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Brian Hopkins serves Enterprise Architecture Professionals. See the full Analyst bio.
Visit Forrester.com to learn how we make Enterprise Architecture Professionals successful every day.
Follow Brian on Twitter.
Posted by Brian Hopkins on October 18, 2011
As promised in my blog last week, here is part 2. In part 1, I introduced the two trends reports we did this year and showed the list of trends for business technology. These are trends and technologies to consider first with your "business hat" on. This blog post lists the other 10 trends to view first from a technology lens because they are of lower interest or impact to the business.
We have created four new categories to make IT stakeholder identification easier: 1) application platforms will be of high interest to your app dev and management teams; 2) integration will be of interest to app dev, data integration specialists, and even process folks (considering that processes can and should be integrated with apps and data); 3) infrastructure and operations; and 4) mobile computing, which spans infrastructure, app dev, and possibly line-of-business relationship managers who are very keen on mobility. And don't forget your security and compliance stakeholders, who will generally care about all of these!
Before listing the trends and technologies, I also want to introduce a new twist to our research this year - we have identified four major themes that run through many of our business technology and technology trends. These themes are so broad and far reaching that we thought it worth calling them out separately; we are advising our clients to understand these themes as the context for responding to individual trends:
Without further adieu, here are this year's technology trends (can you see how the four themes wind through them?):
The trends:

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Open Source Religious Tech & Tools
Also, three key management strategies that apply to churches and technology are Collaboration, Open Solutions, & Innovation (COSI). Collaboration amongst members, between churches, and across the globe. Open Solutions meaning use of free open source software, apps, publications, data, etc. (see http://religion.cositech.net ) Innovation and continuous quality improvement is spurred by collaboration and open solutions.