Deliverable

Deliverable

Intro

A deliverable is a packaged set of architectural artifacts produced as a single work product. It matters because formal deliverables enable review, sign‑off, and reuse.

Key points:

  • Often contractually defined and stakeholder approved.
  • May be archived or added to an architecture repository.
  • Common use cases: target architecture, standards, roadmaps, decision records.
  • Pitfall: unclear acceptance criteria leading to rework.

Examples:

  • Current and target state diagrams with rationale.
  • Technology standards catalog and principles.
  • Release roadmap with dependencies and risks.

In practice:

Define templates, ownership, and sign‑off workflows; store approved versions for traceability.

Related terms: artifact; architecture-repository; architecture-landscape

FAQs:

Q: Who approves deliverables?
A: Relevant stakeholders such as sponsors, domain owners, and governance boards.

Q: How are deliverables maintained?
A: Through version control and periodic review cycles.

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