bsm review 2011 bsm maturity benchmark study
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BSMReview, a Business Service Management community of business and IT professionals, conducted a survey to measure the maturity of BSM initiatives industry-wide. The survey provides a 2011 benchmark for the adoption, perceptions and expectations of Business Service Management. The survey results validate the industry definition of Business Service Management, quantify its value to the organization and provide a means for organizations to assess the level of IT and business alignment based on market and business maturity. For more info visit: http://bit.ly/NetIQBSM or to watch BSM Reviews on-demand webinar visit: http://bit.ly/BSMReviewTRANSCRIPT

2011 BSM MATURITY
BENCHMARK STUDY
Copyright © 2011, BSMReview.com

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BSM Benchmark Survey
BSMReview, a Business Service Management community of business and IT professionals, conducted a survey to
measure the maturity of BSM initiatives industry-wide. The survey provides a 2011 benchmark for the adoption,
perceptions and expectations of Business Service Management. The survey results validate the industry definition
of Business Service Management, quantify its value to the organization and provide a means for organizations to
assess the level of IT and business alignment based on market and business maturity.
Readers will learn:
How other companies are assessing the value of BSM.
How your BSM maturity and initiatives compare to other
What others are doing to better align business with IT.
How others are measuring BSM effectiveness.
Survey Sponsors
The survey was conducted in the second quarter of 2011. With 157 completed responses the survey represents
a good cross section of company size, industry and views from both IT and business personnel.

4
What people are saying?
“IT agility is dependent upon extreme collaboration and transparency. Tools
and process can't get in the way of getting IT service management work
done. IT staff must be able to resolve known business problems with limited
IT resources. For ServiceNow, this BSM Review maturity report highlights the
different kinds of business demands on IT and the resulting need for a
collaborative platform that can bridge the gap between IT and business.”
“As is typical for major transformations such as BSM, progress never
seems fast enough and accurately gauging progress is a continual
challenge. This BSM Maturity benchmark study provides a view of the
current “state of BSM”, giving BSM practitioners perspectives on their
own “state of BSM” and how it compares with other BSM initiatives, as
well as a benchmark to measure their progress.”
Matt French
Marketing Director
Service-Now.com
Audrey Rasmussen
Partner
Ptak/Noel

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What people are saying?
"The survey results captured in this BSMReview report confirms the
importance of IT Service Management adoption as a means of
focusing IT strategy on business outcomes and objectives. Specific
findings reflecting that Business Service Metrics are best improved by
the maturity of IT Management processes and ITIL adoption does
indeed point to an increased generation.”
“Today’s business initiatives cannot relegate IT as an afterthought. At
Cherwell, we believe that technology is needed for every aspect of
business. The results of BSMreview’s 2011 survey confirms this need in
the business context of “RITE” … meaning that IT decisions and
deliverables must be Relevant, Integrated, Timely and Efficient if IT is
to successfully align with their business customers.”
Troy DuMoulin
AVP Strategic Solutions
Pink Elephant
Vance Brown
CEO and Chairman
Cherwell Software

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Survey Demographics
Title
Executive (CEO, CIO, VP)
Director/Manager
IT Operations
IT Consultants
47%
20%
17% 16%
Company Size
1 to 99
99 to 999
1000 - 4999
5000+
23%
16%
43%
18%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
Industry Sector
Resp
onse

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About the Survey Demographics
The BSMReview survey was able to capture a reasonable breadth and size of survey demographics. From an industry perspective, there were significant participation from the financial services and technology industry segments, as well as ―cross industry‖ which tended to be IT consultants providing services to multiple types of companies. The survey also captured a reasonable response from manufacturing, health care, government and education enterprises. There was only a moderate response from retail, energy and telecom industries. However, survey responses demonstrated an unexpected consistency re: IT perceptions by both IT and the business communities that seemed to be independent of type of industry …thus confirming the horizontal demands for IT deliverables.
The more interesting survey results surfaced in the role (executive, manager, staff or consultants) or function (IT or business) demographics and will be highlighted when and where appropriate. If there were noteworthy differences in responses to specific questions, it surfaced primarily in the role or function played within the organization. Another interesting result was the difficulty in determining the impact of size upon the responses. We expected there to be greater harmony between IT and business perspectives within smaller companies and less within larger enterprises. However, size seemed to have minimal impact upon the variation of opinions regarding successful alignment between IT and their business customers, as well as in the perception of business and IT maturity.
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Table of Contents
Take Note
We identified survey
summary data in the left
sidebar with
―Response”.
Conclusions and
observations with
―BSMReview Insight”.
Executive Summary
BSM Maturity Assessment
IT Investment Decisions
Business/IT Culture
Service Level Management
ITIL Adoption
Benchmark Conclusions
Final Recommendations

This is the first benchmark study to assess BSM maturity industry-wide. The study measures and compares IT and Business maturity, extracts independent operational views based on department, role and titles and offers insight into the current and future state of Business Service Management.
Executive Summary

