March 2022CIOAPPLICATIONS.COM9Let's jump back to where it begins, with the Plan. Ideally, this starts with an IT Strategy that aligns to the company's vision, mission and strategy. At a minimum, it's a list of priorities that align and support the business objectives. It's implied, but IT is also responsible to optimize the cost to deliver IT services, ensure we meet or exceed service level agreements (SLAs) the business has agreed to fund and keep our employees and the company's data safe. This last point is more relevant today as the landscape continues to evolve, threat actors have become more creative attacking all industries and most recently the IT supply chain. Fast forward to Manage the Lifecycle; this part is often forgotten, but I find myself spending more and more time here. Ensure you think about the solutions, critical to the business, that require attention: the 20 year old ERP where the employees who support it and know the business processes are retiring in the next few years, the server or solution no longer supported by the vendor, self-service tools developed by the department but not formally supported by IT or the shop floor where you will find the most vulnerable systems. The secret to ITSM is how to optimize the individual parts while ensuring they work well together. It's an end-to-end process, that needs to be aligned across the organization, well-understood by IT employees and partners, but also by the business. Communication is a key ingredient to the success of ITSM. IT Leaders must speak the same language, share key messages, support and demonstrate they understand the process. I was fortunate early in my career to work in consulting and then at a very large global company which showed me how things can work, and at scale. When you have seen it work and realized the benefits, it is much easier to know what you are building. As you introduce change, recognize most people will not have seen it before or understand the benefits. Because of this challenge, the "Why" is more important than the "What". If you really want to transform the organization, everyone needs to understand the Why, the reason they need to change. One approach is to solicit feedback from the people who work in the organization. It is important to understand what is working and leverage that as a strength, identify what should be stopped and stop it, and identify what should start to understand what should be changed. Once you identify the Why, then ITSM can begin transforming the organization. organization visibility to the projects in the pipeline. It was an opportunity to grow the entire team of architects and gave operations a voice into the process early on. When new topics were discussed in the ARB, we incorporated them into the design document so the next project would receive the benefit. Yes, continuous improvement. My current company is much larger, so we have an Executive ARB that reviews and approves standards with the Global IT Leadership Team and a Technical ARB that reviews the project designs. Some companies have introduced DevOps or Sec DevOps to create a culture or working practice to ensure the conversation between the project teams and operations happens.Communication is a key ingredient to the success of ITSM. IT Leaders must speak the same language, share key messages, support and demonstrate they understand the processMark Szkudlarek
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