ITIL is the Information Technology Infrastructure Library. It’s basically a framework for effectively providing IT services within an organization, either internally, or externally. These services include helpdesk (or service desk, as it’s commonly described in the ITIL world), release management, incident management, configuration management, change management, etc. The idea is that there is a standard or best practice for handling every aspect of your IT operations.
Six Sigma, of course, is often associated with quality or manufacturing, but it is really about how to reduce error by implementing quality into the processes and continually improving those processes to meet the ever-changing customer demands and market dynamics. The idea, of course, if you pay attention to quality in while performing the work, then you reduce defects and re-work later on, ultimatley making an organization more profitable
Project management is the methodology of completing projects. How to define them, how schedule them, how to assess risks and maintain open communications. It’s how to get projects done and projects are always ongoing within IT organizations.
What all of these disciplines are really about is process. There’s a process in ITIL for how to handle a customer’s incident. There’s a process in Six Sigma for how to measure and interpret metrics and then apply that information to further refine other organizational processes. There’s a process in project management for how to handle project change requests. Of course these are not the only three processes in these frameworks. The frameworks themselves are a collection of multiple processes.
But what does this have to do with IT operations? How does this get the customer’s printer working again, or restore that failed blade server in the data center? It occurs to me that IT is, in and of itself, a collection of processes as well. Clearly IT benefits from ITIL, Six Sigma, and project management, but is there a comprehensive set of tools that one can use to incorporate all three of these frameworks? That is the topic of my thesis.