I know many customers that could use that!

Sincerly,

David Charters
Charters Technologies
317-331-8985

-------- Original message --------
From: Janie Sprenger <[email protected]> 
Date:02/13/2014  8:39 PM  (GMT-05:00) 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: Asset Management and CMDB 

**
I wrote a paper on this topic and used it in various training classes to help 
people understand what Asset Management is in relation to the CMDB and vice 
versa.  I've included the content below.   Sorry the file is too big to attach 
to the email for the list server. Email me if you would like the PDF though.
 
I wrote the content when Remedy was at version 703 but I don't think any of the 
concepts have really changed although all of them could be expounded upon as 
users become more advanced.
HTH,
Janie
 
Understanding the relationship between Asset Management and the CMDB

Remedy v 703

Janie Sprenger

[email protected]

 
November 2009

Introduction
 
This paper introduces you to Asset Management and the CMDB.  The following 
topics are discussed:

§  Understanding Asset Management
§  Understanding Configuration Management
§  Understanding the CMDB
§  Configuration and Asset Management Differences
§  How the CMDB and Asset Management work together
·  Understanding Asset Management Processes

 

Understanding Asset Management

What is Asset Management?

Asset Management is the discipline of managing an Asset through its lifecycle – 
from requisition to retirement.

Asset Management is comprised of activities which relate to:

·         Managing an Asset’s financial considerations (procurement, leasing, 
vendor management, cost accounting, etc)
·         Contractual agreements and commitments (purchase requisitions and 
purchase orders, support and/or maintenance agreements, warranties, licensing, 
etc)
·         Management of inventory

Asset Management activities are performed for the purpose of maintaining an 
optimal balance between business service requirements, costs, budget 
predictability and contractual and/or regulatory compliance.

What is an Asset?

An Asset is any property with a commercial business value.

Understanding Configuration Management

What is Configuration Management?

Configuration Management is the process of keeping control of the ever evolving 
and inter-related IT configuration items that make up the organization’s IT 
infrastructure. The objective of Configuration Management is to identify 
configuration items, and to systematically record changes to those items for 
purposes of maintaining data integrity as it relates to the configuration 
item’s characteristics, relationships, traceability, and audit-ability. 
Configuration Management begins once the configuration item has entered the 
infrastructure and ends when it has been officially removed from use within the 
infrastructure. Configuration Management encompasses all IT configuration items 
that impact the organization’s infrastructure including servers, routers, 
software, services, personnel and processes.

What is a CI?

A CI is a configuration item and is any component of an infrastructure. For 
example, a CI can be hardware or software components, a service, an inventory 
location, or a network (LAN or WAN), etc.  CIs can vary widely in complexity, 
size, and type, from an entire system to a single component.

Understanding the CMDB

What is a CMDB?

A CMDB is a tool for Configuration Management.  The CMDB contains CIs.  If 
implemented correctly, the CMDB will show a complete view of your 
infrastructure and related services, assets, components, and software.

Where CIs come from

There are primarily two methods for the CMDB to be populated:  Manual and 
Automated.  The Manual method requires that a user enter information to create 
the CI.  The Automated method depends on an integration with another data 
source to populate the data in the CMDB.


Configuration and Asset Management Differences

What is the difference?

The process of managing IT configuration items actually starts with an 
inventory list from Finance showing Asset tags and locations. The Asset 
Management process adds financial and Asset lifecycle data. The Configuration 
Management process builds on the Asset database for CIs that will be under 
Incident or Change Management. The Configuration Management process adds 
relationship information between CIs. This allows services to be mapped, and 
then allows service performance to be managed. Each of these processes 
(Inventory, Asset, and Configuration Management) build on (and depend on) the 
previous process.

 

Configuration Management vs. Asset Management
Configuration Management
Asset Management
Goal: Provide logical model of IT environment as basis for ITIL process
Goal: Manage Asset costs, contracts, and usage/ownership throughout lifecycle
Value: Greater   business service stability, availability, and quality (via 
related ITIL processes)
Value: Lower Asset acquisition costs, reduced purchasing, more efficient 
allocation, more accurate budgeting/planning
CI: Physical, logical or conceptual IT component managed for its operational   
impact
Asset: Physical IT Component tracked based on financial value or contractual 
compliance
Relationships:   Sophisticated relationships between CIs are maintained to 
assess Change risk, analyze Root Cause, and assess service impact
Relationships: Basic relationships (peer, parent, or child) between Assets are 
maintained for retirement process, ownership, and license matching
 

How the CMDB and Asset Management work together

Now that we understand Asset Management versus a CMDB, it is time to understand 
how the Asset Management application and the CMDB work together for the 
application user.

An application user accesses the Asset Management Application's forms to access 
and operate on CIs in the CMDB.


1.    The Asset Management application contains the forms (or screens) that 
show the CIs that reside in the CMDB.
2.    The words, CI and Asset, are often synonymous; although not all CIs will 
have Asset functionality applied to them.
a.    For example, a Person can be a CI; however, you would never go through 
the Procurement process (AM functionality) to order a Person. 
3.    All Asset Users utilize the Asset Management application forms to carry 
out the procedures to handle the Asset and Configuration Management processes.
4.    Only Application Administrators and Advanced Asset Administrators will 
ever need to utilize the CMDB forms which also show all CIs in the CMDB.

 

Understanding Asset Management Processes

Asset Management Processes describe things that occur with the Asset during its 
Lifecycle.   

The asset lifecycle starts with the procurement process and ends with 
retirement of the asset. Procurement starts at the request of equipment.  These 
types of requests can be generated from an end user as the result of a 
break/fix, normal ordering schedules, mass equipment replacements or other 
events that would generate the procurement process.

Between procurement and retirement, Asset Management includes other processes 
that branch into the following areas:

1. Cost management
2. Contract management
3. Software license management
4. Asset maintenance and CMDB updates
Version reviews and schedule definitions apply to the entire lifecycle of 
assets. Version reviews indicate the review of hardware and software versions.
Schedule definitions indicate production scheduling. These include definitions 
for the following schedules and windows:

1. Blackout windows
2. Maintenance windows
3. Maintenance schedules
4. Audit schedules
 

ITSM also includes the following features to account for CI availability:

1. Scheduled outages
2. Schedule of changes
3. Unscheduled outages


On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 12:11 PM, Sweety <[email protected]> wrote:
Hello List,

This is me again :)

What is asset management ? - Application used to manage the CIs

What is CMDB ? - A database used to manage the CIs

Both seems to be same for me. What is the difference between both of them ?

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