Monday, 2 July 2012

ITIL and BUREAUCRACY are NOT synonyms

I have to say that I am quite pleased with the segways I have been managing with these blogs (although secretly this is the reason why it took me several years to write these as I have been perfecting them all this time). So, whilst ITIL is a religion, it is a long and winding road to service management (blog 1), which requires you as much understanding of the WHY as the WHAT, in order to create your personal HOW (blog 2). My example was to show how different projects need different business cases, sometimes not even put on paper at all.


This is almost diametrically opposed to the perception of some people that ITIL introduces a major amount of bureaucracy in the form of procedures, work instructions, logs, forms and other paperwork. And whilst this it true to some degree, there is a very good reason for this, and this reason is what I call my first mantra of ITIL (or perhaps the first commandment to stick with the religion analogy):
YOU CANNOT MANAGE WHAT YOU CANNOT MEASURE!
Not being able to measure is basically what ‘best effort’ is. Individuals doing their best, in whatever way they individually think it should be done. The end result is, for instance, 3 people on the service desk who each use their own way to answer the phone, ask questions, record details, hand these to 2nd level support, follow-up and report to management (i.e. incident management). The result is that even though each of the 3 individuals may do a good job (best effort), the overall result is a bit up-and-down and inconsistent. The introduction of ‘best practice’ (like ITIL) makes all 3 individuals act the same, by following a predefined, accepted way of doing things; and to manage this we need measurements (to compare against baselines, service levels, KPIs, performance targets etc.).
The clincher is though that ITIL never dictates how big or how formal your procedures need to be or even whether you need to document any of this (for instance for those 3 service desk operators). This is where I normally borrow from PRINCE2 which describes the need for tailoring (note not choice, but need!) and this tailoring is based on the size, risk and complexity of the project\organisation. The bigger the organisation, the more complex the organisation (various suppliers, geographical locations, …) and\or the more risky the activity (support for the intensive care in a hospital, nuclear power plant, …); the more, formal documentation you will need.


Thus it is your job (having been converted to ITIL, and understanding both the WHAT and the WHY) to determine HOW much documentation you need in order for you to deliver the best services to your customer (I may get back on the repeatability of ITIL process at some stage). This of course may lead to bureaucracy, but a necessary one.
Imagine this: you’re in an airplane and on the speaker comes the captain saying that they have started the descent into the airport of your destination. He\she continues to says that it a special day as it is his\her 1000th landing here and that to celebrate he\she has a really cool, new way of landing the plane! Probably not something you want to hear as a user\customer in row 23C. You want to hear the pilot say that he\she has a procedure that he\she has followed 999 times before and can do blindfolded, backwards, with one hand tied behind their back, in Russian. But the pilot promises to do this procedure step-be-step and then the co-pilot will check (i.e. audit) that every step has been completed, as that provides the best, repeatable, guaranteed, measured value to you (as the customer in 23C).
And this is the role of IT in the business these days, we can no longer ... (wait for it …) wing it anymore (pause for canned laughter) but have to provide repeatable, guaranteed services and the use of best practice\procedures, if necessary through the use of documentation. And ITIL is that best practice and thus requires a certain, adequate amount of documentation, without becoming bureaucracy.
I’ll leave with one more analogy: if ITIL is perceived as bureaucracy and bureaucracy is meant to slow you down (a often heard complaint), it can therefor be compared to the brake in a car (which slows you down). But would you drive a 100kmph+ on a freeway without a break … and how would you change direction?
The role of ITIL (and its documentation) is to control your speed and to allow the organisation to change direction in a managed, controlled way.


the ITIL Zealot
May 2012

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