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TOGAF® Certification Paves The Way To A Top Career

The key to a career as an enterprise architect is TOGAF®

Choosing a career as an enterprise architect can be the most important decision in a young person's life. It opens many doors, locally and internationally, and ensures that they are well rounded in their general approach to a wide range of business and IT issues. It challenges them to take the step up in terms of strategic thinking.

The key to a career as an enterprise architect is TOGAF®, or The Open Group Architecture Framework, an industry-standard architecture framework that can be used freely under license by any organisation wanting to develop and implement an enterprise architecture internally.

EA is a long-term career, however, one in which it takes at least a decade to reach maturity given the right individual characteristics. But once gained, such maturity means the sky is the limit for a TOGAF-certified enterprise architect.

Growing adoption of TOGAF®

Adoption of TOGAF® is on the up in South Africa, as more and more companies begin to recognise the benefits of an international standard to guide and structure their approach to EA. Participation will continue to rise as companies internalise the value of TOGAF®.

Already, 9% of the members of the Architecture Forum worldwide are South African, way above the traditional average, which sees 0,75% to 1% South African representation in global economies and industry forums. These members include organisations such as Telkom, Eskom, Nedbank and the SA Reserve Bank.

There is no doubt that the adoption of TOGAF® by international giants such as CapGemini and SAP has given the local market greater confidence in the fact that TOGAF® is here to stay. Global membership of HP, IBM, EDS, Johnson & Johnson and NEC is further indication of how TOGAF® is burgeoning. Based on demand, the EA market is seeing a TOGAF® groundswell, with organisations such as Sasol mandating the framework.

Standards and certification

As EA gains traction as a meaningful career choice, so certification is vital; doctors, lawyers and accountants, to name just three, are all certified in a standard way and now, so too are enterprise architects. The Open Group sees the need to recognise enterprise architects who possess the necessary skills to deliver this EA capability and has two critical certification programmes. The first is TOGAF® certification, which attests to a person's knowledge of TOGAF®. The second, in response to the industry's growing demand to standardise skills of enterprise architects is ITAC, the IT Architect Certification programme.

The Open Group's IT Architect Certification programme is the premier, global certification programme for certifying skills and experience in the enterprise architecture community. The programme was developed in response to the growing demand for highly experienced IT architects with proven track records of success.

Based on the proven best practices in the industry, it sets an independent, industry-wide standard for enterprise architects and creates a foundation for trust between suppliers and customers.

Under the programme, practising IT architects can achieve the IT Architect Certification based on demonstrating substantial skills, experience and success in architecting solutions across the whole lifecycle. The programme in effect provides the missing element, a set of recognised standards that allow organisations to benchmark against the required skill level, experience and knowledge, and choose the right people for the job.

Infinite career opportunities

Through standardised certification, the enterprise architect today has a limitless career path and can obtain a post anywhere EA is applied, worldwide. As a result, EA is now acknowledged everywhere as a great career. However, because it bridges the world between business and IT, it requires certain personal characteristics, knowledge, and skills, and it is critical to spend time engaging the right people for this important function.

Gartner predicts that by 2011, 40% of people affiliated with the IT organisation will have gained business experience outside IT. By 2010 market demand for IT specialists will shrink 10% annually. By 2011, IT organisations will suffer an imbalance: too few business-oriented commercial skills, and too many technology skills. These reflect the rising importance of the enterprise business architecture and the need for a more balanced skill set beyond technical architecture. Here are some of the characteristics to look out for:

