Showing posts with label CMDB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CMDB. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

ITIL In the USA


What a great presentation by Malcolm Fry yesterday at the Westin in Chicago -- put together the affable nature of Gromit's companion Wallace with the spontaneous contemplative vision of Yoda, and throw in a bit of John Cleese for good measure and there's Malcolm Fry.

He claims Jimmy Buffett "stole his life" (see photo), but he seems to have a pretty good life traveling around the world talking about configuration management databases and the best-practice guide called ITIL. Not a bad gig for a poor British kid who hails from a family of longshoremen and Romany gypsies.

Talking with Malcolm earlier this week, I was struck by how well-traveled and well-read he is and his ability to put his own not-entirely-occidental perspective on things. Outside the speaking tour he's on perpetually, his latest (anniversary) trip with his wife was to the jungle temples of Angkor Wot at Siem Reap in Cambodia, but you name anyplace in the world and he's likely to be able -- and glad to -- talk with you about it.

Malcolm is also quick to expand your list of reading requirements -- his latest recommendations being "The Devil in the White City" and "Civilization One" (about the "megalithic yard,") and anything by James Michener. He's also got his own book out recently which is a part of the current tour - Step-by-Step to Building a CMDB, (say-em-day-bay in Britspeak) which follows up a series of booklets he wrote on ITIL and a DVD series with the Help Desk Institute.

If you're in southern Wisconsin or Central California, Malcolm will be in the states for another briefing at the Milwaukee itSMF this week and then at the Hilton in San Francisco for a briefing next Wednesday. Drop me an e-mail if you'd like details.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

BSM (IT For Business): The Next Big Thing

"Business Service Management" -- viewing IT processes purely as a business facilitator and not an independent function -- is on the cusp of IT-analyst Gartner's latest hype-cycle for operations management tools. It is making the critical transition from the "Peak of Inflated Expectations" to the "Trough of Disillusionment," (which sounds more like something from John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress than typical IT-lingo). Computerworld chimes in with their own agreement that Kool-Aid style BSM is "the next big thing."

BSM is being followed over the expectations peak by the CMDB (database to track IT environments) which IT Week said yesterday is "set to double in the next year," and web services management. The CMDB is at the heart of BSM, so its catching up over the curve is essential to BSM's success and it has made quite a jump from last year's report, in which Gartner projected its productivity at ten years out. In Gartner's assessment, BSM now follows the spread of the IT Infrastructure Library, which provides the foundation of best practices necessary for BSM to work effectively.

Women's clothing manufacturer Coldwater Creek says it has saved more than $1.8 million and gained another million in profit using BSM to speed the opening of new locations, as well as another $700 thousand in licenses and software negotiations, which should help to assuage at least some of their disillusionment.