Plans for organizing Service Management Initiatives

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If services, their underlying components or parts of the SMS need to be set up or modified, YaSM recommends organizing such work as service management initiatives (e.g. strategic initiatives, service improvement / process improvement initiatives etc.) managed through a number of plans.

Part of: Service management concepts

Previous concept: Customer vs. operational service definitions and agreements

 

Types of service management plans

YaSM suggests to maintain the following service management plans:

Strategic plan

The strategic plan is owned by the steering committee and maintained by the service strategy manager. Its purpose is to manage strategic initiatives, i.e. initiatives aimed at achieving the strategic objectives. Typical examples are the development of new or significantly changed services or service management processes, or the introduction of new technologies or capabilities on a larger scale.

Service improvement plan

The service improvement plans are owned by the service owners. Their purpose is to manage service improvement initiatives, i.e. initiatives of a somewhat smaller scale aimed at continually improving existing services. A typical example is an infrastructure enhancement to improve service availability. -- See also: Checklist service improvement plan (SIP).

Process improvement plan

The process improvement plans are owned by the process owners. Their purpose is to manage initiatives aimed at setting up or improving the service provider's processes (which are an important part of the service management system). A typical example is an upgrade to the incident resolution process.

Security improvement plan

The security improvement plan is owned by the security manager. Its purpose is to manage initiatives aimed at improving security. For such improvements, it is often impractical to execute them as service improvement initiatives because several services are affected. A typical example is the introduction of a new malware detection system.

Continuity improvement plan

The continuity improvement plan is owned by the service continuity manager. Its purpose is to manage initiatives aimed at improving service continuity in the case of critical, disruptive events. For such improvements, it is often impractical to execute them as service improvement initiatives because several services are affected. A typical example is an upgrade to a stand-by data center.

Skill development plan

The skill development plans are owned by the human resources manager. Their purpose is to manage the development of the skills required in the service provider organization. A typical example for an item in the skills development plan is a training program aimed at acquiring the necessary skills for mastering a new technology.

Importance of service management plans

The various service management plans play a key role in getting the initiatives approved and funded, and also in tracking their status.

For example, a new strategic initiative is first entered into the strategic plan as a proposal. The steering committee then needs to approve the initiative, which in turn allows the initiative's owner to obtain funding by submitting a budget request. While it is being implemented, the initiative's status information in the strategic plan is constantly updated.

Depending on their scale, some initiatives will be carried out as formal projects, while others will be executed in an informal way.

Execution of strategic initiatives

Because the service strategy process in YaSM defines a number of strategic initiatives but does not normally have the resources to carry them out, the strategic plan often functions as a top-level plan, as shown in the figure on the right.

In this respect, YaSM allows for strategic initiatives to be executed for example as:


Suggestions for strategic initiatives

It is also possible that issues are identified during service reviews which point to problems whose resolution is beyond the scope of "ordinary" service improvements (for instance a perceived gap in the service portfolio).

In such cases it will be appropriate to submit suggestions for strategic initiatives to the strategic process.

 

Notes

By:  Andrea Kempter   and  Stefan Kempter Contributor: Stefan Kempter, IT Process Maps GbR, IT Process Maps.

 

Types  › Importance  › Execution of strategic initiatives  › Suggestions for strategic initiatives