New York, NY November 3, 2006 Demystifying ITIL Understanding ITIL Without the Hype
Objectives Introduction Key Issues IT Service Management (ITSM) History of ITIL The ITIL Framework Using ITIL in Your Company CA Service Management Accelerator (Brian Johnson)
Click to edit Master title style Obligatory Dilbert slide Accepting Change
Key Issues facing IT Managers Aligning IT and Business goals Implementing Continuous Improvement Measuring IT organization effectiveness and efficiency Reducing the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Demonstrating the business value of IT Managing the constant change in business and IT
Manage services to customers, NOT technology to users What is IT Service Management? Definition Three key elements contribute to the success of a comprehensive IT Service Management program: —Process Management —Quality Management —ITIL IT Service Management (ITSM) is the process of managing IT services to effectively and efficiently meet the needs of the Customer
IT Service Management Business Benefits Continuous Improvements in the delivery of services —Providing consistent and more predictable IT services Improved communication and relationships Strong business partnerships —Expectations are clear throughout the value chain Increased IT customer satisfaction —Well-linked and well-understood handoffs between IT processes means that customers and their problems don’t “fall through the cracks,” Reduced long-term costs —“Best practices are the key to cost reduction, with potential savings of up to 48%” (source: Gartner)
What is a “Best Practice” A Working Definition Best Practices are a set of guidelines based on the best experiences of the most qualified and experienced professionals in a particular field It is based on: —More than one person —More than one organization —More than one technology —More than one event
Where Do Best Practices Fit A Hierarchy Standard Best Practice Applied Framework Organizational Policies, Practices & Procedures How should we do it in our organization? What should we do? BS How should we do it? ITIL How should we do it in a particular context? ITSM
What is ITIL? The Information Technology Infrastructure Library Documented set of best practices (books) for IT Service Management Originated and maintained in the UK by the Office of Government Commerce (OGC) Process based approach to IT service delivery that is internationally accepted and recognized Written by consultants, vendors, IT practitioners Over 200,000 copies of the library have been sold world-wide Originally published nearly 20 years ago, ITIL was refreshed in 2001 to reflect current best practices Active international user group, the itSMF (IT Service Management Forum)
Provides “Best Practice” guidelines to ensure IT processes are aligned to business processes ITIL is not a standard, so tools, processes or people cannot be “ITIL compliant” Is process driven, scalable and flexible Organizations should adopt the guidelines, principles and concepts, then adapt to fit their environment Platform independent —Version 1 is 10+ years old – mostly centralized IT —Version 2 adds in decentralized processing ITIL Philosophy
Is ITIL the Answer? Incident Management - Restore normal service as quickly as possible Problem Management - Get to the root cause of incidents Change Management - Ensure that standardized methods and procedures are used for prompt handling of changes Service Level Management – Maintain and improve IT service quality…through reporting
Why ITIL? Benefits of ITIL Reduction in TCO Greater alignment of IT services, processes and goals with business requirements, expectations and goals Improved business profitability and productivity Support staff that are more aware of business processes and their impact on the business Provide more proactive services to customers Improved service levels and quality of service
ITIL Organizational Structure The Library Incident Management Problem Management Change Management Configuration Management Release Management Availability Management Capacity Management Continuity Management Financial Management Service Level Management SERVICE SUPPORT LIBRARY SERVICE DELIVERY LIBRARY
ITIL Processes Service Support Day-to-day Short to medium-term management cycles Service Desk Configuration Management Database Maintain flexibility of the infrastructure Focus on control of the infrastructure A basis for Service Delivery
ITIL Processes Service Delivery Forward-looking Medium to longer term management cycles Focus on developing plans for improving the quality of IT services What are the business requirements? How do we structure services to meet these? What level of quality do we need and how do we achieve it?
ITIL Driven Cost Reductions Direct and Indirect Direct Reduced cost of incident resolution Reduced self-inflicted incidents via integrated and reliable change Increased productivity of IT staff Improved asset utilization, life cycle management and accurate software licensing costs Reduced service cycle times End-to-end service cost optimization Automation Indirect Reduced peer support Standardization Consolidation Non-IT staff more productive Improved availability Managing appropriate expectations Improved efficiency of security and business continuity planning processes Improved IT governance Drives continual improvement
Gartner Group Opinion on ITIL ITIL is a well established, easily accessible, affordable process model for IT Service Management that is built around a set of best practices ITIL is better known for its back-office operational process definitions than for its application management processes ITIL is based on defining best-practice processes for IT service delivery and support, rather than defining a broad-based control framework ITIL's structure enables incremental adoption, which facilitates continuous improvement Source: Gartner Research
Do We Need ITIL? Supports IT Service Management Program Not an alternative framework, but: —Builds on what you have already started and are doing well —Not an obscure theory, but guidelines based on what has been proven to work —At the core of what you do, not an add-on Reduce costs Improve quality of service
Senior Management buy-in Tools alone do not solve problems If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it Reorganization is the last thing on the agenda, not the first Take one step at a time Communicate and sell at all stages Be prepared for Change Secrets of Success Successful use of ITIL
Moving Forward Recommendations Source: Gartner Measure IT costs and relate results to process analysis to find saving and improvement opportunities for optimization Seek opportunities to learn from and copy best-practice processes Success in IT Service Management is based on repeatable processes. Use ITIL as the basis for IT operational processes and then focus on continually improving them IT Service Management requires fundamental cultural and behavioral change. Pay careful attention to organizational change management issues IT Service Management will be a prerequisite for demonstrating business value. Success requires commitment and perseverance. Start now!
Taking the next step with ITIL – CA Service Management Accelerator presented by: Brian Johnson
Certification Foundation Certificate In IT Service Management Foundation Certificate In IT Service Management Service Support Service Delivery Service Level & Financial Management Capacity, Availability & Service Continuity Management Configuration, Change & Release Management Service Desk, Incident & Problem Management PRACTITIONER’S CERTIFICATE PRACTITIONER’S CERTIFICATE PRACTITIONER’S CERTIFICATE PRACTITIONER’S CERTIFICATE PRACTITIONER’S CERTIFICATE PRACTITIONER’S CERTIFICATE Master’s Certificate in IT Service Management Master’s Certificate in IT Service Management