Showing posts with label capacity management maturity scale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capacity management maturity scale. Show all posts

Friday, 29 September 2017

Capacity Management Maturity, Assessing & Improving - 5 levels of process maturity (3 of 4)

As promised today I'll discuss the 5 levels of Capacity Management Maturity and what they mean.
They are:

Level 1 – Initial
Processes are undocumented and in a state of dynamic and chaotic manner. They tend to be driven in an ad hoc, uncontrolled, and reactive manner. Processes at this level tend to be unstable.


Level 2 – Repeatable
Some processes are repeatable, possibly with consistent results. Discipline is unlikely to be rigorous, but where it exists it may help to ensure existing processes are maintained during stressful periods.

Level 3 – Defined
Sets of defined and documented standard processes are established and subject to some degree of improvement over time.

Level 4 – Managed
Using process metrics, management can effectively control processes and identify ways to adjust and adapt the process to particular projects without losses of quality.

Level 5 – Optimized
The focus is on continual improvement through both incremental and innovative changes / improvements

Don't forget to register for our live webinar 'Capacity Management Maturity - Managed to Optimized' which covers how to get from Level 4 to Level 5 in your process. 

The final part of my series is on Tuesday, enjoy your weekend in the meantime.

Rich Fronheiser
Chief Marketing Officer

Monday, 24 July 2017

Capacity Management Maturity webinar (3) – Defined to Managed

The third part in our 'Capacity Management Maturity webinar' series is on the horizon.

It looks at how to successfully build on the proactivity now established within your Capacity Management process. At the defined level, we have component monitoring and automated reporting in place and the attention starts to focus on the Service and Business.

The webinar will specifically cover how interaction with Service and Business managers can help align the capacity management process with the Business and work towards IT having a more strategic partnership.

Moreover, we show how at the Managed level your Capacity Management process will provide additional benefits to the business through:

  • Increased Service quality and improved Service delivery through mature Service Capacity Management
  • Established working relationships with Service and Business Managers
  • Established automation of process integration (ITSM) via a CMIS
  • Integration of Service catalogues
  • Key stakeholder in the Change process
  • Key stakeholder in End to end SLA reporting

Join us on August 16 to continue the Capacity Management process maturity journey and identify the necessary steps and benefits it can provide. 

If you missed parts 1 and 2 of our Capacity Management Maturity series, then catch up by watching them on-demand.

Jamie Baker
Principal Consultant

Monday, 19 June 2017

Hardware's a commodity - Why bother managing capacity? Capacity Management Maturity levels (4 of 7)

As we look at each of these levels, consider how being at each of these levels as an organization can impact the perception of you as the Capacity Manager.