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Survey Highlights Both Business and IT personnel agree on the high-level definition of Business Service Management, i.e. IT
investments and capabilities are aligned with Business maturity and strategic goals.
However perceptions and reality are not what they seem:
Business personnel see IT as a Tactical, not operating as a strategic part of the business – operating at level 1 or 2 of the BSM maturity model
IT personnel see IT as Strategic, providing strategic business value to the business – operating at level 3 or 4 of the BSM Maturity Model
The 2011 Benchmark Study shows that businesses are maturing at a higher rate than IT and, as such, IT is struggling to keep pace with the business
There remains a significant ―information‖ gap between business and IT regarding how technology could, or should, be leveraged to support business growth and competitive differentiation
The good news is that the nearly half of enterprises have achieved pretty good alignment with their business counterparts and are meeting expectations
But, too many IT shops are in danger of being marginalized as the lack of investment in IT leads to less innovation and IT services that are inadequate to satisfy the longer term needs of the business
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A bit about the BSM Maturity Model
Effective BSM (IT/Business alignment) alignment occurs when IT is operating at a level that meets business imperatives
Maturity of IT Operations should move in a consistent pattern with Business Maturity
An IT ―aligned‖ organization delivers the technology/services required for customer focused business value that ensures competitive differentiation
The BSM Maturity Model can be obtained by clicking here.
Level IT
Maturity
Business
Maturity
Business
Benefits
Business
Metric
5 Pervasive Market
Leadership
Sustained
Competitive
Advantage
Market
Expansion
4 Optimized Competitive
Differentiation
Product &
Service
Leadership
Market
Penetration
3 Aligned Business Value Customer
Acquisition &
Retention
Profit
Maximization
2 Predictive Secure &
Reliable
Operations
Cost Effective
Operations
Revenue
Focuses
1 Essential Business
Fundamentals
Technology
Supporting
Business
Minimize IT
Investment
BSM Maturity Model

12
A Yardstick for Measuring BSM Maturity
We derived the current state of Business Service Management by evaluating survey responses along maturity continuum:
Business Maturity - from sustaining market share to obtaining and holding the market leader position
IT Maturity - from providing a low-cost utility infrastructure to delivering innovative technology for strategic advantage
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Busi
ness
Ma
turi
ty
IT Operational Maturity
Aligned
Strategic
Innovative
Aligned
Utility
Cost Efficient
Not Aligned
Strategic IT
Immature Business
Utility Strategic
Lea
der
Sus
tain
Not Aligned
Strategic Business
Immature IT

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BSM Maturity – The Desired State
The optimal or desired state of Business Service Management is when IT operational maturity is aligned with the maturity of the business.
Good BSM alignment happens when Business and IT are investing and operating at, or near, same level of maturity.
Poor BSM alignment occurs when one or the other is operating at a higher or lower level of operational performance, creating costly inefficiencies and/or missed opportunities.
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Busi
ness
Ma
turi
ty
IT Operational Maturity
Aligned
Strategic
Innovative
Aligned
Utility
Cost Efficient
Not Aligned
Strategic IT
Immature Business
Utility Strategic
Lea
der
Sus
tain
Not Aligned
Strategic Business
Immature IT

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2011 Benchmark – The Current State
2011 Benchmark – Current Reality
The degree of BSM alignment is greater than we anticipated, but almost half of shops with immature IT are attempting to serve needs of more mature business leadership.
There were only a few cases where IT was operating ahead of business maturity.
The current reality is that IT is playing catch-up with business maturity, and the fact is that businesses are maturing at faster rate than IT. The challenge for IT is to maximize the pace of change and demonstrate strategic value to the business.
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Busi
ness
Ma
turi
ty
IT Operational Maturity
Aligned
Strategic
Innovative
Aligned
Utility
Cost Efficient
Not Aligned
Strategic IT
Immature Business
Utility Strategic
Lea
der
Sus
tain
Not Aligned
Strategic Business
Immature IT
Current Reality

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IT is at Risk at being Marginalized
As a result of disconnect between current and desired state, IT is at risk of being increasingly marginalized.
Probably the biggest surprise was that a large majority of the businesses were perceived as having significant business maturity, particularly by the non-executive personnel. In spite of budget cutbacks, layoffs, loss of consumer buying power and increasing regulatory unknowns, these respondents feel that their companies are achieving their business goals and moving up the business maturity spectrum.
While IT personnel see themselves continually moving up the ―IT maturity‖ spectrum, business personnel maintain in their responses that IT remains a tactical focus within their company, and are not operating as a strategic part of the business thrust.
The survey highlights the dichotomy of business operating at an aggressive, mature ―business‖ level, while IT struggles at an immature level of response to the technology demands of their business counterparts. The danger in this conflict is that while IT is getting better and better at managing IT, they are in increasing danger of being permanently marginalized on the outskirts of “business” contribution.
Interestingly, it was evident that the lower levels of IT operations are struggling to understand technology’s contribution within the bigger ―business‖ picture, yet were consistently demonstrating a more cynical perception of how technology was not being appropriately leveraged.
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In this section we converge on the definition of BSM and assess both IT and
Business maturity.
BSM Maturity Assessment

