2009
DOI: 10.1504/ijise.2009.024155
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Defining Enterprise Systems Engineering

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Cited by 10 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…Attempts to define Enterprise SE frequently fall back on refining previous concepts of systems integration and interoperability rather than on Enterprise SE as a whole; indeed, refining all of these concepts is useful, yet the focus is still on modeling and integrating already-existing systems or components. Because it is already stated in literature of Enterprise SE that effective enterprise integration involves not only hardware, equipment, and data but also people, technology, and business processes [12].…”
Section: Se Technical Processes For Enterprise Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Attempts to define Enterprise SE frequently fall back on refining previous concepts of systems integration and interoperability rather than on Enterprise SE as a whole; indeed, refining all of these concepts is useful, yet the focus is still on modeling and integrating already-existing systems or components. Because it is already stated in literature of Enterprise SE that effective enterprise integration involves not only hardware, equipment, and data but also people, technology, and business processes [12].…”
Section: Se Technical Processes For Enterprise Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It views the enterprise as a complex, integrated system that can be purposefully designed or re-designed [31], [90], [10]. It applies "systems theory and engineering techniques to the specification, analysis, design, and implementation of an enterprise for its life cycle" [75].…”
Section: Enterprise Engineering and Enterprise Architecturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some Architecture researchers have recently begun to borrow Deming's (2000) view of Enterprises as Systems with the expectation that just as the behaviour of every system can be examined and improved, so can Enterprises be. These approaches (Wegmann, Julia, Regev, Perroud, & Rychkova, 2007, Wegmann, Regev, Rychkova, Le, de la Cruz, & Julia, 2007Swarz & DeRosa, 2006;Saenz et al, 2009) are yet to mature or standardize.…”
Section: Enterprise Systems Engineeringmentioning
confidence: 99%