Article ID: | iaor2007641 |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Volume: | 35 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 313 |
End Page Number: | 327 |
Publication Date: | Jun 2006 |
Journal: | International Journal of General Systems |
Authors: | Sun L., Liu K., Tan S. |
A large and complex IT project may involve multiple organizations and be constrained within a temporal period. An organization is a system comprising people, activities, processes, information, resources and goals. Understanding and modelling such a project and its interrelationship with relevant organizations are essential for organizational project planning. This paper introduces the problem articulation method (PAM) as a semiotic method for organizational infrastructure modelling. PAM offers a suite of techniques, which enables the articulation of the business, technical and organizational requirements, delivering an infrastructural framework to support the organization. It works by eliciting and formalizing (e.g. processes, activities, relationships, responsibilities, communications, resources, agents, dependencies and constraints) and mapping these abstractions to represent the manifestation of the ‘actual’ organization. Many analysts forgo organizational modelling methods and use localized