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ITSM Service Catalog

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RL Consulting

People Process Technology


Organization Integration

IT Services Management
A Description of a Service Catalog
White Paper

Prepared by:

Rick Leopoldi
June 19, 2002

Copyright 2002 RL Consulting. All rights reserved.


Duplication of this document or extraction of content is strictly forbidden.

ITSM - SLA DESCRIPTION

This paper discusses the processes and methods to define, characterize, and
develop a Service Catalog as part of IT Service Management best practices and the
relationship between a Service Catalog and Service Level Management.

Introduction
A Service Catalog focuses specifically on documenting and articulating the IT
services provided to the organization. Typically it also contains the necessary
service level requirements that are usually detailed in a Service Level Agreement
(SLA).
A Service Catalog is part of the Service Level Management area of ITSM. The
other co-dependent areas that could described as ITSM linkages with it are
service planning, service level objectives and agreements, Availability
Management, IT Service Continuity, Capacity Management, and Financial
Management.

Scope and Description


The objectives of Service Level Management Service is to lead IT organizations
through the design of a Service Catalog, development of detailed service
descriptions for their services, and the development of a Service Level Agreements
(SLA) for their major, mission-critical services that are well-defined, measurable,
and in a negotiable state. These services will then be documented in a Service
Catalog.
From an ITSM maturity perspective, the goals of Service Level Management are:
An optimized, service focused organization
A well defined and effective set of tailored processes and methods
that is supported enterprise-wide and is continuously improved
An integrated toolset that is well established and continuously
improved as needed
One area that denotes Service Level Management maturity within ITSM is the
development and maintenance of a Service Catalog that includes identifying and
qualifying the types of services being provided and integrating service level
objectives and agreements information that employs a business and customer
service focus.

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ITSM - SLA DESCRIPTION

Develop a Service Catalog within Service Level Management


The following are recommended steps for developing a Service Catalog:
1) Develop and document a Service Catalog that includes identifying and
qualifying the types of services being provided for all major business
systems, similar to an inventory of systems that includes a detailed
description of each. Over time these Service Catalog entries are deepened
in breath, scope, and detail dealing with a customer business level focus
for transactions and the component areas that comprise it.
2) Develop and document service level objectives. A primary focus should be
on internal service such as the technology level for performance and
availability. Examples are, network, server response, and up-time. Over
time these objectives should be deepened in breath, scope, and detail
dealing with a customer business level focus for transactions and the
component areas that comprise it.
3) Document service level objectives within the Service Catalog or develop and
document formal service level agreements with customers. (In some IT
organizations, individual SLAs are not prepared since they are not charging
back for services. In this case the SLA may be replaced with a Service
Catalog that defines the same information but without the charges sections.
The service catalog then becomes a tool for the IT support organization to
establish its own measurable objectives. These objectives identify what the
IT staff must do to support the terms of the agreements.) Based on the
service level objectives listed above, these agreements will be contracts of
guaranteed levels of performance and availability. These agreements need
to be reviewed and renegotiated as needed (typically on a cyclic basis, i.e.,
annually). As the scope, breath, and detailed level of the Service Level
Objectives expand so to should the Service Level Agreements.
NOTE: It is important that for both the Service Level Objectives and
Agreements, they are realistic, can be measured, can be achieved, can be
monitored, and are agreed to by both IT and the customers.
4) Put in place the necessary hardware and software technologies to
evaluate, monitor, and report on performance and availability. Off-theshelf software and the associated hardware should be considered initially
for practical reasons of maintenance, support, and resources
requirements.
5) Put in place the necessary methods and processes for developing,
publishing, and maintaining the Service and Operating Level Objectives
and Agreements, as well as their evaluation, monitoring, and reporting.

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ITSM - SLA DESCRIPTION

Put in place service managers (and associated resources if necessary)


whose primary role and responsibility will be to support Service Level
Management enterprise-wide.
7) Fully complete the Service Catalog, verify it with the user community, and
publish it. Assign the responsibility of maintaining and enhancing it.
8) Enhance the Service Catalog such that it is integrated with service level
objectives and agreements and has a business and customer service
focus.
9) Fully develop the other areas of Service Management as defined by ITSM
as needed such that an optimized maturity level is attained as uniformly
as possible.
6)

Relationship to Service Level Management


Within the Service Level Management of ITSM there is a focus on translating IT
strategy into IT services, managing the service levels for those services, and
putting in place continuous service improvement processes for these services.
These services are aligned with business requirements and business strategy.
With this focus in mind, service level management plays a critical role through
the development and use of service level agreements that provide the necessary
metrics for measuring, assessing, managing, and reporting agreed upon service
between IT and its customers.
ITSM maturity in the area of Service Level Management is exhibited in several of
the following areas:
Reactive mode of processes and operation
Customer satisfaction (for IT services) could be improved
Costs are not tracked for the service being provided
This includes having defined service level and operating level objectives or
agreements, formally defined service manager roles, formal coordinated service
reporting to customers, the use of technology being applied to enable service
evaluation, monitoring, and reporting.
Service Level Management is a process that defines, negotiates, monitors, reports,
and controls customer-specific service levels within predefined standard service
parameters. It also generates customer-specific services if the SLA requires it.
Where defines means translating customer-specific service delivery requirements
into selected values for standard service level parameters and incorporating these
into the form of service level agreements (SLAs). This provides for some or all of
the following:
Increases Customer Satisfaction

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ITSM - SLA DESCRIPTION

Increases Service Quality


Decreases Operational Costs
Assess customer-specific service requirements
Map standard services to requirements
Define customer services
Negotiate and document SLA
Establish service performance cycle
Design custom services
Analyze customer-specific service level performance
Create customer reports
Conduct service performance review
Propose service improvements (customer-specific)
Provides IT Direction and Focus
Decreases Time-to-Market
Plan for new standard services
Conduct service risk analysis
Define functional requirements
Analyze capability gaps
Make service buy vs. build decision
Determine ROI on service development
Create internal design specification
Develop strategic alliances
Evaluate Service Catalog impacts
Keep services current
Manage services value
Obsolete services

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