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Historic Church Annex burning on 18th Street in The Heights, March 2014 
What Is Solution Architecture? 
A Point Of View From The Front Lines Fighting Fires
If you relish crawling into a burning building, you 
might have what it takes to be a Solution 
Architect…
This is the black art of Solution Architecture 
revealed through a composite of global 
consulting engagements…the names are 
changed*…the business case is not exposed 
here…but the patent number & team are real. 
*Some of my clients will recognize the name “SmartMeter” but will also see it is not specifically their project.
3 Things 
1. The business problem is the Big Burn…the raison 
d'être of your presence on the scene. 
2. Have Plan B in your pocket…you’re going to need it. 
3. Business cases are fascinating…the concern for them 
often seems inversely proportional to the size of the 
project…make peace with that.
3 More Things 
1. Business managers care about business, IT people care about IT, and vendors 
care about their products…this is why Solution Architecture is a black art. 
2. To gain traction, solution architectures must be simple enough to be 
understood by business people, technical enough to be taken seriously by IT 
people, and brief enough to be consumed by both…vendors will not 
consume them under any circumstance. 
3. No matter how cost effective, elegant, and doable a solution, business may 
choose a different one, IT may favor another, and vendors may actually sell 
them something else…sometimes you have to take lemons and make 
lemonade…embrace it.
A Tale of Two Solutions: 
Is the power on? 
One solution, an inexpensive logic board, minimal change management, maybe one new business 
partner, no additional vendors, no change to the IT environment, focused narrowly on op-ex…and 
led to a patent by the author and his team (the so-called “smart guys”). 
Another solution cost hundreds of millions to implement (massive cap-ex), lengthy regulatory 
hearings, required many new business partners, massive change management, a huge change to the 
technology environment, and business transformation…and hundreds of layoffs (meter readers).
Backdrop 
• The Author, a consulting architect was working at a 
major global IT consulting firm. 
• The composite CEO of a composite Utility tells us 
about the burning issues that keep him up at night. 
• The next day we decide to take a stab at the problem 
of determining which side of the meter a power 
outage is located.
The Business Problem 
1. When a customer calls to report an outage, it can be difficult to 
determine which side of the meter is the outage: on the house 
side, it’s not the Utility’s problem…on the line side, then an 
expensive truck-roll by the Utility is required to restore power. 
2. As many as 50% of truck-rolls turn out to be unnecessary ! 
3. In the Utility business, important incentives are related to 
managing op-ex…eliminating unnecessary truck rolls impacts 
op-ex big time.
Solution No.1 
• Use the electric signal on an open phone line to determine if 
there is power to the meter 
• If signal indicates power on, customer is told by the CSR to call 
an electrician 
• If signal indicates power off, roll truck to restore power to 
customer 
• Utility reduces costs through elimination of unnecessary truck-rolls
Solution Architecture No.1 
Meter 
New 
SRADD State Response And 
Detection Device 
POTS Patent No.: US 
6,828,906 
Solution revolves around the 
SRADD which negotiates a 
state detection, tone detection, 
and tone generation to 
determine if there is power to 
the meter. We generalized the 
concept to apply to any 
scenario involving state 
detection using an open phone 
line and filed for a patent. 
Detailed drawings can be 
viewed on the US Patent 
Office Web site: HERE 
Existing 
Innovation zone confined 
Keep existing meters 
No new backend systems
To Be, Or Not To Be? 
• No.1—simple, inexpensive technology 
• Focused like a laser on op-ex reduction 
• Little transformation, little change management
The SRADD Architecture 
Voltage 
Detection 
Tone Logic Unit 
Detection 
Tone 
Generation 
POTS 
Interface 
Battery 
SRADD (“the device”) may 
be incorporated or affixed to 
an existing meter but need not 
be. The device can be added to 
a meter and isolated from high 
voltage by a relay or induction 
type of device. 
The device is coupled to a 
standard telephone system or 
POTS via a telephone line. But 
the device could be coupled to 
the Internet or a dedicated 
comm network coupled to a 
control center, or a wireless 
network. 
No interface to the Enterprise 
IT environment is necessary 
but is easily accomplished over 
existing network if desired. 
SRADD
Flow: User Perspective 
Begin Call 
Call 
Service 
State 
Needed? 
Transmit 
Tones 
Await 
Response 
Service 
Call 
End Call 
Yes 
No
Flow: SRADD Perspective 
Begin 
Monitor 
Receive 
Tones 
Pattern 
Match? 
Check 
Voltage 
Generate 
Response 
Transmit 
Response 
End 
Yes 
No
Flow: SRADD Processing 
Initiate 
Report 
Attempt 
Report 
Report 
Successful? 
