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Procter & Gamble touts IT services model, saves $500 million

October 1, 2002 12:00 PM ET

Network World - IT managers with tight budgets and growing demands might want to check out a set of best practices that have the likes of Procter & Gamble Co. and the U.S. Navy talking about its promise to cut costs and optimize services.
The Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) is a set of rules for how to deliver IT services more efficiently by improving management processes across IT departments that support networks, applications, databases and systems. Developed in 1992 and maintained by the U.K.'s Office of Government Commerce, ITIL originally served as a set of standards that service providers had to follow to deliver IT services to the British government. After its inception, public companies realized the benefits and implemented parts of ITIL in their internal IT departments.
Procter & Gamble representatives told about 1,000 attendees at the International IT Service Management Summit in Boston last week that the global company has saved about $500 million across multiple departments since beginning to streamline processes with ITIL four years ago.
"It all comes down to the fact that IT is an integral part of supporting the business," said Morton Cohen, manager of global service management at Procter & Gamble. "When IT processes are done by 5,000 people consistently across one company, service management can deliver tremendous savings."
Cohen, who co-chairs the International IT Service Management Forum (ITSMF), which has 8,000 members worldwide and about 700 in the U.S. He said Procter & Gamble's IT group avoided spending $125 million by implementing the service management processes outlined by ITIL.
Procter & Gamble implemented ITIL's "Follow The Sun" management process, which entails staffing data and operations centers around the world according to time zone. For instance, IT management staff in the Cincinnati headquarters manned shifts from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. local time, while staff at the Brussels data center worked 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. local time, and in Singapore, network operations punched the clock from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. local time. The staffing let Procter & Gamble use employees worldwide to ensure all its data centers were fully staffed from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in each location's local time -- without adding staff.
And while ITIL doesn't recommend specific vendor hardware or software, it gives network managers guidelines on how to implement repeatable and consistent processes to eliminate human error caused by solving IT problems on the fly. The foundation of ITIL's principles can be used throughout a company: Procter & Gamble used the ITIL tenets in its accounting, human resources


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