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6 Posts tagged with the itsm tag

Join the dialog about trends in mobile BSM live at the World Wide RUG event in Las Vegas. Doug and I will be discussing what's hot, what's up ahead, and what you can do immediately to help your organization reduce costs and improve productivity. The session is Wednesday, November 11 at 3:00pm. See you there!

 

Can't join us? Download Doug's whitepaper about the right way to mobilize IT support.

 

 

By Dan Turchin, chief executive officer and co-founder of Aeroprise. Follow Dan on Twitter.

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.

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Join leaders from Dell, Cisco, and NetApp alongside BMC CEO Bob Beauchamp and our team of mobile ITSM experts for a full day of interactive demos, talks, and training. Hear from customers who are extending BSM to BlackBerrys, iPhones, bar code scanners, and cell phones. Learn why companies like Lennox International (NYSE: LII) and government agencies like the National Institutes of Health report 30-50% productivity gains and tighter alignment with business goals when executives, managers, and technicians proactively manage IT in real-time from anywhere.

 

We're excited to participate in this BMC-first, innovative, online-only event format and think you'll see why on October 29. Register here then ask for me at the booth and we'll send you an Aeroprise gift.

 

See you next week!

 

By Dan Turchin, chief executive officer and co-founder of Aeroprise. Follow Dan on Twitter.

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.

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-by Dan Turchin, chief executive officer and co-founder of Aeroprise. Follow Dan on Twitter.


Never Go Thirsty Again

 

I heard this story from a public utilities customer last week: a key node on their SAN that stores customer data for use by the billing system was approaching capacity. Through a nifty BMC Capacity Management-Change Management integration, it spawned a change request that was routed to a change manager with budget authority to approve the $10,000 worth of additional storage required. That's where the process broke down.

 

The approval never made it to the assigned delegate and instead sat in a queue while the manager vacationed in Rome. While he was en route to Tuscany, the SAN reached capacity and the approval request grew moss. While he sipped Chianti, the financial system went down. While he pontooned, 11,000 customers had their water shut off because late payments weren't processed. While he boarded to return, the CIO asked for heads on platters before being told their new mobile change approval system would prevent this from ever happening again.

Rewind the clock. What should have happened? Mobile change approvals are powerfully simple. With a click or two from anywhere in the world on a BlackBerry or mobile phone, basic requests receive basic replies in real-time: approved or rejected. Approvers have wireless access to full request history including details about underlying assets and their business impact. In the future, our utility friends will have mobile workflow that spawns mobile approvals that escalate until a response is received when an urgent reply is required. Delegates can't shirk responsibility, priority events are appropriately identified, and critical systems never fail for lack of timely response.

Sad but true: this customer said they routinely have requests that sit untouched for weeks. With mobile approvals, they should sit no more than an hour. Currently, 85% of downtime is caused by unplanned changes or failure to react quickly to planned ones. That should go down at least an order of magnitude within weeks. All of this will be accomplished with no new investment in infrastructure and only minimal retraining. And most important, it will turn wasted time - waiting in line, commuting, etc. - into productive time for their busiest people.

 

This is not a technology project. It's a business project facilitated by mobile technology. The kind of project that was foreign two years ago, is a hot topic today, and will be standard practice in the years ahead.


Click here for more information about Mobile Change Management from Aeroprise.

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.

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-by Dan Turchin, chief executive officer and co-founder of Aeroprise. Follow Dan on Twitter.

 

"Imagine a place where it's always safe and warm...Come in, she said: I'll give you shelter from the storm."

-Bob Dylan, 1974

 

Huge surge in customers turning on mobile reports in the past six months. It's nice to see interest in a feature I've always felt is underused and underappreciated. The recent activity got me thinking: what has changed? How come the same customers with the same business environments and devices suddenly changed how they're using Aeroprise in a pretty fundamental way?

 

No scientific proof but a decent amount of anecdotal evidence to back up this hypothesis...

 

Reports (we call them Executive Summaries) aggregate information about whatever matters to you into timely, actionable word bites. They're ideal for users who receive a lot of requests, have too little time to process them, and are driven by service targets. Our profile user for Exec Summaries is middle-aged, stashes his phone after hours (yeah, some people still do that), has 15 or more direct reports, and a bachelors degree or higher in some technical field. It goes without saying: in the past year that user's world has been turned upside down and shaken like a martini in a centrifuge.

 

In fact, it has changed faster than his ability to adapt. What do we do when new external pressures force internal changes beyond the safe harbor of current business habit? Since the Industrial Revolution, we've turned to technology. By definition, it helps us achieve more output per unit of input and it's needed more now than ever. It's also the reason smartphones are to modern business what ugly ties are to Wall Street.

 

So back to my point: just what has changed in the world of IT that makes mobile reporting so necessary all of a sudden? Here are four things:

 

1. In a tough economy, all decisions are more time-critical and bad ones have more impact. We're all working with skeleton crews under the watchful eye of axe-wielding CFOs. So while the volume of decisions to be made has only increased, they're more scrutinized than ever.

 

2. We're working with old software and equipment. One of the first casualties of the recession was the traditional upgrade cycle. So not only are we under more pressure to perform but we're working with tragically outdated tools.

 

3. The culture of mobility has infiltrated IT. Business users get instant updates about everything from flights to auctions to news - and expect the same level of responsiveness when they have IT issues. That, coupled with ever-evolving technologies IT must support - SaaS applications, mobile devices, and Windows 7 to name a few - mean IT is in a challenging state of flux.

