Let’s talk about the opportunity of your ESM or ITSM tool. Enterprise service management (ESM), using IT service management (ITSM) practices and ITSM tools outside of IT, is a very popular trend. However, before you approach other lines of business – i.e. other corporate service providers such as human resources (HR) and facilities – you need to do your homework! This could start with its origins. That service management per se is not an invention of the IT department, plus it has a longer history than ITSM.
But the service thinking embodied by ITSM is common sense about how to run and manage services systematically. If we look to the ITIL definition: “A set of specialized organizational capabilities for providing value to customers in the form of services” you can see that it doesn’t have to be limited to use in IT service provider scenarios. For example, over ten years ago, I worked in a local real estate management company in Finland and, guess what, we used service management every day. And trust me, we didn’t need to study any ITIL books.
So why do we IT folks rave about ESM and the opportunity of the ESM or ITSM tool?
As I’ve already attested to, enterprise service management (ESM) is nothing new. However, the difference now to ten years ago is that we now have the ability to take the non-IT use of ITSM to the next level due to the technological enablement we can offer to other lines of business units through the corporate ESM or ITSM tool.
If you stop to think about it, the corporate IT department is not the only internal service provider in the organization and ESM is not just about service thinking. It’s also about the digitalization of the current manual processes, used by other lines of business, and making them accessible to corporate end-users in a similar manner to how employees are used to getting their services in their private lives. Thus, from an end-user’s perspective, ESM is more about consumerization and user experience than it is ITSM. From the service provider’s perspective, ESM is about managing, optimizing, and standardizing the flow of work better, which is often close to impossible if the existing processes are manual with work tasks “hidden” in emails and little insight available on true performance.
ESM is about digitalization
ESM is about digitalization, it’s about using the technology to improve business performance and outcomes. But don’t make the mistake that it’s only about technology (and ESM or ITSM tool) – forgetting the processes, organization, people, and the whole lifecycle of service management. Technology is just an enabling factor and the reason why we’re having the ESM conversation with business units.
Run ESM as a service
This is important! You need to have a strategy on what you’re trying to achieve. You need to have a demand management mechanism in place for the new services you’re on-boarding to your portfolio. You need to have new types of business consulting skills and to talk in business language as you propose new areas of digitalization. It’s a service approach, not a technology project.
You can start any line of business with just simple ticketing and an end-user portal implementation, but in the long run there’s so much more we can digitalize and drive benefits from.
In my experience, longer term your chosen ESM or ITSM tool will need to be a system of:
- Record – to manage the flow of work and take it out from emails, and to enable audit trail
- Insight – to make decisions and optimizations based on data and analytics
- Engagement – to make it the single point of contact for end-users
- Innovation – don’t stick to ordinary, look for other ways to support the lines of business.
Where to start with ESM, including the ESM or ITSM tool
If you want to start with ESM, what should you do first?
- Stop calling it enterprise service management (or ESM). This is not what lines of business are interested in, and it’s not human language. Instead, call it digitalization or consumerization.
- Find a sponsor inside your organization. Sell the benefits of digitalization, not the technology.
- Start small, with a proof of concept. Then extend to a program at a pace that suits your organizational capability. Digitalize processes that are based on emails or manual forms using your ESM or ITSM tool. If you fix the biggest pain points first – such as those 37 different email addresses for HR questions – the benefits of digitalization are easier to demonstrate.
- Create a self-service portal. It might be technology but pay great attention to customer experience!
- Run (what you will still probably term internally as) ESM as a service. Remember the full service lifecycle, design your offerings, and build your service organization around it. This is not a small exercise if you do it properly.
- Speak each business unit’s language. Don’t assume they understand ITIL, since they typically don’t.
- Understand the characteristic of each line of business. For example, HR and facilities management have quite different needs due their respective business roles.
- Sell the benefits to employees. Put lots of effort into organizational change management – after all you are changing how people do their daily work!
- Provide consulting services to lines of business. Be a partner. Offer new areas of innovation. Build a strong working relationship.
- Last, but not least. You will need an ESM or ITSM tool, since ESM is digitalization. Choose the best fitting ESM or ITSM tool. It might be your existing ITSM tool, it might not. Be objective as every ESM or ITSM tool will have pros and cons.
Hopefully, this ESM tools article is a good start to your ESM (or digitalization) homework.
If you liked this ESM or ITSM tools article, the following ESM articles might also be of interest.
Elina Pirjanti
Elina’s day-job as a trusted customer advisor in the service management space brings her to the heart of planning and solving strategic, organizational, and governance-related challenges. She is also known for her efforts in supporting and speaking at itSMF and service management events around the world.