By Dr. Cort Coghill on Monday, 30 June 2025
Category: FEAC Institute

Enterprise Archaeology: Digging Deeper into Architectural Truth

Enterprise architecture often involves discovering and understanding fragmented, inconsistent, and undocumented knowledge hidden throughout an organization. Similar to archaeologists, architects must carefully excavate layers of enterprise artifacts, systems, documents, and models to uncover the truth about how an enterprise functions and evolves. This approach, called enterprise archaeology, provides a strong metaphor and method for grasping the structural and operational realities that support business performance.

Why "Archaeology" Matters in EA

1. Map the Site: Structure Your Excavation

To begin an enterprise archaeological effort, architects should:


2. Think Stratigraphically: Understand Layers of Change

Adopt a stratigraphic view of the organization, akin to geological analysis:

EA Layer

Description

Strategic Layer

     Enterprise intent and long-range goals

Capability Layer 

     Core capabilities and outcomes

Process/ Function Layer

     How work is performed

Data Layer

Application Layer

     Information entities, definitions, flows, and structures that support processes

    Supporting systems and integrations

Technology Layer 

    Infrastructure and runtime platforms


Analyze how these layers interact and how a change in one layer propagates (or fails to) across others. Misalignment often reveals structural vulnerabilities or transformation friction. Note: the layers presented in this section represent a common stratification used to analyze enterprise architecture. However, they are not exhaustive. Depending on the organization's context, additional layers, such as security, compliance, and standards may be equally important. These layers should be considered as a part of a comprehensive analysis, especially when addressing cross-cutting concerns or regulatory requirements. 

3. Adopt Hypothesis-Driven Modeling

Rather than assume legacy documentation is accurate, use hypothesis-based modeling:

  1. Form a hypothesis – e.g., "This system supports capability X."
  2. Test the claim – through stakeholder interviews, logs, and system analysis.
  3. Refine your understanding – possibly discovering misalignment between intent and actual behavior.
  4. Record your findings – including your rationale and confidence level.

This investigative approach builds a more trustworthy and transparent architecture baseline.

4. Embed Enterprise Archaeology into Governance

Make enterprise archaeology part of the ongoing architecture practice:


5. Structure Architectural Discovery Using the Six Interrogatives

A powerful technique in enterprise archaeology is to structure your investigation using the six fundamental interrogatives: What, How, Where, Who, When, and Why. These simple questions can serve as a lens through which to analyze artifacts, identify gaps, and guide discovery efforts.

Each interrogative addresses a distinct dimension of enterprise reality:

Using these questions as scaffolding helps ensure that discovery efforts are comprehensive. For example, when examining a legacy application, ask:

This line of inquiry supports both logical rigor and completeness. It also enables you to trace inconsistencies, reveal assumptions, and connect disconnected fragments. Gaps in one or more areas often indicate areas of risk, misalignment, or neglected governance.

When used across multiple systems, processes, or capabilities, the six interrogatives allow architects to compare and integrate insights systematically, helping to reconstruct a more coherent and actionable view of the enterprise landscape.

6. Promote a Culture of Discovery

Effective enterprise archaeology depends on culture, not just tools:


Why This Matters

The value of this approach extends far beyond documentation:

Getting Started: A Practical Path Forward

  1. Choose a focal point: Select a critical capability or system for investigation.
  2. Inventory artifacts: Collect models, requirements, service records, and decision logs.
  3. Use the interrogatives: Apply 'What', 'How', 'Where', 'Who', 'When', and 'Why ' to structure discovery and uncover gaps.
  4. Document rationales: Capture hypotheses, findings, and recommendations with appropriate levels of confidence.
  5. Share and iterate: Present findings as "architectural stories" to stakeholders and integrate feedback.

Conclusion

Enterprise archaeology is more than a metaphor—it's a systematic method for revealing organizational truth within fragmented and aging systems. Through disciplined discovery, interrogative analysis, and collaborative exploration, architects can clarify confusion and uncover value that often lies just beneath the surface. your text here ...

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