Architecture and Patterns for IT Service Management, Resource Planning, and Governance: Making Shoes for the Cobbler's Children,
Edition 1
By Charles T. Betz

Publication Date: 06 Nov 2006
Description

Architecture and Patterns for IT Service Management, Resource Planning, and Governance: Making Shoes for the Cobbler's Children provides an independent examination of developments in Enterprise Resource Planning for Information.

Major companies, research firms, and vendors are offering Enterprise Resource Planning for Information Technology, which they label as ERP for IT, IT Resource Planning and related terms.

This book presents on-the-ground coverage of enabling IT governance in architectural detail, which can be used to define a strategy for immediate execution. It fills the gap between high-level guidance on IT governance and detailed discussions about specific vendor technologies. It provides a unique value chain approach to integrating the COBIT, ITIL, and CMM frameworks into a coherent, unified whole. It presents a field-tested, detailed conceptual information model with definitions and usage scenarios, mapped to both process and system architectures.

This book is recommended for practitioners and managers engaged in IT support in large companies, particularly those who are information architects, enterprise architects, senior software engineers, program/project managers, and IT managers/directors.

Key Features

Are you in the thick of sorting out how to make ITIL and COBIT work, and trying to make sense of the dozens of vendors clamoring to help?Are you puzzled over how the ITIL vision for Change Management fits into the reality of your current processes? And how it relates to Enterprise Architecture and Portfolio Management?Is the concept of configuration management and the CMDB giving off more heat than light for you? How can you make it real?Have you found yourself wondering whether you really need an IT portfolio management tool, an enterprise architecture repository, a metadata repository, a service management tool, and a configuration management database (CMDB)? And if you have them, are you wondering if they should be related somehow?The book presents on-the-ground coverage of enabling IT governance in architectural detail, which you can use to define a strategy and start executing. It fills the gap between high-level guidance on IT governance, and detailed discussions about specific vendor technologies. It is a next-step book that answers the question: OK, we need to improve the way we run IT - now what? It does this through:* A unique value chain approach to integrating the COBIT, ITIL, and CMM frameworks into a coherent, unified whole* A field-tested, detailed conceptual information model with definitions and usage scenarios, mapped to both the process and system architectures* Analysis of current system types in the IT governance and enablement domains: integration opportunities, challenges, and evolutionary trends* Patterns for integrating the process, data, and systems views to support specific problems of IT management. * Specific attention throughout to issues of building a business case and real-world implementation. Among the specific topics addressed are:* ITIL recommendations from a practical systems implementation point of view* Configuration management: challenges, misconceptions, myths, and realities. Business justification for. Support for compliance and regulatory goals.* Interrelationships between IT portfolio planning, solutions development, and IT operations* The relationship between application development and hosting (infrastructure) organizations* Business intelligence, performance management, and metrics for the IT capability itself* Detailed, actionable clarification of the vague concept of "IT Service" and all its permutations and implications* IT portfolio degradation through complexity* Detailed models of IT information* The various classes of systems used internally by large scale IT organizations* The concept of "repository" and its relationship to the Configuration Management Database (CMDB)* Process roles and responsibilities. Closed-loop, self-reinforcing processes for IT data management. * Application as critical control point and portfolio entry. Clarifying relationship between "application" and "IT service." Application portfolio management: process, data structures, and systems.
About the author
By Charles T. Betz, Charles Betz is a Senior Enterprise Architect, and chief architect for IT Service Management strategy for a US-based Fortune 50 enterprise.
Table of Contents
Part I: The IT Value Chain
Chapter 1: Introduction: Shoes for the Cobbler’s Child
1.1 The achievements of information technology
1.2 The problems
1.3 The proposed solutions
1.4 The business case
1.5 Making it real
1.6 Chapter conclusion
1.7 Further reading

Chapter 2: The IT Value Chain: a process foundation
2.1 Frameworks, frameworks everywhere
2.2 A value chain framework
2.3 Relationship between primary and supporting processes
2.4 Primary IT Activities
2.5 Supporting IT Activities
2.6 Major framework issues
2.7 The functional viewpoints
2.8 Non-functional requirements
2.9 Process maturity
2.10 The business case
2.11 Making it real
2.12 Chapter conclusion
2.13 Further reading

Part II: Supporting the IT value chain
Chapter 3: A supporting data architecture
3.1 Metrics: Gateway from Process to Data
3.2 A Conceptual Data Model
3.3 IT process entities
3.4 Configuration Item & subtypes
3.5 Process and workflow – a data perspective
3.6 General IT data architecture issues
3.7 The business case
3.8 Making it real
3.9 Chapter conclusion
3.10 Further reading

Chapter 4: A supporting systems architecture
4.1 Systems & families
4.2 Cohesion and coupling
4.3 Systems for planning and controlling
4.4 Systems for solutions delivery
4.5 Cross-boundary build/run systems
4.6 Systems for service support
4.7 Information-centric systems
4.8 General issues
4.9 The ideal architecture
4.10 The business case
4.11 Making it real
4.12 Chapter conclusion
4.13 Further reading

Chapter 5: Patterns for IT Enablement
5.1 Why apply patterns?
5.2 Core Value Chain Patterns
5.3 Configuration Management Patterns
5.4 Supporting IT Process Patterns
5.5 Chapter conclusion
5.6 Further reading

Part III: Conclusion
Chapter 6: Epilog
6.1 Human constraints of IT enablement
6.2 The next generation IT: MDA, SOA, BPM, portals, utility computing
6.3 In closing

Appendix A: Architecture methodology used in this book
Appendix B: Some thoughts on the professionalization of enterprise IT
Appendix C: IT Professional Organizations
Appendix D Glossary
Index
Book details
ISBN: 9780123705938
Page Count: 424
Retail Price : £32.99
Lutchen/Managing IT as a Business, 2003, Wiley, $34.95, 0471471046.

Weill/IT Governance, 2004, Harvard Business School Press, $35.00, 1591392535.
Audience
This book is for the practitioner and manager in the IT support function in large companies, particularly those who are information architects, enterprise architects, senior software engineers, program/project managers, and IT managers/directors.