© 2004 hewlett-packard the information contained herein is

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© 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is subject to change without notice What is ITIL and Why Should I Care? diane hoschler sr. itsm solution architect december 2004 Diane Hoschler Sr. ITSM Solution Architect HP Consulting & Integration [email protected] 916 785-0991

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Page 1: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

© 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is subject to change without notice

What is ITIL and Why Should I Care?

diane hoschlersr. itsm solution architect december 2004

Diane HoschlerSr. ITSM Solution ArchitectHP Consulting & Integration

[email protected] 785-0991

Page 2: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

The big shifts in The big shifts in businessbusiness All processes and content are being transformed from physical and static to digital, mobile and virtual.

The demand for simplicity, manageability and simplicity, manageability and adaptabilityadaptability is changing how the company works and organizes, buys and uses technology.

Horizontal, heterogeneous, networked organization. With acquisitions, need to embrace StandardsStandards to improve connection and use use common languagecommon language.

Page 3: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

CIO vs. CEO Priority

60% of CEOs Say IT is aligned with their goals.

CIO Management Priorities1. Increase Business Efficiency through

IT-enabled process improvement2. Align IT and business goals3. Improve internal customer satisfaction4. Create competitive advantage through IT5. Control IT costs

1. Align IT and business goals2. Increase Business Efficiency through

IT-enabled process improvement3. Create competitive advantage through IT4. Improve internal customer satisfaction5. Control IT costs

CEO Management Priorities for IT

CIOM a g a z i n e

Page 4: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Minimize risk:• Ensure security and continuity of

internal business operations, while minimizing exposure to external risk factors

Maximize return:• Improve business results; grow

revenue and earnings, cash flow, and reduced cost of operations

Improve performance:• Improve business operations

performance end-to-end across the enterprise

• Increase customer and employee satisfaction

Increase agility:• Enable the business

organization and operations to adapt to changing business needs

CIO balancing actCIO balancing act

Page 5: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Defining, Measuring and Assessing “Agility”

easeLevel of effort, cost, and risk required to introduce and support change.

rangeBreadth of change that can be supported or introduced.

timeSpeed at which infrastructure changes can be implemented.

Page 6: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Running IT as a business (but not just any business)

Customers

Enterprise

Delivery Processes

Offered Business Service

Management ProcessesSuppliers

Consumed Business Service

Business Strategy

Business Objectives and Goals

People(roles/job design,

organizations,measurement

s)

OtherAssets(facilities,

brand,capital)

IT services

(process automation, information, applications,

infrastructure)

Business Process Model

Synchronization

IT Services

Customers

Synchronized Business Service Delivery

Delivery Processes

Offered Business Service

Control ProcessesSuppliersConsumed Business Service

IT Strategy

Business Process Model

IT Objectives and Goals

PeopleTech.

Process

… … an IT Services Delivery Businessan IT Services Delivery Business

Page 7: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

“A set of related components provided in support of one or

more business processes.

The service will comprise of a range of Configuration Item

types, but will be perceived by the customer and users as a self-

contained, single, coherent entity.”Source: A dictionary of IT Service management Terms, Acronyms and Abbreviations

OK, then what is an IT OK, then what is an IT Service?Service?

Page 8: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

What is an IT Service?What is an IT Service?

ITIT

PeoplePeople

ProcessesProcesses

TechnologyTechnology

Public InfrastructurePublic Infrastructure

FedExFedEx

PeoplePeople

ProcessesProcesses

TechnologyTechnology

Public InfrastructurePublic Infrastructure

Page 9: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Either your Infrastructure determines your Service Level

Or

Your Service Level determines your Infrastructure.

Page 10: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

How we got here…

Today Automating the IT infrastructure’s abilityto adapt to every business decision

Emphasis:Effectiveness

+Stability+Reliability+Speed +RoIT

1990s Automating the front office

Emphasis:Speed Efficiency

1980s Automating the back office

Emphasis:

StabilityReliability

Horizontal architecture stable, flexible, supply matches demand

Silos of technologyinflexible to change, over-provisioned

Page 11: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Building toward an Agile, Adaptive Enterprise

busi

ness

valu

e

Sta

bili

tyA

gili

tyEffi

cien

cy

IT maturity

Business processesIT resources IT services

AdaptiveEnterprise

Technologyprovider

Serviceprovider

Businesspartner

ITSM

Page 12: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

ITSM Market TrendsITSM Market Trends

• Entering phase of mass adoption

• Market growth rate estimates:Gartner Group 32% CAGRIDC 30% CAGRMeta Group 26% CAGR

• In 2004…

−Multi Billion $ Industry se

rvic

e m

an

ag

em

en

t ad

op

tion

’02

’03

’04

’05

’06

’07

50%

100%

25%

75%75%

20%

Page 13: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

IInformation nformation TTechnology echnology IInfrastructure nfrastructure LLibraryibrary• Result of years of analysis and research • Currently consists of 7 books providing guidance on the planning, delivery and management of quality IT services to support their business.• THE de facto global standard of IT Service Management best practices• ITIL is Vital! It’s not a question of whether you’re doing IT Service Management or not… it’s a question of how well - or poorly - you’re doing it!

What is ITIL?What is ITIL?

