As the simulation started the teams were confronted with customer issues, product defects, new customer requirements as well as existing ‘inefficiencies’ causing wasted work as a result of structural problems, supporting redundant products and services as well as technical debt. The teams had to plan and execute the work and at the same time plan and execute improvements, working together as separate plan, build and run units needing to operate as a value chain.
What happened? After the first round the team reflected on what happened and more importantly how does this reflect daily reality. Reflections revealed the following recognized real life issues:
There were no champagne corks popping for the CEO as he presented the dashboards of both teams revealing significant dips in Customer satisfaction, wasted costs and revenue loss.
The IT4IT building blocks were then introduced. The teams could now choose from these building blocks, which ones could help address the challenges or which ones would help reshape the organization to become the preferred digital bank for the customers. The building blocks are ‘improvement ideas’ based upon IT4IT concepts that each SILO in the team can suggest such as ‘integrated databases’, ‘automated testing’, ‘portfolio plans of strategic initiatives’.
Different UBanQ teams often choose different building blocks to start with, architects often choose the CMDB (e-2-e backbone), Business product owners choose for ‘portfolio planning’, DevOps stakeholders may choose for ‘automated deployment’. The question is who is responsible to the end-to-end alignment and dependencies of these building blocks to optimize the value chain?
The teams in the simulations all selected different building blocks and realized that improvement means more than simply installing new tools and processes. Changing behaviors and integrating end-to-end capabilities are crucial. What happened?
‘….did anybody know the goals and value expectations’? was a general question during the team retrospectives. The CEO shook his head in frustration ‘It is all well and good applying these approaches like IT4IT and using up valuable resources to install these tools and practices but if we do not have a clear goal as to the value to be realized, and ensure that this flows through the end-to-end value chain then it becomes more a chain around my neck slowing down my progress…..’
The teams once again agreed improvements and adopted new building blocks to be applied, ensuring a focus on end-to-end capabilities. Still teams struggled to embed the new improvements into their way of working. Behavior change, coaching, ownership, leadership were all invisible aspects and skills required to make IT4IT work.
‘Revenue was a little higher, CSAT lower’.
What were the key discoveries from the teams relating to the importance of the IT4IT building blocks and approaches to using them successfully within their own organizations? It was clear that this is a long, tough journey of iterative improvements to change mindsets, behaviors and build end-to-end value chain capabilities.
What the team had experienced matched the core messages in an earlier presentation ‘IT4IT Reference Architecture: Natural fit for DevOps and SAFe’
‘IT4IT started off because of different tool vendors tools not working well together. There was a need to standardize interfaces and data architectures to help tool users to stop wasting money on tool integration’.
‘…What we need is the ‘automation of the flow of data through the tool chain’ to enable a DevOps tool pipeline...’
‘…Flow of information between SILO’s is often unclear and inconsistent…’
It was clear to me that IT4IT, DevOps and the latest ITIL4 all focus on value chains and value streams. DevOps is often interpreted as CI/CD tool pipelines, ITIL4 is often focused primarily and processes and workload management tools. One of the key benefits from IT4IT is that it helps add the end-to-end value chain focus on integrated data and information that supports, underpins and enabled DevOps and ITIL4.
Blog by Paul Wilkinson | GamingWorks BV and Rob Akershoek