Hypothetically, because I know that this would never happen in a company
of any size, but hypothetically, let's say that a company has many help
desks.  Out of the many help desks, lets focus on their top four.  They
may have a help desk that deals with field issues, one that deals with
mainframes, one that deals with minicomputers in the homeoffice, and one
that deals with PC's.  Now, let's say that they all have their processes
and their forms to work their flavor of tickets and issues.  So we have
four help desks with four forms, working their tickets in similar ways,
but not so closely that they could use one form.  There is a common
interface built in that will allow teams that may be affected by the
tickets on all four help desks.  The interface is built, and tickets are
managed.  Would it make sense to take all these hypothetical help desks,
and merge their processes for issues that are worked in different ways
so that they can have the best practices of each team?  Would it make
sense for an lpar ticket and dll ticket, or a new install ticket for a
pc, minicomputer, mainframe to be worked the same way.  Would it make
sense to have so many fields, sub forms, and workflow to choke a donkey
in one form, so that this hypothetical company can embrace best
practices?  I don't know...

All this is hypothetically, I wouldn't know of a company that big, that
would have that many people, working on such a large amount of issues
and opportunities. 


Darrell E Reading II
Contact Center Development 
Wal-Mart
45739
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kaiser Norm E CIV USAF 96
CS/SCCE
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2007 08:56
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: OT -- Sort Of: Computerworld reports on ITIL

I clarified my position--I agree 100% with Pat's claim that all change
costs money.  I think I probably also agree with everything else he
said, but I don't feel like re-reading it all.

All of that is not the point, and I think you realize that.  You're
simply trying to shift the burden of proof onto the skeptic by saying,
"You said this or that, so now the monkey is on your back."

-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Parrish
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2007 8:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: OT -- Sort Of: Computerworld reports on ITIL

No Norm, re-read your post. It begins:

100% correct. Not partially correct, not I agree with you that change
costs
money Your statement is "100% correct". Which means you back his entire
post. Within that post Patrick makes the statements that I allude to
below.
So again, you have gone beyond skepticism to stating fact and I would
like
for you to produce the same documentation/case studies as you implore
others
to provide.


Scott Parrish
IT Prophets, LLC
(770) 653-5203
http://www.itprophets.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kaiser Norm E CIV USAF 96
CS/SCCE
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2007 9:22 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: OT -- Sort Of: Computerworld reports on ITIL

Woah! Hold the phone! You've been fair in quoting me up until this
point.

> My point is, and I'll state it again, I believe it is irresponsible
for
people to make statements about something, such as ITIL in this
instance,
that they have no proof of. Norm stated that he thought Patrick's
comments
were 100% correct. Patrick's comments were that

1. ITIL doesn't save money
2. ITIL doesn't save time
3. ITIL doesn't save energy
4. ITL doesn't make sense

My exact word-for-word statement was this: "And Pat is right--all change
costs money at some point in the change process."

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