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What best describes your definition of
Business Service Management?
The definition of Business Service Management is gaining consensus, but there remains a need to better define BSM to achieve market clarity and expectations.
2/3 or 66.7% defined BSM as a:
Business-oriented approach to IT operations & deliverables
Measurable activity for aligning IT with Business objectives
Rejected, but still existing in the industry:
Running IT as a business (11.6%)
Process approach to ITSM (17.1%)
Managing application performance (3.9%)
BSM Definition Response
BSM is measurable activity for aligning IT with
business objectives 34.9%
BSM is a business-oriented approach to IT
operations and deliverables 31.8%
BSM is a (mature) process oriented approach to IT
service management 17.1%
BSM focuses on "running IT as a business entity" 11.6%
BSM is managing and analyzing application
performance 3.9%
Resp
onse

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Increasing consensus that Business needs to
drive definition of BSM
For almost a decade, the discipline of Business Service Management (BSM) has been largely focused on resolving the lack of strategic alignment between the business community and the IT organization. Vendors, standards bodies, user organizations, and consulting houses have all attempted to capture the promise of BSM — with notable success. Yet the existence of multiple definitions of BSM illustrates the current confusion surrounding this IT discipline.
The statements which focused on the business driving the definition of acceptable IT service management were the predominant responses within the BSMReview survey:
35% - ―BSM is a measureable activity for aligning IT with business objectives‖ …note the emphasis on metrics focused on achievement of business goals
32% - ―BSM is a business-oriented approach to IT operations and deliverables‖ …note the focused approach coming from the business perspective and not IT’s
Other definitions paled by comparison. Confining the BSM discussion to ITSM processes captured less than half of either of the above responses. Running IT as a business was less than one third of the above responses. Focusing BSM attention solely on application performance was one tenth of the above answers.
This growing consistency in the expectations of BSM’s contribution to IT and business working more effectively together is a positive industry direction.
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What best describes your company’s
business goals?
All groups tend to view their company’s business
goals as very mature - meaning the company has a
unique competitive differentiation and is a market
leader.
Strong agreement that their businesses are
operating at levels 3 & 4 (mature businesses)
Good agreement that their business are
operating at level 5 (market leader)
Yet 55% of executives also feel that company is
only doing what is necessary to sustain business
Whereas IT staff and mid-level managers
strongly disagree with this statement
Response Options
(Strongly agree or agree)
Exec
View
IT
View
The company does only what is necessary to sustain
the business
Business Maturity – Level 1
55% 30%
The company focuses on tactical operations that secure
short-term value to stockholders and employees
Business Maturity – Level 2
55% 55%
The company emphasizes strategic initiatives that
maximize long-term profitability and business value
Business Maturity - Level 3
82% 80%
The company focuses on creating product and service
leadership for competitive differentiation
Business Maturity - Level 4
82% 80%
The company is recognized as the market leader and
uses that unique competitive advantage to enter new
markets
Business Maturity - Level 5
73% 67%
Resp
onse

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Are Company’s Really this Mature?
The consistency which all groups view the maturity of the business as ―very‖ mature was surprising. Few respondents felt that the primary business objective was to focus on ensuring the business was secure and reliable and delivering the short term value (profit) most prized by stockholders and employees. Yet almost 9 out of 10 respondents felt that their company was ―focused on creating product and service leadership for unique competitive differentiation‖ or ―emphasized strategic initiatives that maximize long-term profitability and business value through customer emphasis.‖ Even more surprising, 7 out of 10 identified their company as market leaders with a competitive advantage that could not be replicated and provided unique entrees into new markets.
Given the state of the economy, the need to retrench, to ensure cost-effectiveness and still preserve revenue options, this strategic, mature state of the business was a welcomed finding. However, one interesting contradiction involved nearly 60% of executives and business respondents stating that the company was only doing what was necessary to sustain the business, which would negate unique competitive differentiation and market leadership.
Even more interesting was the finding that nearly 70% of IT staff and mid-level managers completely disagreed with the ―only doing what was necessary‖ statement … implying a more correct understanding that you can’t have it both ways. A company cannot be constrained to doing only what was necessary to sustain the business, yet characterize that same business as a market leader with a unique competitive advantage that could not be replicated by any other business competitor. It was intriguing to find that the IT worker bees ―got‖ that contradiction and the executives and business respondents did not.
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What best describes your company’s view
of Technology?
Large majority of employees view technology
as critical to company’s success - yet IT feels
much more can be done with technology to
enhance competitiveness
Every role views contribution of technology in
very positive way
Healthy disagreement that technology is limited
to performing basic business functions
Using technology as a unique competitive
advantage was agreed to by business &
consultants (83% combined)
but disagreed by IT oriented roles (70%)
Response Options
(Strongly agree and agree)
Business
View IT View
We use technology to create product and
service leadership in our industry 84% 55%
We leverage technology to focus on
customer acquisition and retention 84% 75%
We use technology to ensure cost
effective operations 91% 80%
Our technology provides us with a
unique, sustained competitive
advantage 83% 30%
We limit the use of technology to basic
business functions 42% 67%
Resp
onse

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How does your company recognize the
benefit from technology?
― … is a key component to delivering quality with speed to market‖
―… allows us to provide exceptional patient care‖
―… enables top line revenue growth and margin improvement‖
―… improved finding of Oil & Gas and the development of these assets‖
―… reduced operational costs and customer satisfaction‖
―We are a technology center …technology is our livelihood‖

