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Comparative study charts changes in service level management tools, acceptance and best practices
BOULDER, Colo., Aug. 23 -- A new study released by
Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), the leading independent IT
management research and consulting firm, reports that Service Level
Management (SLM) acceptance continues to grow and that IT executives
increasingly view SLM as a vital factor to business success. The 2007
comparative study shows that the number of surveyed organizations
implementing Service Level Agreements (SLAs) has risen to 82 percent of
respondents, a 26 percent increase since EMA's 2003 findings.
"This year's study really reinforces our findings from the last
several years. In addition to the increased adoption of SLM, companies
also reported the adoption and documentation of best practices, with 79
percent of respondents citing the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL) as
the preferred methodology," said Lisa Erickson-Harris, project lead and
research director at EMA. "Best practices adoption is a key factor in
SLM success, so this upward trend is encouraging."
The report marks EMA's continued commitment as a leading authority
on SLM trends, adoption and technology offerings. Led by founder and
CEO, Rick Sturm, EMA has consistently conducted the most in-depth
research on this emerging IT practice area, having published the highly
regarded books, Foundations of Service Level Management and SLM
Solutions: A Buyer's Guide, now in its third edition.
For EMA's most recent research report, SLM Acceptance: 2007,
Erickson-Harris and her team surveyed more than 80 IT professionals at
companies who currently manage or have plans to manage IT from a
services perspective. The survey covered respondents' SLAs and SLM
initiatives, including the enterprise adoption of IT Service Management
(ITSM), Business Service Management (BSM) and ITIL best practices, as
well as drivers, benefits, priorities and deployment challenges
associated with SLM.
Key findings that are detailed within the report include:
-- 90 percent of end users perceived SLM as critical or important to their
executives and directly tied to business survival
-- 82 percent of organizations surveyed have implemented SLAs
-- 79 percent of respondents cited ITIL as an adopted methodology
-- Internal education is key to success and also one of the greatest
challenges for organizations implementing SLM
-- 56 percent of end-user respondents report having no sense of ROI either
before or after employing best practices
-- More users associate IT-business alignment with BSM than with SLM
-- SLM and Configuration Management Database (CMDB) initiatives can
coexist very nicely -- as one survey respondent notes, "you can't do
sophisticated SLM without a CMDB"
EMA's research reveals a marked correlation between enforcing
standards and achieving results. SLM adoption, paired with the right
mix of best practices, is continuing to provide positive outcomes. More
than two-thirds of the respondents reported increased operational
efficiency and customer satisfaction after rolling out their SLM
initiatives.
"There are many other benefits to SLM acceptance," said
Erickson-Harris, "SLM can lead to deeper client relationships, improved
service levels, higher levels of profitability and a competitive
advantage. However, like any addition to networks or systems, these
benefits require planning, stamina and patience, and SLM is no
exception."
To complement the recently published study, Erickson-Harris will
share highlights from her findings during a free Webinar slated for
Thurs., Sept. 6, 2007 (http://www.emausa.com/ema_lead.php
?ls=SLMAcceptwebpr0907&bs=SLMAcceptweb0907) The Webinar will help
answer the question -- "Where on the scale of SLM maturity are most
corporations?"
In addition, a wealth of information on SLM and vendor solutions is available today through EMA's SLM Solutions Center (http://itsolutions.emausa.com/).
This free online resource provides the industry's most comprehensive
third-party analysis of IT management vendors and technologies,
including unbiased analyst profiles of more than 60 SLM products.
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