Determine 
Wait 
Interval 
Wait 
No 
Complete 
Report 
Yes 
No 
Outage 
Continuing? 
Yes
Solution No.2 
(Plan B) 
• Replace many millions of existing meters with new 
SmartMeters at customer premises 
• Significant Business and IT transformation and 
change management 
• Solution reduces op-ex through massive cap-ex
Solution Architecture No.2 
Smart 
Meter 
Mesh 
network 
This highly complex solution 
revolves around new 
technology called SmartMeters 
hitting the market over the 
past 10 years. The meters can 
be “pinged” by CSR to 
determine outage status, auto-report 
meter reads, and turn-on 
and turn-off power by 
remote action. 
Massive new infrastructure, 
change management, and 
dramatic resource actions cost 
hundreds of millions to billions 
of dollars. The business case 
was “controversial.” 
Smart 
Meter 
Rip and replace meters 
Smart 
Meter 
Backhaul comm 
network 
New suite of 
SmartMeter Apps In IT 
Environment 
New network 
New untested 
network 
New backend 
New CSR 
Process 
Change 
mgt 
Change 
mgt 
Change 
mgt
SmartMeter process flows and narratives 
ran well over a hundred pages, few of 
which were understood by the general 
business community and many of which 
were mysterious to IT…to the eternal 
gratification of the software and device 
vendors.
Which solution did the client 
choose… 
SRADD or SmartMeter?
Smartmeter !
Lessons Learned? 
• You can never predict the outcome 
of a Big Burn. 
• Projects involving massive cap-ex, 
Business and IT transformation, and 
years to implement can have benefits 
that overwhelm a too-narrow 
business case. 
• If you think the building was burning 
when you came upon the scene, it 
can get worse…but you can push 
final design toward a better solution, 
make new friends, and learn 
something new all at the same time. 
Exhausted Houston firefighters - March 2014
Story Notes: 
• This story is based on real engagements 
• Composite Utility is a global representation 
• The patents we wrote are real 
• Drawings based on actual Solution 
Architectures 
• Vision-to-implementation took the better part 
of 10 years….it pays to have Plan B 
• Solution No.1 was designed in a single 
afternoon…to-date no one anywhere on the 
planet is remotely interested in it 
• The “not-so-smart guys” are still shaking their 
heads…you just never know 
The Author, trying to keep his head below water in Bonaire
“There’s nothing not-so-smart as a room full of smart 
people.” 
– An Experienced Consulting Architect
Photos Drawings Narratives Copyright © Nicholas Noecker 
Patent Team (the “smart guys”): Jerry Malcolm, Scott Winters, Paul Williamson, and 
Nicholas Noecker 
Contact 
njnoecker@yahoo.com 
713.320.5937

More Related Content

What Is Solution Architecture? The Black Art Of I/T Solution Architecture

  • 1. Historic Church Annex burning on 18th Street in The Heights, March 2014 What Is Solution Architecture? A Point Of View From The Front Lines Fighting Fires
  • 2. If you relish crawling into a burning building, you might have what it takes to be a Solution Architect…
  • 3. This is the black art of Solution Architecture revealed through a composite of global consulting engagements…the names are changed*…the business case is not exposed here…but the patent number & team are real. *Some of my clients will recognize the name “SmartMeter” but will also see it is not specifically their project.
  • 4. 3 Things 1. The business problem is the Big Burn…the raison d'être of your presence on the scene. 2. Have Plan B in your pocket…you’re going to need it. 3. Business cases are fascinating…the concern for them often seems inversely proportional to the size of the project…make peace with that.
  • 5. 3 More Things 1. Business managers care about business, IT people care about IT, and vendors care about their products…this is why Solution Architecture is a black art. 2. To gain traction, solution architectures must be simple enough to be understood by business people, technical enough to be taken seriously by IT people, and brief enough to be consumed by both…vendors will not consume them under any circumstance. 3. No matter how cost effective, elegant, and doable a solution, business may choose a different one, IT may favor another, and vendors may actually sell them something else…sometimes you have to take lemons and make lemonade…embrace it.
  • 6. A Tale of Two Solutions: Is the power on? One solution, an inexpensive logic board, minimal change management, maybe one new business partner, no additional vendors, no change to the IT environment, focused narrowly on op-ex…and led to a patent by the author and his team (the so-called “smart guys”). Another solution cost hundreds of millions to implement (massive cap-ex), lengthy regulatory hearings, required many new business partners, massive change management, a huge change to the technology environment, and business transformation…and hundreds of layoffs (meter readers).
