Organizations operate amid accelerating change and complexity, with intertwined systems, overlapping processes, and increasing pressure to adapt. Enterprise architecture (EA) brings order to that complexity – the scaffolding that supports the technologies, data, applications, and capabilities needed to achieve strategic priorities. This blueprint helps you build a strategy for your EA practice.
EA’s role is often perceived as an overly bureaucratic function rather than an enabler of value delivery. To change misperceptions and gain strategic visibility, EA leaders must engage stakeholders proactively to understand their concerns, shape strategy, and anchor every architectural decision in organizational priorities. A well-defined EA practice will provide a data-informed and strategically aligned foundation for enterprise change, technology investments, portfolio decisions, and solution delivery across the organization.
1. Demonstrate the “why” of EA.
If stakeholders do not understand EA’s overarching role, they are more likely to dismiss it as a technical concern or decision-making bottleneck. Get them on board by linking their most pressing pain points directly to EA’s ability to resolve or improve them.
2. Silo-proof the process.
Without guidance, organizational units gravitate toward siloed decisions. Design an engagement model that specifies where and how EA participates in planning, delivery, and operations. Without that clarity, teams may involve EA too late – or not at all.
3. Start small, ramp up later.
Imposing rigid EA standards too early can alienate teams, stifle innovation, and restrict flexibility. Start with promoting good EA principles and guidelines, then gradually implement broader standards as the organization matures.
Use this step-by-step blueprint to build an EA practice strategy to support transformational growth
This blueprint is the first step in your EA journey and includes templates, tools, and planning documents to position EA as a high-value strategic discipline. Use this step-by-step approach to make the case for EA in your organization, build early buy-in, and set the stage for deeper operating model and governance design.
- Create your value proposition by capturing your strategic priorities and illustrating EA’s role and contributions.
- Set your EA practice fundamentals by listing your EA objectives and metrics, clarifying scope, and listing guiding principles.
- Envision your EA practice future state by prioritizing your EA services and describing your engagement, governance, and deployment models.
- Plan your EA practice rollout by road mapping your EA practice and building your communication plan.
Member Testimonials
After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.
9.3/10
Overall Impact
$82,792
Average $ Saved
35
Average Days Saved
Client
Experience
Impact
$ Saved
Days Saved
Seattle Department of Information Technology
Workshop
10/10
$68,000
50
Howard was knowledgeable and experienced and moved things along as quickly as possible while pausing to take time over the things that were importa... Read More
Regional Transportation District
Workshop
10/10
$136K
120
Howard is a superior facilitator. He helped steer a tough crowd towards a "fit-for-purpose" plan to launch enterprise architecture at RTD. With wor... Read More
City of Tucson Information Technology Department Office of the Deputy Director
Guided Implementation
10/10
$23,800
5
Great interactions, your consultant is highly knowledgeable and full of very useful observations. He clearly understood his domain.
IDP EDUCATION LIMITED
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
Very knowledgeable and experienced so valuable to assess decisions with someone impartial.
Canadian Nuclear Laboratories
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
as my previous answer.
Canada Energy Regulator
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
Wayne is amazing and he understands the uniqueness of our department and openly moves away from the templated style to enable our needs and drive u... Read More
Solvay SA
Guided Implementation
5/10
N/A
1
BOLDYN NETWORKS GROUP LIMITED
Workshop
9/10
$92,499
80
Best - Howard is a great facilitator and knows the material back to front. Worst - some of the material is not always right-sized for our size o... Read More
Amedisys Holding, LLC
Guided Implementation
7/10
$1,088
1
I think given our capacity and investment in EA at Amedisys, the tools and practice recommended by InfoTech is not going to be a fit. We need a mor... Read More
The Boyd Group Inc.
