project management with eplc and itil john castilia & john janke service management office cit

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Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

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Page 1: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Project Management with EPLC and ITIL

John Castilia & John JankeService Management Office

CIT

Page 2: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Presentation Goals

• Provide a suggested approach for managing projects in alignment with EPLC and ITIL

• Offer a brief Refresher on EPLC and ITIL

• Resolve confusion about the role of EPLC and ITIL in project management

• Examine why that confusion exists

Page 3: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

The Project Management Challenge

• Meet requirements and targets for:

• Quality

• Time

• Budget

• Scope

• Manage project scope

• Handle the numerous approaches which exist to aid in successful project completion

Page 4: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

In the Imperfect World of Project Management

• Frameworks such as PMBOK, PRINCE2, EPLC, CPIC, and CMMI promote success

– Based on industry good practice

– Typically customized to meet specific constraints

– May introduce additional work

– Can increase time and cost, but not necessarily perceived value to the customer, project managers, and organizational management

Page 5: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Benefits of Frameworks

• Improve consistency of performance

• Increase competitive advantage

• Raise effectiveness and efficiency

• Enhance organizational capabilities

• Lower costs and risks

• Improve collaboration across projects

Page 6: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

The Balancing Act

• Incorporate the benefits of frameworks to:– improve project excellence– enhance organizational project management– comply with regulations, mandates, etc.

• While simultaneously protecting against:– expensive, procedural “overhead”– non-applicable framework elements– overly rigid adherence to standards– erosion of value perceived by the customer

Page 7: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Confusion about EPLC and ITIL

• EPLC and ITIL seem to:

• compete with one another

• have the same purpose

• create similar deliverables

• add little value

• complicate “getting it done”

Page 8: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Clearing the Confusion

1. Learn enough about EPLC and ITIL in order to benefit:• the project management effort • the customer• the organization

2. Introduce a suggested EPLC/ITIL approach that complies with the rules and adds value during the life cycle

Page 9: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Purpose of EPLC

“A key to successful IT management is a solid project

management methodology that incorporates best

government and commercial practices through a consistent

and repeatable process, and provides a standard structure

for planning, managing and overseeing IT projects over

their entire life cycle. The HHS Enterprise Performance Life

Cycle (EPLC) framework provides that methodology for

HHS.”

Office of the CIO, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Resources and Technology, Health and Human Services, Enterprise Performance Life Cycle Framework Overview Document, (Washington, DC: January 18, 2010), 3.

Page 10: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Enterprise Performance Life Cycle

Page 11: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Purpose of ITIL

“ITIL is used by organizations worldwide to establish and

improve capabilities in service management.”

Office of Government Commerce (UK), ITIL: Service Strategy, (Norwich, UK: The Stationery Office, 2007), 7.

“Service Management is a set of organizational capabilities

for providing value to customers in the form of services.”

Office of Government Commerce (UK), ITIL: Service Strategy, (Norwich, UK: The Stationery Office, 2007), 250.

Page 12: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT
Page 13: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

What’s Common: EPLC and ITIL

Lifecycle-basedParallel (but not identical) termsMatching activitiesComparable goalsProcess DrivenAllow tailoringNon-prescriptive

Page 14: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

EPLC and ITIL Differences

EPLC

• Is mandated• Stage Gates are

governance check-ins• Is designed

specifically for HHS OPDIVs

• Focus on project control and accountability

• Project-based

ITIL

• Often an organizational requirement

• “Mesh” Approach – No Stage Gates

• Is designed from research done in many industries around the world

• Focus on value created and delivered to customer

• Service-based

Page 15: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

The Most Significant Distinctions

• Mandated vs. Non-Mandated

• Assume EPLC must be done

• Allow for Project Management and Service Management differences

• Comprehending Projects vs. Services is the fulcrum with which to leverage framework benefits

• Necessary Definitions: IT System, IT Service, IT Project

Page 16: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

What is an IT System?

• An integrated composite of one or more of the

processes, hardware, software, facilities, formal

documentation, people, and configuration items that

provides capability to satisfy a stated need or objective.

