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.

 
Categories
 
 
Previous
Previous

The TOGAF® BAIT Model: Why Structural Integration Is the Gap Certified Practitioners Are Now Ready to Close

Next
Next

Your AI Problem Isn’t Data Debt – It is Executive Relevance