Infrastructure management is undergoing a transformation. ITIL can help manage conflicting demands like – “low cost but high service quality”, “ubiquitous access but enhanced security”?

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April 21, 2008

An intercontinental tools implementation proposal - part 2

Guest Author: Bruno Calver

In my previous blog entry I spoke about some of the general aspects of what to consider when specifying an ITSM tools implementation project, as well as some of my experiences working offshore. I also highlighted that it was imperative to show you understood some of the client’s challenges. I want to explore this area in a little more detail and discuss some of the questions and challenges that our client was facing.

Our starting point was to demonstrate our alignment to, and understanding of, the client’s business drivers, strategy and tactics. These were implicitly and explicitly stated in the Request for Proposal (RFP), official publications and also based on our knowledge of the client organisation. The key themes were simplification, standardisation and efficiency. No surprises that reducing the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) also made an appearance. We ensured that these points recurred throughout our proposal.

The next stage was to consider the specific challenges the project might face during implementation and present our solutions. At this point there was a mild tension between focussing on technical challenges and project challenges. The key thing here was to try and understand the audience and adapt accordingly. Let’s take a look at a few of the top challenges and our solutions.

The client wanted to implement an out of the box ITIL based tool, this challenged the existing environment, which was highly customised. Organisational stakeholders have been used to having things their way and so more than a technical challenge this would be a cultural issue. The benefits of this approach stemmed from the clients key themes, simplification and standardisation of the existing environment (and therefore lower TCO in terms of support and future upgrades) and efficiency resulting from alignment to best practices. We suggested a two pronged approach, kind of a good cop bad cop tactic. Good cop was to undertake an exercise to understand the existing environment and start building consensus around the benefits of a standardised environment and put in place measures to address the key organisational concerns. Bad cop was to establish an early requirements baseline and put in place a robust and authoritative Change Control Board (CCB) that would require thorough justification for any deviations.

The next challenge was technical, mainly around the process implementation order and infrastructure platform. Again the aim was to simplify the architecture onto a single shared platform, in turn reducing the TCO. In addition clear guidance was required on the correct order of implementation of the various process/service management modules to simplify the project approach. Our proposed solution showed a clear point of view on architecture and an assessment approach regarding the existing platform's long term suitability. We also showed the dependencies between the processes and a recommended order of implementation. For example, Change Management must be prior to Service Request Management as service requests often become changes and transferring tickets en masse between tools is not desirable.

The last challenge I wanted to talk about (there were others of course) was around managing the risk of business disruption leading up to and following the stages of cut-over to the new toolset. In preparation we would need to train users across the globe in varying concentrations. We also needed to suggest ways of reducing the risks of disruption following the actual cut-over to the new tool. The benefit of this would be to reduce the operational cost of the implementation. Our proposed solution was many fold. First we would deploy training through a variety of channels, including class room sessions for larger concentrations of support groups and NetMeeting for lesser numbers. We also suggested combining process training with tool training to reduce the time out of the day job for support staff. On the preparation front we suggested a sand-box environment for remote life like testing/practice on the new tools. As for the cutover itself we included the suggestion of a pilot rollout first, then a main rollout building on the lessons learned from the pilot. In addition, a rapid response hotline would be provided to enhance early life support. The last piece of the puzzle would be to have clear live cut-over testing plans and a back-out procedure to provide an escape route if needed.

Hopefully the above gives a flavour of some of the typical challenges faced when considering an ITSM tools implementation and some of the options you might consider to counter them. I think it is fair to say that the first challenge is the most significant and requires the most time and energy in addressing, especially where you are working with a global organisation. Sponsorship from the client organisation is usually a critical success factor.

On a lighter note, one of the interesting debates when working on this proposal was whether it was acceptable to use capitals for the first letter of words in titles or that they should be reserved only for proper nouns. My feeling is that the trend is moving towards only using capitals for proper nouns, especially in presentations where there are many titles. I think the rules of language are actually defined by use rather than any kind of official guide, any thoughts on this?

That's all for now, my next blog entry will be talking about the good and the bad of offshore consulting delivery and some aspects of life in India...

April 17, 2008

A CMDB for your CMDB

"I want to implement my Service Management tool out of the box. Minimum customization absolutely."

Given the ballooning costs of maintaining highly customized products, associated vendor lock-in worries and the nightmare of product upgrades on customized product sets, more organizations prefer to go out of the box or with minimum customization with their ITSM product implementations.

Wonderful so far. But how do you decide how much customization is enough? What is that minimum customization threshold value? And more importantly, how do you know when you breach that threshold?

The story of minimum customization 

Charles Betz, in his well written book, Architecture and Patterns for IT Service Management, Resource Planning, and Governance, calls it making shoes for the cobbler's children. I interpret it in this case as how do you manage the complexity and implementation of the ITSM product itself?

An excellent way to start an IT Service Management product implementation is with an understanding of the as-is environment. Knowing how things work currently helps prepare and answer questions on the new process and softens the organizational change process. Questions such as - Why can't I book outages through the new Change Management system like I used to? Or why do I need to create and assign these tasks? Or I need to capture the business request number which is not mentioned here. And numerous others arise in any typical implementation.

And among these questions, there are some that get pushed really hard - which eventually become what I call arm-twisted requirements leading to tool customizations. When such customizations are kept track of through documents and spreadsheets, that's when the trouble starts.

  1. How do you know how much of the product set you are changing. Is there a way an ITSM product set can tell me that by making a tweak here and a tweak there, I am making an impact to the overall solution that is quantifiable? Say adding a field that has no interfaces with any other data feed would have an impact of 0%. But adding a field that feeds information from an external source which is outside this tool adds an impact of 0.75% to the overall solution. And this percentage is arrived at through consideration of impacts on all data models, relationships and all associated process flows.
  2. Now the second point. With an upgrade, how do you manage these customizations? Go back to the drawing board? How about if these entities are modelled into an automated data modelling set and each time there is a change to the entities, click a button and you know what has changed and what remains. And you also know what impact these changes have had to your overall solution.

