Tag: The Goal

Definitions Matter: Part Two - The Operating System

by admin on Dec.31, 2009, under IT Management

My definition (purpose) of IT Operations  ”The Operating System”

“An explicitly specified system of work that consists of a structured, controlled and measured approach to the continuous delivery of existing IT Services and Service Assets in order to achieve the goals of business.  The system accurately illustrates capacity, describes, manages and measures the flow of work in to operations via Service Transition and Standard Operations Requests and compares their actual resulting output to business expectations.

The Operations System collectively focuses on  preventive action first, detective controls that instrument variance from specified acceptable operating states, and lastly when operations are interrupted, specified structured  corrective measures that deliver root cause analysis with corresponding countermeasures to prevent reoccurrence are used to restore operation.”

I know you have operating systems in IT but do you have an IT Operations System? If you do, could it be better? Next post I will look in to the pillars of “The Operating System”

Kevin Behr

2 Comments :, , , , more...

The IT Performance DOJO is no longer optional, but survival is

by @kevinbehr on Mar.03, 2009, under Hire Kevin Behr as a Consultant, IT Management

Have you ever read “The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering“?

If so you are a rare bird (or over 45) in today’s tech zoo.

I wish I could drop this book (among many others such as The Goal, Critical Chain, The Machine that Changed the World, Great Boss Dead Boss, and Chasing the Rabbit  - see the right side column to buy them!) out of airplanes and organize study groups with my IT; operations, security, audit, project management, executive management and yes especially development brethren.

I was reflecting on this text and several other seminal management books I have collected over the years and I decided I needed to write a series for my blog on this topic. As of late Gene Kim and I are working on some amazing projects for fun and exciting internet 2.0 companies. We have been writing a new IT management novel with George Spafford (think “The Goal” for IT) , and helping a bunch of IT shops solve the quality, reliability and cost reduction realities that have now become must-do (all at the same time mind you).

Just yesterday we began working with long time collaborator and joyful subversive, Eileen Forrester, from the Software Engineering Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

We are shaping up a few writing projects for the newly released CMMI-Service model.  Eileen has been in charge of getting the new model released on time and has actually over-performed and it is out much earlier than expected for the first time in history.

I relish the opportunity to exchange ideas and approaches for improving the delivery of services with folks from all sectors of the economy (especially those disciplines outside of the IT world).

Many of these industries and business disciplines have a long history of systems design and improvement that reads like rich history.

Where is this similar lineage taught and practiced for IT today?

As I work with many IT executives and teams around the globe I often find myself wondering if the collective “we” has forgotten more than we have learned up to this point.

For a community that not only leans towards scientific interest our entire profession exists on the shoulders of science (knowledge and technology are the output) so little of the way we actually do IT is built on the scientific method or around what I have dubbed the “System Building and Continuous Improving Arts” (SBCIA).  We often are just reacting rather than treating every request as a hypothesis and making sure we have built a repeatable response that correctly satisfies all of the implicit assumptions in the request.

To better explain what I am talking about I will use the Japanese term RYU, which denotes the flow of water.  The idea represents formal Japanese traditions such as the Martial Arts.  In Karate fluidity and finding one’s path are compared.  Water will find its own path in balance with the terrain it is surrounded by, just as the Karate student must advance through his or her path by practice and training.

Bringing me to the point of my concern in this post…

Much of “the path” for IT practitioners and managers of all levels travels through the acquisition and appropriation of myopic technical domain knowledge (yes even auditors). In other words “what we must know” so “we” know how to react in a given technical situation”.

What is missing?  What we need to understand holistically (see) to decide how we should work together as a system .  This information is both timeless and too time consuming to amass through trial and error in our own life experience. The old adage applies here “Time may be the best teacher but it kills all of its pupils”. In order to amass the collective wisdom about how to see the work in order to build an effective system to do the work, we need the collective wisdom of our predecessors and our current community at large. We also need to look outside of our industry and find analogs to improve our execution, quality and safety with larger and scientifically validated levers. Stop chasing consensus based “Best Practices” and start purpose-building systems around scientifically proven practices.

There is much room in IT to build a new flow of knowledge about the “System Building and Continuous Improving Arts” (SBCIA).  This economy is shaping up to be the ultimate Dojo for us to do so.  Let’s just say performance is no longer optional but survival is.

So pick up a copy of “The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering” and start a study group and learn from your ancestors.  Create a culture of Kung-Fu, a Chinese term that means “individual accomplishment or skill cultivated through long and hard work” .  Set the tone with your team and define skill from a systemic and improvement standpoint rather than merely a technical one.

Check out the books in the far right column on this blog to find a handy DOJO compendium to get you started on this journey.  If you are serious about improving IT flow, reaping the drastic cost savings, increases in project execution and infrastructure reliability that result, feel free to contact me about mentoring and staff coaching.  It really does make a huge difference!

If you have stumbled upon a nugget on your journey please let me know I am @kevinbehr on Twitter - join the conversation!

 

5 Comments :, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , more...

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Archives

All entries, chronologically...