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American ITIL – Winning The Metadata Contest
Published: November 1, 2007 This article describes how an IT process excellence movement will energize and reinvigorate metadata management.
Old metadata campaigners understand the difficulty in establishing a metadata management program within their IT organization. After all, metadata management and enterprise architecture strategies frequently look like attempts to “solve world hunger” by “boiling the ocean” (sorry for the mixed metaphors), yet promise little immediate payback. On the other hand, how many metadata fire drills will it take before establishing an ongoing IT knowledge management framework begins to make sense? In other words, how many times do we have to be right before anyone listens? Let’s list a few examples:
What is the common thread in all of these examples – millions of dollars wasted because the organization lacks a reference library of all IT assets and their relationships. So what does ITIL (information technology infrastructure library) have to do with all this? For many of you, especially in the data management field, we probably need to start by describing ITIL. At the simplest level, ITIL is a set of books (literally) that define best practices for IT processes. The idea of defining IT best practices in a set of books is the brainchild of the OGC (Office of Government Commerce), which is a part of the British government. Here’s a quote from their website:
The itSMF is an international user group dedicated to promoting IT service management best practices and is the vehicle for IT organizations to get involved in the “movement.” Here’s a quote from the U.S. chapter website:
While ITIL covers many IT-related processes, of most interest are the “Service Support” and “Service Delivery” books that define the processes listed below.
This article will not detail these processes as most are fairly self-evident and the websites listed earlier contain a wealth of information on the topic. What is important to know however, is that while ITIL is all about process best practice, the processes are enabled by a metadata repository called the CMDB (configuration management database). The CMDB is an integrated database that underlies all of the Service Support and Service Delivery processes. It provides not only a catalog of IT assets (i.e., hardware and software components) but how they relate to one another. Furthermore (enterprise architects start paying attention), the CMDB also contains a model of all business services, how those services are supported by the underlying application systems, and how those application systems are supported by the underlying infrastructure. One of the fundamental principles of ITIL is a focus on moving IT organizations toward managing “services” versus “systems” (i.e., is the Order Entry website up versus is server xyz up). This requires not only the recording of physical assets in the CMDB, but also a conceptualization of the business itself in terms of business services and the automated systems that support those services – in short, an ontology of the organization enabling impact analysis, where-used analysis, and visualization of the complex relationships between business services, applications, and infrastructure. The introduction to this article states that ITIL will re-energize metadata management in the IT organization. Why is it that ITIL will succeed where past metadata management efforts have floundered? There are three simple reasons – ROI, ROI, and ROI. There’s a reason why ITIL is widely implemented in Europe and taking off in America – it works. Implementing ITIL best practice processes will reduce IT support costs and improve service delivery. And the secret sauce of ITIL isn’t the process; it’s the integrated knowledge repository called the CMDB that enables process integration and optimization. Simply put, the ROI contained within an ITIL implementation will fund the creation of the IT knowledge management framework, now called the CMDB. All of the above not withstanding, the term “metadata” does not appear in any of the ITIL documentation (nor do ITIL consultants use this term). While ITIL puts forward a far-reaching vision for IT knowledge management, it is hidden inside a vague description of the CMDB itself and how the ITIL processes are enabled by the CMDB. The ITIL documents themselves do not provide much prescriptive how-to information on building the CMDB, and that is where all you old metadata campaigners come in – run (don’t walk) down to your data center operations area and find out where they are in their ITIL implementation and volunteer your services to help out. Hopefully this article has piqued your interest in exploring ITIL and the opportunity it presents. Traditional metadata management efforts are fraught with danger and have experienced high failure rates. The ITIL CMDB effort will be no less challenging, but has the distinct advantage of the process improvement business model and ROI. Future articles will delve deeper into the subject by exploring the following areas:
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John Singer -
John Singer is a 26-year veteran information systems professional who has focused on data management activities including metadata management, data administration, database administration and enteprise architecture in both staff and management roles. Currently working as a data architect focusing on an ITIL CMDB implementation. John is a former MetaGroup industry analyst, and also has held positions in financial services, pharmaceutical, healthcare, manufacturing, retail, and criminal justice organizations. John teaches graduate level courses as an adjunct faculty member of Webster University. He may be reached at jsinger0420@yahoo.com. |