Continual Improvement Frameworks and Maturity Assessments ========================================================= Slide 1: Continual Improvement Frameworks and Maturity Assessments Narration Anna: Continual improvement is the heartbeat of any successful IT service organization. It's not a one-time project but an ongoing commitment to making things better every day. Greg: This systematic approach focuses on creating value for customers while learning from every incident, change, and interaction. Think of it as evolving from a reactive firefighting mode to a proactive enhancement culture. Anna: The goal is simple: deliver better service tomorrow than you did today. But achieving this requires both structure and the right mindset across your entire organization. On-screen text Continual Improvement Frameworks and Maturity Assessments Building a culture of ongoing enhancement Slide 2: What is continual improvement? Narration Anna: What is continual improvement? focuses attention on a concrete part of the work. Systematic approach to enhancing services, Focus on value creation and customer satisfaction, and Builds on lessons learned from incidents and changes. Greg: In practice, ask who owns the work, what evidence proves it happened, and what handoff comes next. Use the supporting details as a checklist: Focus on value creation and customer satisfaction; Builds on lessons learned from incidents and changes; Cultural shift from reactive to proactive mindset. On-screen text What is continual improvement? - Systematic approach to enhancing services - Focus on value creation and customer satisfaction - Builds on lessons learned from incidents and changes - Cultural shift from reactive to proactive mindset Slide 3: Kaizen vs. formal improvement programs Narration Anna: There are two main approaches to improvement: Kaizen and formal improvement programs. Kaizen comes from Japanese manufacturing and means "change for the better." Greg: In Kaizen, everyone makes small daily improvements. A service desk agent might streamline how they document tickets, or a network admin might create a checklist for routine tasks. These small changes add up to significant improvements over time. Anna: Formal improvement programs are bigger structured projects. Think of upgrading your monitoring system or redesigning your change approval process. These need dedicated resources and project management. Greg: [enthusiastically] The magic happens when you combine both approaches. Kaizen keeps the improvement mindset alive day-to-day, while formal programs tackle the bigger transformations your organization needs. On-screen text Kaizen vs. formal improvement programs - Kaizen: Small, daily improvements by everyone - Formal programs: Structured projects with defined outcomes - Both approaches complement each other - Different time horizons and resource commitments Slide 4: The Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle Narration Anna: The Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle is your roadmap for systematic improvement. It's like a scientific method for making changes that actually stick. Greg: Plan means identifying what needs improvement and designing a solution. Maybe you've noticed that password reset requests are taking too long, so you plan to implement a self-service portal. Anna: Do is implementing your solution, but start small. Roll out that self-service portal to one department first, not the entire organization. This lets you test and learn without major disruption. Greg: Check means measuring the results. Are password resets faster? Are users happy with the new process? Are there unexpected issues you need to address? Anna: Act is where you decide what to do next. If the pilot worked well, standardize it across the organization. If it didn't, learn from what went wrong and try a different approach. The cycle then begins again. On-screen text The Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle - Plan: Identify improvement opportunities - Do: Implement changes on a small scale - Check: Measure results and gather feedback - Act: Standardize successful improvements Slide 5: Maturity models overview Narration Anna: Maturity models are like a GPS for your improvement journey. They help you figure out where you are now and chart a path to where you want to be. Greg: Think of it like learning to drive. You start with basic skills like steering and braking, then progress to parallel parking, and eventually to driving in complex traffic. Each level builds on the previous one. Anna: In IT service management, maturity models assess how well your organization manages services. A level one organization might be reactive, fixing things as they break. A level five organization predicts and prevents problems before they impact users. Greg: The key insight is that you can't skip levels. You need solid incident management before you can do effective problem management. You need good change control before you can implement continuous deployment. It's about building capability progressively. On-screen text Maturity models overview - Assess current capability levels - Identify gaps and improvement priorities - Provide roadmap for progression - Enable benchmarking against industry standards Slide 6: ITIL 4 maturity dimensions Narration Anna: ITIL 4 maturity assessment looks at four key dimensions. Think of them as the four legs of a table - you need all of them to be strong for the table to be stable. Greg: Capabilities are what your organization can do. Can you resolve incidents quickly? Can you implement changes without breaking things? Can you plan capacity to meet future demand? Anna: Practices are how work gets done. Are your processes documented and followed? Do you have standard operating procedures? Are your workflows efficient and effective? Greg: Governance covers decision-making and oversight. Who has authority to approve changes? How are resources allocated? How is risk managed? Is there clear accountability? Anna: Culture is about values and behaviors. Do people share knowledge freely? Is there a blame-free environment for learning from mistakes? Are teams collaborative or siloed? Culture often determines whether your improvements will succeed or fail. On-screen text ITIL 4 maturity dimensions - Capabilities: What the organization can do - Practices: How work gets done - Governance: Decision-making and oversight - Culture: Values and behaviors Slide 7: Measuring improvement success Narration Anna: You can't improve what you don't measure. But measuring improvement success goes beyond just technical metrics - you need to look at the whole picture. Greg: Service performance metrics are the obvious starting point. Are your incidents being resolved faster? Are there fewer outages? Is system availability improving? These operational metrics show if your processes are working better. Anna: Customer satisfaction scores tell you if your improvements actually matter to users. Sometimes technical improvements don't translate to better user experience, and sometimes small changes make a huge difference to customer happiness. Greg: Employee engagement levels are crucial but often overlooked. Are your team members more motivated? Do they feel empowered to make improvements? Happy employees deliver better service, so this is a leading indicator of future success. Anna: Finally, business value delivered is the ultimate measure. Are your improvements helping the organization achieve its goals? Are IT services enabling new business capabilities? This connects your technical work to real business outcomes. On-screen text Measuring improvement success - Service performance metrics - Customer satisfaction scores - Employee engagement levels - Business value delivered