Introduction
Document editing provides business users with the necessary tools to manage, analyze, and enhance their documents efficiently. There are two modes available: Edit Mode and Advanced Edit Mode. Each mode is tailored to different user needs, ensuring a comprehensive and structured approach to document management.
Edit Mode
This mode focuses on document scoring based on the Organisation Unit goal for each business architecture domain.
Advanced Edit Mode
Advanced Edit Mode offers a more robust set of tools for detailed analysis and prioritization of documents. This mode is designed for users who need to perform comprehensive evaluations and ensure alignment with strategic goals and industry standards. Key features include:
Content Analysis: Evaluate documents across multiple domains such as Strategy, Policy, Capability, and more. Each domain is assessed based on relevance, quality, and quantity, ensuring a thorough review.
Content Weighting: Prioritize documents by establishing criteria for importance, rating documents against these criteria, and calculating weighted and normalized scores. This helps in identifying the most critical documents that support organizational objectives.
Purpose
The purpose of both Edit Mode and Advanced Edit Mode is to provide users with flexible and powerful tools to manage their documentation effectively. By leveraging these features, users can ensure their documents not only meet regulatory requirements but also drive strategic initiatives and support overall business objectives.
By using Edit Mode for quick updates and Advanced Edit Mode for detailed analysis, users can maintain high standards of document quality and relevance, contributing to the overall success and efficiency of the organization.
Edit mode
Document Scoring
Overview
Document scoring provides a detailed assessment of a document’s business architecture content. This assessment helps in understanding the alignment, value, capability etc. of each document in relation to the organization's goals and objectives.
Document Scoring domains
Each Business Architecture domain is rated and issues are identified to provide a comprehensive overview of the document's strengths and weaknesses.
Strategy
Policy
Capability
Value
Organisation
Stakeholders
Initiatives
Product
Information
Performance
Rating Criteria
The following criteria are used for scoring:
Relevance
Quality
Quantity
An aggregated score based on the criteria is prepared for each business architecture domain.
Comparison with Organisation unit goal
This aggregated score for each business architecture domain is compared to the Organisation unit goal for that business architecture domain.
Interpretation of Scores
Green (0 issues): Indicates that the business architecture meets or exceeds expectations.
Yellow (1-3 issues): Indicates minor issues that need to be addressed to fully align with organizational goals.
Red (4 or more issues): Indicates significant issues that need immediate attention to align with organizational goals.
Learn more
Learn in more detail: See Weighting and analysis
Advanced edit mode
Content Analysis
In advanced edit mode, content analysis evaluates business architecture data within each document domain through a structured rating process. This process ensures a thorough assessment of relevance, quality, and quantity.
Domains and Criteria:
Each of the ten Business Architecture domains are rated on relevance, quality and quantity.
Rating Process
Relevance: How well the data aligns with organizational goals.
Very High: Direct alignment
Very Low: Minimal support
Incomplete: No relevant data
Quality: Adherence to industry standards (ISO 9001 for documents).
Very High: Meets/exceeds Level 5 standards
Very Low: Meets Level 1 standards
Incomplete: Non-compliance with any standard
Quantity: Comprehensiveness against ISO 9001 for documents requirements.
Very High: Surpassing Level 5 requirements
Very Low: Meeting Level 1 requirements
Incomplete: Insufficient documentation
This structured approach helps identify strengths and areas for improvement, aiding in more informed decision-making.
Content Weighting
Content weighting determines the importance of business documents within the organization, following a structured and comprehensive approach to document prioritization.
Steps for Document Prioritization
Establish Criteria for Importance
Alignment with Organisational Goals: Evaluate support for core objectives.
Impact on Decision Making: Assess influence on key business decisions.
Scope of Influence: Determine impact on the entire organization or specific departments.
Compliance & Regulatory Requirements: Identify documents required for legal or regulatory adherence.
Stakeholder Interest: Gauge importance to key stakeholders (investors, management, employees).
Rate Each Document Against the Criteria
Use a predefined scale (1-5) for automatic weighting.
For manual validation, involve stakeholders in scoring through surveys or workshops.
Example Scale:
1: Very Low
2: Low
3: Medium
4: High
5: Very High
Assign Weights to Each Criterion
Based on relative importance to the organization’s strategy.
Example Weights:
Alignment with Organisational Goals: 30%
Impact on Decision Making: 25%
Scope of Influence: 20%
Compliance and Regulatory Requirements: 15%
Stakeholder Interest: 10%
Calculate Weighted Scores
Multiply scores by weights for each document and sum them to get a total weighted score.
Calculation Example:
Weighted Score = (Score for Alignment * Weight) + (Score for Impact * Weight) + ...
Normalize the Scores
Compare importance across documents by normalizing scores.
Normalization Example:
Normalised Score = Document Score / Highest Score
Rank the Documents
Rank based on normalised scores to determine relative importance.
Guides resource allocation, attention, and efforts among strategic documents.
This method ensures critical documents receive the attention they deserve, supporting informed decision-making and compliance with industry standards.
Learn more
Learn more about Content weighting: See Weighting and analysis