Lean Integration: An Integration Factory Approach to Business Agility (Addison-Wesley Information Technology) |  | Authors: John G. Schmidt, David Lyle Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional Category: Book
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $28.59 as of 9/5/2010 02:11 CDT details You Save: $11.40 (29%)
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Seller: aphrohead_books_uk Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 113250
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 464 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7 x 1.1
ISBN: 0321712315 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.5 EAN: 9780321712318 ASIN: 0321712315
Publication Date: May 28, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
“Lean Integration is an excellent resource for anyone struggling with the challenges of performing integration for a complex enterprise.” –Steve J. Dennis, Integration Competency Center Director, Nike Use Lean Techniques to Integrate Enterprise Systems Faster, with Far Less Cost and Risk By some estimates, 40 percent of IT budgets are devoted to integration. However, most organizations still attack integration on a project-by-project basis, causing unnecessary expense, waste, risk, and delay. They struggle with integration “hairballs”: complex point-to-point information exchanges that are expensive to maintain, difficult to change, and unpredictable in operation. The solution is Lean Integration. This book demonstrates how to use proven “lean” techniques to take control over the entire integration process. John Schmidt and David Lyle show how to establish “integration factories” that leverage the powerful benefits of repeatability and continuous improvement across every integration project you undertake. Drawing on their immense experience, Schmidt and Lyle bring together best practices; solid management principles; and specific, measurable actions for streamlining integration development and maintenance. Whether you’re an IT manager, project leader, architect, analyst, or developer, this book will help you systematically improve the way you integrate–adding value that is both substantial and sustainable. Coverage includes -
Treating integration as a business strategy and implementing management disciplines that systematically address its people, process, policy, and technology dimensions -
Providing maximum business flexibility and supporting rapid change without compromising stability, quality, control, or efficiency -
Applying improvements incrementally without “Boiling the Ocean” -
Automating processes so you can deliver IT solutions faster–while avoiding the pitfalls of automation -
Building in both data and integration quality up front, rather than inspecting quality in later -
More than a dozen in-depth case studies that show how real organizations are applying Lean Integration practices and the lessons they’ve learned Visit integrationfactory.com for additional resources, including more case studies, best practices, templates, software demos, and reference links, plus a direct connection to lean integration practitioners worldwide.
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| Customer Reviews: Required reading for business and technology professionals July 17, 2010 IC 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I really like the way book is organized into three parts. The first part provides a great description of the business value of Lean and introduces all the core concepts in the book. If you don't need all the details, you can just read the first three chapters and you're done. The second part does a terrific job translating lean principles from the world of manufacturing to the world of systems integration. The case studies in part 2 are insightful and show how Lean Integration is not a theory - it is being applied in a real world context. Part 3 of the book provides a prescription or "how to" guide and as such is a great desk-top reference manual. This book is great and a must read for all technology and business practitioners and innovators.
Lean Integration is the wave of the future for optimized business practices defined in the real world context. I bought a print version for my office and a kindle version for when I'm traveling and need to look up something. My only complaint is that I had to pay for both copies. Pearson does offer free access to an on-line version through Safari when you buy the book but it is limited to 45 days. The publisher, (or Amazon) should offer a bundle for people who want to buy both a hard-copy and electronic copy.
Along with David and John's first publication, Integration Competency Center - An Implementation methodologyIntegration Competency Center: An Implementation Methodology, both books are the foundation for an integration body of knowledge and should be required reading for any professional (business or technology) that is charged with optimizing their company or division.
Michael Kuhbock
Corporate Development Engineer, Integration InSite
Founder & Chairman Emeritus, Integration Consortium
Efficient Integration Delivered August 5, 2010 David (Reston, Vatican City State (Holy See))
First, full discloser: I'm the guy who wrote the forward for this book. However, I have to say here as well that this book is ground breaking work. The authors have done what needed to be done, a look at the integration as a solvable problem, something that many enterprises are missing these days.
Lean Integration is a management system that emphasizes continuous improvements, meaning you don't complete the links and call it done. Integration requires an ongoing interest in the way integration is carried out, and the mechanisms required. This means consistently reevaluating and improving the approaches we leverage for integration, as well as the technology employed. Integration is a journey, not a project.
The fact of the matter is that integration is an architectural pattern. Like any architectural pattern, you can improve and refine integration into something more productive and more innovative. That is exactly what the author's have done here. In short, John and David have written the right book, at the right time, for the right reasons. John and David present concepts that take integration to the next level, making integration more accessible, efficient, and cost effective.
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