• A collection of configuration items (hardware, software,

and documentation) that are necessary to deliver an IT

Service.

Page 17: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

What is an IT Service?

• Service– Delivers Value

– Facilitates Outcomes• Enhances Performance

• Reduces Constraints

– Owns costs and risks

– Increases the probability of desired outcomes

Page 18: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

What is an IT Project?

“A project is a temporary planned endeavor funded by

an approved information technology investment; thus

achieving a specific goal and creating a unique product,

service, or result. A project has a defined start and end

point with specific objectives that, when attained, signify

completion.”

Office of the CIO, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Resources and Technology, Health and Human Services, Enterprise Performance Life Cycle Framework Overview Document, (Washington, DC: January 18, 2010), 10.

Page 19: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Hierarchy of Definitions

Page 20: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Project and Service Management

Projects

• Projects should be used to build services and systems

• Projects have defined deliverables

• Projects end or have signifiers of completion

• Transfer of “ownership” from development organization to customer organization

Services

• Service management does not typically develop solutions

• Service Management run operations

• Services are rarely built to be handed off to another party

• Services are ongoing

• Assume costs and risks on behalf of customer

Page 21: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Management Domains

Business Value

Business Service

IT Service

IT System(s)

IT Component(s)

Research

Laboratory Management

Facilities Access

FACNet

Access Card Reader

Business Managers

IT Leadership/ Service Owners

Project Managers

Technical Managers

ITSM (ITIL)

Project Management (EPLC)

Business Management

EPLC and ITIL blur when development and operations overlap

RolesActivity

Page 22: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

● Services assume the ownership their systems ● *Systems and other solutions developed in support of services should,

therefore, be built with the EPLC● Both the EPLC and ITIL should be tailored to satisfy requirements

Suggested Decision Table: Project or Service

Example Transfer of Ownership

Transfer of Managemen

t

Signifier of Completion

Type

Web Site Y Y Y Project

Email Server Y Y N Service*

NBS Y N N Service*

Service Catalog

N N N Service*

Laptop Battery Swap

N N Y Project

SharePoint Site

N Y Y Project

Page 23: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Example 1: A Database

This cannot be a service, should follow the EPLC, and be tailored to meet requirements

Deciding FactorsWill the major deliverables be operated by the customer?

Yes

Does the customer assume the costs and risks? Yes

Does the customer own the final product? Yes

Is there an established end date or other signifier of completion?

Yes

Page 24: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Example 2: Remote Access System

• This is system that will support a service and better run with the ITIL framework, but the system itself should be built with the EPLC

Deciding FactorsWill the major deliverables be owned and operated by the customer?

No

Does the customer assume the costs and risks? No

Does the customer own the final product? No

Is there an established end date or other signifier of completion?

No

Page 25: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Deliverables and Outputs

Question: Doesn’t that mean two sets of deliverables? One for ITIL and one for EPLC?

Answer: No! EPLC has deliverables and these can be used to satisfy ITIL outputs.

• There are no mandated or required ITIL outputs.• ITIL strongly suggests that there are outputs.• EPLC is more structured as deliverables are

required for Stage Gate reviews.

Page 26: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

The Confusion Allayed?

• Service Management uses Project Management to build its systems (. . . EPLC enhances ITIL)

• Project Management uses Service Management to run what it builds (. . . ITIL enhances EPLC)

• Guidance from one can help accomplish the other, i.e.,– Use ITIL guidance for EPLC release documentation– Could use EPLC documents as part of ITIL process.

Page 27: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Final Thoughts

• EPLC strengthens project management rigor and accountability through a mandated process.

• ITIL provides a service management framework. The ITIL processes within that framework exist for the primary purpose of planning, delivering and supporting IT services.

• Together EPLC & ITIL enhance our organizational capability to deliver value to our customers.

Page 28: Project Management with EPLC and ITIL John Castilia & John Janke Service Management Office CIT

Service Management Office Contacts

John “Jack” Castilia, PMP

Project Manager

John Janke, ITIL Service Manager

Process Engineer

Questions ?