We hear a lot of talk these days about
KPAs and ITIL process areas. KPAs (Key Process Areas) are used to help
develop and measure the benchmarked standards of ITIL and are a good
way of measuring your organization’s ‘maturity’ level within an ITIL
process area (such as Configuration Management
KPAs apply to a repeatable maturity level. In the Infrastructure
Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL), a repeatable maturity level
means that the most important processes have been introduced and the
effective structure of the IT process in question is predictable, and
the provision of its IT-related services is repeatable.
So what about KPAs associated with Configuration Management? The
main purpose of Configuration Management is to establish and maintain
the integrity of products that are subject to or part of IT services.
Configuration Management involves the identification of the relevant
hardware and software components that need to be put under
configuration control. Changes to the configuration are evaluated with
respect to the service level agreement and with respect to possible
risks for the integrity of the configuration.
A Configuration Management plan covers the Configuration Management
activities to be performed, the schedule of the activities, the
assigned responsibilities, the resources required (including staff,
tools and computer facilities) and the CM requirements and activities
to be performed by the service delivery group and other related groups
With all these things in mind, you may be able to develop and
benchmark your Configuration Management KPAs using the following
questions. Remember that each question has three possible answers of
(1) consistently (2) inconsistently (3) never. Which category your
answers fall into will quickly steer your assessment of configuration
management maturity as either consistent (repeatable), inconsistent or
having no organized approach
Try your hand at some of these questions and see how your organization ranks against best practices.
Keep up the good work until next time.
Also, Don’t forget to register for Evergreen’s change management webinar: Take Change Management from Firefighting to Fire Prevention
Don
- Is a Configuration Management plan prepared for each service according to a documented procedure?
- Is a documented and approved Configuration Management plan used as
the basis for performing the Configuration Management activities?
- Is a Configuration Management library system established as a repository for the configuration base lines?
- Are the products to be placed under Configuration Management identified?
- Are action items for all configuration items/units initiated,
recorded, reviewed, approved, and tracked to closure according to a
documented procedure?
- Are action items for all configuration items/units initiated,
recorded, reviewed, approved, and tracked to closure according to a
documented procedure, by an automated process or toolset?