Key practices for SOA adoption
BICA'12 Proceedings of the 5th WSEAS congress on Applied Computing conference, and Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Biologically Inspired Computation
A methodology for web services-based SOA realisation
International Journal of Business Information Systems
The influence of SOA governance mechanisms on IT flexibility and service reuse
The Journal of Strategic Information Systems
Implementing service oriented architecture - a case study
International Journal of Business Information Systems
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In recent years, the movement to establish a concept of service science has consolidated itself as a new academic discipline (NESSI, 2007; IBM Academic Initiative, 2007; Spohrer, Maglio, Bailey, & Gruhl, 2007). Service science is taking a growing interest in Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), a framework which promises to develop a flexible and a robust IT-based service capable of responding efficiently to business demands. However, the development of SOA remains at a nascent stage and many early adopting firms find it difficult to establish effective strategies for adopting the framework, especially since they cannot be sure of its successful implementation. The current paper takes the form of an exploratory study based on a review of 34 SOA literatures and 22 interviews and claims to identify twenty factors in successful SOA adoption; the paper subsequently defines a concrete implementation policy for each factor. Comparative analysis, drawing on interviews with vendors and users, demonstrates both similarities and differences in the perspectives presented by a range of research literatures, proceeding to suggest complementary methods of SOA adoption that take account of both vendors' and users' needs. Thus far, research on SOA implementation has not offered a detailed account of the critical success factors (CSFs) conducive to successful SOA adoption. This work thus fills a gap in more closely reflecting the reality of putting SOA into practice.