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Conflicting Views of Technology Contribution
There was a strong, healthy majority of respondents that deemed technology as critical to the company’s success.
However, there were significant differences between the business and IT people regarding the best or correct
view of technology’s contribution. For example, 83% of business respondents agreed that technology provided
the company ―with a unique, sustained competitive advantage‖ while only 30% of the IT respondents felt that
way. A second example involved 84% of business agreeing that technology was used by their company ―to
create product and service leadership in our industry‖ while only a slight majority (55%) of IT felt that way.
Why would there be such a difference in their viewpoints?
Yet, the percentages were swapped for the statement that the company ―limits the use of technology to basic
business functions‖ with only 42% of business agreeing while a much larger percentage (67%) of IT expressed
stronger agreement. Again, why this discrepancy between the two camps?
Apparently business personnel grasps the impact technology has upon competitive advantage and
product/service leadership where that perspective is only available to a smaller subset of the IT organization.
However, the reverse disparity between business and IT regarding ―limiting technology to only basic functions‖
implies that IT has a better grasp on the opportunity that technology brings to the corporate objectives and
nearly two-thirds of IT are responding that technology’s contribution to business value is mismanaged or
misunderstood.
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In this section we discuss how IT investment decisions are made and assess, to
what extent, those decisions are aligned with the business.
IT Investment Decisions

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What BEST describes how IT technology investment
decisions are assessed and made within your organization?
There tends to be a strong feeling IT investments
are a collaborative effort, especially with top
management in the company.
Majority of Business, IT and Consultants
(Executives and Managers) felt that IT
investment decisions were jointly sponsored by
IT and Line-of-Business executives and that
CIO and CEO were working in tandem
However, IT Staff felt IT was making IT
decisions based primarily on cost justification
or sponsored solely by IT.
Sponsored solely by IT
Limited to cost
justification with our CFO
Jointly sponsored by IT and
LOB executive
CEO and CIO are
working in tandem
CIO is trusted to
make independent
decisions
7.9%
14.0%
38.6%
24.6%
13.2%
Resp
onse

26
IT investment decisions, differing perspectives
Probably one of the most telling symptoms of IT/Business alignment involves how IT investment decisions are
made and by whom. Identifying annual budgets for IT operations, approving IT projects, and maintaining
adequate IT staff required to ―do‖ the job … all whisper the true agreement or disagreement between IT and
their business customers. If IT projects are continually turned down and IT is expected to work miracles in
keeping legacy systems performing while constantly investing in new, mission-critical applications without
adequate funding, then there is no adequate IT/business alignment.
In this case, there was generous agreement between all functions (business, IT, system consultants) that IT and
Business were jointly making IT investment decisions and that the CIO and CEO were working toward common
goals. The disparity surfaced in the roles that individuals played within the enterprise -- 82% of mid-level
managers and 63% of executives (…healthy majorities) supported this perception of harmony in IT investment
decisions. Yet only a minority (45%) of IT was able to support such claims with the same minority (45%) feeling
that IT investment decisions were based primarily on cost justification. Again, the obvious conclusion is that IT
staff is not getting the business insight or cooperative perspective that is shared at the management level and IT
staff therefore cannot be expected to share in the apparent optimism of the management group. We conclude
that this is a management communication issue that can easily be addressed.
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What are the top obstacles that your company faces in
terms of aligning business and IT investments?
Both IT and business see poor alignment due
to the general lack of understanding of the
―value of alignment‖.
The lack of understanding is rooted in
Ineffective Communication (47%)
The lack of understanding is no doubt
affecting the level of commitment
through Budget/Resources applied to
alignment (51%) Ineffective communication of
business strategy to IT management team
Lack of IT understanding of the value of business alignment
Lack of business understanding of the value of IT alignment
Lack of budget and resources applied to creating alignment
between business and IT
47.4%
43.0%
53.5%
50.9% Resp
onse

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BSM Immaturity Surfaces as an Obstacle
Certain obstacles that are frequently identified as causing a disconnect between IT and business were only
selected by a small minority of the respondents. These include:
IT making budget/investment decisions in a vacuum (17%)
Business units making their own technology decisions (26%)
Business receiving weak support from IT executives/staff (17%)
However, the survey responses clearly identified the ―lack of understanding‖ of the value of IT alignment by the
business or the value of business alignment by IT. Almost half of all respondents identified ineffective
communication of the business strategy to the IT management team as a primary cause of this lack of
understanding.
Just over half of all respondents also identified the ―lack of budget and resources‖ being applied to improving
alignment between business and IT.
Unfortunately implying that corporate decision makers were not recognizing the need to plan and invest in
improving business/IT alignment.
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Considering how your company makes IT financial investment
decisions, please indicate your level of agreement with the
following statements.
IT investment decision criteria is highly
consistent with views expressed on company
goals – that business goals and IT investments
are focused on Maturity Levels 3 and 4
Significant disagreement (63%) that decisions
are focused on cost containment – particularly by
mid-level/staff and IT (68-78%)
Significant agreement that decisions are based
on revenue contribution (68%), profit margins &
customer relationships (67%) – particularly by
business & consultants (88-96%) Solely based
on cost containment
Determined by revenue
contribution and cost
containment
Focused on maximizing profits and
strengthening customer
relationship
Prioritized to optimize market
penetration
Create unique technology
infrastructure for unfair
competitive advantage
5% 6% 12% 7% 5%
25%
62% 55%
42%
18%
50%
21% 23%
36%
47%
13% 5% 5% 7%
15%
Strongly agree Agree Disagree Strongly disagree
Resp
onse

