Posts Tagged ‘IT’

SMI Suite: the Dentist of ServiceCenter / Sevice Manager

May 26th, 2010

Six or seven weeks ago I had a terrible toothache. I knew I was pain and I knew it was something with my teeth, but I didn’t know exactly where it was coming from. Because I hoped it was a temporary thing I relieved my pain with painkillers. But the pain didn’t go away and I had to take further steps. Luckily we have a dentist who is an expert on teeth and who  specializes in searching for the cause of the pain. One time it’s harder to find the cause of the pain than the other, but finally the dentist will find the cause. Therefore I will visit the dentist today. A bit late after so many weeks you would say? Sometimes it takes a while to proceed the right way.

This is the same way it works for SMI Suite. A lot of organizations are suffering within their IT organization hoping it will be an temporary problem and will be solved by time. And for all that they know they are suffering, they do not know exactly where the pain is coming from. After a while they realize that  a solution is not going to fall out of the sky. To find the cause of the pain they need to report on their IT environment and processes. Luckily for them, SMI Suite can help with finding the cause of the pain so the suffering organization will be relieved.
Martin

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Improving IT performance and long-standing information cascades: understanding behavioral theory as a prerequisite to change

November 5th, 2009

People are known to make decisions based on the actions of others. Indeed, when required to make a decision in a given situation, one might observe the decisions made by others in a similar situation and conclude that if all your predecessors made the same decision it most likely is the right one. As one person follows the example of his forerunner, an ever-increasing number of people will follow the behavior of the first few decision-makers. Essentially, if twenty people are driving down the same road, unsure of where they’re supposed to be going, and the driver in front takes a left, chances are that everyone else will also take the left. Observing this behavior has led three economists, Sushil Bikhchandani, David Hirshleifer and Ivo Welch, to develop a theory known as an information cascade: a situation in which every subsequent actor, based on the observations of others, makes the same choice independent of his or her private signal.

Rational_HerdingInformation cascades can have wide organizational, societal or economic impact. The unprecedented economic downturn of 2007-2009 may well indeed have been the result of an information cascade. In an article titled ‘How a Bubble Stayed Under the Radar’, published on March 2, 2008 in the New York Times, professor of Economics Robert J. Shiller exemplifies how an information cascade caused the real-estate market bubble: “even if houses are of low investment value, we may […] have two people who make purchasing decisions that reveal their conclusion that houses are a good investment. As others make purchases at rising prices, more and more people will conclude that these buyers’ information about the market outweighs their own.” He proceeds to state that “It is clear that just such an information cascade helped to create the housing bubble. And it is now possible that a downward cascade will develop — in which rational individuals become excessively pessimistic as they see others bidding down home prices to abnormally low levels.”

Within an organization, an information cascade may very well prevent change and maintain the status quo.  Processes and tools once instituted by a few are now followed and used by many. Indeed, the way things have always been done may seem the way to go. Information cascades, however, are fragile. As Sushil Bikhchandani, David Hirshleifer and Ivo Welch point out, “A little bit of public information (or an unusual signal) can overturn long-standing informational cascades. That is, even though a million people may have chosen one action, seemingly little information can induce the next million people to choose the opposite action. Fragility is an integral component of the informational cascades theory!”

The economic woes of the last couple of years have impacted IT operations in many ways by increasing the pressures on CIOs and their teams and accelerating the need for IT organizations to change, to reduce IT costs and deliver more value to the business. Could the worst international economic crisis since the Great Depression be the ‘unusual signal’ that will cause the ITSM information cascade to crumble and instigate change within IT departments?

The answer is no. Instead, within an organization, business users must gain insight into their ITSM processes and use that insight to broadcast the signal that will ultimately enable IT to reduce cost and deliver more value to the business. Westbury’s Service Management Intelligence solution enables business users to do just that. With a powerful reporting solution in their own hands, business users can battle information cascades and instigate change that will continuously strengthen the value of IT.

Arnon

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The Future of the IT Department: Ten Predictions that will Change the Focus of IT Service Management Reporting

October 1st, 2009

CAWP-rect

Today we’re bringing you a piece from guest blogger Cornelis A. Winkler Prins of the ITRP Institute.

cor.winklerprins@itrp.com

What will the corporate IT department be like 10 years from now? I have been asking this question because the answer will tell us which information will be required by the IT manager of the future. Once we understand the information requirements, we will be able to infer the functionality that IT Service Management applications will need to offer.

