Archive for the General Category

New blog available….

Hey everyone,

I want to let you know that I finished designing a blog site for my corporate website and I hope to be posting there more regularly.  The new blog is call “The Ascent” (http://blog.k2sg.com)” which is based on the corporate tag line of “Leading the ascent to the peak of Service Management”. I imported all of the posts from this blog into the new one in the event that you choose to only follow the new one.

CMDB Open Source solutions

Hi folks,

In one of my Twitter exchanges, someone asked for a list of Open Source ITSM solutions. What I had available was a list I gathered over the years that targeted CMDB versus general ITSM.

I can’t speak to how good/bad these sites are since I gathered most of these over the years when doing my initial research starting back in 2004/05. I checked to confirm they are still all live but not whether they are up-to-date with recent advancements or if they’ve gone off the deep end into skepticism or flying high in the sky over the lands of ITILtopia.

Read them yourself and make your own judgments.
CMDB Info.com
http://www.cmdb.info/p/index.html

Zenoss
http://www.zenoss.com/product/network-management

ProcessWorx CMDB ( I believe they were Open Source but this would need to be confirmed )
http://www.processworx.com/products/ITSM/cmdb.htm

ONE CMDB
http://www.onecmdb.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

CMDBuild.org ( Spanish Language site )
http://www.cmdbuild.org/

easyCMDB
http://www.easycmdb.com/

You can follow me on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/CarlosCasanova

Also, please visit the K2 Solutions Group Inc. website at http://www.k2sg.com for other related articles and presentations available for free download.

CMDB vs CMS… Is it really an ‘upgrade’? Can it really be done?

I recently had a discussion with someone about the notion that some individuals believe that the CMDB is not possible to implement and that ITIL V3 is too complex. Because of this, they are recommending that companies stick with ITIL V2 vs V3. The main point we kicked around was the fact that if individuals don’t fully appreciate the intentions of the ITIL V2 and the CMDB, they could very easily fall into the trap and believe that it can’t be done.  This is a mindset that I believe has been the foundation of most failed ITIL efforts.

ITIL V3, although on the surface to some may appear to be more complex than ITIL V2, is in fact a clarification of ITIL V2 much more so than it is an upgrade. Many of the components detailed in the ITIL V3 literature are merely elements that were left out of the V2 literature forcing every individual and organization to fend for themselves in trying to define what it all meant and how they were going to glue it all together.  In ITIL V3 however, they have made a valiant effort to at least identify these areas and document some best practice around them. I am not stating that everything in the ITIL V3 literature be viewed as gospel by any means but it is at least is a step in the right direction to identify the gaps and put some structure around them.
This lead us to the discussion on whether or not a CMDB can be built. I would agree that a “CMDB” is very hard and possibly impossible to build ‘IF’ and ONLY ‘IF’ your view of it is a single monolithic repository as prescribed by the black & white written words of the ITILV2 literature. If however, you fully digested the purpose of what the CMDB was intended for and what problems you were trying to resolve by implementing it, I totally disagree that it can not be done. The concept of a CMDB can be deployed but it must be in the form of a federated CMS if you stand any chance to succeed.

The  key to success is in the simplicity of purpose. Like every other complex entity, the CMS is just made up of smaller components that can be addressed somewhat independently but under an over-arching umbrella.  If tackled on that level, the CMS can become a reality to most organizations. I’m not implying that it will be done overnight and won’t come without challenges, challenges which will typically be on the cultural side rather than process or technology end.  A key element to this success of course is still a true adoption of the purpose of ITIL and not simply a belief that it is something “you implement”. If your organization and/or leadership believes it is a project to implement rather than a philosophy to adopt, you will very likely not succeed regardless of whether you head down the ITIL V2 or V3 path.

ITIL is much more of a cultural transformation rather than a process or technology implementation and until everyone accepts that, there will continue to be many failed attempts to implement ITIL, regardless of which version is being attempted.

About the Blogger

Carlos Casanova is the founder of K2 Solutions Group, Inc. and co-author of “The CMDB Imperative”. You can follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/CarlosCasanova

Data Assembly Delivers Actionable Information

Hi folks,

An article I wrote for Information Management magazine was just posted.  Check it out and please leave comments on Digg.

Click here to read the posting on Information Magazine website

Click here to read the article on the Digg website where you can leave comments

Thanks,
Carlos

Straight Talk about the CMDB Imperative: Carlos Casanova, author and former MetLife IT Executive

A podcast interview that I did with www.enterpriseleadership.org named “Straight Talk about the CMDB Imperative” was just published at this URL on the Enterprise Leadership website.

Sample Chapter of “The CMDB Imperative”

Hi everyone,

You may not be aware of this but a sample chapter of the book is posted on the InformIT.com website.

http://www.informit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=1329141

I hope you enjoy it.

Carlos

Recent activity….

Hi everyone,

This is just a quick post to keep things fresh. First off, the book is finally available for purchase at your favorite book seller.

It has been a busy few weeks for Glenn and I talking with people about the book as well as doing presentations and interviews.  Glenn has been traveling around the country as well as internationally talking with his clients and we have received tremendous positive feedback so far on the book.

We jointly delviered the key note address at the annual Lehigh-Delaware Valley itSMF LIG conference and again got very positive feedback from everyone in attendance. We are very excited about the feedback so far and look forward to working directly with many of you on ITSM and CMS/CMDB solutions.  If you are interested in seeing the presentation that we delivered at the LDV LIG conference, you can download it from the book’s website www.cmdbimperative.com .

I’m currently preparing for my next presentation which will be at the OMG’s Technical meeting in Washington DC on March 23rd. I will be leading a roundtable discussion on sustainability with regards to Business Operations as part of the “Green Computing Information Day” (http://www.omg.org/news/meetings/tc/agendas/dc-09/gcio-agenda.htm).  I truly beleive that we can leverage the work already laid out by the DMTF’s CMDBf specification and the work currently being done by the GCIO around the GBMM to put in place a CMS that not only supports ITSM as we traditionally have seen it but also supports the requirements that a sustainability model would need.

Welcome to “The Imperative Blog”

Glenn and Carlos would like to welcome you to “The Imperative Blog”.  We would like to use this blog to solicit your feedback on our soon to be released book.  We also plan to use it to share some of our thoughts and ideas that we are experiencing that might not have made it into the book.

Please let us know what you think about, The CMDB Imperative: How to realize the dream and avoid the nightmares and if you find the topic interesting enough, you can purchase the book on Amazon.om by clicking here.

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