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Difference between revisions of "Enterprise Modeling"

(Enterprise modeling is a term for the modeling of various processes, infrastructures, asset groups, or other elements of a business or organization. Enterprise modeling helps leaders to visualize what is going on within a business and how to make changes.)
 
(Enterprise modeling is a term for the modeling of various processes, infrastructures, asset groups, or other elements of a business or organization. Enterprise modeling helps leaders to visualize what is going on within a business and how to make changes.)
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[[Enterprise_Engineering|Enterprise Engineering]]<br />
 
[[Enterprise_Engineering|Enterprise Engineering]]<br />
 
[[Enterprise_Architecture|Enterprise Architecture]]<br />
 
[[Enterprise_Architecture|Enterprise Architecture]]<br />
[Business_Reference_Model|Business Reference Modelling]]<br />
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[[Business_Reference_Model_(BRM)|Business Reference Model]]<br />
 
[[Economic_Model|Economic Model]]<br />
 
[[Economic_Model|Economic Model]]<br />
 
[[Ontology_Engineering|Ontology Engineering]]<br />
 
[[Ontology_Engineering|Ontology Engineering]]<br />

Revision as of 16:24, 26 December 2018

Enterprise Modeling is the abstract representation, description and definition of the structure, processes, information and resources of an identifiable business, government body, or other large organization. [1]

Enterprise Modelling (EM) addresses the modelling of business processes, goals, strategy, information entities, business structure, support systems and personnel of an enterprise (Katz, 1990; Fox and Gruninger, 1998).

Enterprise models integrate models of information systems and models of supported business functions and can provide the transparency required for systematic support of enterprise transformation from ‘business to IT’ (Dietz, 2006; Hoogervorst, 2009).

By representing both organisational and technical infrastructure, EM may also provide a broad and comprehensive view of an entire corporation or government agency (Kirikova, 2000), referred to as Enterprise Architecture (EA) (Lankhorst, 2005; Jonkers et al., 2006; Tyler and Cathcart, 2006; Winter and Fischer, 2007; Rohloff, 2008). [2]


See Also

Enterprise Model
Process Model
Function Model
Business Model
Data Model
Resource Model
Systems Modeling
Enterprise Engineering
Enterprise Architecture
Business Reference Model
Economic Model
Ontology Engineering
Systems Thinking


External References

  1. What is Enterprise Modelling? Wikipedia
  2. Aier, S. and Saat, J. (2011) ‘Understanding processes for model-based enterprise transformation planning’, Int. J. Internet and Enterprise Management, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp.84–103.