Level 1 – Initial
        No process activity
        Regular capacity breaches and outages
        Minimal funding
        No documentation or governance
        All CM activities are reactive
        Small pockets of CM – only in technical silos
        A mixture of platform-specific tools, no CM focus
Processes are undocumented and in a state of dynamic and chaotic manner.  They tend to be driven in an ad hoc, uncontrolled, and reactive manner.  Processes at this level tend to be unstable.
Organizations at Level 1 tend to not have dedicated Capacity Managers or teams dedicated to Capacity and Performance.  If you ask who manages capacity in the organization, you’ll typically hear that the administrators look at that (and everything else) and that there aren’t capacity problems often because “they buy a lot of hardware and make sure problems don’t happen.”
But problems happen anyway, since throwing hardware at problems doesn’t prevent all of them.
Level 2 – Repeatable
        Some acknowledgment of CM – technical silos actively managing capacity
        No objectives set, all activities still ad hoc
        Some process definition, focus is still reactive
        Pockets of people doing some CM
        Some key metrics captured, individual data sources
        Still very component focused
Some processes are repeatable, possibly with consistent results.  Discipline is unlikely to be rigorous, but where it exists it may help to ensure existing processes are maintained during stressful periods.
There are organizations at this level that have Capacity Managers.  These tend to be those organizations who have one person managing thousands of hardware components, usually with inadequate tools, data, and information.  Capacity Managers in these organizations are frequently thought of as firefighters and are as likely to be thought of as ineffective as effective, depending on the current day’s crisis.
Level 3 – Defined
        Capacity Management exists but communication interfaces are undefined
        Objectives set and basic capacity plans produced
        Processes are defined and documented
        Key deliverables are being produced – usually manually
        Roles and responsibilities are defined
        Component level data is being captured and stored centrally
        Reports are being generated automatically
        Component Capacity Management being done well – organization at a minimum is looking at Service Capacity Management
Sets of defined and documented standard processes are established and subject to some degree of improvement over time.  
Organizations that have reached this level are doing a pretty good job of Capacity Management from a technical perspective.
However, in today’s age of cost-cutting, I’d argue that this isn’t enough to guarantee that you’ll be considered vital to the future success of the business.  I’ve seen entire Capacity Management groups dissolved only for the organization to realize a year later how crucial they are.  That’s too late for you, the Capacity Manager.
The key point above to consider is the first one – Capacity Management has to actively consider and make an effort to put in place communication interfaces with various processes and teams:
        Administrators
        Storage
        Business analysts
        IT management
        Business management
        Other ITSM processes (Incident, Problem, Change, SLM, etc.)
Level 4 – Managed
        Capacity Management has been fully implemented and integrated with the business and IT
        Business objectives are defined (and being met)
        The process is proactively focused
        Process, activities, and communication interfaces are now documented
        IT is using defined Capacity Management processes and activities
        Capacity Management spans all IT with champions ensuring benefits are understood and being realized
        Component and service level tools being used
        Data stored in a CMIS
        Service Capacity Management has been implemented and is actively used
Using process metrics, management can effectively control processes and identify ways to adjust and adapt the process to particular projects without losses of quality.
Ideally, this is a great goal for an organization and the Capacity Manager.  Having a fully implemented Capacity Management process with a proactive focus with communication interfaces defined and actively used means the Capacity Manager and the team/process is considered a vital part of IT and the business.
Level 5 – Optimized
        Capacity Management now embedded in the business and culture
        Awareness of Capacity Management company-wide
        All Capacity Management objectives aligned with the business objectives
        Key capacity metrics included in all SLAs with all reactive/proactive elements understood
        An experienced and well-trained group supports the Capacity Management process, including a process owner, manager, and capacity champions
        All communications / interfaces are defined with relevant information automatically exchanged
        A strategic solution has been implemented – includes component, service, and business data
        Data captured is being analyzed and correlated using a CMIS
The focus is on continual improvement through both incremental and innovative changes / improvements.
Few organizations actually reach this level of maturity, but there are a few things here that the individual Capacity Manager can strive to implement.
The two key things here, in my opinion, are company-wide awareness of Capacity Management as well as the automatic exchange of information between teams, people, processes, and between IT and the business.
If Capacity Management is providing value to the rest of the business automatically, then that frees the Capacity Manager to provide even more value to the business in other areas, such as finding new interfaces / avenues to provide information or even improving the level of knowledge about specific IT services or the technologies that underpin those services.
Don't forget to fill out and submit our survey to find out where your organization is on the Capacity Management Maturity Scale 

Rich Fronheiser
Chief Marketing Officer

Monday, 3 April 2017

Capacity Management Maturity Webinar Series – Initial to Repeatable

We start our webinar series on April 12 by taking a look at the lowest level of CMMI process maturity, Initial.

Where do you start when attempting to address how mature a process within your organization?

Can you:
  • Clearly identify whether a Capacity Management process exists?
  • Derive and demonstrate understandable output from it?
  • Illustrate how the process works through supporting documentation?
  • Demonstrate control of the inputs to the process?
  • Guarantee you’re not losing time through a variable and undefined approach?
If you answer no or maybe to most of these, then it's possible that your Capacity Management process is at the Initial maturity level. Moving up to the Repeatable level will benefit you and your business by delivering relevant capacity management information in a consistent manner.

Join us on the start of this process maturity series as we take a deep-dive into practical steps you can take that will enhance your current activities to ensure that core capacity management information is delivered every time – the Repeatable level of the Capacity Management Maturity model.

Register for your place on our webinar now

Tuesday, 28 March 2017

Capacity Management Maturity, Assessing & Improving - 5 levels of process maturity (3 of 4)

As promised today I'll discuss the 5 levels of Capacity Management Maturity.

