Less than a quarter of UK IT chiefs have plans to seek accreditations based
on Itil best-practice frameworks for IT
management, according to a survey.
Itil originated in the UK through what is now the
Office of Government Commerce and has been
regarded as a success story at home and abroad, winning the recognition of many
infrastructure software giants, auditors and training firms. However, some
experts believe that certification may lag behind.
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IT service management firm Axios
Systems polled 147 IT managers and directors and found that only 23 percent
of respondents were looking for ISO/IEC 20000 accreditation to demonstrate
adherence to IT service management best practices. Forty-three percent have no
plans at all.
“Itil is such a large framework but many firms think that because they’re
doing incident management they’re doing Itil,” said Linda King, Axios marketing
manager. “Situations such as the Dell battery recall show how important it is to
be able to know your IT estate.”
Taken alone, the lack of willingness to pursue accreditation might not be a
major issue, especially for smaller firms, but Axios’s poll suggests basic asset
management, having a configuration management database (CMDB) and other key
steps are often ignored.
However, some experts said that even in one in four is a good start.
“I don’t think it’s bad for a kick-off,” said Peter Armstrong, corporate
strategist at BMC Software, which is building Itil process automation into
products. “ISO 20000’s precursor, BS 15000, was mostly ignored but I believe the
first wave for ISO 20000 will be people who want to have an edge or are acting
as service providers.”
Kosten Metreweli, vice-president of Tideway Systems, another developer of IT
management software, said, “Some customers like BT take Itil very seriously
whereas others will apply the spirit rather than the letter. They understand the
processes have to be right but they don’t see accreditation as important. A lot
of the banks are like that.”
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