tug
Volume 8, Number 15 -- April 17, 2008

As I See It: Goldilocks and the Zen of IT

Published: April 17, 2008

by Victor Rozek

All right kids, grab your blankies and pillows, get comfy, and I'll tell you the story of Goldilocks, the IT Zen masters, and the three migration options. Once upon a time, there was a CEO everyone called Goldilocks because she had curly blond hair and the people in her company suffered from a paucity of imagination. Goldilocks had a problem. Her enterprise system was toooo old, her employees were toooo inefficient; and, if things didn't change soon, her annual bonus was going to be toooo small.

Goldi had two migration choices and both were real bears. There was the "big bang" approach, where some vendor drops a lot of very expensive hardware and software in your lap, and upsets just about everything and everybody. But that approach was toooo risky.

Or, she could try the "incremental" approach, where aging components are gradually replaced, and archaic software is converted one application at a time. But that approach was toooo slow.

Squirming on the horns of her dilemma, she headed (as best she could for someone squirming on horns) for the nearest bar--eh, I meant to say salad bar, kids--where, as luck would have it, she ran into two very bright guys. She knew right away they were bright because they wore "I'm Ivy League Educated" buttons on their Tommy Hilfiger sweaters. And they could see right away that Goldi was upset, so they did what bright guys do when they see a distressed CEO, they introduced themselves as consultants. Their names were David Upton and Bradley Staats, and they sat crunching croutons while patiently listening to her lament. When she was through, they nodded knowingly and told her there was a third migration option: they called it the "path-based" approach.

That sounded very Zen to Goldi, but how Zen could two guys with wing-tips actually be?

Goldi chewed a carrot thoughtfully, wondering where her path would lead. She knew that going through a lengthy system conversion is like buying a new car only to discover that when you finally take possession, the car is two years old. So much effort was required to install an enterprise system that by the time the last application was launched, the business environment had in all likelihood changed, and the solution was already well on the way to being obsolete.

And those pesky users! Always falling off the path, changing their minds, demanding new features after they'd already signed off on all the features they could possibly need if they worked to be 100 (which many of them would have to do since Goldi spent down their pension fund some years ago). Users were always complaining, and, if you couldn't give them what they wanted fast enough, they'd lose interest and orphan your system before it was even operational. It didn't take much to convince Goldi that "technical problems were almost never the reason that new IT systems flopped. Human problems were." Yeah, those humans, Goldi thought morosely, the cause of all her business problems. Come to think of it, they were the cause of her personal problems too, but that's a story for when you kids grow up.

In a moment of blinding clarity, Goldi understood that being one with IT required maintaining "focus on foreseeable business objectives, not the existing environment." Otherwise, Upton and Staats, warned, you'd just be "paving. . . the old dirt paths."

That sounded Zen-like too, but the old path was worn and she needed to replace it with a four-lane highway. It all seemed too complicated and she again began to despair, when their next remark confirmed Goldi's growing suspicion that Upton and Staats were really IT mystics without yoga mats.

You must "strive for extreme simplicity," they said.

Goldi was momentarily confused. Wasn't striving for simplicity an oxymoron? Like toiling for leisure. But that was the Zen-like beauty of their approach. Ideally, they said, enterprise system design should be limited to a single platform, a single operating system, and just one network protocol. Mainframes "were expensive and difficult to keep up," said her companions, showing a strong grasp of the obvious. The annual cost of maintaining them "is 15 percent to 20 percent of the original purchase cost." They said a Japanese bank had simplified from a mainframe to a server-based platform and saved "$40 million in expenses annually." And they had other great ideas for simplifying and saving money. Like "installing two Internet connections from two different providers" for connectivity that was more reliable than a leased line at one-tenth the cost. Goldi looked at her lettuce, which reminded her of her bonus, and smiled. She breathed in simplicity. If she simplified enough, she could probably get rid of half her IT staff. A soothing thought if ever she had one.

Packaged software was problematic, Upton and Staats said, because you "often end up adapting the business to the technology." Yes, they admitted, best practices are sometimes embedded in packaged software, but more often than not "managers sacrifice idiosyncratic, competitively powerful capabilities that the system could make possible because developing them would add to the time and cost of carrying out an already expensive time-intensive project." Goldi didn't know exactly what all that meant, but that's the way it was with Zen: First there is an idiosyncratic, competitively powerful capability; then there is no idiosyncratic, competitively powerful capability.

True "modularity, not just modules," Upton and Staats advised, would allow her to "build solutions to local problems without disturbing the global system." This, they said, required "clearly specified interfaces so that development work can take place within any one module without affecting the others." Like her modular shoe tree, she could always add another pair without disturbing the rest.

But what could she do about those annoying users? Sure, they clamor for new technology, but then vapor lock when it comes to learning something new. Could she trust them to embrace a new system? But again, Upton and Staats had the answer. "Offer an interface, or screen format, that is similar to that of the old system." It just might work. After all, her users weren't all that bright, maybe they wouldn't notice. Not knowing. It was so Zen. As Cheng-Tao Ke said: "Ignorance is in reality the Buddha nature."

