Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

How to hit pay dirt when overhauling IT processes

IT managers share tips for deploying ITIL and other best-practice frameworks.
By Denise Dubie , Network World , 09/20/2007
  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- There are plenty of reasons to streamline IT processes using best-practice frameworks such as the IT Infrastructure Library. But that doesn’t make it any easier to do.

"You hear a lot of people talk about how standardizing processes and adopting best practices in IT is just common sense. And it is,” said Rafael Rodriguez, associate CIO of academic and infrastructure services at Duke Health Technology Solutions, part of Duke Medicine in Durham, N.C. “But it's hard for me to follow a good, healthy lifestyle. It's not because I don't know what to do, [but because] it requires cultural change and that can be the hardest thing to effect."

Rodriguez was among a number of IT managers who spoke this week at the itSMF USA Fusion 2007 conference, where close to 2,000 attendees gathered to hear how companies such as Mary Kay Cosmetics, General Motors and Wells Fargo made IT service management improvements happen in their environments. Here are some of the lessons these companies learned along the road to success.

1. Get upper management support. It’s a common refrain, but the need for support from upper management is critical in a project that could involve nearly all aspects of IT. Until a new, supportive CIO came on board, David Farris said for five years he hit a cultural roadblock with management and staff while working to get ITIL processes in place.

"A single ITIL champion cannot succeed alone," said Farris, who is manager at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal Plant Health Inspection Service, in Riverdale, Md. To keep momentum on such a project going, champions must "spend time and effort to convince and motivate others to participate,” he added.

2. Tie best practice adoption to specific business goals. Configuration management meant nothing to business leaders until Joseph Kennedy explained that adopting better processes around this IT discipline would ensure applications at State Street in Boston were available when needed.

"I had to take everything I know about the technology and translate into something relevant to the business," said the vice president of technology architecture and R&D. "The discussion became about resource improvements, fewer outages, more transparency and better responsiveness from IT to the business."

  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print
Partner Content

NetScout is one of the world's premier providers of integrated network and application performance solutions.

www.netscout.com

Know First

Get Proactive — Move from Troubleshooting to Monitoring to Management with nGenius K2's Service Dashboard & Intelligent Early Warning Alarms

Watch the Video

Know Where

Get Rapid Performance Problem Isolation with nGenius Performance Manager and Diagnose Problems up to 70% Faster!

Learn More

Know Why

Get the Details to Validate and Solve your Toughest Performance Issues with nGenius InfiniStream and Sniffer Intelligence Modules

Read the Whitepaper

Comments (1)
Login
Forgot your account info?

RE: How to hit pay dirt when overhauling IT processesBy meatpieandtatters on September 24, 2007, 2:28 pmStreamlining IT processes? What a hoot! Most companies senior management team are clueless. Most of them regard security as the dominion of the IT gurus and not...

Reply | Read entire comment

View all comments

Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed
Get instant email notification when white papers, webcasts, executive guides are added to our library. Stay informed and up-to-date with the latest on IT Technologies with Network World's Resource Alerts.
Network World,to go. Wherever you are. Breaking news delivered to your mobile device. Select the hottest topics in networking and start receiving Network World on your mobile device today.