What Is Enterprise Architecture? Strategy, Frameworks, and Roadmaps
Enterprise Architecture
What Is Enterprise Architecture? Strategy, Frameworks, and Roadmaps
Enterprise architecture helps organizations connect business strategy with technology decisions. It gives leaders a structured way to understand capabilities, applications, data, infrastructure, security, governance, and roadmaps before making major technology changes.
Short answer
Enterprise architecture is a discipline for aligning business goals with technology systems. It maps how people, processes, applications, data, infrastructure, and controls work together so an organization can reduce complexity, modernize safely, and make better long-term decisions.
Why enterprise architecture matters
Without architecture discipline, organizations often add systems faster than they remove complexity. Teams may duplicate tools, define data differently, create fragile integrations, or modernize one area while breaking another. Enterprise architecture makes these dependencies visible.
Core domains
- Business architecture: Capabilities, value streams, operating model, and business outcomes.
- Application architecture: Software systems, ownership, integrations, lifecycle, and portfolio health.
- Data architecture: Data definitions, quality, ownership, governance, and analytics foundations.
- Technology architecture: Cloud, infrastructure, platforms, identity, integration, and operations.
- Security architecture: Risk, access, policy, resilience, and control alignment.
Enterprise architecture deliverables
- Capability map
- Application portfolio view
- Current-state and future-state architecture
- Technology standards and principles
- Roadmaps and modernization plans
- Architecture decision records
- Governance review model
Enterprise architecture frameworks
Frameworks such as TOGAF help teams structure architecture work, but a framework is not the goal. The goal is better decision-making. A lightweight architecture practice that improves clarity is often more useful than a large framework that nobody uses.
How to start
- Identify the most important business capabilities.
- Map the applications that support those capabilities.
- Find duplicated, outdated, or risky systems.
- Document major data flows and integration dependencies.
- Define architecture principles and decision rules.
- Create a roadmap with phases, owners, and measurable outcomes.
Related guides from The Tech Silo
- Enterprise Architecture hub
- Enterprise Software hub
- Cloud Infrastructure hub
- AI Infrastructure hub
- Data Platforms hub
References and further reading
FAQ
Is enterprise architecture only documentation?
No. Good enterprise architecture supports decisions, prioritization, governance, and roadmaps. Documentation is useful only when it helps teams act.
Who owns enterprise architecture?
Ownership varies, but the work usually involves enterprise architects, technology leaders, business owners, security leaders, data leaders, and delivery teams.
How often should architecture roadmaps be updated?
Roadmaps should be reviewed regularly, especially when business priorities, platforms, risks, or major programs change.
Keyword-density checklist: Primary keyword: enterprise architecture. Target range: 0.6%–1.2%. Secondary terms: capability map, architecture governance, technology roadmap, application portfolio, business architecture, data architecture.
