The TOGAF® Standard, 10th Edition, is a proven, sustainable Enterprise Architecture framework that facilitates the delivery of effective business innovation. The TOGAF® Standard, 10th Edition defines a modular framework ideally suited to the support of strategic planning of an organizations’ assets and other key elements that are essential to enterprise architecture vendors and their tools. 
  - For businesses, the TOGAF® Standard,10th Edition empowers your organization with an adaptable framework that delivers practical, flexible and trusted governance. 
  - For Enterprise Architects, the TOGAF® Standard, 10th Edition provides an integrated, holistic view of an organizational landscape which enables strategic decision making by providing best practices for new business and technology trend adoption.
  - For consultants, the TOGAF® Standard,10th Edition provides a modular, scalable framework that enables organizational transformation for different use cases and architecture styles.
  
 This intensive course covers the entire syllabus for TOGAF® Enterprise Architecture Foundation and TOGAF® Enterprise Architecture Practitioner, thereby preparing candidates for the TOGAF® Enterprise Architecture Part 1 and TOGAF® Enterprise Architecture Part 2 examinations. This course will provide students with the knowledge and a basic understanding of Enterprise Architecture using the TOGAF® approach. This course will also provide students with validation of the knowledge and comprehension, including the ability to analyze and apply the TOGAF® Standard, 10th Edition to developing, sustaining, and using an Enterprise Architecture. Students will obtain the ability to use, practice, and apply the TOGAF® approach generically.
 Ideal for: This course is designed for those seeking to achieve the TOGAF®  Certified certificate, which is an important and valuable qualification, demonstrating increasingly higher levels of competence.
 Course & Certification Benefits
 When you complete this course, you are entitled to receive a Certification of Completion upon request. This Certificate is not the same as the TOGAF® EA Level 1 and Level 2 Certifications. To achieve Certification, you must schedule, complete, and pass the Level 1 and Level 2 Certification Examinations.
 Who should attend
  
  - Application Architects
  - Application Portfolio Managers
  - Business Analysts
  - Business Architects
  - CIOs and CTOs
  - Data Architects
  - Enterprise Architects
  - T. strategists, senior business analysts
  - Information Architects
  - Infrastructure Architects
  - IT Architects
  - Others responsible for change programs
  - Program Managers
  - Project Managers
  - Security Architects and Technology Vendors
  - Solution Architects
  - System Integrators
  - Technology Architects
  
  
 Course Agenda
  Introduction and TOGAF® Enterprise Architecture Learning Path 
  Module 1: Introduction and Concepts 
  
  - Enterprise
  - The Purpose of Enterprise Architecture
  - The Benefits of Having an Enterprise Architecture
  - A Framework for Enterprise Architecture
  - Architecture Domains
  - Architecture Abstraction in Enterprise Architecture
  - The Enterprise Continuum
  - The Architecture Repository
  - The TOGAF® Content Framework and Enterprise Metamodel
  - Architecture Capability
  - Risk Management
  - Gap Analysis
  
  
  Module 2: Definitions 
  
  - TOGAF® Definitions that are examinable are covered throughout the course as part of other modules.
  
  
  Module 3: Introduction to the ADM Phases 
  
  - The TOGAF® ADM and its Phases
  - “Draft” and “Approved” Deliverables
  - Iteration and the ADM
  - Governing the Creation, Development, and Maintenance of Enterprise Architecture
  - How to Scope an Architecture
  - Architecture Alternatives, Concerns, and Trade-Off
  - Purpose: Preliminary Phase
  - Objectives: Preliminary Phase
  - Purpose: Phase A
  - Objectives: Phase A
  - Purpose: Phases B, C, and D
  - Objectives: Phase B
  - Objectives: Phase C: Data Architecture and Application Architecture
  - Objectives: Phase D
  - Purpose: Phase E
  - Objectives: Phase E
  - Purpose: Phase F
  - Objectives: Phase F
  - Purpose: Phase G
  - Objectives: Phase G
  - Purpose: Phase H
  - Objectives: Phase H
  - Objectives: Requirements Management
  - Purpose: Requirements Management
  - Information Flow Between ADM Phases
  - How Developing Architecture can be Applied to Support Agile Software Development
  
  
  Module 4: Introduction to ADM Techniques 
  
  - How the ADM and Supporting Guidelines and Techniques Relate to Each Other
  - Purpose: Architecture Principles
  - Template for Architecture Principles
  - What Makes a Good Architecture Principle
  - Business Scenarios
  - The Purpose of Gap Analysis
  - Interoperability
  - Business Transformation Readiness Assessment
  - Risk Management and the TOGAF® ADM
  
  
  Module 5: Introduction to Applying the ADM 
  
  - How to Apply the TOGAF® Standard
  - Iteration and the ADM
  - The Three Levels of the Architecture Landscape
  - Partitioning to Simplify the Development of an Enterprise Architecture
  - Purpose-Based Architecture Projects
  - Applying the TOGAF® Standard to Support the Digital Enterprise
  
