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The Visible Ops Handbook: Implementing ITIL in 4 Practical and Auditable Steps

The Visible Ops Handbook: Implementing ITIL in 4 Practical and Auditable Steps
List Price: $21.95
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Manufacturer: Information Technology Process Institute
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 004
EAN: 9780975568613
ISBN: 0975568612
Label: Information Technology Process Institute
Manufacturer: Information Technology Process Institute
Number Of Pages: 112
Publication Date: 2005-06-15
Publisher: Information Technology Process Institute
Studio: Information Technology Process Institute

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Editorial Reviews:

The Core of Visible Ops Visible Ops is a methodology designed to jumpstart implementation of controls and process improvement in IT organizations needing to increase service levels, security, and auditability while managing costs. Visible Ops is comprised of four prescriptive and self-fueling steps that take an organization from any starting point to a continually improving process. Making ITIL Actionable Although the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) provides a wealth of best practices, it lacks prescriptive guidance: What do you implement first, and how do you do it? Moreover, the ITIL books remain relatively expensive to distribute. Other information, publicly available from a variety of sources, is too general and vague to effectively aid organizations that need to start or enhance process improvement efforts. The Visible Ops booklet provides a prescriptive roadmap for organizations beginning or continuing their IT process improvement journey. Why Do You Need Visible Ops? The Visible Ops methodology was developed because there was not a satisfactory answer to the question: “I believe in the need for IT process improvement, but where do I start?” Since 2000, Gene Kim and Kevin Behr have met with hundreds of IT organizations and identified eight high-performing IT organizations with the highest service levels, best security, and best efficiencies. For years, they studied these high-performing organizations to figure out the secrets to their success. Visible Ops codifies how these organizations achieved their transformation from good to great, showing how interested organizations can replicate the key processes of these high-performing organizations in just four steps: 1. Stabilize Patient, Modify First Response – Almost 80% of outages are self-inflicted. The first step is to control risky changes and reduce MTTR by addressing how changes are managed and how problems are resolved. 2. Catch and Release, Find Fragile Artifacts – Often, infrastructure exists that cannot be repeatedly replicated. In this step, we inventory assets, configurations and services, to identify those with the lowest change success rates, highest MTTR and highest business downtime costs. 3. Establish Repeatable Build Library – The highest return on investment is implementing effective release management processes. This step creates repeatable builds for the most critical assets and services, to make it “cheaper to rebuild than to repair.” 4. Enable Continuous Improvement – The previous steps have progressively built a closed-loop between the Release, Control and Resolution processes. This step implements metrics to allow continuous improvement of all of these process areas, to best ensure that business objectives are met.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: The Visible OPS handbook
Comment: This publication will definately help anyone that is struggling with how to apply ITIL Operations Services. It is definately geared towards a server based enviroment and not towards programming, midrange systems or mainframe operations. However, once you apply the ITIL ops to your server and desktop environments it can be easily adjusted to enhance all IT operations. It's a great way to get started. I recommend reading through it.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Great handbook!
Comment: This is a great book. I recommend everyone going towards ITIL or just improving IT to read it. It is a quick read, fun stories and anecdotes.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Excellent whitepaper, weak book
Comment: Visible Ops contains some good - though oft repeated - insight and information regarding ITIL and infrastructure support by consultants who have obviously spent some time in the trenches. Its premise is based on Gartner research stating that 80% of unplanned downtime is caused by people and process issues and 80% of the time spent in resolving downtime is unproductive and there are systems administration principles and activities that can mitigate. The problem with Visible Ops is that the volume of content warrants a whitepaper, yet the authors seemingly add filler to justify the $22 sales price.

The authors are one of the first to offer in print some solutions for infrastructure support that validate what IT infrastructure managers have been doing for years. The ideas of rebuild v. repair, "source control" of infrastructure builds, repeatable infrastructure build processes are right on. Yet instead of case studies and further exploration, we get multiple pages of testimonials, a forward, an introduction, a multiple-page TOC, a mere 40 pages of content which include repetition, constant summarization, and more testimonials, and 30 pages of appendices of largely copyrighted and incomplete material. As a final insult, there are ads on the front and back covers. At least one of the authors sells tools to remedy some of the problems mentioned in "Visible Ops" and it seems he is hedging his bets by charging for materials that should be marketing and product literature.

Why not give more detailed examples and case studies, expound on the CMDB, give some ideas on organizing builds or address other ITIL areas? This is *great* stuff here, but I feel like it has been cheapened. Regardless, I recommend "Visible Ops" because it addresses common and significant problems and solutions that are rarely addressed elsewhere.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Great place to start
Comment: 'The Visible Ops Handbook' is a great resource that highlights why you may want to reorganize your IT operations. The book then provides some excellent ideas on how to get started. It is also a good source of details you can use to convince others that aligning your IT operations with a best practice solution is worth doing.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Good reference book for IT Leaders and Executives
Comment: I bought this book to help me implement process improvement practices, specifically around IT Change & Release Management at my company. Implementing a process requires not only the definition of the process but efficient management of that process. For the most part, this book provides practical ideas and good descriptive examples of real world situations.

This is also a great book for anyone studying for the ITIL Certification Exam. It is even better for someone that is trying to implement some of the ITIL best practices into their organization. I would recommend it as a reference for Senior Management and other IT leaders in IT operations.

It was quite interesting to learn about the author's concept of DSL (Definitive Software Library). Some of the ideas presented in this book can be viewed as radical & extreme. For example it indicates that if a team member makes a unauthorized change to the system without getting approval first, he should be demoted to a position on the team where he can no longer make any changes. Depending on the impact of the change, this might be warranted but doing so, just to "reinforce the process" seems too excessive.


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