Enterprise Architecture

This course starts from absolute basics and teaches enterprise architecture through TOGAF 10 as a working method, not as a memorisation exercise. Each stage combines the core standard, the relevant Series Guides, practical judgement, and one recurring London Grid Distribution case so the method stays tied to real enterprise decisions.

The route is deliberately integrated. Business architecture is taught with business-model, capability, value-stream, and planning depth. Information systems architecture is taught with information mapping, authority, metadata, analytics, and building-block selection. Governance is taught as operating behaviour, not as a decorative appendix.

35 hours8 stages + foundations, 67 modulesBeginners welcomeFree, no account
Start from the beginning
Team in an architecture workshop - photo by Alex Kotliarskyi on Unsplash
9stages
67modules
35hours
150questions
11tools
13diagrams

What you will learn

  • Explain what enterprise architecture is for, and distinguish TOGAF's standard content from guidance, certifications, and common mythology
  • Work through the ADM in a practical way that connects business architecture, information systems, technology, migration, and governance
  • Use TOGAF Series Guide ideas in context rather than as disconnected side reading
  • Build and critique repository artefacts including principles, stakeholder concerns, capability maps, gap analysis, transition states, and governance records
  • Compare TOGAF with ArchiMate, BIZBOK, DoDAF, FEAF, and Zachman using defensible comparison axes
  • Apply the London Grid Distribution case to turn TOGAF concepts into realistic architecture decisions, evidence packs, and roadmap thinking

Who this course is for

  • Non-technical professionals who need a plain-language route into enterprise architecture and TOGAF
  • Students, analysts, and early-career practitioners starting from scratch and needing a structured foundation
  • Architects, engineers, and delivery leaders who want a deeper practical understanding of how enterprise decisions fit together
  • Managers and transformation leads who need to understand architecture without turning it into jargon or theatre
  • People comparing enterprise architecture methods and wanting to understand where TOGAF helps, where it needs support, and where it is the wrong fit

Prerequisites: None. The course starts from absolute basics, explains the vocabulary in plain language, and then builds toward deeper TOGAF work.

Course curriculum

Read the modules in order on the first pass. This route starts from scratch, keeps the vocabulary plain, and then builds toward deeper TOGAF practice through one recurring London Grid Distribution case.

0

Foundations

Foundations

3 modules0.92 hours

Three primer modules that explain the physical electricity system, the fictional company used throughout the course, and why architecture matters, so that the rest of the course makes sense from the start.

  1. 1. What electricity is and how it reaches you20 min
  2. 2. What London Grid Distribution does20 min
  3. 3. Why architecture matters15 min
1

Stage 1 of 8

Orientation and TOGAF 10 in Practice

7 modules4.41 hours

Start with what enterprise architecture is for, what TOGAF 10 changed, and how to read the standard without getting lost.

  1. 4. What enterprise architecture is and is not45 min
  2. 5. TOGAF 10 structure and what changed35 min
  3. 6. Core, Series Guides, Library, and certification map40 min
  4. 7. Enterprise continuum, repository, and enterprise services35 min
  5. 8. Deliverables, artefacts, building blocks, and viewpoints40 min
  6. 9. Reading TOGAF without getting lost35 min
  7. 10. London Grid Distribution orientation and source discipline35 min
2

Stage 2 of 8

Preliminary Phase and Architecture Vision

8 modules5 hours

Define scope, stakeholders, principles, sponsorship, and the Statement of Architecture Work before modelling anything.

  1. 11. Preliminary Phase and the enterprise boundary40 min
  2. 12. Stakeholders, concerns, and viewpoints35 min
  3. 13. Architecture principles that change decisions35 min
  4. 14. Business scenarios and problem framing35 min
  5. 15. Scope: breadth, depth, time, and domains30 min
  6. 16. Sponsorship, governance, and capability kickoff45 min
  7. 17. Architecture Vision and the Statement of Architecture Work40 min
  8. 18. London kickoff: principles, stakeholders, and vision40 min
3

Stage 3 of 8

Business Architecture

10 modules5.91 hours

Use Phase B, capability work, value streams, business models, and organisation mapping to make the business layer explicit.