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IT Investment Decisions - Quotes
Best Case
―IT investments are determined by added value, effectiveness and efficiency of the business‖
Typical Case
―Investments build a global infrastructure and product set that should improve efficiency and drive business‖
Worst Case
―IT investments are always reactionary‖
Resp
onse

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Business Goals Impact IT Investment Decisions
The survey identified a strong cause/effect relationship between the ―business‖ goals of the company and the
resulting IT investment decisions. Those companies that had strong identification earlier in the survey questions
for business goals of long-term profitability and business value as defined by customers (Level 3 Business
Maturity) or product/service leadership and competitive differentiation (Level 4 Business Maturity) ...expressed
significant agreement that IT investment decisions were based on revenue, profits and customer relationships (77-
83%), particularly by business and consultants (88-96%). To a lesser extent, there was also healthy
disagreement (63%) that IT decisions were focused on cost containment (Level 1 and 2 Business Maturity). This
disagreement was particularly expressed by those most affected by the IT investment decisions …namely mid-
level IT management and IT staff.
Fortunately, the consistency between the cause (business goals) and the effect (IT investment decisions) provided
good validation of the earlier assessment of what was driving the business agenda of companies surveyed
…meaning that individuals within IT are gaining a better understanding of the impact of IT on the business, even
if the company’s behavior frequently did not follow through with that increased understanding.
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In this section we explore how business and IT work toward an alignment
and uncover some interesting perceptions of IT based on role and title.
Business/IT Culture

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How is business operations involved with IT?
Functions (Business and IT Operations) are fairly consistent regarding business involvement with IT. Differences surface in roles -- with Executives feeling Business more involved and IT staff feeling Business is much less involved.
Significant agreement (all roles & all functions) that ―business holds IT accountable for continuous business improvement though technology‖
Exec (41%), Mid-level (39%), Staff (53%)
Business (48%), IT Ops (43%)
Yet, significant difference between IT and Business exists regarding that "business accepts IT operational requirements and finance approves minimal budget."
Business expects IT to operate
like a utility and has no other interest in IT
Business accepts IT operational requirements and finance approves
minimal budget
Business requires regular IT updates
regarding IT investment
targets and operation results
Business insists upon
measurable results within 6-12 months of IT
investment decision
Business holds IT accountable for
continuous business
improvement through
technology
30%
22%
30% 30%
48%
34% 37% 38%
22%
43% Biz View IT View
Resp
onse

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How is business operations involved with IT?
“Business expects IT to add value, but IT seems to be interested in
protecting turf. IT accepts little responsibility for anything.”
“Depends on Business Unit, some just want a utility and others want
active participation.”
―Business evaluates impact of IT as a service differentiator.‖
Resp
onse

35
Better IT Communication = Better Alignment
There was healthy agreement that ―business holds IT accountable for continuous improvement through
technology.‖ Disagreement with that statement is almost like disagreeing with motherhood and apple pie.
However, the more interesting part of the survey results identified the disparity between IT executives and IT
staff on the statement ―business expects IT to operate like a utility and has no other interest in IT‖.
The executives, who have the better connections with their business counterparts, disagree with this statement
88% of the time, whereas IT staff, who have the least common connections with the business, disagree only 44%
of the time.
The resultant conclusion is that while the business feels their issues and requirements are being heard by IT
executives, this communication is not being passed down to the worker-bees … thereby not empowering them to
alter behavior as they interact and serve their customer base.
The issue here is not the business’s communication to IT, but IT executive’s communication to IT staff.
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How do business and IT interact or
cooperate in your company?
While IT feels responsive, there is definite lack of trust
& cooperation between IT and Business regarding
meeting the needs of the business.
The majority of IT roles (52%) view IT as responsive to reasonable business requests, but are not expecting miracles, while just 30% of Business responses see IT as responsive.
Generally the scores reflect the lack of trust and cooperation between IT and Business
Roughly only 25% feel that IT can be trusted to do the right thing in leveraging technology for business benefits, and feel that Business does not trust IT and has minimum confidence in IT meeting Business needs
Business less supportive of all descriptions of Bus/IT interaction …ranging from 19-30%
Resp
onse
Business does not trust IT and has minimum confidence in IT meeting business needs
Business feels IT is responsive to reasonable IT requests, not expecting IT miracles
IT is recognized for contributing to reduction in production costs of existing products &
services
IT has a history of success in automating business process improvements
Business effectively leverages IT for core operating processes (supply chain, CRM,
product innovation...)
IT is trusted to do the "right" thing in leveraging technology for business benefits
19%
30%
33%
26%
30%
26%
30%
52%
34%
25%
33%
25%
Biz View IT View

