ITIL Update to Cover Security, Outsourcing
Users eager to try new version of IT services spec
February 5, 2007 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
After the IT department at Raymond James Financial Inc. implemented best practices from the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL), the number of calls to the company’s help desk dropped as much as 25% within 18 months.
Fewer phone calls means IT workers are free for other assignments, said Brian Miller, manager of IT monitoring services and availability management at St. Petersburg, Fla.-based Raymond James. He credited ITIL’s set of disciplined processes — such as finding the root cause of a problem — for the drop in help desk calls.
Miller said that by using ITIL’s best practices, “you get everybody in every department playing by the same rules,” which delivers big benefits in many IT areas, such as change management.
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Miller and other IT managers are eager to get their hands on Version 3 of ITIL, which is due in April and will be the first new release since 2000. A lot in IT has changed since Version 2 became available.
Security processes, which users say are lacking in the current ITIL version, will get more attention in the new release. According to Sharon Taylor, ITIL’s chief architect, Version 3 will also cover an area that has exploded as a major IT management concern since 2000: outsourcing.
Version 3 will also provide guidance on the related issue of knowledge transfer. In a data center relocation, for example, knowledge transfer means ensuring that new employees or outsourcers know how to run the systems.
Roman Albrecht, an IT manager at DHL Worldwide Network SA/NV’s data center in Prague, said he wishes he had had ITIL guidelines for knowledge transfer in 2003 when, as part of a wider facilities consolidation, the company moved its London data center to Prague. “There wasn’t any existing process that you could take and [use] — you had to develop it yourself,” said Albrecht.
DHL is growing partly by acquisitions, so ITIL helps the delivery company ensure that its global IT operations follow one set of IT processes. “If you are big company and you don’t have ITIL, you will be dead very soon because your cost will be too high,” said Albrecht. “Without defined, measured processes, you can’t optimize — this is a key thing.”
IT service management
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