  1. 19. Phase B and the point of business architecture40 min
  2. 20. Business models in TOGAF practice35 min
  3. 21. Organisation mapping30 min
  4. 22. Business capabilities30 min
  5. 23. Capability-based planning30 min
  6. 24. Value streams45 min
  7. 25. Business footprints, goals, services, and measures40 min
  8. 26. Gap analysis in the business layer35 min
  9. 27. London connections modernisation walkthrough35 min
  10. 28. When business architecture becomes theatre35 min
4

Stage 4 of 8

Information Systems Architecture

10 modules4.01 hours

Work through Phase C for data and applications, with information mapping, metadata, integration, and building-block selection.

  1. 29. Phase C orientation: data and applications together30 min
  2. 30. Information mapping and information domains25 min
  3. 31. Source of truth and information authority25 min
  4. 32. Customer master data management25 min
  5. 33. Asset and network data architecture for utilities25 min
  6. 34. Metadata management and information publication20 min
  7. 35. Business intelligence, analytics, and decision support20 min
  8. 36. Application architecture, ABBs, and SBBs25 min
  9. 37. Integration, interoperability, and coupling decisions20 min
  10. 38. London LTDS and CIM information architecture walkthrough25 min
5

Stage 5 of 8

Technology Architecture and Cross-Cutting Design

8 modules4.58 hours

Translate enterprise needs into platform, security, resilience, and sustainability decisions without losing traceability.

  1. 39. Phase D and technology architecture in context40 min
  2. 40. Platform strategy and interoperability35 min
  3. 41. Integrating risk and security into architecture40 min
  4. 42. Microservices and when not to use them35 min
  5. 43. Sustainable information systems and carbon-aware design30 min
  6. 44. Government and regulated-sector reference models30 min
  7. 45. Technology gap analysis, constraints, and trade-offs30 min
  8. 46. London OT, IT, and telecom resilience architecture35 min
6

Stage 6 of 8

Opportunities, Solutions, Migration, and Delivery

8 modules4 hours

Move from target architecture to work packages, transition architectures, roadmaps, iteration, and delivery control.

  1. 47. Opportunities and solutions35 min
  2. 48. Transition architectures and work packages30 min
  3. 49. Migration planning and roadmap logic25 min
  4. 50. Iteration inside and across ADM cycles30 min
  5. 51. Architecture landscape and partitioning30 min
  6. 52. Agile sprints, project management, and architecture change30 min
  7. 53. Readiness assessment and adoption sequencing30 min
  8. 54. London transformation roadmap and evidence gates30 min
7

Stage 7 of 8

Running EA as a Capability

6 modules2.84 hours

Establish governance, roles, compliance, maturity, and a workable architecture operating model.

  1. 55. EA capability, roles, and operating model25 min
  2. 56. Architecture Board and decision rights25 min
  3. 57. Compliance, waivers, and architecture contracts30 min
  4. 58. Skills, roles, and maturity models30 min
  5. 59. Running TOGAF without bureaucracy30 min
  6. 60. London governance repository and assurance model30 min
8

Stage 8 of 8

Comparison, Tailoring, Limitations, and Capstone

7 modules3.41 hours

Compare TOGAF accurately with other enterprise architecture approaches, tailor it honestly, and complete the London capstone.

  1. 61. TOGAF with ArchiMate20 min
  2. 62. TOGAF with BIZBOK30 min
  3. 63. TOGAF with DoDAF and FEAF30 min
  4. 64. TOGAF with Zachman30 min
  5. 65. Common misconceptions and where TOGAF is inappropriate35 min
  6. 66. Tailoring TOGAF by size, speed, and risk30 min
  7. 67. End-to-end London Grid Distribution capstone30 min

Standards and references

This course is written to stand on its own, but version-sensitive claims and framework comparisons are anchored to official sources. The main TOGAF public entry points used in this course are the TOGAF overview page, the TOGAF Library, and the TOGAF Standard, 10th Edition publication page.

  1. 1The TOGAF Standard, 10th Edition - formal enterprise architecture standard from The Open Group
  2. 2TOGAF Series Guides and the TOGAF Library - official Open Group guidance extending the core standard
  3. 3ArchiMate - Open Group modelling language used alongside enterprise architecture methods
  4. 4Business Architecture Guild material including the BIZBOK Guide - reference framework for business architecture practice
  5. 5DoDAF - United States Department of Defense architecture framework for defence and mission contexts
  6. 6Federal Enterprise Architecture resources - official United States federal architecture guidance and reference models
  7. 7The Zachman Framework - enterprise ontology and classification approach used for comparison, not presented here as a full delivery method
  8. 8Selected GB energy-sector sources from DESNZ, Ofgem, NESO, and NCSC used to ground the London Grid Distribution case