itSMFI 2016 Forum Focus - December Forum Focus ITSMFIV3 | Page 18

By Barclay Rae—CEO of itSMF UK The worlds of technology and service management are at last realising the value of their greatest assets – people. We hear an angle in every article now on the need to develop our people and their skills – across a broad range of competencies. This is a great development. It focusses our minds on the real issues, challenges and differentiators that help us to understand our own personal value and what we need to do to get the best out of our colleagues, reports, managers and leaders. “It’s (and IT is) all about people” is fast becoming our industry’s clear rallying call. This is a very positive step and long may it continue! We are a service industry – this relies on people. Our focus can shift from an obsession with technical skills and capabilities which, although they are an essential component in our working life, do not provide the full rounded template for a ‘professional’. We have long decried the lack of a simple definition of our (ITSM) industry and its own place in the scheme of things – how many of us have successfully described our roles and work to those outside of the IT(SM) bubble? an organisation with clarity and pride. From a business viewpoint, we manage risk and cost and also help to improve the stability and consistency of IT services, which for many of us effectively means running the business of the planet. As we introduce more and more automation and robotics into our business and IT working lives, there is a need for a greater focus on human interaction when it is needed. Person to person interactions may be more limited and irregular experiences as self-service comes to the fore. As such they will have more positive or negative impact when they do occur, and need to reflect the highest levels of professionalism. “So what do you do?” “I work in IT – actually no, I’m really part of the ‘business’. Well, I do business things in the IT world and try to make that more ‘human’. No that’s not fair, I work on processes and try to manage the expectations of users, well customers, no really they are users…” “Erm, can you fix my PC or not..?” This conversation will sound all-too-familiar, and it stems from a lack of identity for a group of professionals who are rapidly becoming critical to the business operation. We should be proud of what we do in IT Service Management and be able to describe our value and place in 18 itSMFI Forum Focus—December 2016 It is not acceptable and highly risky to leave these interactions or ‘moments of truth’ to chance and at the mercy of some technical people who perhaps don’t have the appropriate means of communication to fully deliver this to expectation. Current business and industry demands mean that the customer experience must be properly managed and professionalised. IT and Service Management are at a critical crossroads.