  • Conceptual thinker: Ability to think at different levels of abstraction, and deal with different frameworks and ambiguity.
  • Technology-agnostic: Many strong technical people are also quite biased in their views toward products and tend to 'go with what they know'. Architects must be neutral and maintain an objective perspective.
  • Well respected and influential: Architects need the support of senior IT and business managers and the ability to influence them as well as the IT organisation at large. Those who are already well respected and have influence have an advantage.
  • Persuasive: Enterprise architects must spend time communicating and educating. It is therefore important that they have the skills to clearly communicate ideas in a persuasive, compelling manner.
  • A zoom lens approach: Enterprise architects must have the ability to zoom out and focus on business strategy with executives, and to zoom in and discuss technical details with the techies.
  • Strategic outlook: Strategic ideas are, by definition, those that contribute to defining or fulfilling the transformations described in the business strategy of the enterprise, while tactical issues pertain to executing well with operations. Architects must be strategically driven, while recognising the need to have balance in the organisation with effective, tactical operations.
  • Knowledge of the business: It is important to avoid the trap of technology for the sake of technology. Enterprise architects are leaders and therefore they must have a strong interest in and understanding of the business, its strategic direction, dysfunctions, strengths, and more. It is not good enough to be a superior technologist.
  • Ability to facilitate: Enterprise architects are frequently counted on to facilitate content development meetings or lead subcommittees. In this capacity, effective group facilitation skills are important.
  • Ability to negotiate: It is important to seek solutions on issues as architecture content is developed. There are difficult decisions to be made. Effective negotiation skills are invaluable for peacefully resolving these situations with powerful decisions to benefit the organisation.
  • Ability to lead: Taking the initiative to persuade, inspire, motivate, and influence others, plus the ability to make quality decisions with a high level of stakeholder buy-in.

In today's global and highly competitive environment, businesses need to be flexible and able to quickly respond to changing market conditions irrespective of geographical boundaries, time zones, and organisational structures. The key enabler, a well defined EA that supports the needs of the business, is highly dependent on the key employees, enterprise architects, having the required ability, experience and skills. As a result, the demand for highly experienced practitioners is exploding. They must, however, have proven competencies across a variety of disciplines, and the ability to apply their enterprise architecture expertise to reduce business risk, add value and drive sustainable business change.

Date Published: 
Thursday, August 23, 2007 (All day)
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The Open Group has released ArchiMate® 2.0, the latest version of the open and independent modeling language for Enterprise Architecture. ArchiMate® 2.0 is now more closely aligned with TOGAF® and enables the creation of fully integrated models of an organization's Enterprise Architecture, the motivation behind it, and the programs, projects and migration paths to implement it.

The TOGAF® 9 People Certification program has been designed to accommodate maintenance updates (such as TOGAF® 9.1) to the TOGAF® 9 specification. Thus, the certification remains as “TOGAF® 9 Foundation” and “TOGAF 9 Certified”, and individuals who are currently certified in the TOGAF® 9 People Certification program remain certified.

TOGAF® 9.1 was released on 1 December 2011. It contains a set of corrections to address the feedback submitted since the introduction of TOGAF® 9 in 2009. This new version has addressed over 400 of the comments received, resulting in over 450 changes to the standard.
The changes are upwards compatible adding clarification, consistency and additional detail where needed. Some of the most significant updates include:

Real IRM will be providing TOGAF® 9 training in Cape Town in August 2011. The course is open to the public and promises an interactive training experience that combines formal training with informal class discussion.

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South Africa is ranked fifth in the world when it comes to TOGAF® 9 certification numbers. According to The Open Group, at the beginning of June there were already 7,200 individuals certified from more than 50 countries worldwide. Following on the heels of the UK, Netherlands, USA and Australia, South Africa has 5.5% of all these certified individuals.

In South Africa, the first TOGAF® course was presented by Real IRM in 2006. Since then the company has certified hundreds of individuals both locally and abroad, and continues to present public and in-house courses each month.

A certification provides assurance that individuals have the expertise and experience required to get the job done. The Open Group offers three certifications for practitioners; TOGAF® Certification, IT Architecture Certification (ITAC) and IT Specialist Certification (ITSC).

Training Articles

Real IRM, a leading enterprise architecture specialist, is launching the first ArchiMate 1.0 training course in South Africa in July.

Real IRM will offer ArchiMate training locally and internationally alongside its TOGAFTM (The Open Group Architecture Framework) training and certification. The training will be presented in the form of instructor-led, public and client-specific courses.

The key to a career as an enterprise architect is TOGAF®

Choosing a career as an enterprise architect can be the most important decision in a young person's life. It opens many doors, locally and internationally, and ensures that they are well rounded in their general approach to a wide range of business and IT issues. It challenges them to take the step up in terms of strategic thinking.

The growing demand for TOGAF® version 9 and its certification program is indicative of the accelerating global adoption of the standard.

Real IRM, a leading enterprise architecture (EA) specialist, is launching the new EA Bootcamp training course in Johannesburg, in October.

The EA Bootcamp course offers a solid foundation to individuals beginning their careers in the field of enterprise architecture. This four-day course focuses on basic EA concepts with the aim of equipping delegates with the knowledge needed to start participating in EA initiatives.