itSMFI 2017 Forum Focus - June Forum Focus ITSMFI | Page 17
to realise in a services environment as opposed to a software
environment. In what follows, I will summarise the main Agile
principles that were discussed and will draw some conclusions of
their applicability to service management.
As for focusing on value, do we need Agile for this? Not really, as it
should already be recognised that value is the primary aim of
delivering services. However, Agile provides a refreshing
perspective where value creation and the customer's perspective
on the services are central, which is lacking in some service
management implementations that focus mostly on the internal
activities.
contracts, which customers need to accept.
All in all, the ISMF seems well positioned to make the move from
classic, process and internally oriented Service Management, to a
more externally focused, flexible way of delivering services and
creating value for the customer. Once the breadth of the ISMF has
been embraced, an Agile approach to service management can
follow
naturally.
It is the close collaboration with the customer that is a major
contribution of Agile, also in the service provider area. The “daily”
aspect of collaboration needs to be taken with a grain of salt, but
the aim to more closely involve the customer in the development
and delivery of services is a great way to ensure customer
satisfaction is ultimately maximised.
Agile's focus on the well-being of the people who actually need to
do the work is fully in line with the Integral Service Management
Framework. It should be common sense to have this focus, but not
all organisations have developed that far yet. Agile may well
provide the push to get there.
I believe that Agile has a point in wanting to reduce unnecessary
documentation, as many documents will never be read by anyone
or become obsolete as soon as they have been written due to new
developments and requirements. However, in a service provider
environment, it is hard to cut away all documentation, simply
because the service knowledge needs to be retained.
In the area of change, Agile goes a bit over board in its embrace of
change as a constant (Agile Principle: Welcome changing
requirements, even late in development), but has a point when it
comes to the need to be flexible about it. This applies to services as
well as to software development, albeit in different ways.
Services require a higher level of control, specifically if they are
provided to multiple customers, hence change management for
(multi-tenant) services needs to be stricter than when developing a
software product for a single customer.
Iterative and incremental service provisioning is an area that Agile is
the great game-changer in, but it is also the area that is most
difficult to apply to services. It very much depends on the type of
service you are providing whether a minimum viable service can
actually be developed, on top of which incremental enhancements
can be regularly provided. It is also up to the customer to actually
agree with this approach, where the benefit is that services should
be available earlier, but subsequent enhancements are to be
developed in a collaborative way. This is a departure from classic
References
http://agilemanifesto.org/
1.
Gordon Groll, Jayne – The Agile Service Management
Guide, 2015
2.
Pinchbeck, Lee – Agile Service Management, in: itSMF
Australia Bulletin. August 2016
3.
Netflix Culture: Freedom and Responsibility, Netflix, 2012
4.
Meyer, Bertrand – Agile!: The Good, the Hype and the Ugly,
Springer, 2014
5.
Kliem, Ralph M. – Managing Lean Projects, Auerbach
Publications, 2015
Dolf van der Haven was born in Muiderberg, The
Netherlands, in 1971. Originally a Geophysicist, he has a
wide background in IT, Telecommunications, Management,
Psychotherapy and Service Management. He currently
works as a Service Management Consultant at Verizon
Enterprise Solutions and is Co-founder and Managing
Director of Powerful Answers, a Service Management
consultancy based in Bulgaria, The Netherlands and the
Czech Republic. He is also member of ISO/IEC Joint Technical
Committee
1, Subcommittee 40, which develops the ISO/IEC standard
series 38500 (Governance of IT) and 20000 (Service
Management).
Previous publications include The Healing Elephant (2008 in
Dutch, 2009 in English), about psychotherapy; and The
Human Face of Management (2014) about people
management.
Dolf lives in Groenekan, The Netherlands, with his partner
and their 75 chickens. He can be reached at
[email protected].
17 itSMFI Forum Focus—June 2017