A developer wants to understand how to make an API call to get some data as required in tech specification.

He sends his question to the Solution Architect who penned the tech spec. However, Solution Architect actually only knows how to copy-and-paste spec from other document. So he asks the question to his best colleague, a Preliminary Solution Architect. Unfortunately this hapless fellow doesn't have more ideas than Solution Architect himself. But at the end the Preliminary Solution Architect finds one better idea. 

"It more looks like a data issue. Data Architect should know about it."

The Data Architect takes a serious amount time on the question, then offers his approach.

"Is this API a Java application?"

Get a confirmed answer.  "Okay, in that case this is question best answered by Java Domain Architect." The Data Architect says.

Of course, Java Domain Architect has no idea what people talking about. And no one of these Architects does coding.

Despairingly, the developer finds the Java Developer who wrote the API, talks him over the phone, promises a free lunch (a very low level bribery) then gets the documents, wikis and all the source codes. The developer is happy to get all what he wants.

This is another day in the corporate life.