Posts Tagged ‘Processes’

What’s new in SMI 2011: support for all HP Service Manager processes, and more…

May 12th, 2011

With the release of SMI 2011 any information stored in the HP Service Manager application can theoretically be made available for reporting.

In practice this means that although it is possible to extract all the data from HP Service Manager, the best practice will be to extract only the data required for reporting. After all,  from all the data stored in the HP Service Manager database only roughly 20 – 40% at most is real information that will help you during your day-to-day activities and allow you take maturity of your ITSM platform to the next level.

Let me throw you some numbers at you, based on HP’s Best Practices for HP Service Manager 9.x reporting, and the out-of-the-box HP Service Manager model:

ITSM Process # Fields in
HPSM 9.2
# Fields in
SMI 2011
Percentage Available
Incident Management 249 46 18%
Interaction Management 118 33 28%
Change Management 216 33 15%
Problem Management 66 37 56%
Configuration Management 144 36 25%
Known Error Management 63 25 40%


Apart from the obvious support for the main ITSM processes (Incident Management, Interaction Management, Change Management, Request Management, Service Level Management, Problem Management, Configuration Management, Known Error Management, Knowledge Management) you will be able to report on all the supporting data like Operator, Contact, Location, Department, Assignment Group, Tasks, Clocks, Activities and many more as well, either in combination with the main ITSM processes or standalone.

Next to reporting on the available data from the HP Service Manager database, SMI 2011 also offers the possibility to enrich the data with additional computed data, for example duration calculations like first touch duration and Boolean calculations like the first line resolved indicator. In theory, any computation can be made, but again as a best practice you only want to perform calculations that facilitate easier reporting and do not want to perform for example your SLA or SLO calculations on this level, that should be done in the HP Service Manager application because you would want access to that data in the application as well.

Calculations, derived date objects like Year, Month Name, Week Nr, etc and pre-defined conditions for dates are all objects made available for easier and more standardized reporting. They enrich the service management semantic reporting layer (also known as a universe) and facilitate the self service reporting capabilities of SMI 2011. Users without in-depth technical knowledge or knowledge of the HP Service Manager data model are capable of building and tailoring the reports to meet their specific needs.


Finally, one of the best features of SMI 2011 is it’s easy way of making additional data available for reporting, whether they are existing fields from HP Service Manager that we haven’t included in the out of the box set, or custom fields added to the application. You can easily add them to the data selection and make them available in the reporting front end, and if you wish add calculations, derived date objects and pre-defined conditions!


David vH

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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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