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Strategic Technology Architecture for Maine State Government What does it mean for Maine State IT?. Nancy Armentrout B. Victor Chakravarty. Strategic Architecture Committee Charter. Ad-hoc committee, chartered by the CIO. Members & Chair appointed by the CIO.
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Strategic Technology ArchitectureforMaine State GovernmentWhat does it mean for Maine State IT? Nancy Armentrout B. Victor Chakravarty
Strategic Architecture Committee Charter • Ad-hoc committee, chartered by the CIO. Members & Chair appointed by the CIO. • Set and communicate architectural directions for critical IT infrastructure and applications. • Examine emerging issues and develop architecture road-maps for guiding day-to-day decisions and new projects. • Horizon is two bienniums, rolling.
Committee Members • Core Tech: Greg McNeal, Jon Richard, Wayne Gallant, Sheldon Bird, Mark Kemmerle, Mike Pomerleau. • Agencies: Kevin Jones, Nancy Armentrout (Chair), David Blocher, Art Henry. • OCIO: Kathy Record, Victor Chakravarty, Paul Sandlin.
Many existing one-off solutions to support. Use our limited resources wisely. Be cost-effective. Orderly sunset and support of legacy products/technologies. Guide RFPs and purchases. Develop appropriate skills to properly support our services, technologies, products. Why Common Architecture?
Why Strategic Architecture? • Facilitate the Governor’s interoperability and integration initiatives. • Support agencies and programs as they proceed to improve service delivery and reduce costs. • Provide integration of services, improved access, and higher availability. These are now routine expectations of agencies and programs.
Committee Strategy • Iterative approach • Urgent need to limit the buffet of technology options and increase interoperability. • First Pass • Identify mainstream technologies that move us forward in the direction believed to be correct • Standardize • Second Pass • More strategic • More input from the business community • Refine standards where necessary
The First Pass • Review 2002 Strategic Plan. • Start with categories identified in the old plan, modify and add where applicable. • For each category describe where we want to be in four years – using To-Be Roadmaps. • Identify technologies and products that help us get there and those that don’t – using Gartner Brick format • Put To-Be Roadmaps and associated Bricks out for vetting. • Hold focus group sessions to help get feedback • Update the bricks as standards • Publish internally. Incorporate in RFPs, etc.
The Second Pass • Engage the IT Executive Committee. • Talk to leaders in agencies and programs, to understand where they are headed with service delivery, information management, tools, connectivity, etc. • Develop the technology directions to support such plans. • Refine & finalize the To-Be Roadmaps. • Refine & finalize the Bricks to support them. • Publish externally. Link to RFPs, etc.
Committee Outputs to Date • Intranet Site for Internal Publishing • General Architectural Principles - Guidelines for Every Day Decision-making • Database Brick • Newsletter Articles • Meager feedback so far. Request more!
To-Be Roadmaps & Brick Categories Identified to Date • Single Sign On: Identity & Authentication Management • Web Publishing • Database, Reporting & Data Warehousing • Client Provisioning • Server Infrastructure • Applications Architecture • Network Services • Security
Criteria used to make selections • Installed base within the State • Customer Value (ROI) –discussed this criteria having the most weight • Supportability • Sustainability, (or Viability) • Market Position • Training Effectiveness • Scalability • Alignment w/ the long-term architecture vision • General excellence (Enterprise-class product)
Today’s Agenda • Describe the Brick format and the DB Brick. • You are the focus group for the DB Brick (both format and content). • What is the best way to reach you in the vetting cycle? • Introduce the Single Sign On and Web Publishing drafts (both To-Be Roadmaps & Bricks).