itSMFI 2017 Forum Focus - June Forum Focus ITSMFI | Page 7

I’m sitting passing through the Staffordshire countryside at 100mph on a Virgin Train when my thoughts turn to agile. I recall a conversation with the CEO of one organisation who recently told me their master plan for doubling sales. “I’ll just put ‘agile’ in front of everything I sell” they told me. To an extent I can see the point. Agile development, agile project management, agile busi- ness analysis, agile testing…there is not a part of the delivery supply chain that hasn’t been pre- fixed by the word “agile” to spawn a whole new industry! Now I’m not decrying the need for more agility. After all, who’d say no to getting a working product or service out the door faster to realise quicker return or value on investment? But I see too many organisations willing to jump on the ‘Agile Bandwagon’ without looking whether it has any wheels! My experience suggests that those struggling the most are in the operational environment. They’ve been asked to deliver “Agile Operations” having spent years mastering ITIL which they mistakenly believe cannot be adapted to be agile. So here’s my look at 4 values from the Agile Manifesto and their applicability to something that isn’t a software development project. We value individuals and interactions over processes and tools For me, this value is always something of an oxymoron in the agile dev and project management world, where the “industry” is in a headlong rush to “lean” and “automate” everything. I’m not sure that organisations like SDI and itSMF have not been saying ‘people over process’ for years. One service desk I audited about 8 years ago were doing stand-up meetings every morning with their operations colleagues very effectively. It’s NOT and NEVER has been about slavish devotion to operations management processes; it is MORE about individuals engaged in operational activity being supported to have the confidence and capability to do their jobs. There are still those in operational environments scared 7 itSMFI Forum Focus—June 2017 to experiment or put forward ideas for fear of ridicule and reprimand. Worse, many don’t even possess a channel to even suggest those ideas! A healthy and empowered service improvement ethos with multiple stakeholders and active feedback can help operations start a more agile journey. Working software over comprehensive documentation Poetic licence here as I’m going to substitute the word services for software. Doing that makes this an interesting one if you are in the operational space. You could easily argue that the operations documentation “minimum viable product” for restoring service is recording “you did it, fixed”. It means you can inform the customer at least. Your service