Survey Shows IT Struggling with Service Model Implementations

Neebula survey illustrates results do not align with intentions across the industry


NEW YORK, Feb. 26, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Enterprise information technology (IT) staffs spend significant time struggling to keep up with change management, as well as trying to improve overall end-user service quality. To address these issues, IT managers have implemented service modeling projects, which have helped make some progress but there is still far from universal satisfaction, according to a new survey by Neebula Systems.

Organizations with more than 500 employees were asked about their priorities in managing IT operations, as well as objectives for and satisfaction with the results of service modeling projects. The responses indicated that service modeling becomes more difficult as data centers become more complex and that IT professionals are employing lots of different technologies to address their issues.

Neebula is the leading provider of business-level service modeling, management, and automated full-stack discovery and dependency mapping solutions. The survey showed that as an indication of the IT staff's ongoing battle to put out fires, there was an average of 30 or more critical and major events open for 88 percent of respondents.

It's clear that addressing this problem is the motivation for undertaking a service modeling project. Specifically, three main priorities were identified for service modeling projects: root cause analysis (listed by 68 percent of respondents), change impact assessment (67 percent) and business continuity planning (51 percent).

However, the survey shows IT operations struggling with business services implementations with half responding "our goals were met and we are very happy with the project" while 28 percent said "our initial goals were not met but we are realizing value" and 23 percent answered "our goals were not met."

Meanwhile, more than 92 percent of respondents spend 6-plus months on service modeling projects. Yet, when asked "what percentage of your business services are defined in service models?" the majority of respondents (84 percent) said they had between 21 and 60 percent of their business services defined in service models. Those are used to help IT align with business requirements to maintain availability of services such as billing, email and inventory management. Only 4 percent had completed more - indicating the vast majority of IT operations do not avail themselves of business service topology models.

None of this appears to be for lack of trying, with multiple types of tools deployed by IT, such as device-specific consoles (primarily for servers, network, and storage devices), transaction tracking tools, application performance management and other monitoring software.

In addition, 90 percent were using Configuration Management Databases (CMDBs) with many indicating they are using CMDBs from more than one supplier. Among respondents, 75 percent indicated they maintain service models in the CMDB.

The survey also found that accuracy of services was a big question mark. On one hand, 64 percent of respondents felt that their service models were mostly up to date. On the other hand, a quarter of respondents felt less confident.

Survey Methodology

Neebula conducted the survey from late September through early November with more than 100 respondents. The survey was open to IT staff of enterprises with at least 500 employees. It should be noted that there is no correlation with Neebula customers, as this was a general survey. There were 86 percent of respondents with 500-plus servers in their IT infrastructure and 84 percent said they were supporting more than 100 business services.

A free survey report is available at www.neebula.com/resources/it-business-service-modeling-survey.

About Neebula: "IT all Starts with the Map"

Neebula provides Service Availability Management software that improves IT performance and availability through an automated and unified approach to mapping business services which is 20 times faster and 80 percent less expensive compared to other solutions. Optimized for SaaS delivery, Neebula encourages IT organizations to shift from monitoring data center silos (servers, network, storage, applications) to managing end-user business services (examples: CRM, billing, tax payment, fund transfer services). Believing that effective IT "Starts with the Map," Neebula's unique technology automatically creates and maintains a run-time map of business services including underlying physical, virtual, network, and storage infrastructure. Focused on business impact and realizing that IT should monitor only what matters, Neebula's run-time service map enriches event management and monitored information by presentation in the context of the business service, resulting in improved IT change control, rapid problem isolation, and meaningful service health monitoring. While no CMDB is required, Neebula service maps can be imported into software from BMC Software, CA Technologies, HP, IBM, and ServiceNow, making existing CMDBs "service-aware" with run-time accuracy. Headquartered in New York and Tel Aviv, Neebula has an installed base of global enterprises, Fortune 10,000 companies, and government/education customers in Europe and North America.


            

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