 

4. IT is more strategic to the business than ever because the new global economy runs on technology. The line that once separated the CIO from the CTO is gone. These days, internal tools spawn external projects that often morph and spawn new internal tools. Case in point: we have a Fortune 50 customer in the oil industry that built a mobile application for monitoring the productivity of oil derricks based on their internal Aeroprise BMC Remedy helpdesk application.

 

So what does all this mean? I don't know - but it does explain the popularity of mobile reporting, a tool that helps make better decisions faster. Reminds me of the parched guy in the desert panting toward the mirage of a lake with a bottle of water in hand. That bottle won't quench his thirst forever but it will clear his head long enough to find a map. I guess what I'm saying is if you're using Aeroprise and not using reports, try it - sure beats dying of thirst.

 

Contact us if you need help configuring reports or just a pep talk to get you started. Oh, and if you're using them and have a success story to share, check out our customer reference program.

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.

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-by Dan Turchin, chief executive officer and co-founder of Aeroprise. Follow Dan on Twitter.

 

Frustrating experience at the pediatrician this week. The nurse measured our 19-month old daughter's head circumference, height, and weight and, type A geek that I am, I asked the same question I ask at every appointment: "can I see those graphed?" Here's the conversation that ensued:

 

Nurse: "No. Computer's down."

 

Me: "But they're networked. Can you use a different machine?"

 

Nurse: "No. System's down."

 

Me: "Huh?"

 

Nurse: "Tech came out three days ago. Said he didn't know we were upgraded. He’ll be back Friday."

 

Me: "So the whole system has been down for three days??"

 

Nurse: "Yeah. Real pain. We're manually updating charts like the old days. Then we'll hand-enter everything later."

 

Useful background: we chose this clinic in part because they use state-of-the-art diagnostic tools and our test results are available online immediately. Huge selling point but this outage makes the whole operation seem fragile and forces us to question the care we receive.

 

Back to the story: the nurse's answer was pathetic so I sought refuge in the basement (where, for some reason, all companies sequester IT). Sure enough, a surly tech had been dispatched with obsolete information about the whole system - hardware records were years out of date, network information was misleading, software config data dated back to when high technology meant leeches in an apothecary jar on the top shelf.

 

So here I am in a modern doctor's office in the cradle of Silicon  Valley and I can't look at my daughter's health records because some dude had no idea floor 3 had been upgraded in 2005. A silly problem with a simple solution - and an exchange that underscored what customers tell me every day: Mobile Asset Management changes everything.

 

Add off-the-shelf handheld bar code or RFID scanners interfaced to an Asset Management application and CMDB (all of which, by the way, the hospital purchased but doesn't use) and this whole experience is completely different. The outage that led to a week of downtime is resolved in hours not days. Nurses can focus on providing care - not excuses. And we can spend the extra five minutes spent wrestling with Dell paper weights understanding how Dara’s developing.

 

The days of physical inventories are over. 95% of all companies still update asset repositories the wrong way and the economic impact is in the billions. Why collect information manually that is obsolete before ever being entered and inaccurate when it finally is (which leads to more manual entry) when a simple application of mobile technology and smart software can automate the end-to-end process and eliminate human error? Never again should profit margins, productivity, or patient safety be sacrificed because too little information is known about what is owned or what condition it's in.

 

Dr. Levin. I hope you're reading this.

 

Click here for more information about Mobile Asset Management.

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.

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-by Dan Turchin, chief executive officer and co-founder of Aeroprise

Turns out these days the way to a CIO's wallet isn't through a diagram with clouds or a CMDB or a quad-core anything - it's through a BlackBerry.

We have a customer that was acquired recently by a large technology company. As a result, they're in the process of integrating IT systems and considering which applications stay and go. For a global IT organization with more than 350,000 employees, that's no small project. In fact, they issued an RFP for a new ITSM system months back and have entertained a steady stream of suitors since then. I'm an outsider but from what I've heard several things haven't surprised me about the process (and one has).

 

Vendors are savvy and differentiate themselves based on analyst ratings, customer success stories, after-sale support, and global reach. No surprise there. What surprised me is that with the exception of one feature, product enters the discussion infrequently. Why? ITSM products are so similar these days that going through the alphabet soup of ITIL this and SLM that is a waste of time. The one feature that comes up in every discussion is – you guessed it – wireless.

 

There was a time when wireless was heated seats and an extra cup holder. Now it's the steering wheel and engine. Not just an essential part of the sales pitch but the difference-maker that distinguishes strong from weak products, whole from partial ones. It turns out these days the way to a CIO's wallet isn't through a diagram with clouds or a CMDB or a quad-core anything - it's through a BlackBerry.

 

For this particular customer, wireless means productivity and a lot more. They've narrowed the field to two players, based almost solely on the strength of their mobile solutions. The vendors without a solution at all were easy to eliminate. The ones with immature or incomplete solutions sent the message that they're not innovative and don't see where the market is headed. According to the customer, vendors that lead with the strength of their mobile solution have the "it" factor. The others, not so much.

 

Customers need to feel confident that vendors meet today's basic requirements and, more importantly, get where computing will be tomorrow. Call it a tip. Call it a warning. Call it whatever you want. All I know is I’ve seen the future of enterprise software and PCs are asleep at the wheel.

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.
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