For people who have never worked in a very large organization (or have, but it was a dysfunctional one), "architect" may have left a bad taste in their mouth. However, it is a legitimate role.
When an application becomes so vast and complex that dealing with the overall technical vision and planning, and translating business needs into technical requirements becomes a full-time job, that is an application architect.
When an organization has so many applications and infrastructure inter-dependencies that it is a full-time job to coordinate the technical aspects of those without being involved in the code of any of them, that is a solutions architect.
When an organization becomes so large that it becomes a full-time job to coordinate the high-level planning for the solution architects, that role is an enterprise architect.
Note: numerous other answers have said there is "no standard" for these titles. That is not true. Go to any Fortune 1000 company's IT department and you will find these titles used consistently.
The two most common misconceptions about "architect" are:
- An architect is simply a more senior/higher-earning developer with a fancy title
- An architect is someone who is technically useless, hasn't coded in years but still throws around their weight in the business, making life difficult for developers
Both of these misconceptions come from architects as a whole doing a pretty bad job, and organizations doing a terrible job at understanding what an architect is for. It is common to promote the top programmer into an architect role, but that is not right. They have some overlapping but not identical skillsets. The best programmer may often be, but is not always, an ideal architect. A good architect has a good understanding of many technical aspects of the IT industry; a better understanding of business needs and strategies than a developer needs to have; excellent communication skills and often some project management skills. It is essential for architects to keep their hands dirty with code and to stay sharp technically. Good ones do.