They are:

Level 1 – Initial
Processes are undocumented and in a state of dynamic and chaotic manner. They tend to be driven in an ad hoc, uncontrolled, and reactive manner. Processes at this level tend to be unstable.

Level 2 – Repeatable
Some processes are repeatable, possibly with consistent results. Discipline is unlikely to be rigorous, but where it exists it may help to ensure existing processes are maintained during stressful periods.

Level 3 – Defined
Sets of defined and documented standard processes are established and subject to some degree of improvement over time.

Level 4 – Managed
Using process metrics, management can effectively control processes and identify ways to adjust and adapt the process to particular projects without losses of quality.

Level 5 – Optimizing

The focus is on continual improvement through both incremental and innovative changes / improvements

Don't forget to check out our Resources, there are some great white papers and on-demand webinars available to you.

The final part of my series will be on Thursday.

Rich Fronheiser
Chief Marketing Officer

Monday, 25 January 2016

Capacity Management Maturity, Assessing & Improving (4 of 4)

Our Capacity Management Maturity Survey helps you to see where your organization scores on the Maturity Scale.

Capacity Management Maturity is not easy to achieve.

Most organizations that have dedicated Capacity Management functions or teams typically score either a 2 or a 3 in this model. Organizations that do not have dedicated teams or functions normally score between a 1 or a 2.

Our survey is a perfect discussion point between the Capacity Manager and management. The results of the survey provide quick feedback on areas to improve.

Using the survey to compare the results for your organization against others in your industry or geography gives an opportunity for you to see where you stack up….possibly identify where you are behind others so that you can catch up.

Take our survey now http://www.metron-athene.com/_capacity-management-maturity-survey/survey.asp

It’s the perfect opportunity to put processes in place that give your organization a competitive advantage over others in your industry.

If you missed my recent webinar 'Capacity Management Maturity, Assessing & Improving' catch it on-demand now http://www.metron-athene.com/_resources/on-demand-webinars/login.asp

Rich Fronheiser
Chief Marketing Officer

Friday, 22 January 2016

Capacity Management Maturity, Assessing & Improving - 5 levels of process maturity (3 of 4)

As promised today I'll discuss the 5 levels of Capacity Management Maturity.

They are:

Level 1 – Initial


Processes are undocumented and in a state of dynamic and chaotic manner. They tend to be driven in an ad hoc, uncontrolled, and reactive manner. Processes at this level tend to be unstable.

Level 2 – Repeatable
Some processes are repeatable, possibly with consistent results. Discipline is unlikely to be rigorous, but where it exists it may help to ensure existing processes are maintained during stressful periods.

Level 3 – Defined
Sets of defined and documented standard processes are established and subject to some degree of improvement over time.

Level 4 – Managed
Using process metrics, management can effectively control processes and identify ways to adjust and adapt the process to particular projects without losses of quality.

Level 5 – Optimizing

The focus is on continual improvement through both incremental and innovative changes / improvements

If you missed my webinar on Wednesday then you can listen to the live recording here

The final part of my series will be on Monday.

Rich Fronheiser
Chief Marketing Officer








Monday, 18 January 2016

Capacity Management Maturity - Assessing and Improving the Effectiveness (1 of 4)


Many organizations have a Capacity Management process or function in place, but no practical way to assess the effectiveness or even the strengths and weaknesses of the process or function.
This led to our development and refinement of a Capacity Management Maturity Assessment, consisting of 20 carefully chosen questions that help an organization assess maturity and effectiveness.
Once completed, the results will allow the Capacity Manager to better communicate the importance of Capacity Management and also create a plan to fill identified gaps going forward.
     Applying this assessment to multiple organizations allows comparisons to be made
between organizations and between an organization and others sharing characteristics such as type of business, geographical location, organizational size, among others.

This blog series will discuss the concept of Capacity Management Maturity, how the concept of maturity is defined and what are the building blocks that reflect a mature process or function within an organization.
Don't forget to register for my webinar on Wednesday Jan 20 'Capacity Management Maturity - Assessing and Improving the Effectiveness'
Rich Fronheiser
Chief Marketing Officer