ITIL Version 3 - What The Changes Could Mean To You
Author: Hank Marquis
Abstract
The IT Infrastructure Library® (ITIL®) v3, released in 2007, is
an exciting major overhaul of the previous version. Its focus on
managing IT along business lines and a movement away from strict
process control is having a dramatic impact on the entire IT
industry.
An enhanced and clarified descriptive core, more prescriptive
additions, better guidance on business alignment, and recent
international standards approvals move ITIL from a "nice to have"
to a "must have" for any IT professional or organization. If you
have been putting off ITIL, now is the time to begin. If you are
already implementing ITIL, you must consider these new
capabilities. In either case, you need to understand the impact
that ITIL v3 is having on the IT industry.
ITIL Version 3
The goal of the new ITIL is to provide a business-aligned
implementation that you can customize to your specific situation.
New topics include: understanding business catalysts and how they
produce IT strategies; how you should respond to specific business
drivers like compliance, regulation, demand management; and how to
interoperate with other standards and best practices.
ITIL v3 uses an IT services lifecycle model in a hub-and-spoke
design with fundamental core concepts as the hub and specific
market and industry guidance as the spokes. Because ITIL involves
best practices, it can never be fully prescriptive and must always
remain descriptive. However, the changes to ITIL v3 are more
detailed and industry-directed and, thus, more prescriptive than
the previous ITIL.
ITIL v3 also provides significant new resources to help align
with business, communicate with customers, manage suppliers, and
manage services.
Reasons for ITIL v3
The UK's Office of Government Commerce (OGC) owns the core
guidance and the ITIL brand, but they passed responsibility for
stewardship to itSMF International (international ITIL user group).
They also engaged the APM Group Limited (APMG) to manage the ITIL
v3 certification process and program, which is dramatically changed
from ITIL v2.
According to a letter written from the OGC to the itSMF
discussing collaboration on ITIL v3 development:
"Ownership in this context means OGC is the ultimate authority
on the content of core guidance in ITIL and provides visible
endorsement through use of OGC-owned brands and trademarks."
"Stewardship means the assurance that the guidance is truly best
practice through the engagement of experts in development and
promulgation."
ItSMF stewardship is important and makes ITIL v3 truly
representative of the industry and driven by input from the
worldwide ITIL community. The ITIL v3 refresh committee solicited
and reviewed 530 written responses and over 6,000
comments-representing 80% of the countries with an itSMF
chapter.
As taken from the ITIL refresh publication, the top changes
requested were:
Provide consistent structure and navigation throughout the
entire library. ITIL v3 is much more consistent in its use
of terms and its structure than previous versions.
Preserve the fundamental core concepts of the existing
Service Support and Service Delivery books while expanding and
improving upon these fundamental concepts. ITIL v3 has
five primary books that incorporate all of the ITIL v2 processes.
Further, ITIL v3 has clarified discrepancies many practitioners
found in ITIL v2. For example, ITIL v3 has a new Request
Fulfillment process; whereas ITIL v2 promoted a service request as
a form of Incident.
Include best practices that extend deeper into service
management concepts and reflect ITIL's relevance to business in a
more tangible way, and show how ITIL can be built into business
processes and cycles. ITIL v3 has more content
practitioners can use in the form of tools, worksheets and models
than ITIL v2. Additionally, ITIL v3 expands to include not only
processes, but also functions. Whereas ITIL v2 has one function
(the Service Desk), ITIL v3 offers many functional descriptions of
common activities, how to organize, roles, technology
considerations, and how to implement.
Provide guidance on the softer issues of organizational
structures, cultural issues, and an understanding of the interfaces
to other best practices that help support effective ITIL practices
in the workplace. Primary improvements here include
business alignment techniques, and aligning with popular
complimentary guidance outside of the traditional IT mix. For
example, a focus on knowledge management, and referencing popular
non-IT books around financial and change management.
Provide a knowledge management strategy to support the
service management needs of business and IT environments today and
tomorrow. Within the ITIL the new Service Knowledge
Management System (SKMS) guidance helps practitioners manage and
grow knowledge - the cornerstone of productivity and
efficiency.
Demonstrate and articulate value, benefits, and Return
on Investment (ROI) to establish the value proposition for
ITIL. ITIL v3 says not to start your ITIL journey with
process, but rather business strategy and service value. This
fundamental shift is extremely valuable to IT managers and
practitioners since one of the top issues IT faces is communicating
with business executives in business terms.
Reflect the reality of today's business, operational,
procurement, and technical environments including the use of ITIL
in multi-sourced IT environments. ITIL v3 excels in this
regard with the introduction of service provider categories that
include commercial IT service providers and guidance for supplier
management.
The purpose of ITIL v3 as defined by the OGC is, "to ensure, on
behalf of all interested parties, that ITIL provides a single,
coherent description of IT service management core activities and
products, based on best practice, supported by high-quality
qualifications and services that are consistent with the core
principles of ITIL." The new version delivers on all counts.
Related Courses
ITIL® v3 Awareness
ITIL® v3 Foundation