INT302 - Service Strategy
INT302 - Service Strategy
INT302 - Service Strategy
Service providers must have the ability to think and act in a strategic manner The achievement of strategic goals or objectives requires the use of strategic assets Service Strategy shows how to transform service management into a strategic asset Technical knowledge of IT is necessary but not sufficient Strategy requires knowledge from the disciplines such as operations management, marketing, finance, information systems, organizational development, systems dynamics, and industrial engineering
Service Model
Elements of Value
Utility Attributes of the service that have a positive effect on the performance of activities, objects, and tasks associated with required outcomes Warranty The positive effect being available when needed, in sufficient capacity or magnitude, and dependably available in terms of continuity and security
Service Assets
Capabilities and Resources Asset Types
Capabilities
Management Organization Processes Knowledge
Resources
Capital Infrastructure Applications Information
Services
Value Customer
Service Provider
Service Providers
Internal Service Provider (Type I) business functions embedded within the business units Shared Service Provider (Type II) shared functions are consolidated into an autonomous special unit called a shared service unit (SSU) External Service Provider (Type III) offer competitive prices and drive down unit costs by consolidating
Services may be sourced from each type of service provider with decisions based on:
Transaction costs Strategic industry factors Core competence Risk management capabilities of the customer
Sourcing Approaches
Insourcing relies on using internal organizational resources Outsourcing uses the resources of an external organization or organizations Co-sourcing is a combination of insourcing and outsourcing Partnership or multi-sourcing is an arrangement between two or more organizations to work together Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) relocates entire business functions Application Service Provision involves formal arrangements with an Application Service Provider
Service Strategy
Strategy Generation
Differentiate your services from the competition Use existing opportunities: Customers who are not well-supported represent opportunities for services to be offered as solutions Use new opportunities: New opportunities emerge when changes in the business environment cause a previously well-supported customer to be poorly supported
Setting Objectives
Objectives represent the results expected from pursuing strategies Strategies represent the actions to be taken to accomplish objectives Clear objectives provide for consistent decision making, minimizing any future conflicts. They set forth priorities and serve as standards
Service Strategy
Every planned and operated service by the provider is documented Every new service must complete a set of standardized activities and procedures Essential information is documented and provided to the relevant management processes Each service and its design package is regularly reviewed Every service is reviewed within the Continual Service Improvement Process Through the service portfolio, an information base for a service catalog is provided
Define
Collect information from all existing services
Analyze
The intent strategy is designed
Approve
Deliberate approvals or disapprovals of the proposed portfolio
Charter
Decisions are communicated, resources
Financial Management
Financial Management as a strategic tool is equally applicable to all three service provider types Financial Management consists of the following benefits:
Enhanced decision making Speed of change Operational control Value capture and creation
Plan
Address critical questions, outline activities
Analyze
Gather details, perform service valuation
Design
Processes, valuation models, chargeback methods
Implement
Activation plan processes
Measure
Demand Management
Essential that Demand Management techniques be used Demand Management includes techniques such as:
The goal of demand management is to reduce cost and create value by being able to predict demand and reduce idle capacity
Study the business of the customer to identify, analyze, and codify patterns Visualize the business activity and plans in terms of the demand for supporting services Identify, codify, and share patterns of business activity (PBA) across process for clarity and completeness of detail Construct user profiles (Ups) using one or more predefined PBAs Associate each user profile with one or more PBAs