• Skip Navigation |
  • Accessibility 
IT-Director.com Logo
  • How ICT can help broad environmental initiatives
  • Is there a business case to be made in favour of virtualising the desktop?
  • Collaborative mind mapping
 

Main navigation - go to a section of this website:

  • ARCHIVE
  • PAPERS
  • RESEARCH
  • EVENTS
  • NEWSWIRE
  • BLOGS
  • POLLS

  

Member Login | Become a Member

 
DOMAINS
  • Enterprise
  • SME
  • Business Issues
  • Technology
  • Services
  • Channels
FEATURED EVENTS
  • Carbon Footprint Energy Efficient IT Summit 2008
    4th September - 5th September
    London, United Kingdom
POPULAR PAPERS
  • On-premise and on-demand by Quocirca
  • Data Migration by Bloor Research
  • Enterprise Search by Bloor Research
TRANSLATE PAGE



USEFUL LINKS
  • Last 7 Days
  • Archives
  • Market Place
  • Top Articles
  • Hall of Flame
INTERACT
  • Advertising
  • About IT-Director.com
  • Site Feedback
  • Newsletters
  • Contact Us
  • Registration
CONTENT FEED

Sitewide
RSS Feed:

RSS Icon

What is RSS?

RANDOM QUOTE
Famous Slights - "Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising." - Cyril Connolly

ADVERTISEMENT
Blogs > MWD

Which comes first: process or service? Part 1

Neil Ward-Dutton By: Neil Ward-Dutton, Research Director, Macehiter Ward-Dutton
Published: 18th April 2008
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
Logo for Macehiter Ward-Dutton
Page Tools

Tell A Friend
Contact Author

Recent Blog Posts
  • Collaborative mind mapping
  • IBM's identity management becomes user-centric: HP's identity management exit strategy
  • Oracle makes its "enterprise 2.0" play
  • A week of firsts
  • Which comes first: process or service? Part 2
  • The Mysterious Oracle
Blog Archive
  • July, 2008
  • May, 2008
  • April, 2008
  • March, 2008
  • February, 2008
  • January, 2008
  • December, 2007
  • November, 2007
  • October, 2007
  • September, 2007
  • August, 2007
  • July, 2007
Syndication
  • Delicious Icon Delicious
  • Digg Icon Digg
  • reddit Icon reddit
  • Facebook Icon Facebook
  • StumbleUpon Icon StumbleUpon

Over the years I've been helping to run MWD I've been to quite a few events, talked to many enterprise IT folks and talked to many tech vendors, too—and one of the topics that comes up most often is the relationship between BPM and SOA. There's been a bit of a run on the topic in the blogosphere lately. First, I was alerted to this post on CIO.com via the EDS fellows' blog in a post called SOA is a Business Process Architecture. At around the same time, I read The Problem with Process by Nick Malik (always good to read).

Too often, in presentations and papers, I see diagrams that replicate the old three-tier architecture of the '90s, but with a twist: instead of user interface, business logic and data access layers, now I keep seeing portal, BPM and SOA layers. Portals provide user interaction, and invoke processes; processes invoke services. Job done.

Looking at BPM and SOA purely in this way is short-sighted, disingenuous and dangerous. It looks at both initiatives through a very focused lens, and essentially says "BPM and SOA are about building and integrating applications". Not your father's applications I'll grant, but applications nonetheless—things with hard boundaries that have little awareness of other systems or resources that might exist, and little conceptual relationship to broader architectural or business considerations.

The first, and most obvious, point to make that blows this kind of picture apart is that it's mind-numbingly straightforward to wrap a process (or at least the initial invocation of a process) as a service. So *now* what's "on top" - process or service? This realisation has led to more enlightened commentators advocating that organisations consider processes and services more like a lasagne, with alternating layers of the two concepts. Services expose processes, processes call services, etc etc ad infinitum.

However even here we're only part way to the real answer, because this view also stems from seeing both BPM and SOA primarily from a "bottom up", software development- and integration-centric perspective. Of course, many people refute a view like this, and point out that "BPM is a business management approach, and SOA is a technology architecture approach—you can't lump them together so easily". In other (very simplistic) words BPM is a top-down, business-driven initiative, whereas SOA is a bottom-up, technology-driven initiative.

The two articles I've linked to above are great because they start to take a deeper look at the architectural and conceptual relationship between service and process. Both EDS Fellow Fred Cummins and Nick Malik start to pick away at the simplistic views that seem to hold sway in the minds of many at the moment.

Neither quite take the argument as far as they might, though. Through our industry research (for our book as well as our various free reports and consulting gigs), we've come to see that the value of both BPM and SOA comes from considering them neither purely as bottom-up initiatives focused on improving the development / integration of applications and resources, nor as top-down initiatives focused on exploring and elaborating business architecture. We already have a champion in the case of "top-down SOA" - the OASIS SOA Adoption Blueprints team. The real insights come, I think, when you see how top-down and bottom-up perspectives of service-orientation and process-orientation can all come together in a more holistic view of business and technology architecture.

I'll expand on what such a view entails in a Part 2 of this post, in the next few days.

Reader Comments

We are no longer accepting comments against this item. We suggest contacting the author directly.

  • Site Map
  • | Terms of Use
  • | Privacy

Published by: IT Analysis Communications Ltd.
T: +44 (0)203 051 5760 | F: +44 (0)870 345 9922