itSMFI 2016 Forum Focus - December Forum Focus ITSMFIV3 | Page 30

Book Review By Caspar Miller, itSMF Denmark Chapter Member By Steven C. Bell Without knowing it, this is a book we have all been waiting for. Run, Grow, Transform views IT in the context of/on the backdrop of the Lean philosophy, which also forms the basis for frameworks such as ITIL ® . The author of the book is Steve Bell, who also wrote Lean IT together with Mike Orzen. Title: Run Grow Transform: Integrating Business and Lean IT Author: Steven C. Bell Target Group: Anyone working with improvements within IT and wishing to learn more about IT Service Management in a Lean context. Qualifications: None required, although general knowledge of IT Service Management and Lean is an advantage. ISBN: 9781466504493 Publisher: CRC Press Page Count: 336 ® The ITIL Service Strategy volume describes a strategy tool as part of the Service Portfolio Management process known as the option space tool, a ‘useful tool for making decisions on the timing and sequencing of investments in a service portfolio’ (p. 187), which is based on the value and the volatility of investments. In the context of Service Management, this translates to customers and markets, i.e. the customer value of an investment and whether there is a market for the investment. The model divides investment opportunities into three categories with increasing risk; run the business, grow the business and transform the business. Run is an expression of investments that are presently ripe, i.e. which represent high customer value (the value is higher than the cost) in an existing market. The next level, grow, is about investments which have a potential but are not yet ripe. Customer value is not as high, and the market is not as developed. Finally, transform, the third level, is a radical change or re-thinking of 30 itSMFI Forum Focus—December 2016 both products and services as well as the processes and business modules that support them. The book is divided into two parts. The first part deserves thorough scrutiny and is very valuable in terms of insight into the importance of viewing Lean as a philosophy rather than a tool set or a way to cut costs. Grow and transform Run the business Lean product development  Product, service and process innovation  Variety without complexity  Create differentiation Grow and transform Lean operational excellence   Reduce unit cost of services  Improve service quality  Reduce compliance costs Make it easier to do business with IT Run the business If we wish to benefit more from our IT capabilities, we must improve speed, quality, cost efficiency and customer satisfaction through continuous improvement, reducing waste (muda), unnecessary variation (mura) and over-burdening (muri)—that is, CSI in ITIL lingo. In this way, we can free resources from running the business,