You brought together all the stakeholders, you set an ambitious goal to shift your business, and you triggered a significant change process.
But then it fell apart. That reorganisation messed up the responsibilities. The customer insights turned out to be just assumptions. The IT applications were too hard to change, and the regulations were too constraining. And your stakeholders were not that convinced after all. What just happened?
In this session, Annika and Milan will show you a mapping technique for facilitating enterprise-level change by design. Based on an overarching model of Enterprise Design Facets and Elements, a Milky Way map captures the value cycle of the enterprise as a system. If used as a true anchor model, it opens up the conversation on your Enterprise Design: what you can do, where to go next, and what to change to get there.
Key takeaways:
Annika Klyver’s work is about making transformations in large organisations happen. She has worked with Enterprise and Information Architecture for over 15 years. She has experience from numerous change and architecture programs in several business lines. Her background is in controlling, business development and within project portfolio management. She has also been a highly appreciated teacher in EA since 2011. Annika is a thought leader in Business Architecture, the ways of working, the visualization of business architecture and she is constantly looking for better ways to create great Enterprises. She is a speaker at international conferences. Annika is a Business Designer/Architect at Scania.
Milan is president of Intersection Group, and a co-founder of the consultancy Enterprise Design Associates and Teamenu, a digital workplace SAAS business. 12 years back, Milan launched a social software startup and designed a patented innovation for commercial flight decks. Today he works with enterprises of all shapes and sizes, to make them deliver, and useful to people. He's been working with enterprises like Google, SAP, Toyota, ThoughtWorks, OECD and the UN. His first book Intersection introduces this Enterprise Design approach, and he is co-organising the Intersection conference series since 2014. He is co-author of the book Enterprise Design Patterns and curator of EDGY, an Open Source tool for co-creating better enterprises, adopted by organisations around the globe.