Password:
For immediate release: May 23, 2006 Contact: Shawn Karrick
NASCIO Releases Research Brief on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)
This research brief, an important resource for CIOs and state chief architects, also provides an excellent overview of SOA for non-technical government professionals at all levels of government. SOA promises to be a significant innovation for state government that will provide the ability to pick and choose business and technology services, and will allow the trade out of services based on organizational re-design, new strategic intent, legislative requirements, or business process modifications.
"SOA promises to bring significant business value out of existing IT assets through increased operational efficiencies, optimized business processes, and the ability to adapt and change quickly," said Utah CIO Stephen Fletcher. "Providing flexible access to information across platforms and languages can be complex and resource intensive. Service Oriented Architecture simplifies this through standard protocols which treat all platforms equally. This allows us to offer data services to a wide variety of business partners with requests that can originate from anywhere."
SOA is not another new technology but rather a whole philosophy about sharing and decoupling business processes from technology to enable a fluid enterprise that can adapt and change quickly. With SOA, the spontaneous enterprise, a long-touted vision within enterprise architecture, now becomes possible.
Service Oriented Architecture: an Enabler of the Agile Enterprise is available at http://www.nascio.org/publications.
NASCIO is the premier network and resource for state chief information officers and an effective advocate for technology policy at all levels of government. NASCIO represents state chief information officers and information resource executives and managers from the 50 states, six U.S. territories, and the District of Columbia. State members are senior officials from any of the three branches of state government who have executive-level and statewide responsibility for information resource management. Representatives from federal, municipal, and international governments and state officials who are involved in information resource management but do not have chief responsibility for that function participate in the organization as associate members. Private-sector firms and non-profit organizations may join as corporate members.
For more information about NASCIO visit www.nascio.org.
###
For more information contact NASCIO Enterprise Architect Eric Sweden at (859) 514-9189 or esweden@AMRms.com, or NASCIO Communications Coordinator Beth Roszman at (859) 514-9212 or broszman@AMRms.com.