Workshop
9/10
N/A
20
Best parts - Helped raise my teams awareness and level of strategic thinking as pertains to EA. Helped us form a shared consensus of what it means... Read More
City of Scottsdale, Arizona
Guided Implementation
10/10
$13,600
50
An excellent way to leverage the concept of "standing on the shoulders" of the people that came before you-learn the good and not make the mistakes... Read More
Firstmac Limited
Guided Implementation
7/10
$1,800
2
positive alignment session on the arcitectural approach linking to business capability
Alcoa Corporation
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
As we continue to navigate our Enterprise Architecture (EA) journey, his invaluable advice and guidance was great input. His insights have always b... Read More
Oregon Department of Employment
Workshop
10/10
N/A
N/A
Howard Feng did a great job facilitating this workshop. Howard is very knowledgeable and gave the Oregon Employment Department a great start to dev... Read More
DKV Euro Service GmbH + Co. KG
Guided Implementation
9/10
N/A
5
Wayne went above and beyond in his answers, he is a truly experienced EA
Oregon Secretary of State
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
120
It's an art to distill such volume and complexity of subject matter into a distilled, digestible form.
Auckland Transport
Guided Implementation
9/10
$135K
23
Discussing the Intake Funnel / business advisory squad Info-Tech's Operational model blueprint
Kardex Germany GmbH
Guided Implementation
9/10
$25,000
20
Very good artifacts and materials, properly explained
Toronto Community Housing Corporation
Guided Implementation
10/10
$23,500
10
raise great perspectives to ensure holistic realistic thinking has been applied
Blue Cross of Idaho Health Service, Inc.
Workshop
8/10
N/A
10
Difficult to estimate financial impact. Thank you for running us through a well-organized workshop with valuable conversation. We look forward to... Read More
Loto-Québec
Guided Implementation
10/10
$10,000
5
Hearst Technology, Inc.
Guided Implementation
9/10
N/A
10
Kuvare US Holdings
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
Worst: I was late and missed out on some time with Altaz. Best: The collaboration, understanding, and ideas/output from Altaz is fantastic. He is ... Read More
Shared Services Canada – Chief Technology Officer Branch
Guided Implementation
9/10
N/A
1
MASC
Guided Implementation
9/10
N/A
10
Good experience as a whole. Knowledgeable consultant in the topic. The service could improve by making best practice and methodologies more concr... Read More
Sydney Water
Guided Implementation
9/10
$4,550
2
Very Knowledgeable and has lost of examples and reference documents.
DPHI – Department of Planning, Housing & Infrastructure
Guided Implementation
9/10
$14,560
10
Ministry of Industry, Innovation, Science and Technology
Workshop
10/10
$68,500
120
The best part was having a new understanding of what my Ministry should be trying to accomplish and replicate to other Ministries and Departments a... Read More
Halifax Port Authority
Guided Implementation
8/10
$50,000
20
Nitin provided an excellent overview of Info-Tech's Enterprise Architecture strategy blueprint, including the advisory service, workshops, and cons... Read More
General Dynamics Mission Systems, Inc
Workshop
9/10
$13,700
5
Overall the experience was excellent. The best part was working on the EA Services RACI and Roadmap. The worst part was we could have used more t... Read More
Enterprise Architecture
EA teams need to understand the dynamic relationship between organizational complexity, operational maturity, and stakeholder value. This relationship forms the foundation for building value-driven roadmaps anchored in stakeholder needs..
This course makes up part of the Service Planning & Architecture Certificate.
Please note that Academy course and certificate tracks will be updated on June 1, 2025. Please complete any current course you are enrolled in before this date or your progress will be lost.
- Course Modules: 4
- Estimated Completion Time: 1 hour
Workshop: Build Your EA Practice Strategy
Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.
Module 1: Create Your Value Proposition
The Purpose
State the value your EA practice will deliver to your organization.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Defining the role your EA practice will play in your context.
- Recognition of the strategic priorities EA is expected to address.
- Identifying the contributions your EA practice will provide to meet your strategic priorities.
Activities
Outputs
Illustrate your EA practice role.
- Your interpretation of EA practice’s role.
Capture your strategic priorities.
- EA value statements.
