Introduction
The Orthogramic User Types provides a detailed overview of the various user roles within Orthogramic and their primary drivers. Understanding these user types is essential for effectively managing and aligning organizational functions with strategic objectives. Each user type plays a critical role in ensuring that the organization operates efficiently and meets its goals.
Key Features
User Role Definitions: Detailed descriptions of each standard user role and their main objectives.
Role-Specific Drivers: Key drivers and goals associated with each user type to ensure alignment with organizational strategies.
Best Practices: Tips for effectively assigning and managing user roles to optimize system interactions and achieve business objectives.
Conclusion
By clearly defining and understanding the different user roles within Orthogramic, organizations can optimize their system interactions and align them with strategic objectives. This guide provides the necessary information to ensure that each user type is effectively managed and their contributions are aligned with the overall goals of the organization.
User types
These are the standard user roles. You can deselect roles you are not working with and add them later if needed via Settings > Users.
Business Architect
Chief Operating Officer (COO)
Strategic Planner
Managers
Enterprise Architect
Product Managers
Chief Information Officer (CIO)
UX/UI Designers
Data Analysts
Compliance Officers
Change managers
User types and main drivers
These are the standard user roles and the description of their main drivers:
Business Architect
Alignment of IT strategy with business objectives
Business process improvement
Innovation and adaptability
Chief Operating Officer (COO)
Operational efficiency
Cost management
Customer satisfaction and quality of service
Strategic Planner
Revenue growth
Market share
Return on investment (ROI) for strategic initiatives
Managers
Revenue growth
Profit margin improvement
Customer satisfaction and retention
Enterprise Architect
Architecture compliance rate
IT cost optimization
Time-to-market for IT solutions
Product Managers
Product lifecycle management
Market competitiveness
Customer feedback and satisfaction
Chief Information Officer (CIO)
IT infrastructure and operations
Technology innovation and integration
Cybersecurity and data management
UX/UI Designers
User experience and usability
Visual design and branding consistency
User engagement and satisfaction
Data Analysts
Strategic insights from data analysis
Support for data-driven decision-making
Ensuring data quality and relevance
Compliance Officers
Regulatory compliance management
Adherence to legal standards
Risk mitigation within the organization
Change Managers
Execute organizational change initiatives.
Communicate and involve stakeholders.
Evaluate change effects on organization.