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Strategic activity mapping for software architects May 25, 2025 The future is bright Mar 30, 2025 2024 Reflections Dec 31, 2024 The day I became an architect Sep 11, 2024 Are developer jobs truly in decline? Jun 29, 2024 Should today’s developers worry about AI code generators taking their jobs? Dec 11, 2022 Automation and coding tools for pet projects on the Apple hardware May 28, 2022 Good idea fairy strikes when you least expect it May 2, 2022 Best practices for building a microservice architecture Apr 25, 2022 Tools of the craft Dec 18, 2021 Configuring Peloton Apple Health integration Feb 16, 2019 Using Markov Chain Generator to create Donald Trump's state of union speech Jan 20, 2019 The religion of JavaScript Nov 26, 2018 Teleportation can corrupt your data Sep 29, 2018 Quick guide to Internet privacy for families Apr 7, 2018 Leaving Facebook and Twitter: here are the alternatives Mar 25, 2018 When politics and technology intersect Mar 24, 2018 Node.js is a perfect enterprise application platform Jul 30, 2017 The technology publishing industry needs to transform in order to survive Jun 30, 2017 Emails, politics, and common sense Jan 14, 2017 Windows 10: a confession from an iOS traitor Jan 4, 2017 Don't trust your cloud service until you've read the terms Sep 27, 2016 I am addicted to Medium, and I am tempted to move my entire blog to it Sep 9, 2016 What I learned from using Amazon Alexa for a month Sep 7, 2016 Amazon Alexa is eating the retailers alive Jun 22, 2016 In Support Of Gary Johnson Jun 13, 2016 What can we learn from the last week's salesforce.com outage ? May 15, 2016 Let's stop letting tools get in the way of results Apr 10, 2016 In memory of Ed Yourdon Jan 23, 2016 OAuth 2.0: the protocol at the center of the universe Jan 1, 2016 What Every College Computer Science Freshman Should Know Aug 14, 2015 On Maintaining Personal Brand as a Software Engineer Aug 2, 2015 The Three Myths About JavaScript Simplicity Jul 10, 2015 The longer the chain of responsibility the less likely there is anyone in the hierarchy who can actually accept it Jun 7, 2015 Ordered Sets and Logs in Cassandra vs SQL Apr 8, 2015 Have computers become too complicated for teaching ? Jan 1, 2013 Best way to start writing an XSLT Jun 25, 2006

Strategic activity mapping for software architects

May 25, 2025

I often dive deep into research on a topic when an idea resonates with me. I might read a paper, an article, or find something in a book. What starts as curiosity becomes a full-fledged exploration. I read broadly across science, psychology, and sociology, always seeking the connections between disciplines and outcomes.

During one of my executive classes at the Wharton CTO program, I came across the concept of activity system mapping. That framework sparked a cascade of insights. It helped me reframe a long-standing question: how can technologists, particularly lead engineers, software architects, and CTOs, quantify and increase their impact on the business?

Gregor Hope’s “Software Architect Elevator” defines the three-legged stool of software architecture: skill, impact, and leadership. For many technologists, “impact” is the hardest leg to build because we are accustomed to recognition for technical excellence and rarely for business results.

The impact of software architecture is measured by the benefit achieved for the business, typically through increased revenue, reduced costs, faster time to market, competitive advantage, or the ability to respond quickly to changing customer needs. These are the hallmarks of a strong architecture.

So, how do you ensure your work drives business value? According to Michael Porter, strategic impact stems from five pillars:

  • Increasing revenue,

  • Building desirable and profitable products,

  • Reducing costs to serve,

  • Enabling scale,

  • Establishing competitive differentiation


These pillars are rooted in Michael Porter’s work on competition and strategy. Crucially, you don’t achieve them by mimicking competitors. Strategy is about making deliberate choices to be effective and different.

One exercise I now recommend to teams is mapping their day-to-day technical work to business value. If you are working on an established and successful product, list the top 3-5 reasons your customers are buying it and staying with it. If it is an emerging offering, list 3-5 reasons why you think your customers will buy it. Then, add 2 more: increasing revenue and lowering costs for your enterprise. Place these items into the center of your diagram: they are your strategic priorities.

Critically, technical activities are never a strategic priority. For example, “API-first” is not a strategic priority -- it is an activity serving the purpose of a strategic priority. But enabling a platform strategy where external partners build on your APIs to expand your ecosystem and moat is. Strategy translates technical activities into business leverage.

From there, list all your daily activities - features, experiments, and processes. Then, map connections between them and to strategic priorities. You’ll quickly see which activities drive value, which is disconnected/orphaned, and where your architecture does not align with strategy.

Done well, this map becomes a compass. It clarifies where to invest energy and where to pivot. It’s also not static. I recommend doing it monthly or quarterly, including your team and executive leadership.

Software architecture isn’t just about choosing the right patterns or writing clean code. It is about making deliberate choices that move the business forward. By mapping your activities to strategic priorities, you start seeing architecture not as isolated technical work but as a value delivery system. You’ll also begin to notice which activities generate traction and which are just consuming cycles.