Catalog
concept#Architecture#Governance#Platform#Product

Capability Landscape

A structured representation of an organization’s business capabilities to align strategy, products, IT and investments.

A Capability Landscape is a holistic model for mapping and prioritizing business capabilities across organizational units.
Established
Medium

Classification

  • Medium
  • Organizational
  • Organizational
  • Intermediate

Technical context

Enterprise architecture repository (e.g. Archi, ADOIT)Product portfolio and roadmap toolsCMDB and inventory tools

Principles & goals

Capabilities are more stable planning units than solutions.Prioritization is driven by business value and strategic relevance.Transparent assignment of ownership and metrics is mandatory.
Discovery
Enterprise, Domain

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Wrong prioritization leads to misinvestments.
  • Too coarse granularity prevents operational usefulness.
  • One-sided focus on technology rather than business purpose skews decisions.
  • Define clear ownership and metrics for each capability.
  • Start with a manageable set of critical capabilities.
  • Link capability priorities directly to investment decisions.

I/O & resources

  • Strategy and objective documents
  • Product and service inventory
  • Technology and platform overviews
  • Capability map with maturity, ownership and priority
  • Recommended investment and roadmap items
  • Governance recommendations and role descriptions

Description

A Capability Landscape is a holistic model for mapping and prioritizing business capabilities across organizational units. It supports strategic decisions, investment prioritization and alignment between product and IT roadmaps. The visualization creates transparency about responsibilities, dependencies and maturity, and informs architecture and governance choices.

  • Improved alignment between strategy, product and IT.
  • Better decision basis for investments and roadmaps.
  • Increased transparency about dependencies and responsibilities.

  • Requires regular maintenance and alignment, otherwise the representation becomes outdated.
  • Can initially create significant coordination effort between business units.
  • Not all technical dependencies can be represented purely on a capability basis.

  • Number of validated capabilities

    Number of capabilities that have been documented and aligned.

  • Time-to-value per capability

    Time until realized value increase after investing in a capability.

  • Ownership coverage

    Percentage of capabilities with clearly assigned owner.

Telecom provider: product portfolio alignment

A capability landscape was used to identify redundant services and prioritize consolidation projects.

Bank: consolidating compliance capabilities

A bank mapped regulatory capabilities to justify investments in central compliance platforms.

Software vendor: deriving platform strategy

The landscape showed which capabilities could be consolidated on a common platform to shorten time-to-market.

1

Kickoff with stakeholders and goal definition

2

Collect and consolidate existing information

3

Model the capability map and validate

4

Integrate into governance and roadmap processes

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Outdated, unmaintained capability definitions
  • Incompatible tools hinder automation
  • Missing interfaces to CMDB/inventory
Lack of maturity dataUnclear ownershipIncompatible tool landscape
  • Using the capability map as a static diagram without governance.
  • Defining capabilities too technically and losing strategic relevance.
  • Prioritizing solely by short-term cost.
  • Confusing capability with process/project.
  • Lack of stakeholder commitment leads to incomplete data.
  • Excessive detail before the structure is stabilized.
Enterprise and domain architectureBusiness analysis and strategic portfolio managementFacilitation and stakeholder alignment
Strategic goals and business modelsPlatform and integration strategyRegulatory requirements and compliance
  • Limited resources for collection and maintenance
  • Organizational silos prevent unified view
  • Data protection and compliance constraints