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Fundamental Design
Terminology and Concepts
    Introduction
    Design Characteristic
    Design Principle
    Design Paradigm
    Design Pattern
    Design Standard
    Best Practice

Elements of
Service-Oriented Computing
    Introduction
    Service-Oriented
Architecture (SOA)
    Services and
Service-Orientation
    Service Compositions
    Service Inventory
    A Conceptual View of
Service-Oriented Computing
    A Physical View of
Service-Oriented Computing

Goals and Benefits of
Service-Oriented Computing
    Introduction
    Increased Intrinsic Interoperability
    Increased Federation
    Increased Vendor Diversification Options
    Increased Business and Technology Alignment
    Increased ROI
    Increased
Organizational Agility
    Reduced IT Burden

Service-Oriented Computing
in the Real World
    Services as Web Services
    About Web Services (Part I)
    About Web Services (Part II)
    Service Models and
Service Layers
    Service Inventory Blueprints
    Service-Oriented Analysis
    Service-Oriented Design

Resources
    SOA Book Series
    SOA Training & Certification
    Free SOA Principles Poster
    Notification
    SOAPatterns.org
    SOAPrinciples.com
    SOA Visio Stencil


Introduction

Home > Goals and Benefits of Service-Oriented Computing > Introduction

Audio Podcast
The upcoming pages are further narrated by Thomas Erl via the audio podcast Strategic Goals of Service-Oriented Computing.
It is very important to establish why both vendor and end-user communities within the IT industry are going through the trouble of adopting the service-oriented computing platform and embracing all of the change that comes with it.

The vision behind service-oriented computing is extremely ambitious and therefore also very attractive to any organization interested in truly improving the effectiveness of its IT enterprise. A set of common goals and benefits has emerged to form this vision. These establish a target state for an enterprise that successfully adopts service-orientation.

The upcoming set of sections describe each of these strategic goals and benefits

- Increased Intrinsic Interoperability

- Increased Federation

- Increased Vendor Diversification Options

- Increased Business and Technology Alignment

- Increased ROI

- Increased Organizational Agility

- Reduced IT Burden

It is beneficial to understand the significance of these goals and benefits prior to studying and applying service-orientation so that design principles are consistently viewed within a strategic context. An important message of this Web site (and the SOA: Principles of Service Design book) is that there is a concrete link between successfully applying service-orientation design principles and successfully attaining these specific goals and benefits.


Figure: The seven identified goals are inter-related and can be further categorized into two groups: strategic goals and resulting benefits. Increased organization agility, increased ROI, and reduced IT burden are concrete benefits resulting from the attainment of the remaining four goals.

Note that as previously mentioned, the term "SOA" has been used so much in the media and within marketing literature that it has become synonymous with what the entire service-oriented computing platform represents. Therefore, the goals and benefits listed here are frequently associated with SOA as well.

The Prentice Hall Service-Oriented Computing Series from Thomas Erl
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