Describing software or IT architectures and effectively communicating about architecture to business stakeholders is a relevant and important skill for architects. After all, many architectural decisions are made by others, so they need to be informed with clear, honest, intelligible, and helpful information and advice. But it’s also hard, especially when communicating with nontechnical stakeholders.
Jochem Schulenklopper shares relevant theories, techniques, and examples of creating architecture visualizations that are attractive, informative, and easier to understand for nontechnical audiences. Jochem focuses on eight facets of the visual communication of architecture: basic visual attributes, composition and layout, color, text, graphs, sketches, icons and images, and stories.
Jochem Schulenklopper is a Netherlands-based IT architect at Xebia, an international IT consultancy company.
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Slides — all 100 of them — can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/secret/wMIHeYZuPcYG5y.