Enterprise Architecture Consulting
Blueprint your enterprise for the next decade — business, data, application, and technology architecture, aligned.
Blueprint your enterprise for the next decade — business, data, application, and technology architecture, aligned.
Enterprise architecture is how you stop IT from drifting. Our EA consultants help leadership teams align technology investments with business strategy through TOGAF-aligned frameworks and pragmatic delivery.
We work at the intersection of business and IT — translating board-level ambition into reference architectures, roadmaps, and governance that teams can actually execute.
Architect Your Enterprise FutureTOGAF-aligned framework setup, architecture review boards, standards libraries, and governance models that match your delivery tempo.
Capability maps, value streams, operating models, and business-IT alignment artefacts that give leadership a clear view of what the enterprise actually does.
Enterprise data models, data domains, master data strategy, and data platform blueprints that make analytics and AI investments pay off.
Application portfolio rationalization, integration patterns, API strategy, and reference architectures for modern cloud-native delivery.
Infrastructure, cloud, networking, and security architecture patterns — standardized where it helps, flexible where it matters.
Multi-year transition roadmaps with sequenced initiatives, dependency mapping, and investment cases your CFO will actually sign off on.
Our EA practitioners hold TOGAF certification and apply the framework pragmatically — not as a documentation exercise.
Years of working directly with CIOs, CTOs, and CFOs across banking, government, and energy — we speak the language of the boardroom.
We favour working artefacts that teams use over shelfware diagrams. EA is only valuable if it changes decisions.
We stay with you through execution — not just the blueprint. Our architects ride along as programs deliver against the roadmap.
Book an EA maturity assessment and see where your architecture stands — and where it needs to go.