themselves. ERP, traditional data warehousing and the EAI and/or web services
based systems -linking infrastructures fundame ntally ignore the importance of the information
itself and the requirement to maintain accurate, consistent data as the business changes.
 

Furthermore, Adaptive Enterprise leaders strive for an information strategy that provides
“visibility” and “flexibility” in equal measures and not a trade-off between the two. Visibility
means the ability to ‘slice and dice’ business performance information from any perspective
through key entities such as customers, products or financials even as strategies and
structures change. Flexibility is the ability to move as fast as the market changes because
local units can use best of breed solutions while giving global reporting a cross-enterprise
perspective on information.

The benefits of the Adaptive Enterprise approach can be applied in any area of the business.
For example, a corporation can identify its top corporate accounts worldwide and assess
their profitability by country, product or sales team. The decision-makers can then use the
same data to explore how the business would perform if the business were reorganized on a
customer account basis – without extensive systems integration or re-coding.

All of this process can be achieved without removing precious resources from the local units who are
able to continue to operate and report, as suits their market requirements, without the need
to conform to an ERP-type centralized business model.
 

Two Routes – Both Dead-Ends
Decision-makers of most successful businesses aspire to be adaptive, and many have tried to
achieve it by one of two routes, both by-and-large unsuccessful.
Some organizations, notably those which have grown organically, have standardized on one
enterprise software application worldwide, however painful, time -consuming and expensive
the process might be. In these instances the board enjoys excellent visibility of the business
once the process is completed and there is a common approach to reporting throughout the
business.

However this comes at a price. Any major change can significantly reduce the global visibility
– for example integration of an acquisition’s management accounts can take months to port
to the chosen platform. Furthermore, it takes considerable time and money for the
Standardized Enterprise to effect the cultural and process change associated with
persuading operating units to adopt the same software.

The alternative path is the Decentralized Enterprise. Here the organization leaders have
decided that the operating business units should have the autonomy to choose the business
processes and supporting IT applications that are most appropriate for their local
requirements. Usually this results in a best-of-breed approach. As a consequence, the
businesses have a greater degree of flexibility in how they respond to opportunities and
market changes.

But the center has to spend heavily in terms of time and resources to gain aggregated data
that may or may not be accurate. Typically such businesses experience information
disconnect (or ‘semantic’ disconnect) where the center is unable to compare information from
different systems as the assumptions and context are different for each system. For
example, aggregating sales data by “product group” makes the assumption that all operating
companies have identical, current definitions of the valid “product groups,” though there is
no guarantee of this, nor a procedure to ensure it.

The Adaptive Enterprise combines the benefits of both the Standardized and Decentralized
Enterprise without their drawbacks. It enjoys the ‘visibility’ of a standardized approach in
that information from across the organization can be viewed from any perspective at a global
or regional level. It also provides the organization with ‘flexibility’ when it needs to react to
internal or external change, as local units have the freedom to use solutions that enable
them to perform at peak efficiency.

Indeed, a successful Adaptive Enterprise will recognize the importance of regional and local
distinctiveness and put in place systems that meet these specific information needs as well
as the global requirement. The challenge is to set up and maintain such systems efficiently
both in time and cost terms.

Getting Started

The perceived drawback to the Adaptive Enterprise as a concept is that it can appear to be
a very long and xpensive strategy to undertake before benefits are realized. However, a
project-based start to the process will pay immediate benefits while building a model which
can evolve into an enterprise-wide strategy. In other words, companies are advised to ‘Think
Big, Start Small, Evolve Smart.’

Think Big - The CIO, or other business champion, sees integrated information as a core asset
and source of competitive advantage and envisions how this information could be managed
better for a more accurate, real-time view of business performance. The CIO will have seen a
proliferation of data warehouses or the implementation of new operational systems created
for specific needs, such as market segment analysis or customer account management,
without any central co-ordination or benefit to the organization as a whole.

With the Adaptive Enterprise approach, however, all existing investments are integrated at
an information level to form an enhanced global view that can withstand change.
Many of our global customers address their enterprise-wide information integration strategy
by the application of an adaptive information architecture containing the following three key

components:

Creation of a ‘next generation’ data warehouse that has a non-rigid design that can
accommodate change for a country or large region. This flexible warehouse will enable
the vertical integration of information held in disparate operational systems through to
business intelligence reporting. It will also have sophisticated ‘beyond OLAP’ business
modeling capabilities to provide multiple perspectives of the information.

· Separate management of “transaction” (static) data and “reference” (business
context) data as a fundamental part of the next generation data warehouse strategy
to enable the horizontal integration of reference data across disparate operational
systems. This procedure enables the comparison of ‘like’ for ‘like’ across the
operational systems.

