• Skip Navigation |
  • Accessibility 
IT-Director.com Logo
  • Breaking out of the social media echo chamber
  • Matching IT service with business needs
  • How to tag documents with multiple languages and scripts
 

Main navigation - go to a section of this website:

  • ARCHIVE
  • PAPERS
  • RESEARCH
  • EVENTS
  • NEWSWIRE
  • BLOGS
  • POLLS
  • MARKETPLACE

  

Member Login | Become a Member

 
DOMAINS
  • Enterprise
  • SME
  • Business Issues
  • Technology
  • Services
  • Channels
FEATURED EVENTS
  • Legal IT Show 2009
    4th February - 5th February
    Islington London, United Kingdom
  • Best Practice User Group International Congress
    10th February - 11th February
    London, United Kingdom
POPULAR PAPERS
  • Content security for the next decade by Quocirca
  • IT Delivery in the Downturn by Freeform Dynamics
  • ShoreTel 8.1 by Bloor Research
TRANSLATE PAGE



USEFUL LINKS
  • Last 7 Days
  • Archives
  • Market Place
  • Top Articles
  • Hall of Flame
INTERACT
  • Advertising
  • Site Feedback
  • Newsletters
  • Contact Us
  • Registration
CONTENT FEED

Sitewide
RSS Feed:

RSS Icon

What is RSS?

RANDOM QUOTE
Famous Slights - "I don't like food that's too carefully arranged; it makes me think that the chef is spending too much time arranging and not enough time cooking. If I wanted a picture I'd buy a painting." - Andy Rooney

ADVERTISEMENT
MARKETPLACE
  • New Apple iPod classic 120GB - Black
    New Apple iPod classic 120GB - Black
  • New Apple iPod touch 8GB
    New Apple iPod touch 8GB
Blogs > MWD

MMS 2007: Microsoft begins to deliver on DSI; provides some IT-business alignment pointers

Neil Macehiter By: Neil Macehiter, Research Director, Macehiter Ward-Dutton
Published: 3rd April 2007
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
Logo for Macehiter Ward-Dutton
Page Tools

Tell A Friend
Contact Author

Recent Blog Posts
  • On SOA governance: for SOA, read CPOA?
  • Are you capable of watching your technical debt?
  • The death of middleware
  • Notes on PDC: Windows Azure
  • Interviewing Avaya on Communications-Enabled Business Processes (CEBP)
  • Software Delivery InFocus podcast - ALM challenges and direction in the real world
Blog Archive
  • November, 2008
  • October, 2008
  • September, 2008
  • August, 2008
  • July, 2008
  • May, 2008
  • April, 2008
  • March, 2008
  • February, 2008
  • January, 2008
  • December, 2007
  • November, 2007
Syndication
  • Delicious Icon Delicious
  • Digg Icon Digg
  • reddit Icon reddit
  • Facebook Icon Facebook
  • StumbleUpon Icon StumbleUpon

I spent the beginning of last week in San Diego at the Microsoft Management Summit (MMS), the company's annual conference focused on all things systems management. With time to kill on the 15-hour return journey, I began to draft my thoughts only for this post from Coté over at RedMonk to pop into my feed reader. As well as providing excellent summaries of IT management, Microsoft's Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI) and the company's System Center product family, Coté provides his impressions of MMS and Microsoft's approach to systems management. Since my impressions were much the same:

  • Significant focus on delivery with System Center Operations Manager, Configuration Manager and Essentials, Virtual Machine Manager and Service Manager (although the latter is still a year away).
  • Emphasis on modeling—Service Modeling Language, Common Modeling Language (adding the management semantics to SML), CMDB, Management Packs.
  • Raising the ITIL flag—Microsoft Operations Framework (which Microsoft has until recently failed to exploit despite a long-standing ITIL foundation); System Center Service Manager and CMDB.
  • Plugging some notable gaps - OEM relationship with EMC for network-aware management but support for a heterogeneous environment requires more work.

I won't repeat them in detail here.

Instead, I thought I would call out something which I felt was largely absent from the two days of briefings and meetings with the Windows Enterprise Management Division team: how they help organisations align what they do from a systems management perspective with business objectives and priorities. Ultimately, as Microsoft claims, that's what DSI is really all about:

A dynamic system is Microsoft's vision for what an agile business looks like—where IT works closely with business in order to meet the demands of a rapidly changing and adaptable environment. The Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI) is Microsoft's technology strategy for products and solutions that help businesses enhance the dynamic capability of its people, process, and IT infrastructure using technology.

Microsoft has done a pretty good job with its Infrastructure Optimization (IO) Model of outlining a roadmap to dynamic systems nirvana, as well as assessment tools to help organisations understand where they are on that path. The company has also gathered a significant amount of data from its customers which should help IT organisations to justify IO investment to the business.

However, the company hasn't really explained how it can help them to maintain the dialogue with the business once the investment has been secured—understanding and capturing business expectations; providing business-meaningful monitoring and metrics; correlating IT security management (as an aside, Microsoft needs to tighten the linkage between its System Center and security—Forefront, Identity Lifecyle Manager—offerings) with business risk management etc. Microsoft needs to address this, not least because all of its enterprise systems management competitors are claiming such capabilities, be it Business Service Management from BMC, Business Service Optimization from CA, Business Technology Optimization from HP, Service Management from IBM.

There were signs, admittedly subtle ones, that were obscured by the focus on new System Center products, in Bob Muglia's Tuesday morning keynote that Microsoft recognises this need:

  • Plans to extend Design For Operations to a 'business analyst' audience.
  • The use of SML (presumably in BizTalk) for business process and key performance indicator modeling.
  • 2007 Office System (Project Server for portfolio management?) as a component of Microsoft's management offerings.
  • DSI is "ERP for IT".

Fortunately the timings of my meetings meant that I had a chance to quiz Kirill Tatarinov, Corporate Vice President, Windows Enterprise Management Division, about these small but important aspects of the keynote. He confirmed my interpretations of Muglia's comments in light of aligning IT operations with the business. He wasn't able to go into too much detail but I fully expect to see Microsoft begin to talk about these aspects of its management strategy in the not too distant future.

With Microsoft now four years into its ten-year management initiative it's good to see it delivering the first generation of DSI-era management tools. It's equally encouraging to see that the company recognises that it's not just an IT proposition. The company certainly has many of the assets required to help IT engage with a business audience but Microsoft is already coming from behind when it comes to IT management. There may be another six years of DSI but that's a LONG time in the IT industry, so it has to act quickly if its not to be forever trying to catch up with its competitors.

Reader Comments

We are no longer accepting comments against this item. We suggest contacting the author directly.

  • Site Map
  • | Terms of Use
  • | Privacy

Published by: IT Analysis Communications Ltd.
T: +44 (0)190 888 0760 | F: +44 (0)190 888 0761