  • 7. Backdrop • The Author, a consulting architect was working at a major global IT consulting firm. • The composite CEO of a composite Utility tells us about the burning issues that keep him up at night. • The next day we decide to take a stab at the problem of determining which side of the meter a power outage is located.
  • 8. The Business Problem 1. When a customer calls to report an outage, it can be difficult to determine which side of the meter is the outage: on the house side, it’s not the Utility’s problem…on the line side, then an expensive truck-roll by the Utility is required to restore power. 2. As many as 50% of truck-rolls turn out to be unnecessary ! 3. In the Utility business, important incentives are related to managing op-ex…eliminating unnecessary truck rolls impacts op-ex big time.
  • 9. Solution No.1 • Use the electric signal on an open phone line to determine if there is power to the meter • If signal indicates power on, customer is told by the CSR to call an electrician • If signal indicates power off, roll truck to restore power to customer • Utility reduces costs through elimination of unnecessary truck-rolls
  • 10. Solution Architecture No.1 Meter New SRADD State Response And Detection Device POTS Patent No.: US 6,828,906 Solution revolves around the SRADD which negotiates a state detection, tone detection, and tone generation to determine if there is power to the meter. We generalized the concept to apply to any scenario involving state detection using an open phone line and filed for a patent. Detailed drawings can be viewed on the US Patent Office Web site: HERE Existing Innovation zone confined Keep existing meters No new backend systems
  • 11. To Be, Or Not To Be? • No.1—simple, inexpensive technology • Focused like a laser on op-ex reduction • Little transformation, little change management
  • 12. The SRADD Architecture Voltage Detection Tone Logic Unit Detection Tone Generation POTS Interface Battery SRADD (“the device”) may be incorporated or affixed to an existing meter but need not be. The device can be added to a meter and isolated from high voltage by a relay or induction type of device. The device is coupled to a standard telephone system or POTS via a telephone line. But the device could be coupled to the Internet or a dedicated comm network coupled to a control center, or a wireless network. No interface to the Enterprise IT environment is necessary but is easily accomplished over existing network if desired. SRADD
  • 13. Flow: User Perspective Begin Call Call Service State Needed? Transmit Tones Await Response Service Call End Call Yes No
  • 14. Flow: SRADD Perspective Begin Monitor Receive Tones Pattern Match? Check Voltage Generate Response Transmit Response End Yes No
  • 15. Flow: SRADD Processing Initiate Report Attempt Report Report Successful? Determine Wait Interval Wait No Complete Report Yes No Outage Continuing? Yes
  • 16. Solution No.2 (Plan B) • Replace many millions of existing meters with new SmartMeters at customer premises • Significant Business and IT transformation and change management • Solution reduces op-ex through massive cap-ex
  • 17. Solution Architecture No.2 Smart Meter Mesh network This highly complex solution revolves around new technology called SmartMeters hitting the market over the past 10 years. The meters can be “pinged” by CSR to determine outage status, auto-report meter reads, and turn-on and turn-off power by remote action. Massive new infrastructure, change management, and dramatic resource actions cost hundreds of millions to billions of dollars. The business case was “controversial.” Smart Meter Rip and replace meters Smart Meter Backhaul comm network New suite of SmartMeter Apps In IT Environment New network New untested network New backend New CSR Process Change mgt Change mgt Change mgt
  • 18. SmartMeter process flows and narratives ran well over a hundred pages, few of which were understood by the general business community and many of which were mysterious to IT…to the eternal gratification of the software and device vendors.
  • 19. Which solution did the client choose… SRADD or SmartMeter?
  • 21. Lessons Learned? • You can never predict the outcome of a Big Burn. • Projects involving massive cap-ex, Business and IT transformation, and years to implement can have benefits that overwhelm a too-narrow business case. • If you think the building was burning when you came upon the scene, it can get worse…but you can push final design toward a better solution, make new friends, and learn something new all at the same time. Exhausted Houston firefighters - March 2014
  • 22. Story Notes: • This story is based on real engagements • Composite Utility is a global representation • The patents we wrote are real • Drawings based on actual Solution Architectures • Vision-to-implementation took the better part of 10 years….it pays to have Plan B • Solution No.1 was designed in a single afternoon…to-date no one anywhere on the planet is remotely interested in it • The “not-so-smart guys” are still shaking their heads…you just never know The Author, trying to keep his head below water in Bonaire
  • 23. “There’s nothing not-so-smart as a room full of smart people.” – An Experienced Consulting Architect
  • 24. Photos Drawings Narratives Copyright © Nicholas Noecker Patent Team (the “smart guys”): Jerry Malcolm, Scott Winters, Paul Williamson, and Nicholas Noecker Contact njnoecker@yahoo.com 713.320.5937