· If the company has more than one ‘next generation’ data warehouse, the warehouses
are then federated ‘pyramid fashion,’ with country warehouses linked into a top-level
warehouse at a contextual level. This structure enables simultaneous global and local
reporting formats in styles that suit each level. All warehouses in this structure are
interlinked to share information.

Unlike traditional data warehousing solutions, these three components enable an organization
to build up a picture - during business change - of key business entities such as customers,
products and suppliers across disparate systems while allowing local units to operate as
market requirements dictate.

Traditional data warehouses are rarely built to accommodate change rapidly due to their rigid
schemas. If the company reorganizes its product range, channel strategy or key account
process, the data concerning these items becomes obsolete until the hierarchies are
reorganized.

In addition, traditional data warehouses do not treat transaction data separately from
business reference data. This means that when changes in the structure of source systems
for the data warehouse occur, ‘like’ is no longer being compared with ‘like.’ In next generation
data warehousing, the ability to separate transaction data from reference data with a centra
reference data repository ensures that, whatever changes, ‘like’ is always compared with
‘like,’ and data is not being overwritten. This ensures that management can have confidence
in the accuracy of the information as well as get the right data quickly into their business
models to make fast, effective decisions.

The management of reference data is now a key component of an enterprise-wide
information management strategy, which encompasses housing and mapping the
‘vocabularies’ of all the operating units and a single resultant view of how entities such as
customers, suppliers and products are described. The same generic product might be
described in very different ways in two different operational systems but the reference data
repository understands that they are the same.

Some organizations have researched extensively all the differing descriptions of these items
within every single business and created a central database that recognizes differing local
descriptions but stores them as they really are, stripped of local customization. This means
that any changes to these items can be fed out to the local data warehouses whenever
anything changes – yet the local operations can continue to code and view the information
according to their individual preferences.

With federated data warehousing, the specific requirements of each region are catered for at
the regional level with core information being fed into the global data warehouse for a toplevel
view. This allows full visibility and flexibility across the enterprise.

Start Small – Any IT project needs to have a very clear and fast return-on-investment if it is
to gain executive sign-off - and this is also true in the case of the Adaptive Enterprise
approach. For many corporations, two critical areas stand out as having an immediate need
for global information management, while requiring local account management to continue:
supplier and customer management. Both areas represent untapped potential for value
creation if information to support initiatives in each area is integrated for analysis across
diverse systems.

For example, a manufacturing leader with a multi-billion dollar turnover has started with a
global supply chain project which aims to give its hundreds of procurement managers
worldwide a holistic view of the corporation’s supplier relationships. The executives can view
information drawn from all the systems that contain supplier information in one unified view
that adapts to change. Everyone in the organization will have the ability, looking at the
supplier relationship from any perspective, to create their own reports and to model new
approaches.

In this case a reference data ‘repository’ drives all the data warehouses around the business,
ensuring that the definition of key business information is the same in all systems. The
starting point for this kind of activity is a data modeling exercise where the definition of how
products, suppliers and contracts are described and collated. This is a resource-intensive,
but one-time, process.

Evolve Smart - Building the Adaptive Enterprise can be compared to the construction of a
jigsaw. The initial projects may be situated in different parts of the organization to address
different problems. The most important criteria for the Adaptive Enterprise approach is that
they demonstrate significant contribution to business performance through cost-savings
and/or revenue generation opportunities.

The same worldwide manufacturer, previously discussed, is already planning how the
principles and processes developed for the initial ‘small’ project can be applied to other
functions within the business. Through orchestrated word-of-mouth across the organization,
the potential of the Adaptive Enterprise approach is being discussed and fed into future
strategies with the expectation that the adaptive information within the business will
eventually encompass everything they do.

Conclusion

CIOs contemplating better ways to manage information should continue to focus on distinct
areas that ave the potential to deliver significant margin improvement. Invariably these
areas will have been the focus of prior, unsuccessful data warehouse-related projects, so
the participants must be open to new approaches. While these tactical projects are
implemented on a quarterly cycle, the organization should also work toward achieving the
larger goal of leveraging adaptive business information as a strategic asset of the company.

By adopting the Adaptive Enterprise approach, for the first time executives can move beyond
management of the ‘status quo’ and start to manage the global business with the same
responsiveness and effectiveness that they managed smaller, local businesses earlier in their
careers. All the information containing the learning and experience from across business
units worldwide can be harnessed, enabling global business decision-makers to plan and actfaster
and better than the competition.

Charles Manly is chief operating officer of Kalido Ltd., provider of information integration
software to support enterprise management of complex change such as mergers,acquisitions,
reorganization and globalization. He can be reached on

charles.manly@kalido.com.

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