Ford’s New EV “Assembly Tree” - And What It Means for Enterprise Architecture and Business Architecture
Ford’s new electric truck program is being called its “Model T moment” – not because it’s just another vehicle, but because Ford is tearing up a century of manufacturing practice to build something fundamentally different. In doing so, they have replaced the traditional assembly line with what they call an “assembly tree”: a modular way of building that uses far fewer parts, far less complexity, and a completely new production logic.
Enterprise Architecture (EA) and Business Architecture (BA) are at a similar crossroads. Most organizations are still using an architectural “assembly line”: long sequences of phases, hand offs, documents, and exams that were designed for a slower, more predictable world. These legacy, exam centric certifications, methodologies, and frameworks add steps and artifacts, but struggle to produce architectures executives actually use to run and change the business.