UK companies are at the tipping point for adoption of service-oriented
architecture according to research from
Oracle and its system integration partner
Griffith Waite.
A study of 180 UK organisations revealed that nearly half (47 per cent) were
in the process of implementing SOA.
"SOA has reached a point where organisations see the value, have undertaken
pilots and are at the point of implementing real world applications in an SOA
environment,” said Alan Hartwell, Vice President, Technology Solutions and
Channels, Oracle UK, Ireland and Israel.
Respondents indicated that business flexibility was a key driver for
implementing SOA. Of those with SOA programmes underway, 49 per cent said they
had been convinced that SOA would deliver a flexible IT architecture capable of
supporting ongoing business change.
The survey was based on Oracle's SOA Maturity Model, which "puts forth a
realistic business and technology view of what it takes for companies to
successfully adopt SOA,” said Hugh Griffiths, co-founder and director of
Griffiths Waite.
The survey results paint a more optimist picture of SOA adoption in the UK
than was apparent as analyst group IDC's recent SOA conference in London. There,
delegates also expressed their desire to push forward with SOA plans, but many
also highlighted the difficulties – at both a technical and organisational level
– of so doing.
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