Reveal EA’s contributions.
- List of EA contributions to achieve your EA value statements.
Module 2: Set Your EA Practice Fundamentals
The Purpose
Set the expectations and scope of your EA practice.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Define achievable objectives and measurable metrics for your EA practice.
- Clarify the scope of your EA practice.
- List the principles that will guide your EA practice.
Activities
Outputs
List your EA objectives and metrics.
- EA objectives and metrics.
Clarify EA’s scope.
- Defined organizational coverage, architectural domains and depth, and planning time horizon.
List your EA guiding principles.
- EA guiding principles.
Module 3: Envision Your EA Practice Future State
The Purpose
Create the initial design of your EA practice future state.
Key Benefits Achieved
- List the EA services your practice will deliver.
- Discuss the initial considerations of your EA engagement, governance, and deployment models.
Activities
Outputs
Assess and plan your EA services.
- EA services current state assessment and plan.
Describe your EA engagement model.
- Initial engagement model design.
Describe your EA governance model.
- EA governance needs.
Describe your EA deployment model.
- Decision on EA deployment approach.
Module 4: Plan Your EA Practice Rollout
The Purpose
Create an achievable roadmap for your EA practice and your communication plan.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Achievable EA practice implementation roadmap.
- EA stakeholder communication plan.
Activities
Outputs
Roadmap your EA practice.
- EA practice roadmap, organizational change management plan, and risk assessment.
Build your communication plan.
- EA communication plan.
Build Your EA Practice Strategy
Craft the practice your organization needs to solve the problems your stakeholders care about the most.
Analyst perspective
Make your EA practice a strategic partner
Howard Feng, CBA, AWS CCP, CBE
Senior Workshop Director
Info-Tech Research Group

Andrew Kum-Seun
Research Director, Application Delivery and Application Management Info-Tech Research Group
Enterprise architecture (EA) is not an operational support role or confined to IT. EA is most effective when it positioned as a strategic discipline that integrates business and technology, ensuring that all enterprise structures, decisions, and designs are optimized to realize the organization’s vision and strategic objectives. The core mandate is to translate visions and strategies into practical architectures and transformation plans across the enterprise to drive tangible enterprise outcomes and value.
Distinguish your EA practice by motivating proactive and collaborative engagements with business leaders to understand their concerns, shape enterprise strategies, and ensure every architectural decision is anchored in business priorities. EA provides a data-informed and structural foundation for enterprise change by guiding strategies, influencing the project portfolio, guiding solution development, and ensuring success in solution operationalization across the enterprise. Discover the art of the possible with your EA practice.
Executive summary
Your Challenge
As organizations mature and adopt more complex technologies, they face increasing challenges in:
- Aligning IT initiatives with strategic priorities, stakeholder expectations, and business capabilities.
- Managing and scaling redundant, outdated, and fragmented processes and technologies.
- Ensuring flexibility of IT operations and technologies while adhering to quality standards.
Enterprise architecture (EA) provides the approach, framework, and thinking needed to boost IT support, guide technology decisions, and ensure investments support long-term strategic objectives.
Common Obstacles
Implementing EA is not as simple as hiring someone. It involves organizational investment to build the necessary foundations EA need to be successful. However, many factors stand in the way:
- Lack of organizational buy-in due to EA’s perception as an overly bureaucratic and bulky process rather than a value delivery enabler.
- Dynamically shifting organizational demands and maturing technologies that make aligning EA services with strategic objectives difficult.
- Overwhelming scope of EA’s organizational domains if the practice is not clearly defined and roles are ill-equipped and unsupported.
Info-Tech’s Approach
- Create a compelling value proposition. State the organizational purpose, goals, and strategic problems an EA practice is intended to solve. Indicate the role the practice will play in guiding future organizational and technology decisions.
- Prioritize the EA services that support your vision. Address the EA inefficiencies found in your current state assessment. Build the foundations needed to scale your EA practice.