Something to think about.

So, what does getting there involve? You guessed it - a CMDB for your ITSM product. Are we there yet? Tell me when you see a good solution.

April 07, 2008

Positioning IT Service management in the V3 context

Traditionally, ITIL was considered as a best practice framework for operations team who support the IT functions of an organization. There was limited credibility around IT strategy, planning, portfolio management, enterprise architecture, or solutions delivery. ITIL V3 has changed this perception by providing a lifecycle view of services and ITIL is no longer seen as an isolated process framework.

To enable V3 transformation, service management (SM) organization needs to develop a broader outlook. Can SM enable this transformation on its own? Whom do they need to partner with?

The V3 adoption has brought in some challenges to SM organization.  To enable end-to-end view of IT services, SM organizations need to focus more on the service strategy and design.  In fulfilling this, they need to leap into territories that are well established under other governance functions. These groups are typically not ITIL savvy and follows differing guidelines such as PMI, enterprise architecture standards etc, within their domains. In my experience, typical governance functions include:

Project portfolio management team (PPM):- Develop strategy that allows organizations to align their IT functions and application development projects to its business objectives. Provide means to proactively monitor project portfolios for alignment with planned costs and schedules.

Enterprise architecture groups (EA): To predict changes in technology and standards that help the organization to compete in today's dynamic business environment. Articulate the impact of new demands on the company’s architecture standards.

Project Management Office (PMO): Provide a full understanding of projects, its dependencies and impacts on other projects. Encourage adherence to the organization's overall project management standards and ensure that the new project's management methodology is consistent with existing practices.

What are the project governance functions within your organization?
In my opinion, the high-level mapping of these functions to V3 principles would look like this:

PPM - > Service Strategy (SS)

EA -> Service Design (SD)

PMO -> Service Design (SD) & Service Transition (ST)

Have you done this mapping yet?

Though the lifecycle view is a new concept, the key functions that enable this view do exist in one form or other within organizations. The SM organization needs to identify these functions and drive towards the mutual alignment of their goals and objectives.

As per Sharon Taylor, the chief architect of ITIL V3, “The lifecycle extension of ITIL is orthogonal to process - it is a new dimension. Your lifecycle processes may need change: how you do what the service lifecycle does. Just as V2 changed the way you do service management, V3 will change the way you do service lifecycle.”

Is service management ready to take up this newly identified role in your organization?
Are your project governance functions ready to accept the new role of IT Service management?

Let the dialog begin now!

 

April 04, 2008

Language differences between IT and (the rest of) Business

In a recent article - How to tap IT’s hidden potential written by Dr Amit Basu and Chip Jarnagin for WSJ - “language differences” between IT departments and the rest of the company has been cited as one of the five primary reasons for the existence of a glass-wall between IT and Business. This cannot be more true and especially so in today’s times with rapid innovation in information technologies and the constant pressure on IT departments to do more with less coupled with an extremely dynamic business environment. 

So what are the different touch points where IT needs to re-think their language with Business? And what kind of changes are we talking about? Are these changes easy to make?

Participation of Senior IT Managers in Business Planning and Review meetings and vice versa helps each side of the table understand the other’s perspective. Additionally job rotation where possible between Business and IT teams can also create tremendous opportunities to narrow language differences. One customer organization we worked with has a Vice President of Production Support and Service Management who had started his career being a business call center analyst. This organization has extremely mature Service Management practices and it is not difficult to see the connection.

The Business perspective and understanding is invariably missing in Senior IT Managers as most of them have risen from technical roles. The impact of a large IT initiative on Business performance and improvement, IT governance linkages with overall organization governance, relationship between IT metrics and business indicators – all these are opportunity areas for IT to lead the way in breaking the glass wall. 

Incidentally, one of the key advantages always talked about from rolling out an ITIL initiative is “standardization of language” … although participation of Business representatives in an ITIL program – Now that’s going too far, or is it?

How do you break the wall?

April 02, 2008

An intercontinental tools implementation proposal

Posted by Bruno Calver

Recently I was asked to assist an effort in putting together a proposal for an IT Service Management (ITSM) tools project for one of our UK based clients. I am currently working offshore for a while to get a feel for organisational life in India, having recently been transferred from London.

So, what does a process consultant have to do with a technical implementation of an ITSM tool?  Maybe a better question is, ‘Is an ITSM tools implementation just a technical deployment?’ The answer is a positive ‘NO’ (if that’s not a contradiction in terms).

The tool should support the people and the processes, this is a  key principle of a successful tools implementation. It is normal to focus on process areas in clusters and take a staged approach, but you must always balance this with the long terms goals of the project.

As a process consultant I was in a unique position to understand the process and people change that would go with any ITSM tools implementation and its impact. The client wants to see you demonstrate your grasp of the whole picture, failing to do this could result in some unpleasant side-effects.

The next challenge was to tailor the proposal to the client. Understanding the client you are working with is critical as business needs are paramount. We spent a lot of time thinking about the client’s key challenges and how our mix of people, process, tools and governance solutions would address them. Co-ordination across continents on these issues made working together interesting.

So how did we manage this? In fact it was not as complicated as you might think, but it did involve some early mornings for those in the UK and some late nights for me in India. The advantage, however, was that we had an extended working day. Everyday I had 5.5 hours head start on my colleagues in the UK to work on the presentation, they would then pick up the baton at the end of my day and continue the good work…