Page 14: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Planning to Implement Service Management

Service Management Core

ServiceSupport

ServiceDelivery

The

Business

The Business

Perspective

Applications Management

ICTInfrastructureManagement

The

Technology

Security Management

ITILITIL®® Publications Map Publications Map

Application Asset ManagementAvailable now

available now

available now

available now

available nowComing Soon! available now

Page 15: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

certification bodies:

• ISEB (The Information Systems Examination Board) – UK • EXIN (Examination Institute for Information Science) –

Netherlands

available certification:

• Foundation Certificate – entry-level multiple choice exam

• Practitioner’s Certificates – for specific disciplines; pass in-course assessments and a case-study based multiple choice exam

• Manager’s Certificate – requires passing 2 three-hour essay exams after successfully passing an accredited 10 day training course

(ITIL accreditation demonstrates that an individual has met the standards as set by an examination certification board comprising representatives from OGC, itSMF and the examining boards.)

ITIL® certificationITIL® certification

Page 16: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Core ITIL® Service Management Processes

Service Support• Service Desk*• Incident Management• Problem Management• Configuration

Management• Change Management• Release Management

Service Delivery• Service Level

Management• Financial Management

for IT Services• Capacity Management• IT Service Continuity

Management• Availability

Management

* Service Desk is a function not a process

Page 17: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Source: IT Service Management, ITSMF

“IT Services are there solely to support the business and its efficient and effective operation.”– itSMF ITIL® Pocket Guide

Page 18: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Integration

Simplification

Standardization

Modularity

+

+

+

Applied consistently across:• Business

processes

• Applications

• Infrastructure

• Reduce number of elements• Eliminate customization• Automate change

• Use standard technologies and interfaces

• Adopt common architectures• Implement standard processes

• Break down monolithic structures

• Create reusable components • Implement logical

architectures

• Link business and IT • Connect applications and business

processes within & outside the enterprise

You don’t buy an Adaptive Enterprise. You build it.

Page 19: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

BusinessBusiness “Front Wheel” Alignment

ITIT

“Spectacular Results” Alignment

BusinessBusiness ITIT

“We’re behind you all the way” Alignment

BusinessBusinessITIT

Business and IT Alignment

Page 20: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

““Bold Fusion” AlignmentBold Fusion” Alignment

Business Business andand IT IT

Business and IT Alignment

Page 21: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Relationship between people, process, and technology

[HP] ITSM processes • Consist of activities to manage

the IT services lifecycle• Are the glue between:

− People and management technology− IT services and IT infrastructure

People• Execute, control, and own the HP ITSM processes• Design, build, integrate, and manage IT services

Management technology• Enables execution and control of HP ITSM processes• Automates provisioning and assurance of IT services

Page 22: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

• Reduced risk and implementation time• Lower costs• Increased customer satisfaction• Competitive advantage

What You Get…What You Get…

• Proven processes based on industry best practices• Faster time-to-market• Balance between customer requirements and service costs• Transparent support of business processes• Measurable, well-defined services• Management of customer expectations• Continuous improvement of service quality• Improved/strong relationships with both customers and partner providers• Time to be proactive• Built-in “Management of Change”• Ability to dynamically address changing business requirements with flexibility and speed (agility)

Because you now have…

Process

Process

People

Technology

The Right Balance for Success

…an approach that brings togetherProcess, People, and Technologythrough a powerful reference model…

Page 23: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

HP ITSM Reference Model vs3.0

Availability management

Continuity management

Security management

Capacity management

Service-level management

Change management

Financial management

Configurationmanagement

Service planning

IT business assessment

IT strategy and architecture planning

Customer management

Service build and test

Release to productionOperations management

Problem management

Incident and servicerequest management

Page 24: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

It’s time to:Demand more from IT than it’s ever delivered before. Make it prove its value, make it pay.

Demand a new IT architecture: one that is open, modular and flexible; one that adapts, and adapts quickly, to every IT event triggered by every business decision.

Demand that technology yield to the disciplines of business and be subject to the same practices and return analysis as any other business decision.

Demand an alternative way to how IT and IT services have been purchased, implemented and operated for the last two decades.

Demand the ultimate state of IT fitness: Insist that business and IT be perfectly synchronized, and speed the evolution toward an adaptive enterprise.

Page 25: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

The IT Service Management Forum is the only internationally recognized and independent

organization dedicated to IT Service Management. It is a not-for-profit body, wholly

owned, and principally operated, by its membership.

It was formed in the UK in 1991 & has national chapters around the globe.

The itSMF USA was formed in 1997 and has over 1600 members representing over 500 companies.

What is the itSMF?What is the itSMF?

Page 26: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

Area happenings………• itsmF USA (www.itsmfusa.org)

− Complementary copy of ITSM Overview• https://asp5.catalog.com/khamilto2/books/itSMF%20Overview%

20Pocket%20Guide.pdf• www.itsmf.no/bestpractice/itil_overview.pdf

− Annual conference (/www.jupiterevents.com/itsmf/fall05/index.html)• 2004 Long Beach, CA (9/04)• 2005 Chicago, IL (9/05)

• Norcal itsmF LIG (www.norcalitsm.com)− 2nd Tuesday of the month− No December meeting− Jan 11 topic: Configuration management

Page 27: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

• itSMF USA: − www.itsmf.net

• itSMF International: − www.itsmf.com

• ITIL®: − www.itil.co.uk

• HP: − www.hp.com/go/itsm

• Other: − www.itsmwatch.com

Looking for more?

Page 28: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is
Page 29: © 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is

© 2004 Hewlett-Packard The information contained herein is subject to change without notice

What is ITIL and Why Should I Care?

diane hoschlersr. itsm solution architect december 2004

Diane HoschlerSr. ITSM Solution ArchitectHP Consulting & Integration

[email protected] 785-0991