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This is a great article to store away for future reference - thank you.

Sandra Hennigan

OSD Remedy Administrator
Office # 703-602-2525 x251
CACI - Ever Vigilant(tm)

Apparently, there is nothing that cannot happen today.  Mark Twain

-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Carey Matthew Black
Sent: Friday, January 26, 2007 2:42 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: OT: ITSM Total Cost of Implementation Discussion


Norm,

I see this problem from a few perspectives. And I think it helps to look
at specific scenarios too. So let's look at a few simple observations.


1) If the business is working "just fine" then why change anything?
    I would include in that conversation a discussion of why upgrade
anything?

   I think it is a false statement to say that you can not get support
from BMC for ITSM v4 (even on ARS v7) today. I think it just takes more
"Professional Services" than what your annual support contract would pay
for. :) [ And just to be clear, your annual support pays for exactly
zero hours of "Professional Services" each year. ]

2) If your business is "not working" and the higher ups want it to "work
differently" then changes will be made. ( If the higher management
actually have any authority to effect real change.)  Now here is where
it gets real sticky.

    If Part A of your company is working well enough to "break even" and
Part B of your company is loosing money then does that mean that Part B
should adopt Part A's business practices? My answer is .... it depends.
:) Even if Part A is making tons of money than Part B is loosing tons of
money it still may not be the best decision to re-tool Part B with Part
A's practices. Sometimes it really does take a full fracture of the
company to get Part B to figure out what they are doing wrong. ( Or to
realise that the accounts were just cost shifting all of Part A's losses
to Part B and Part B was actually making money when it does not have to
share the burden that Part A was "not honestly claiming to be theirs"
too.)

But, again, if the management want change, then it will happen. Even if
the change is for the worst in the short term.


3) Business are not all unique. (Really, they are generally very
similar.) Sure, there are different types of business. (for example:
Services vs Manufacturing  ) And there are even different market
segments and forces to be sorted out. However, once a given market
matures and stabilizes there are generally "best practices" that are
formed for a given market. Yes they change over time due to changing
market forces, but you get the idea. The companies that stay in business
making... "Bicycles" tend to do almost the same basic things. Which nets
them enough money to keep doing what they have been doing. Often
business that are failing will turn to their competitors to try to
figure out what they are doing wrong as compared to their competitors!
(Differences like that are often the definition of a "anti-best
practice".)


4) In a mature business, best practices (policies/procedures) are
documentable in ways that lead to common terminology. (We all call
"Sales" that for a reason. Same is true for "Marketing".) And those
business functions are well understood in most business markets. IT is
becoming a fairly standardized part of any business. So there are bound
to be good and bad practices forming for how any business should manage
that part of their business.


And finally...

5) ITIL is not something that BMC controls. ITIL is much bigger than any
single company. It's origins and life cycle is driven by a conglomerate
of business that all do "IT things" for themselves, and maybe for other
companies too.

6) Choosing to use a standard today does not mean that you have to keep
chasing that standard. There is nothing wrong with saying that ITIL v2
was "ok" for you, but "v3" is just silly. (Again. No reason to upgrade
when things are going just fine.)


7) ITIL history lesson:

+ ref http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITIL

*  Started in the 1980's. (and continually updated)
*  It was originally created by "Central Computer and Telecommunications
Agency (CCTA) of the UK Government".  To help them manage their growing
IT needs/resources.
*  In December 2005, the OGC(Office of Government Commerce) issued
notice of an ITIL refresh(ITIL v3) which is planned to be available in
Spring 2007.
* ITIL is often considered alongside other best practice frameworks



So at the end of the day Norm. The UK government built ITIL(v1), but it
was not widely adopted or considered util the 90's(v2). So I guess that
in the 2000's would be about the time that some of the USA government
agencies would get around to looking at it. (Just a bit of humor. :)


8) And there is always the thought that whatever you are doing (that you
think it working) must be "good enough for the next guy too". However,
that might not be the case in reality. It might be working just fine for
you due to specific conditions that are unique to you/your business too.

Or there could be a more general pattern that you have not seen in what
your doing that really is a lot like what "they" are doing too. Just
with a few different political/personal tweaks.


So my summary is this:

I think the point of ITIL is to be that "general pattern" for IT stuff.

Given that 1000's of smart, effective, and successful people have spent
years of their life/work to beat the general case patterns out of IT and
to document them, then I can only say that if that "shoe does not fit
you" that you should go join the ITIL team and tell them they are all
wrong or that they missed whatever market force/unique reality that you
have identified. That way ITIL v4 will be better and might help 1000's
more people too.

-- 
Carey Matthew Black
Remedy Skilled Professional (RSP)
ARS = Action Request System(Remedy)

Love, then teach
Solution = People + Process + Tools
Fast, Accurate, Cheap.... Pick two.


On 1/26/07, Kaiser Norm E CIV USAF 96 CG/SCWOE
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It comes down to a question of who should dictate your process, I 
> think-you or the vendor?
[snip... ect...]

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