Getting started by problem examples
Here are five “Getting started by problem” examples designed to help non-architects begin using the Orthogramic Metamodel in a practical, problem-led way. Each one identifies a common business issue, suggests a starting domain, and outlines a simple modelling pathway that builds confidence and momentum.
We don’t know who owns or uses what across the business.
Problem: Confusion about accountability, duplicated effort, or finger-pointing when services break down or decisions stall.
Start with:
Organization and Capabilities
Use Inter-unit domain relationships
Steps:
List major business units and what they are responsible for.
Define a few key capabilities (e.g. Procurement, Customer Service).
Map who owns, uses, or supports each capability using standard roles (e.g. owning unit, consuming unit).
Visualise overlaps and gaps to clarify responsibility.
We’re running too many disconnected projects.
Problem: Initiatives are not aligned to strategy or capabilities, leading to wasted effort and missed outcomes.
Start with:
Initiatives, Strategy, and Capabilities
Steps:
List current initiatives or projects.
Link each initiative to a strategic objective and at least one capability it is meant to improve or enable.
Identify where initiatives are not clearly aligned—flag for review.
Use this map to support investment decisions and consolidate effort.
We’re making decisions without understanding the flow of value.
Problem: Decisions about processes, teams, or systems are made in isolation without seeing how they contribute to end-to-end outcomes.
Start with:
Value streams and Capabilities
Steps:
Identify a major product, service, or customer journey.
Model the stages from start to finish (value stream stages).
Link stages to supporting capabilities and responsible business units.
Use this to identify bottlenecks, duplication, or misalignment.
We’re struggling to respond to external changes.
Problem: External events (regulatory shifts, market changes, customer demands) trigger uncoordinated, reactive responses.
Start with:
Strategic Response Model (SRM), Triggers, and Initiatives
Steps:
Identify recent business pressures (e.g. new law, technology change).
Document them as Triggers.
Link each trigger to one or more Rationales for change.
Show which strategies, initiatives, or policies have been activated in response.
Use this to improve visibility and coordination across responses.
Our documentation is inconsistent and hard to analyse.
Problem: Information about how the business operates is locked in slide decks, spreadsheets, and people's heads.
Start with:
Capabilities, Information, and Performance
Steps:
Pick one function (e.g. Incident Management, Onboarding).
Model it as a capability, identifying the supporting data and performance indicators.
Use the structured fields in the schema to describe it consistently (inputs, outputs, owner, compliance).
Use this approach to begin replacing ad hoc documentation with structured, analysable assets.
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The Orthogramic Metamodel license: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0), ensuring it remains open, collaborative, and widely accessible.