Difference between revisions of "Enterprise Architecture Quarter"

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===Roles===
 
===Roles===
 
#'''[[Data architect]]'''.  
 
#'''[[Data architect]]'''.  
#'''[[Knowledge engineer]]'''.  
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#'''[[Knowledge engineer]]'''.
#'''[[Entrepreneur]]'''. “An entrepreneur is an individual who accepts financial risks and undertakes new financial ventures. The word derives from the French “entre” (to enter) and “prendre” (to take), and in a general sense applies to any person starting a new project or trying a new opportunity.” (Source: wiseGEEK)
 
#'''[[Intraprenuer]]'''. “Coined in the 1980s by management consultant Gifford Pinchot, intrapreneurs are used by companies that are in great need of new, innovative ideas. Today, instead of waiting until the company is in a bind, most companies try to create an environment where employees are free to explore ideas. If the idea looks profitable, the person behind it is given an opportunity to become an intrapreneur.” (Source: Investopedia) ‘Intrapreneurs’ hold many similar characteristics to ‘Entrepreneurs’ any may well leave their jobs to pursue a career as an entrepreneur. Companies seek out intrapreneurs to effect change within their organizations.
 
#'''[[Lead investor]]'''. A venture capital firm or individual investor that organizes a specific round of funding for a company. The lead investor usually invests the most capital in that round. Also known as "leading the round."
 
  
 
===Methods===
 
===Methods===

Revision as of 18:11, 16 April 2018

Enterprise Architecture Quarter (hereinafter, the Quarter) is the third of four lectures of Project Quadrivium (hereinafter, the Quadrivium):

  • The Quarter is designed to introduce its learners to enterprise design, or, in other words, to concepts related to creating architecture for achieving enterprise goals; and
  • The Quadrivium examines concepts of administering various types of enterprises known as enterprise administration as a whole.

The Quadrivium is the first of seven modules of Septem Artes Administrativi, which is a course designed to introduce its learners to general concepts in business administration, management, and organizational behavior.


Lecture outline

The predecessor lecture is Feasibility Study Quarter.

Concepts

  1. Enterprise architecture. A composition of the interrelated businesses, process assets, enterprise factors, and personnel that together are known as an enterprise.
  2. Enterprise business. The actual or potential practice of making enterprise's profit by engaging in commerce.
    • Business. (1) An individual's regular occupation, profession, or trade; (2) the practice of making one's profit by engaging in commerce.
    • Departmentalization. The basis by which jobs in an enterprise are grouped together.
  3. Startup business (or, simply, startup). A business in its search of its business model or its ways of making money.
    • Startup. A startup company is a company in the early stages of operations. Startups are usually seeking to solve a problem of fill a need, but there is no hard-and-fast rule for what makes a startup. A company is considered a startup until they stop referring to themselves as a startup.
  4. Operational business. Any business, which business model generates revenue.
  5. Portfolio engineering.
  6. Segmentation.
    • Sector. The market that a startup companies product or service fits into. Examples include: consumer technology, cleantech, biotech, and enterprise technology. Venture Capitalists tend to have experience investing in specific related sectors and thus tend not to invest outside of their area of expertise.
  7. Core competency. An organization's major value-creating capability that determines its competitive weapons.
  8. Innovation. Taking change ideas and turning them into new products, product features, production methods, pricing strategies, and ways of enterprise administration.
  9. Context diagram. An analysis model that illustrates product scope by showing the system in its environment with the external entities (people and systems) that give to and receive from the system.
    • Context. The users, other systems and other features of the environment of the system that the system will interact with.
  10. Exit strategy. This is how startup founders get rich. It's the method by which an investor and/or entrepreneur intends to "exit" their investment in a company. Commons options are an IPO or buyout from another company. Entrepreneurs and VCs often develop an "exit strategy" while the company is still growing.
    • Exit strategy. A business strategy that seeks to withdraw an enterprise out of a particular business at the lowest cost and biggest gain.
    • Buyout. A common exit strategy. The purchase of a company's shares that gives the purchaser controlling interest in the company.
    • Liquidation. The process of dissolving a company by selling off all of its assets (making them liquid).
    • IPO. Initial public offering. The first time shares of stock in a company are offered on a securities exchange or to the general public. At this point, a private company turns into a public company (and is no longer a startup).
    • Harvesting. Exiting a venture when an entrepreneur hopes to capitalize financially on the investment in the future.
  11. Paradox theory. The theory that the key paradox in management is that there is no final status for an enterprise.

Roles

  1. Data architect.
  2. Knowledge engineer.

Methods

Instruments

  1. BCG matrix. A strategy tool that guides resource allocation decisions on the basis of market share and growth rate of strategic business units.

Results

  1. Enterprise portfolio. A collection of all businesses in which a particular enterprise is.

Practices

The successor lecture is Resource Planning Quarter.

Materials

Recorded audio

Recorded video

Live sessions

Texts and graphics

See also