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Integration still a stumbling block
Information Technology News
Integration still a stumbling block | Integration still a stumbling block |
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| by Stephen Withers | |
| Wednesday, 06 February 2008 | |
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Page 1 of 2
As much as one quarter of the cost of new application implementation may come from the need for integration with existing applications, and skill shortages are hampering that process.Featured Whitepaper
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The 2007 survey was carried out at two CIO summit meetings held in Queensland and New South Wales during August, with a majority of respondents representing large organisations, typically running large ERP systems and with more than 1000 computer-using employees. Other findings include only one-third of respondents rating their organisation's ability to aggregate data from several applications as 'good' or 'very good' (down slightly from last year); standardisation on integration technologies and techniques within organisations is improving, and while there has been an improvement in successful completion rates for these projects, the proportion completed on time remains around 50 percent. According to Tebbutt, "there hasn't been any real correlation" between the integration difficulties reported by respondents and the major applications they run. Nor was there any relationship with the size of the organisation or the industry in which it operates. Even though some organisations have invested heavily in an EAI architecture, a proportion of those report that connecting applications is still not easy and the task requires skilled and experienced staff. "Infrastructure doesn't usually provide agility," Tebbutt observed. |
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