Wednesday 29 August 2018

ITIL: Resources - Capabilities

ITIL General principles:
Resources & capabilities are both service assets used to create value (goods & services) for customers
Resources need capabilities to use any available resources to develop value-adding services to customers
Capabilities cannot produce value without available & adequate resources
It's usually easier to acquire resources than capabilities - - - agree?

Monday 27 August 2018

ITIL-Service Strategy - Demand Management

Principles in Demand Management:
Services can not be produced in advance of their consumption
Excess capacity generates cost but no material value;  equally, unused capacity creates some value through higher levels of assurance
Poorly managed demand is a source of risk
Understanding the Pattern of Business Activity (PBA) helps service design optimize designs to suit demand patterns






Thursday 23 August 2018

ITIL Service Strategy SUMMARY

 SUMMARY - ITIL Service Strategy

ITIL Service Strategy is where value creation begins (in the ITIL service lifecycle).

ITIL Service Strategy enables a service provider to:
use Service Management as a strategic asset
set objectives & expectations of performance towards servicing customers and market spaces
identify, select and prioritize opportunities

ITIL Service Strategy includes these processes:
Strategy management for IT services
Service Portfolio Management
Financial Management
Demand Management
Business Relationship Management


THOUGHTS: Design is the art of gradually applying the constraints until only one solution remains

ITIL THOUGHTS:
ITIL Service Design - "Design is the art of gradually applying the constraints until only one solution remains" (ITIL-SD)

Friday 22 June 2018

Definition: Service models (ITIL Service Strategy)



https://www.eqsystems.co.in/itil-service-strategy-service-models/

The definition of a service model is ‘a model that shows how service assets interact with customer assets to create value. Service models describe the structure of a service (how the configuration items fit together) and the dynamics of the service (activities, flow of resources and interactions). A service model can be used as a template or blueprint for multiple services.’

Friday 8 June 2018

What is - Customer Portfolio (CP): A starter tool for BRM

ITIL - Service Strategy / Business Relations Management

What is -
Customer Portfolio (CP): A starter tool for BRM

The customer portfolio is a database used to record all customers of the IT service provider.  It is used by many processes but is defined and maintained in the business relation management process.  It provides insight into the customer and is developed from the point of view of the business relationship manger.  It allows the service provider to understand who the customers are and make the distinction between customers and users.  This enables the BRM to be able to define who the customer is and who in that organization has the authority to make decisions about which services are needed and their respective requirements.

Link:
https://buff.ly/2JnURxh

A note on ITIL Service Strategy - before attempting to defining services


ITIL Service Strategy design Principle:

Attempting to define the services in the absence of service portfolio management could result in lack of consistency of service definition, poorly defined service models and a lack of formal gate keeping

ITIL BASICS: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT SERVICE MANAGEMENT EXCELLENCE

ITIL BASICS:

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT SERVICE MANAGEMENT EXCELLENCE

To bring your Service Management to the degree of excellence, you need to become strategic with well-implemented Service Portfolio Management, enhance and solidify Service Level Management, and adopt the culture of Continual Service Improvement by implementing CSI mechanisms and Service Reporting.

1. Service Portfolio Management
2. Service Level Management
3. Service Reporting

https://itchapter.com/what-you-need-to-know-about-service-management-excellence

Wednesday 6 June 2018

ITIL Implementation Challenges

ITIL Implementation Challenges

1. Management Commitment

2. Resistance to ITIL

3. Project Culture

4. ITIL for the sake of ITIL

5. Business Acceptance

6. Big Bang

7. Naive Implementation

8. Tools

9. The Moving Target

Comment: Which one did you encounter in your ITIL implementation?   please share your thoughts & experiences with me!

LINK:
https://arch.simplicable.com/arch/new/10-ITIL-implemenation-challenges



Thursday 31 May 2018

ITIL - Knowledge Management: Knowledge Centered Support (KCS) > The Framework For Service Desk Transformation

Knowledge Centered Support: The Framework For Service Desk Transformation

Knowledge Management is fast emerging as a way to mitigate this challenge. Effective use of knowledge significantly improves self-service experiences for end customers, and generates faster and more successful outcomes for those issues which still reach the service center.
However, effective implementation of Knowledge Management is still proving to be a significant challenge in the industry. Organizations often struggle with either of two significant challenges: building a knowledge base, and using it successfully once it’s there.
It is often difficult for support teams to find the time to capture good knowledge, especially if it is not formally entrenched as a priority for them. Some enterprises have addressed this with a dedicated knowledge team, but a team like this is unlikely to have sufficient subject matter expertise in all areas.  As a result, they still rely on input from those over-worked specialists.
Even where knowledge has been captured, making good use of it can be a challenge. As Katrina Pugh and Nancy M. Dixon put it the HBR Article on Knowledge Management, Don’t Just Capture Knowledge—Put It to Work: “what’s the point of capturing organizational knowledge if it’s going to be tossed into some file and forgotten?”  This effect can be exacerbated in organizations who have addressed the content creation challenge by embracing wide participation or even crowdsourcing:  noise can overwhelm the signal, making knowledge difficult to find.
Each of these issues creates a negative cycle: support teams are unwilling to spend time searching a knowledge base if they don’t expect to find answers.
Knowledge Centered Support, or KCS, is one solution to this challenge.