Enterprise Architecture is the primary lens through which organisations surface, work through, and stabilise shared meaning.

🧠 Meaning does not start with models

Meaning does not originate in frameworks, systems, or diagrams.

πŸ‘‰ It emerges through interaction between people when:

  • perspectives are shared,
  • assumptions are questioned,
  • differences are brought up and discussed,
  • and a shared understanding of the organisation develops.

This is where organisations begin to β€œsee” reality.

🧱 Where Enterprise Architecture becomes critical

Without structure, that emerging meaning remains:

  • Fragmented and hidden.
  • Localised in silos.
  • Expressed without a common language.

πŸ‘‰ It cannot be captured, coherently expressed and shared.

This is where Enterprise Architecture plays its role.

Through:

  • Business Capability Modelling (BCM),
  • Common Data Modelling (CDM),

Organisations build a shared view of reality.

πŸ“– Narrative Example from Adapt Survive and Flourish

Chapter: Mario, Bruno, Bill, and Mary’s Site Visit: Bruno’s Pitch

Bruno introduces a Business Capability Model to Sam and his team.

Initially sceptical, they begin to see how it reveals what is actually happening in the business.

Β The introduction of the Common Data Model then exposes underlying data issues and inconsistencies.

πŸ‘‰ The models do not provide answers. They make reality visible and open to discussion.

 🧭 In the Guidelines β€” Adapt, Survive and Flourish

  • The Knowledge Management guideline provides detailed guidance on BCM and CDM
  • Their role in building a shared knowledge base.

πŸ‘‰ If people are performing roles rather than exposing reality, you are seeing defensive routines in action.

πŸ” Modelling as sensemaking

In practice, building these models is not a technical exercise.

They are structured conversations.

  • People describe how the organisation actually works.
  • The BCM provides a holistic, β€œmind-sized” view.
  • Definitions are debated and refined.
  • Dependencies between capabilities surfaces.
  • Relationships between data entities become explicit.
  • Gaps and inconsistencies are exposed as they are tested in Gemba.

πŸ‘‰ The model is not the outcome. Shared understanding is.

 

πŸ” What the lens reveals

Enterprise Architecture does not simplify reality.

It makes it visible.

  • Connections between perspectives.
  • Dependencies across the organisation.
  • Conflicts between goals and assumptions.

Without this holistic perspective:

  • Stakeholder perspectives remain disconnected.
  • Meaning is assumed rather than tested.
  • Decisions lack coherence.

βš–οΈ The role of tension

Shared meaning is not achieved through agreement.

It is formed through:

  • challenge
  • negotiation
  • refinement

πŸ‘‰ Differences are not a problem to eliminate. They are the raw material of understanding.

πŸ”— How this fits the system

  • Stakeholder Engagement β†’ creates interaction.
  • Enterprise Architecture β†’ structures meaning.
  • Gemba β†’ tests meaning in reality.
  • SECI β†’ deepens and spreads understanding.

⚠️ When it goes wrong

When Enterprise Architecture is separated from participation:

  • Models become abstract.
  • Consultants produce artefacts without ownership.
  • Knowledge remains external.
  • Organisations receive shelf ware instead of workwear.

πŸ‘‰ Meaning appears to exist, but is not shared or lived.

🎯 Practical insight

Enterprise Architecture is most effective when:

  • people build the models themselves,
  • conversations are prioritised over artefacts,
  • structure supports understanding, not replaces it.

πŸ‘‰ Enterprise Architecture does not create meaning. It makes meaning visible, shared, and usable.

➰To Return to the Executive Pathway

πŸ“ To understand more and a more advanced discussion, see: