itSMFI 2016 Forum Focus - December Forum Focus ITSMFIV3 | Page 27

Lorie Lynn Wilson itSMF-USA, Phoenix Local Interest Group I consider myself to be an optimist. I realize from the title of this piece that that may not be so obvious, but I really am an optimist. I am an optimist who over the years of ITSM growth within my organization has come to the realization that there are some real obstacles when it comes to implementing and sustaining a robust IT Service Management Program but that the struggle is well worth the effort. Prior to working for my current employer, I worked for a company that was at the point of “thinking” about bringing ITSM/ITIL into our organization. We had a relatively strong incident handling process which understood the importance of providing as much front-line tools and knowledge as possible. Those working in this space, even though they did not officially hold the title of incident management regularly utilized automation to bounce JVM’s, could walk a Network Operations contact through an incident scenario and provide support as the eyes, ears and sometimes hands of that NetOps team member. On the side of Problem Management, there were no designated problem coordinators, however; several people operated in the role of a Problem Manager. They oftentimes would join an incident call to proactively obtain key details on what actions would be required to begin the root cause analysis effort and oftentimes, before the call was even completed, they had a problem record opened, known error documented and tasks had already been assigned to Subject Matter Experts (SME’s) for follow-up. In the Change Management space there was a person that took on the role of documenting which changes would be rolling out on a particular day and ensuring that everyone on the “front line” was aware of when and where these would occur and who were the contacts in the event of an incident/problem. Now there were other groups that acted in the role of Release 27 itSMFI Forum Focus—December 2016 Management, Configuration Management, Continuity Management, etc… however, for some reason, taking that step to be officially called an IT Service Management engaged organization, never seemed to happen. Since ITSM was an area that I had a strong interest in and wanted to learn more about, I made the hard decision to move on to an organization that officially supported ITSM and had implemented many of the processes outlined in the ITIL Framework. I entered this organization in the role of an IT Pro