37
“IT has a history of not delivering on time or on budget & when on-time,
functionality doesn’t work”
“The business submits work requests, IT determines required and available
resources, and business prioritizes projects”
“We are a large organization, so trust is higher in some areas than others.
Executive level is NOT yet supportive of a single approach or point of view”
“Business is beginning to participate in governance activities to prioritize IT
projects”
How do business and IT collaborate?
Resp
onse

38
Evidence of Collaboration is Minimal
Responses to this question seem to confirm the unfortunate trend that while IT is getting better and better at what they do …and are recognized for their responsiveness, the value of their business contribution is becoming increasingly marginalized. This set of questions focused on how business and IT were actually collaborating. Yet some of the lowest scores on the survey were in response to some descriptions of how business & IT collaborates.
There was minimal agreement that ―business trusts IT and has confidence in IT meeting business needs‖. Yet in a similar question with the statement reversed, there was only minimal agreement that ―IT is trusted to do the right thing in leveraging technology for business benefits‖.
The only plausible explanation for the contradiction is that business really doesn’t trust IT to meet business needs, but they do trust IT to leverage the use of technology, which a much more restrictive contribution from an IT point of view.
Other examples of IT not being effective in their collaborative behavior include: ―Business feels IT is responsive to reasonable requests‖ achieved fair agreement with most roles, but business
respondents did not support this premise with 70% disagreeing. Minimal agreement with the following statements:
―IT has a history of success in automating business process improvements‖ ―IT is recognized for contributing to reduction in production costs‖ ―Business effectively leverages IT for core operating processes‖
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What is your opinion of IT operations?
One of the most interesting responses in the survey with significant contradictions (safe vs. strategic) and disagreements (real-time visibility & early adopter):
Strong agreement (all roles, all functions):
IT operations uses only proven, safe technologies and is not an early adopter of leading edge technology
IT operations is core to strategic business execution
Differences surface:
Business (96%) agree that IT provides real-time visibility into business impact of technology issues, while IT is less convinced (46% of IT responses)
Business perceives IT is an early adaptor of leading edge technologies (86%) while IT disagrees (only 36% agree)
Resp
onse
Has little to no technical strategy (services are managed to be "good
enough")
Uses only proven, safe technologies that have been validated and
tested elsewhere
Provides real-time visibility into business impact of technology issues
Is an early adopter of leading edge technologies
Is core to strategic business execution
48%
66%
48%
36%
70%
50%
75%
96%
86%
74%
Strongly Agree/Agree
IT View Biz View

40
Technology Understanding is a GAP
This set of questions provoked some of the most interesting responses in the survey. For example, there was
strong agreement that ―IT operations uses only proven, safe technologies‖ and is not an early adopter of
leading edge technology. However, there was also strong agreement that ―IT operations is core to strategic
business execution.‖ It seems an anomaly that IT uses only safe technologies and can still be ―strategic‖
(…implying long-term vision) to business execution.
The disagreement between IT and business respondents regarding how IT ―provides real time visibility into
business impact of technology issues‖ serves to highlight how the various roles in the company affects their point
of view. In this case, executives agree with this premise most of the time whereas mid-level IT management and IT
staff don’t see it that way. Apparently IT is delivering real time visibility to business impact …but only the
executives seem to see it, as it is somewhat invisible to the mid-level and staff positions.
There was some disagreement regarding IT being ―an early adopter of leading edge technologies.‖ The
business perspective has strong agreement with this statement while IT staff largely disagrees. Implication being
that IT staff have a better grasp of what is considered leading edge technologies and executives operate under
older, different definitions of what constitutes ―leading edge.‖
BSM
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In this section we explore the impact of service performance and outages on
business operations.
Service Level Management

42
What is the level of impact of performance and service outages?
IT and Business View
IT and Business have different, sometimes opposing views on how IT service outages and performance impact business operations
Both agree on lost revenues and employee productivity, but
Business places higher impact on poor customer retention and decreased business agility (business issues)
IT Operations places higher impact on visibility by external customers (perception issues)
Business Impact IT View Business
View
Lost Revenues High High
Poor Customer Retention Medium
High
High
Increased Time-to-Market Medium Medium
Decreased Business Agility Medium High
Employee Productivity High High
Increased Cost to Business
Operations
Medium Medium
Visibility to External Customers High Medium
Resp
onse

43
What is the level of impact of performance and service outages?
Business Impact Executive
s
Mid-Level IT Staff
Lost Revenues Medium High Medium
Poor Customer Retention Low Medium
High
Medium
Increased Time-to-Market Low Medium Medium
Decreased Business Agility Low Medium Medium
Employee Productivity High High High
Increased Cost to Business
Operations
Medium Medium
High
Medium
Visibility to External Customers Medium Medium
High
Medium
Role/Title View
Opposing views surface on how IT service
outages and performance impact business
operations based on role and title.
All roles (Exec, Mid-level, Staff) agree that
IT issues have highest impact on employee
productivity, but
Mid-level roles tend to have greater
awareness of IT issues on lost revenues,
customer retention, increased cost and
external visibility
Resp
onse