- Communicate and rollout the EA practice. Define and present the initiatives to deliver your EA vision. Accommodate the concerns and influence of your stakeholders to maximize EA success.
Info-Tech Insight
EA is already happening. But, it is often uncoordinated, siloed, and overly bureaucratic. Transform EA into an organizational capability. Deliver the EA insights, designs, and services that solve your stakeholders’ most pressing problems and achieve their strategic goals and vision.
Build Your EA Practice Strategy
Craft the practice your organization needs to solve the problems your stakeholders care about the most
EXECUTIVE BRIEF
Disruptions, distractions, and complexities are the norm
What we are facing today is transforming the ways we operate and deliver value. Organizations MUST change to meet this reality.
Increased Cybersecurity Incidents
Most Common Cybersecurity Incidents
- Data Breach
- Regulatory Compliance Violation
- Ransomware
- Insider Risk
Source: Splunk, 2025
AI Is No Longer a Nice-to-Have
84%
84% of respondents say they are looking to add more AI capabilities over the next three years.
Source: Camunda, 2025
Deployments Are Increasingly Complex
“Organizations deal with a median of four public clouds.”
Source: F5, 2025
However, many organizations struggle to embrace sudden changes
Unclear translation of stakeholder needs into actionable IT initiatives
Understanding user needs was identified as the most challenging part of the jobs of surveyed developers. (n=23,262)Source: Jetbrains, 2024Lack of confidence and trust in enterprise data
67%
67% of respondents stated they don’t completely trust the data used by their organization for decision-making. (n=565)Source: Precisely, 2024Risk management is not fully integrated across the organization
33%
Only 33% have a fully integrated enterprise risk management program. (n=259)Source: Info-Tech Tech Trends, 2025Enterprise systems are burdened with technical debt
51%
51% of respondents dedicated more than a quarter of their annual IT/engineering budget to remediating technical debt. (n=1,037)Source: vFunction, 2024
Use EA to overcome the chaos you are facing
The need for a well-defined EA is no longer a luxury but a fundamental necessity. Here is why:
Managing Unprecedented Complexity
Modern organizations are incredibly complex with intricate webs of processes, systems, and data sources. EA untangles this complexity to ensure the organization is efficient and can respond effectively to change.Navigating Constant Change
The pace of technology growth is exponential. EA provides the structure to navigate these changes proactively, allowing the organization to prepare, adapt, and thrive.Breaking Down Silos
Departments often work in silos, leading to fragmented customer experiences, conflicting decisions, and process bottlenecks. EA promotes system-thinking and encourages cross-department collaboration to optimize the broader delivery of value.Ensuring Sustainability and Scalability
Business can outgrow their technologies. EA ensures that business capabilities and technologies scale sustainably together, avoiding unnecessary, costly, and disruptive overhauls in the future.
From conversations with Info-Tech analysts, advisors and counselors.
What is enterprise architecture (EA)?
Enterprise architecture (EA) is an intricate discipline and a strategic business capability that addresses an organization's strategy, operations, structures, and behaviors. Its intent is to illustrate how an organization can most effectively move toward the future state and achieve its strategic objectives.
Learn the various elements that make up enterprise architecture
EA brings the organization and technologies closer together

Operationalize EA with an effective practice
Your EA practice is the mechanism for addressing your complex, organization-wide challenges and supporting the achievement of your strategic objectives. It does this by maximizing the value of your technology landscape and creating flexible strategic planning.
The increasing intricacy of modern business operations and the heavy reliance on productive technologies necessitate a disciplined EA practice. An effective practice leads to:
Strategic Alignment
Ensures IT and technology initiatives directly support and satisfy overarching business goals through a common language.Enhanced Agility
Promotes architectural principles, standards, references, and guardrails to enable and accommodate the rapid shifts in market conditions, customer needs, and technology trends.Risk Management
Provides a structured approach to mitigate organizational risks, simplify compliance, streamline compliance processes, and standardize appropriate controls.Impactful Decisions
Delivers clear, data-driven insights into the structure and inner workings of the organization. It connects operational metrics to strategic outcomes, ensuring decisions drive the desired impact.