To be truly useful, Upton and Staats concluded, a major IT system has to be a launching pad for future strategies and new functions. No longer is rolling out a system the equivalent of building a warehouse, they warned--just because you've built it, doesn't mean you're done. Nor is the object to build "cathedrals," which are "costly, take a great deal of time, and deliver value only when the project is completed." Today's perpetually changing business environment requires something akin to mobile chapels, adaptable to the particular faith embedded in each unique business function.

Goldi had a lot to think about, but already she was feeling much better. She could fool the users, meld business and IT strategies, go modular, embrace simplicity, and salvage her bonus. She thanked her companions for their good counsel, and quickly headed back to work before they could hand her an invoice. When Goldi walked past the data center, she smiled. While the "big bang" approach was tooo risky, and the "incremental" approach was tooo slow, the "path-based" approach was juuust right.

And that, kids, is the function of Zen in IT.

For a more lucid and detailed elaboration of the author's ideas, which have nothing to do with Zen or Goldilocks, see the March 2008 issue of Harvard Business Review.




                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
GUILD COMPANIES

If You're Reading This,
Why Aren't You Getting It?

If you're working with Unix in your OS/400 or i5/OS shop, you need to subscribe to The Unix Guardian. This FREE weekly newsletter delivers hard news on enterprise Unix server platforms from Sun, HP, IBM, SCO, SGI, and others, as well as keeping track of developments in the open source BSD arena.

Sign up now and get breaking Unix news delivered straight to your desktop.

Start your FREE subscription today!

Subscribe. Read. Thrive.


Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

COMMON:  Join us at the annual 2009 conference, April 26 - April 30, in Reno, Nevada
Vision Solutions:  Disaster Recovery and Compliance – Get the Free e-Book!
NowWhatJobs.net:  NowWhatJobs.net is the resource for job transitions after age 40


 

IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

Getting Started with PHP for i5/OS: List Price, $59.95
The System i RPG & RPG IV Tutorial and Lab Exercises: List Price, $59.95
The System i Pocket RPG & RPG IV Guide: List Price, $69.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Developers' Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Query Guide: List Price, $49.00
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39.00
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $59.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Development Studio for iSeries: List Price, $79.95
Getting Started With WebSphere Development Studio Client for iSeries: List Price, $89.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
WebFacing Application Design and Development Guide: List Price, $55.00
Can the AS/400 Survive IBM?: List Price, $49.00
The All-Everything Machine: List Price, $29.95
Chip Wars: List Price, $29.95


 
The Four Hundred
The 64-Core Power6-Based Power 595 Starts to Roll in May

And Then There Was One: The New and Improved Power 570

Sundry Power Systems Announcements

As I See It: Goldilocks and the Zen of IT

Albert Simon Barsa, Jr., 1953-2008

The Linux Beacon
ScaleMP Makes Big SMPs Out of Little Ones

VIA Creates Compact Thin Server, Pushes Linux

Windows and Linux Get a Skinny Blade Server from IBM

The 64-Core Power6-Based Power 595 Starts to Roll in May

And Then There Was One: The New and Improved Power 570

Four Hundred Stuff
i-Based SCS500 Internet Phone System Now Available

Raz-Lee Flushes Out Fraud with Application Security Tool

ARCAD Looks to Aid Application Modernization Projects with Updated Software

BOSaNOVA Goes Semi-Rugged with New Thin Client

Quadrant Updates IntelliChief with Web Forms

Big Iron
HP Goes Visual with Application Modernization Tools

Top Mainframe Stories From Around the Web

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

Four Hundred Guru
More about SQL and Logical Files

Performance Advice from a Mysterious Friend, Part 5

Admin Alert: V6R1 Changes for the i5/OS Administrator, Part 2

System i PTF Guide
April 12, 2008: Volume 10, Number 15

April 5, 2008: Volume 10, Number 14

March 29, 2008: Volume 10, Number 13

March 22, 2008: Volume 10, Number 12

March 15, 2008: Volume 10, Number 11

March 8, 2008: Volume 10, Number 10

The Windows Observer
Will Bloat and Complexity Get the Best of Windows? Probably Not

More Wheeling, But No Dealing in Micro-Hoo

Microsoft Unveils New Security Vision as 'Stirling' Goes to Beta

As I See It: Misera Plebs Contribuens

Windows and Linux Get a Skinny Blade Server from IBM

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Roaring Penguin
Vision Solutions
Canvas Systems
Guild Companies
Vibrant Technologies


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
Sun Plans to Scale T2+ Servers to Four Sockets, Maybe More

And Then There Was One: The New and Improved Power 570

Sundry Power Systems Announcements

As I See It: Goldilocks and the Zen of IT

Server Makers Start Shipping Barcelona Boxes

But Wait, There's More:

Sun Updates Streaming System, Adds Solaris Support . . . HP Goes Visual with Application Modernization Tools . . . IBM to Launch Mashup Center Beta in April . . . New Customer Sales Pump Up Lawson Software's Q3 . . . IBM Buys FilesX for Continuous Data Protection Software . . .

The Unix Guardian

BACK ISSUES





 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement