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App And Service Portfolio Management

By Charles Betz
Expert Author
Article Date: 2007-02-26

A longstanding debate in IT service management is the relationship between Service and Application.

Readers of my book and this blog know that I see an Application as a subtype of Service, not as a component of.

The alternative view is well articulated in various ITSM and ITIL materials: Applications are technical and too low level for the customer to care about. A hierarchy is proposed:

Service
depends on
System
depends on
Application

for example.

However, if one examines the reality of Application Portfolio Management: it is targeting a much higher level concept. APM requires information on financials, operational metrics, customer impressions, and so forth. See especially Bob Benson's book and product literature for Prosight and similar products. Also, a chapter from the excellent Handler/Maizlish book on IT portfolio management is available for free here. Note that Handler and Maizlish do not even use the term IT Service.

We would not be managing applications as a portfolio if they were mere subcomponents of something bigger (i.e. Service). We'd be managing the "something bigger."

The capture of customer perception in particular points up the contradiction. In the classic ITIL sense, the Application should be "invisible to the Customer." So why do application portfolio management products focus on customer satisfaction? Because application is a type of IT service - not a purely technical back-end function.

See also What's an Application Manager to Think?

Now, this does not preclude the existence of process-based IT services, such as Customer Credit Authorization, that are essentially transactional and may cross multiple systems.

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About the Author:
Charles Betz is a Senior Enterprise Architect, and chief architect for IT Service Management strategy for a US-based Fortune 50 enterprise. He is author of the forthcoming Architecture and Patterns for IT Service Management, Resource Planning, and Governance: Making Shoes for the Cobbler's Children (Morgan Kaufman/Elsevier, 2006, ISBN 0123705932). He is the sole author of the popular www.erp4it.com weblog.