44
Limited Alignment of ―Business Impact‖
Both IT and business strongly agree that there is a high impact of IT performance and service outages on lost
revenues and employee productivity. Agreement is a nice thing. However, business places a higher impact of IT
performance and service outages on poor customer retention and decreased business agility. IT places a higher
impact on visibility to external customers. The implication might be that IT understands there is a negative impact
to external customers not being able to interface to the company …but business carries that loss of external
visibility to the business issues of retaining existing customers and in maintaining business agility …issues that IT
might have difficulty comprehending.
In moving to differences as expressed by role within the company (…executive vs. mid-level vs. staff), a even
greater disparity surfaces. For example, there is widespread agreement among all roles that there is a high
impact to employee productivity from IT performance and service outages …that being the only high impact
assessed by IT staff (?). Conversely, executives rated the business impact of lost revenue, poor customer
retention, increased time-to-market and decreased business agility lower than mid-level or staff personnel.
Given the dominance of those metrics within existing IT organizations, the implication might be that executives
understand the need for more business-oriented ―alignment‖ metrics sooner and more clearly than mid-level and
staff personnel.
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45
How have IT service metrics changed in
the past 12 months?
High consistency between IT and
Business regarding how service metrics
have changed, with two exceptions:
IT feels time between service slowdowns
has marginally improved (65%)
compared to optimistic view of Business
(90%) – implying slowdowns are not
visible to Business community
Business responds optimistically (65%)
regarding IT/Business alignment while
IT responds on average that services
have not improved, mostly stayed the
same
95%
84% 90% 90%
70%
80%
65%
77%
60% 70% 65%
70% 73% 66%
Service availability
Time between service outages
Service performance
and/or response times
Time between service
slowdowns and/or
brownouts
Number of issues or incidents reported
Business staff satisfaction with services
managed by IT operations
Understanding of IT/Business
alignment requirements
Improved or Stayed the Same
Business View IT View Resp
onse

46
Business/Executives View Metrics Improving
There is both good and bad news in these responses on metrics. On one hand, IT has been able to maintain
good service and support during one of the worst economic downturns in history … or IT is doing more with less.
On the other hand, IT has not made significant improvements from the BSM perspective of IT moving to higher
levels of business maturity -- where typical IT performance metrics have yet to be replanted with business
oriented IT metrics.
Business perceives a healthy improvement for Service Availability and Service Performance metric, and IT
confirmed Service Availability as reasonably improved.
Executives viewed Service Availability, Service Performance and Business Staff Satisfaction as experiencing
healthy improvement in the last 12 months. However, IT Staff was not nearly as positive. Interestingly, IT staff
felt metrics declined only 7-8% of the time …the lowest of any group.
Those responsible for tracking the metrics have a more restrictive view of how these metrics might have changed
for the better. The result of the business and executive assessment indicates a more positive perception exists …
or they don’t care about the metrics identified.
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47
What actions should be taken to improve
IT performance metrics?
Belief by all roles & functions that process improvement is the best way to improve service metrics which supports continued industry focus on ITIL best practices.
Investments in new solutions or technology, or upgrades of existing technology is supported by only 29-31% of respondents
The vast majority, 66%, of respondents believe that IT operational metrics can be improved by improving service management processes.
We believe that this indicates better awareness and expectations of ITIL and higher adoption rates of ITIL processes
That is a huge change from 10 years ago, when the focus was largely on tools.
Outsource service
management
Invest in service
management solutions
Improve service
management processes
Invest in new technology Upgrade
existing technology
Don't know
16.3%
38.4%
66.3%
29.1% 31.4%
12.8%
Resp
onse

48
“Find better ways to leverage existing technology”
“The things that declined are good things”
“Need to hold staff accountable”
“Meetings and more meetings … but nobody with the guts to truly
change.”
“We’re implementing an improved ITSM toolkit and plan to soon
have metrics available.”
Improving IT performance metrics - Quotes
Resp
onse

49
Focus on ―Process‖ to Improve Service
The important finding is that all roles and all functions believe strongly that implementation of service
management process is the best way to improve IT performance metrics (66%). This is a huge and significant
change from 10 years ago when a tool or technology was expected to resolve all service management issues. It
is a good change. The highest score on process (72%) came from mid-level managers. This is an important
endorsement of ITIL best practices …but possibly not ITIL implementation projects as evidenced by the lowest
process scores coming from business (56%) and IT staff (58%). The business is seeing the length of ITIL project
implementation impeding responsiveness to their business needs, and the staff is seeing the diversion of resources
from high priority tasks.
The minimal willingness to outsource (16% of respondents) to improve metrics identifies a critical, yet-to-be-
resolved impact on cloud service providers. This implies an unwillingness or inability to hand off portions of IT
service management to an outsourcer … not from the perspective of reduced cost and faster provisioning
offered by Infrastructure-as-a-Service providers, but from the perspective of managing cloud services to satisfy
business objectives.
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In this section we explore how ITIL v2 and v3 process adoption is
progressing.
ITIL Adoption

51
What ITIL v2 process capabilities are you
using today and planning to use?
No big surprise here!
IT has largely implemented, the
core ITIL processes:
Incident management
Problem Management
Service Request Management
Change management
Incident Management
Change Management
Problem Management
Service Request Management
79%
66%
60% 54%
Implemented
Resp
onse