Speculating about the future of IT is something I always enjoy. Whenever I get the chance, I pick the brains of IT leaders about what they see on the horizon. From these conversations, and from what I see happening around me, I have concluded that we are about to witness a gradual but major shift in the IT landscape. The forces that will be shaping our future within the IT industry are already apparent and will result in a shift that seems inevitable.

Today I would like to offer 10 predictions. Each prediction provides the basis for the next one. I hope they will invoke some debate and inspire more people to think ahead, so that we can start building solutions for the IT manager of tomorrow.
» More: The Future of the IT Department: Ten Predictions that will Change the Focus of IT Service Management Reporting

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Coming out of recession…Now what?

September 28th, 2009

bullAccording to the economical gurus, the world is coming out of the recession. After a year of cutting costs, doing more with less and outsourcing IT services, what should be the best strategy for IT executives moving forward?

Obviously, the reckless pattern of costs savings has lead to huge gaps in IT processes. Especially the maintenance of IT applications has been hit hard during the recession. In the last 9-12 months almost all companies have reduced the contracts with consultants dramatically, IT services have been outsourced and support and maintenance contracts not renewed. On top of that, internal IT resources have been cut back or reorganizations have taken people away from maintenance projects. But also new, innovative IT projects have been postponed. I’m pretty sure everyone can think of one project this year that was already approved but never executed or was killed during implementation.

However, since our gurus allows us to see some light at the end of the tunnel (which could easily be a train coming towards you from the other site of the tunnel!), what should be the recommendations for IT executives?

Allow me to come with some suggestions:

  1. Fill out the gaps of your IT processes by implementing new processes, new application to support the processes and by hiring resources in critical spots
  2. Gain competitive advantage by updating your website with new features such as: news feeds, newsletters, event calendars, case studies, photo galleries, customer support features, product catalogs, blogs, social networking capabilities, and SEO improvements.
  3. Invest in the future by hiring young, talented people and by training the employees that kept your business running for the last 12 months.

Just some suggestions. Let me know your ideas.

Floris

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The “red-headed step child” of a HP Service Manager implementation

July 2nd, 2009

Chances are that if your company is using HP Service Desk or HP ServiceCenter, that you are contemplating a move to HP Service Manager. Such an undertaking will undoubtedly be coupled with a review of existing IT Service Management processes and the way in which HP Service Manager will support these processes. Having learned from experience, most companies recognize that there is no need to reinvent the wheel and are therefore minimizing customization and sticking to the out of the box configuration as much as possible.  However, and this is a surprising industry trend, most companies are still paying little to no attention to the reporting requirements from HP Service Manager. Without a proper reporting solution and strategy in place, your HP Service Manager implementation cannot succeed as you will have no way to properly measure and communicate IT’s performance.

Common themes that accompany the (planning of the) implementation of HP Service Manager include the sensible improvement goals around:

  • Business and IT alignment
  • Quality of IT services
  • Transparency of IT services to IT customers

Given the above themes it is therefore surprising to see that getting the right information out of your HP Service Manager implementation is often an afterthought. Or as one seasoned ITSM consultant put it, ITSM reporting is often dealt with as the ‘red-headed step child’ of any ITSM implementation. “We’ll deal with that when we get to it” however by the time you ‘get to it’ you’ve got your hands too full to properly address the issue.

At Westbury we are constantly running into customer scenarios where all the focus is aimed at getting HP Service Manager up and running and yet reporting often seems to be an afterthought. Interestingly enough, that same ‘red headed step child’ suddenly becomes of utmost importance the moment HP Service Manager’s live date approaches . The reasons are obvious:

  • At a minimum IT wants to provide at least the same reports as existed before the move to Service Manager
  • Additionally IT managers & supervisors need insight to better oversee, drive and improve the performance of the various support teams and services they provide
  • Going forward the IT department would like to prove its value by objectively demonstrating improvement in the delivery of IT services
  • Customers  of IT will demand insight into the delivery of IT services and will require increasingly more in-depth reporting from IT

We in roles of ITSM are being asked to do more with less and to improve the delivery of IT services to our customers. This means we have to be smarter as to how we go about this. Let’s all agree that it is not about what we put into the ITSM processes and tools, rather it is about what we can get out of it.

Be smart, look at the overall picture.

David

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