  
  Module 6: Introduction to Architecture Governance 
  
  - Architecture Governance
  - Why Architecture Governance is Beneficial
  - The Role of an Architecture Board and its Responsibilities
  - Architecture Contracts
  - Architecture Compliance
  
  
  Module 7: Architecture Content 
  
  - Key Concepts: Stakeholders, Concerns, Architecture Views, Architecture Viewpoints, and their Relationships
  - Building Blocks and the ADM
  - The TOGAF® Standard Deliverables Created and Consumed in the TOGAF® ADM Phases
  
  
  Module 8: The Context for Enterprise Architecture 
  
  - Guiding Effective Change: The Purpose of Enterprise Architecture
  - What does an Enterprise Architecture look like?
  - Architecture Capability
  - Architecture Governance and the role of an Enterprise Architect
  - Architecture Compliance, Levels of Conformance, Reviews, and the Role of the Architect
  - How an Architecture enables alignment to Organizational Objectives using Agile development as an example
  - The need to Manage Multiple Architecture States
  - Enterprise Security Architecture
  - Security, a Cross-Cutting Concern
  - Managing Uncertainty in order to optimize Maximum Business Benefit and Minimum Business Loss
  - The Enterprise Architect and Enterprise Architecture in a Digital Enterprise
  
  
  Module 9: Stakeholder Management 
  
  - How to identify Stakeholders, their Concerns, Views, and the Communication involved
  - The use of Architecture Views
  - Stakeholder Engagement and Requirements Management
  - Using Trade-off to Support Architecture development
  
  
  Module 10: Phase A, the Starting Point 
  
  - Information necessary to execute the Architecture Vision phase
  - How to apply Phase A and how it contributes to Architecture Development Work
  - Security-specific Architecture Design that is sufficient — Phase A
  - Outputs necessary to proceed with the Architecture Development
  
  
  Module 11: Architecture Development 
  
  - Steps applicable to all ADM Phases
  - Risk and Security considerations during the Architecture Development (ADM Phases B to D)
  - Relevant Information to produce outputs valuable to the Architecture Development
  - How to apply Phases B, C, and D, and how they contribute to the Architecture Development work
  - Information relevant to Phase C (Data and Applications) to produce outputs for the Architecture Development
  - Information needed in Phase D to produce outputs relevant to the architecture development
  - Outputs of Phases B, C, and D necessary to proceed with the Architecture Development work
  
  
  Module 12: Implementing the Architecture 
  
  - Risk and Security considerations for Phases E, F, and G
  - Steps (Phase E) to create the Implementation and Migration Strategy
  - Basic Approaches to Implementation
  - Identifying and Grouping Work Packages
  - Creating and Documenting Transition Architectures
  - The Impact of Migration Projects on the Organization and the Coordination Required
  - Why and how Business Value is assigned to each Work Package
  - How to Prioritize the Migration Projects (Phase F)
  - Confirm the Architecture Roadmap (Phase F)
  - The outputs of Phase F necessary to Proceed with the Architecture Implementation
  - Inputs to Phase G Implementation Governance
  - How Implementation Governance is executed (Phase G)
Outputs to support Architecture Governance  - How Architecture Contracts are used to communicate with Implementers
  
  
  Module 13: Architecture Change Management 
  
  - Inputs triggering Change Management — Change Requests
  - Activities necessary for effective Change Management (Stakeholder Management)
Outputs relevant to proceed with a Change  
  
  Module 14: Requirements Management 
  
  - The inputs that feed the Requirements Management Phase
  - How the Requirements Management steps correspond to ADM Phase Steps
  - The Purpose of the outputs of Requirements Management
  
  
  Module 15: Supporting the ADM Work 
  
  - How The Open Group TOGAF® Library can be used to support the Practitioner’s Work
  - Business Scenarios
  - The purpose of Compliance Assessments
  - How Migration Planning techniques are used to review and consolidate the Gap Analysis results from earlier Phases
  - How a Repository can be structured using the TOGAF® Architecture Repository as an example
  - What to expect in a well-run Architecture Repository
  - How the concepts of Architecture Levels are used to organize the Architecture Landscape
  - Different Levels of Architecture that exist in an organization
  - Determining the Level that an Architecture is being Developed at
  - The Role of Architecture Building Blocks (ABBs)
  - Guidelines and Techniques for Business Architecture
  - Applying Gap Analysis
  - How Iteration can be used in Architecture Practices
  - How the Implementation Factor Catalog can be used
  - The Content Framework and the Enterprise Metamodel
  - When the Architecture Content Framework (ACF) needs to be filled throughout the ADM Cycles
  - Using an Enterprise Metamodel
  - Using a Taxonomy
  - How Risk Assessment can be used