Thursday | 8 January, 2009
CIO
One size doesn't fit all for IT productivity and ITIL compliance
Time for a multi-faceted approach in service delivery and service management
Jon Rolls (Computerworld UK) 17 July, 2008 10:30:36

IT productivity is under increasing focus as businesses look for ways to reduce the cost of their daily business operations and increase profitability.

Achieving these cost savings and conforming to best practices and Service Level Agreements within the IT department frequently requires investment in a number of related IT solutions, not just the purchase of a single tool to address one specific problem.

An additional pressure, highlighted in recent findings by the National Computer Centre (NCC) and IT Governance Institute (ITGI), is a growing concern about the lack of skilled IT staff within business. As companies become ever more dependent on IT this shortage becomes more apparent and, despite its growing costs, the process of retraining and recruiting quality IT staff is inevitable in order for the business to continue to succeed and sustain a competitive advantage.

The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) has outlined best practices for IT services management through its IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL), benchmarks that CIOs take very seriously. One of the processes that ITIL addresses is incident management, instructing IT administrators to minimise end-user impact when client-side incidents arise. Businesses lose time and money when allotting additional resources for incident management.

The right solution, for any task, can empower the end-user to solve many of his or her own IT problems effectively, reduce the number of calls to the IT help desk and therefore allow the IT department to work on larger issues and strategic planning.

For example, in 2007, 61 per cent of support centres and organisations surveyed by the Help Desk Institute (HDI) felt that incidents were increasing and that it was due to the changes in infrastructure or products. In this environment, managers must constantly embrace and prepare for changes within their support centres.

Furthermore, when respondents were asked what they would do regarding the tools and technology used in their support organisations "if money were no object," a large percentage said they would "throw it all away and start over".

There is a willingness among IT administrators to make technology investments. While buying a stand-alone product may 'fix' a specific problem, a 'solution' combines multiple related products and allows the company to concentrate on strategic objectives such as business expansion, upgrades, regulatory compliance and energy efficiency.

A holistic approach to IT management should be taken. In the case of an incident management solution, IT Administrators should begin with a helpdesk ticketing system. Via email, end users can log problems as tickets, allowing them to view the status of their open ticket.

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