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​​Build a Better Enterprise Architect​

​​Mature the EA skills that deliver your promised value to stakeholders​.

Not all enterprise architects are created equally. The enterprise architect role is context-sensitive, and what works in one organization may be the wrong posture in another. Hiring or developing for every possible skill at once can produce architects who are overwhelmed and ill-equipped to address enterprise problems. Our research gives enterprise architecture (EA) leaders and their teams a structured path to define the right role of an enterprise architect, identify the skills that matter, and roadmap development milestones tied to real stakeholder value.

Organizations often mistake technical brilliance for EA maturity, expecting architects to win credibility with frameworks, domain knowledge, and technical expertise. But successful organizations acknowledge that the skills that make enterprise architects truly effective are analytical thinking, relationship-building, and the ability to tell a compelling story that moves people to act.

1. Anchor the role to the value you are committed to deliver.

When the role is defined by broad expectations rather than specific committed outcomes, architects chase too many priorities and deliver on little. Anchor the enterprise architect role to the value your EA practice has promised stakeholders. Credibility and influence grow when the architect delivers meaningful results.

2. Prioritize human skills over technical expertise.

Technical expertise and domain specialization are no longer the primary success criteria for enterprise architects. Conceptualizing a long-term vision is one part of the role; getting stakeholders to buy into it and navigating its complexity is another. Prioritize the maturation of analytical thinking, communication, relationship building, and strategic analysis skills.

3. Show momentum early, then build for the long term.

Stakeholder confidence depends on seeing results within a reasonable timeframe. If progress takes too long to materialize, early enthusiasm fades and the role loses organizational support before it matures. Balance quick-win skill improvements with the groundwork for sustained growth, and communicate expanding the architect’s value through the services they support.

Use this framework to build a better enterprise architect

Our research offers robust tools, including a skills assessment tool and role profile template, and step-by-step guidance for crafting the enterprise architect role, assessing their skills, and roadmapping development milestones. Use this blueprint to move from a loosely defined enterprise architect role to one that is focused on delivering their commitments.

  • Craft your enterprise architect role by establishing a clear definition, selecting the orientation that best serves your stakeholders, and anchoring the role’s scope to your EA practice's committed value.
  • Prioritize and assess your enterprise architect skills using the Enterprise Architect Skills Assessment Tool to identify the gaps that matter most to your architect’s orientation without the burden of addressing every skill at once.
  • Roadmap your development milestones by setting objectives and metrics, sequencing skill development activities across one, three, and six-month horizons, and capturing outputs in the Enterprise Architect Role Profile Template.

​​Build a Better Enterprise Architect​ Research & Tools

1. Build a Better Enterprise Architect Storyboard – A framework that walks EA leaders through a full methodology for defining, assessing, and developing the enterprise architect role.

This storyboard outlines three steps from role definition through skills assessment to development roadmapping.

  • Explore nine enterprise architect orientations and select the one or two that best align with your practice needs.
  • Work through the enterprise architect skills framework covering analytical thinking, communication, design, and strategic analysis.
  • Communicate the objectives and purpose of this role to stakeholders for continuous buy-in and support.

2. Enterprise Architect Skills Assessment Tool — An Excel-based template that gives EA leaders a structured way to identify, prioritize, and evaluate current EA skills across individual architects or the broader practice.

This assessment is built to surface what skills matter most for your architect’s orientation, avoiding the trap of evaluating every skill at once.

  • Score current enterprise architect skills across different roles in your organization using a structured scale.
  • Sort and filter skills by priority to identify the highest-impact gaps based on what your architect needs to achieve.
  • Use findings to guide development conversations, training plans, and milestone-setting in the Role Profile Template.

3. Enterprise Architect Role Profile Template – A deck that helps document the enterprise architect's purpose, value, and development plan and makes the case to stakeholders who may not yet see the opportunities enterprise architects bring.

All sections are direct outputs from the research activities, populated with your organization's context.

  • Capture the architect definition, stakeholder value commitment, key responsibilities, and reporting scope on the front side of the one-pager.
  • Record prioritized skills, chosen orientation, guiding principles, objectives, metrics, and development milestones on the back side.
  • Distribute the completed profile to build stakeholder buy-in and organizational support for the architect's growth.

​​Mature the EA skills that deliver your promised value to stakeholders​.

About Info-Tech

Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.

We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.

What Is a Blueprint?

A blueprint is designed to be a roadmap, containing a methodology and the tools and templates you need to solve your IT problems.

Each blueprint can be accompanied by a Guided Implementation that provides you access to our world-class analysts to help you get through the project.

Need Extra Help?
Speak With An Analyst

Get the help you need in this 3-phase advisory process. You'll receive 7 touchpoints with our researchers, all included in your membership.

Guided Implementation 1: Craft Your Enterprise Architect Role
  • Call 1: Discuss the vision and purpose of your EA practice.
  • Call 2: Describe the role you need the enterprise architect to play.

Guided Implementation 2: Prioritize & Assess Your EA Skills
  • Call 1: Prioritize the skills you need your enterprise architect to have.
  • Call 2: Assess the skills of your enterprise architects.
  • Call 3: Discuss solutions to fill your skills gaps.

Guided Implementation 3: Roadmap Your Development Milestones
  • Call 1: Define the objectives and metrics of your enterprise architects.
  • Call 2: Roadmap your enterprise architect development milestones.

Authors

Andrew Kum-Seun

Caleb Pittman

Contributors

  • Cullen Hale, Enterprise Architect, Consumers Energy
  • Ravi Guyyala, Enterprise Technology Architect Lead, Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield
  • Julian Hirjoi, Head of Enterprise Architecture, Ent Credit Union
  • 5 anonymous contributors
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