Inspired by LeanIX’s Value of Enterprise Architecture.
Start your EA practice journey with a strategy
An EA practice strategy defines how your organization intends to establish, operate, mature and evolve its EA practice to deliver business value, support strategic goals and objectives, improve decision-making, and effectively plan technology transformation.
This Blueprint focuses on steps 1 and 2.
LEARN
- Learn what is EA and what is involved to be successful
STRATEGIZE
- State your value proposition
- Define EA scope, objectives & principles
- Roadmap your target state
OPERATE
Agile Enterprise Architecture Operating Model- Define your EA operating environment
- Create your EA functional design
- Design your EA engagement and deployment model
GOVERN
Create a Right-Sized Enterprise Architecture Governance Framework- Define your EA governing bodies
- Build your EA policies and standards
- Formalize stakeholder communications
SPECIALIZE
Domain Architectures:
Enterprise Architecture Research Center- Clarify the domain objectives and principles
- Set domain standards and policies
- Improve domain architecture capabilities

Set reasonable expectations for your practice
Many organizations are starting to see the benefits of EA, but the effective practices are not widespread in the industry.
Our EA helps align IT investments with long-term strategy to reduce risk and deliver business value outcomes
66%
Of respondents agree or somewhat agree
Our EA deliverables are current and relevant to support and drive change
66%
Of respondents agree or somewhat agree
The mission and value of our EA function are understood and valued across the organization
62%
Of respondents agree or somewhat agree
We have sufficiently trained and business-knowledgeable EA practitioners
55%
Of respondents agree or somewhat agree
n=523. Source: Bizzdesign, 2025.
Maximize your practice’s value
EA success is not a given. Twenty-nine percent of enterprise architects say no one in the company knows about the EA team (n=360, LeanIX, 2025). Your practice must be ready to justify and communicate its value.
What are the top activities to improve EA’s impact to the organization?
- Improve the communication of EA’s value to the organization.
- Improve the EA development process and its adoption.
- Deliver more strategic insights to support senior management with strategy and investment decisions.
- Measure outcomes to demonstrate the value of EA to the business.
Source: Bizzdesign, 2025
ABC needed an EA practice to optimize value delivery
INDUSTRY
Telecommunication
SOURCE
Info-Tech Workshop
Info-Tech Engagement With ABC
ABC stakeholders wanted an EA practice strategy to improve ABC’s strategic planning function that bridges both business and technology. ABC had many expectations for their strategy and practice, such as:- Improve alignment of IT and business strategy
- Enhance stakeholder value from business investments
- Drive the optimization of IT assets, resources, capabilities, and business processes
This engagement focused on developing the EA practice strategy for:
- Gathering feedback for optimizing enterprise architecture from key stakeholders and participants and identifying prevalent related pains, challenges, frustrations, risks, and opportunities.
- Identifying external aspects that will affect the operations of the organization and deliverables of the enterprise architecture team.
- Assessing the organization’s current enterprise architecture maturity, planning for a desired target state taking into consideration other organization-wide strategic priorities and projects, analyzing the gaps, and formulating initiatives for attaining the desired target state.
- Developed the vision, mission, goals, objectives, and functions needed to optimize the value of EA.
- Drafted an EA activity roadmap to focus the activities of the EA team in the coming three years.

Download the EA Strategy Workshop Sanitized Report
Blueprint deliverables
Each step of this blueprint is accompanied by supporting deliverables to help you accomplish your goals:
EA Introduction Presentation Template
Educate the organization on what EA is, how EA can help, and what is needed for EA to be effective.
EA Services Assessment and Planning Tool
Assess the current state of your EA services and plan for their delivery.
EA Practice Strategy One Pager Template
Communicate the objectives and desired structure of your EA practice with a one page.