52
What ITIL v2 process capabilities are you
using today and planning to use?
To a lesser extent, respondents either
implemented or plan to implement
Service Level Management
Configuration Management
Release Management
Planned for the future include:
Capacity Management
IT Service Continuity Management
Availability Management
30%
13%
27%
21%
40% 43%
41%
35%
28% 25%
ITIL V2 Planned
Resp
onse

53
What ITIL v3 process capabilities are you
using today and planning to use?
Interest (…and understanding) is maturing with ITIL V3.
There seems to be a higher correlation between V3 and
improved Business/IT alignment catering to more mature
BSM levels 3-4.
High ―planned‖ anticipation for a few V3 categories:
Knowledge Management
Service Catalog
Service Asset & Configuration Management
Service Portfolio Management
Operation Processes were also high in ―planned‖ expectations:
Request Fulfillment Event Management
Assess Management
Healthy interest in plans for three other Processes:
Service Management and Reporting
Continual Service Improvement
IT Financial Management
35% 36% 41% 44% 49% 54%
Top ITIL 3 Planned
Resp
onse

54
ITIL v3 process capabilities using today
and planning to use?
62% 58% 57%
54% 52% 52%
48%
Not Planned or Don't Know Our initial surprise to this question is the
number of respondents that indicated that
they either had no plan to implement or
didn’t know.
We see ITIL V3 is more relevant to
organizations at BSM maturity levels 3 or
higher, and most of our survey respondents
are at level 2.
Resp
onse

55
ITIL v2 and Adoption of ITIL v3 There are no surprises in responses from V2 of ITIL. The top four categories of ITIL implementations include
Incident Management, Problem Management, Service Request Management and Change Management,
confirming the maturity of IT is currently focused on secure and reliable operations for a Level 2 business
maturity achievement.
The V2 ITIL ―planned to implement‖ story is a good indication of where short-term investments are anticipated.
Configuration Management (CMDB), Service Level Management (SLA’s) and Release Management top the chart
of next set of ITIL implementations ...all topping 40% of planned investments.
Although the existing implementations of ITIL V3 processes sometimes reaches one-third of respondents, the
―planned‖ implementations tell the story of what is being considered for short term investments. The top four
include Knowledge Management – Transition (32% now & moving to 73%); Service Catalog - Design (20% now
& moving to 72%); Service Asset & Configuration – Transition (21% now & moving to 70%); and Service Portfolio
Management – Strategy (15% now & moving to 59%).
IT Management using these V3 processes are attempting to move the IT organization from Level 2 Predictive to
Level 3 Aligned and Level 4 Optimized business maturity levels in order to better satisfy the business demands
of technology.
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In this section we wrap up on the 2011 BSM Benchmark with some overall
conclusions and industry recommendations.
Conclusions and Recommendations

57
Conclusions
Business is maturing (moving beyond consistently ―reliable‖ to ―customer driven‖ and ―competitively
differentiated‖) at a faster rate than their IT counterparts are maturing in their ability to meet business
expectations.
IT needs to better understand the business context in which their company is immersed and business should
better understand how technology can be leveraged for competitive advantage. The disparity between
business and IT views of business maturity and business drivers is too significant to ignore.
Business has a more optimistic, but dated view of technology’s contribution. IT needs to create additional
focus on ―marketing‖ IT to their business customers. If IT doesn’t articulate their unique differentiation and
core value proposition, then business will continue to have inappropriate expectations of IT and will move
toward competitive alternatives like outsourcing.
We found that respondents who had experienced some type of cross fertilization (business or IT liaison
roles) demonstrated greater awareness of the communication issues and better understanding of the value
of aligning IT investments with business objectives.
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58
Recommendations (part 1)
To begin to
realize the
potential of
BSM, we
recommend
you consider
taking the
following
actions:
Create a BSM Alignment Executive role who is measured on improving
BSM Maturity (strategic and operational alignment)
Consider integrating Business and IT liaison roles
Benchmark both company and IT maturity to assess the current state of
alignment and determine next steps
Utilize BSM Maturity Model as a assessment template
Conduct a State-of-the-Business workshop for IT
Ensure IT executives/mangers have a solid understanding of the company’s
business strategy, goals and competitive challenges
Strive to put the business in terms that IT can consume and execute on
Select 1 or 2 specific IT initiatives that will results in near-term business value

59
Recommendations (part 2)
To begin to
realize the
potential of
BSM, we
recommend
you consider
taking the
following
actions:
Conduct an annual ―Technology for Business Summit‖ that enlightens line-
of-business executives with what is possible from a technology/service
point-of-view
Provide vision and insight into technology trends that can improve competitive
differentiation and customer retention
Cloud computing, mobile computing, social media, etc.
Bring the consumer/customer experience into play
Develop an IT Marketing Strategy and Plan that builds a positive,
trusted IT brand identity with the business
Be clear about who you serve, what value you uniquely offer and how you will
improve customer satisfaction, retention and loyalty
Utilize proven marketing strategies/tactics and measure results

60
Credits
Rick Berzle
GoToMarket Publishing
858-271-4351
Bill Keyworth
Editor-in-Chief, BSMReview
949-600-6255
Authors/Editors Sponsors
Copyright © 2011, BSMReview.com

2011 BSM MATURITY
BENCHMARK STUDY
Copyright © 2011, BSMReview.com