EA Strategy Workshop Sanitized Report
Learn what one organization has done to define their EA practice strategy.
Key deliverable:
EA Practice Strategy TemplateDocument the strategy of your EA practice in the language your stakeholders understand. Tailor this document to fit your strategic priorities and EA practice objectives.
Insight Summary
Info-Tech Insight
EA is already happening. But, it is often uncoordinated, siloed, and overly bureaucratic. Transform EA into an organizational capability. Deliver the EA insights, designs, and services that solve your stakeholders’ most pressing problems and achieve their strategic goals and vision.
Phase 1
If your stakeholders do not know why EA exists, they will see it as a bureaucratic hurdle. Start with what is most painful and concerning your stakeholders. Then, elaborate how EA will contribute to your organization’s success through a compelling value proposition.
Phase 2
It is tempting to enforce EA standards and controls from the outset. However, too much oversight too soon constrains innovation, alienates teams, and restricts flexibility. Enable EA first, structure later. Start with good EA principles and guidelines then evolve to standards and frameworks as the organization grows and matures.
Phase 3
Left alone, organizational units gravitate toward siloed decisions that do not consider the ramifications to others. Design an engagement model that clearly indicates which planning, delivery, and operations activities EA will participate in. If teams do not know when to involve EA, they will involve them too late or not at all.
Phase 4
Your EA practice will lose momentum if it takes too long to show measurable improvements. However, we can’t just focus on the now. Demonstrate quick-win changes and the initiations of your practice’s foundations. Communicate success across your organization to maintain stakeholder buy-in and drive the motivation to scale.
Info-Tech’s methodology for EA practice strategy
Phase Steps | 1. Create Your Value Proposition1.1 Illustrate the Role of Your EA Practice 1.2 Capture Your Strategic Priorities 1.3 Reveal EA’s Contributions | 2. Set Your EA Practice Fundamentals2.1 List Your EA Objectives & Metrics 2.2 Clarify EA’s Scope 2.3 List Your Guiding Principles | 3. Envision Your EA Practice Future State3.1 Assess and Plan Your EA Services 3.2 Describe Your Engagement Model 3.3 Describe Your Governance Model 3.4 Describe Your Deployment Model | 4. Plan Your EA Practice Rollout4.1 Roadmap Your EA Practice 4.2 Build Your Communication Plan |
Phase Outcomes |
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Blueprint benefits
Justify the Importance of an EA Practice With a Value Proposition
- Illustrate the role you want the EA practice to play in your organization considering past experiences, current perspectives, and industry trends.
- Reveal the strategic priorities driving the organization and the stakeholder pains with achieving those objectives.
- Clarify how an EA practice can help alleviate stakeholder pains and the expected value an EA practice can deliver.
- Achievable outcomes your EA practice is expected to deliver.
- Identify the highest priority problems to be solved first.
- Communicate the value of EA in the language stakeholders understand.
Illustrate an Appropriately Scoped and Designed EA Practice
- Indicate the EA services that will generate the most value.
- Define a reasonable scope of your EA practice.
- Envision the target-state engagement, governance, and deployment models that align with your vision.
- Compile an achievable roadmap that describes how your EA practice will be rolled out and who will be accountable for its success.
- A well-articulated strategy of your EA practice that is tailored to your priorities, structure, perspectives, and experiences.
- Confident and invested EA practitioners who are bought into the EA practice and are willing to support its delivery.
Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs
DIY Toolkit
"Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful."
Guided Implementation
"Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track."
Workshop
"We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place."
Executive & Technical Counseling
"Our team and processes are maturing; however to expedite the journey we'll need a seasoned practitioner to coach and validate approaches, deliverables, and opportunities."
Consulting
"Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assitance through the entirety of this project."
Diagnostics and consistent frameworks are used throughout all five options.
Guided Implementation
Phase 1
| Phase 2
| Phase 3
| Phase 4
|
A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.
A typical GI is 8 to 12 calls over the course of 4 to 6 months.
Build Your EA Practice Strategy
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