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Project Management Methodology for IT Operations?

sleeperservice asks: "There are a multitude of books, tools, and educational programs that deal with managing development projects. Whether you subscribe to IBM's Rational Unified Process or maybe SEI's Capability Maturity Model, whether you read Tom DeMarco's Peopleware or possibly Brooks' Mythical Man Month, there's something out there for you. However, most of these deal with projects that have a heavy amount of development, often new development associated with them. What about the folks in Operations? Let's say you need to upgrade your Oracle-based data management system for 1000 non-technical users? Or maybe you need to migrate your enterprise off of Outlook/Exchange and onto an alternative? What pointers are out there that Slashdot readers have used in such situations?"

3 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. Operations books by Checkered+Daemon · · Score: 5, Informative

    "The Practice of System and Network Administration" by Limoncelli and Hogan.

    The book I wish I'd had when I started doing this 35 years ago.

    "Security Engineering" by Ross Anderson.

    Even if you think you don't need it. Especially if you think you don't need it.

  2. ITIL by Pete+(big-pete) · · Score: 5, Informative

    ITIL stands for IT Infrastructure Library, and defines an IT Service Management structure that can be applied to IT Operations as an effective framework. There are two main areas within ITIL, Service Delivery and Service Support.

    Service Delivery includes:

    Service Level Management

    Capacity Management

    Availability Management

    Financial Management

    IT Service Continuity

    Service Support includes:

    Service Desk

    Incident Management

    Problem Management

    Change Management

    Release Management

    Configuration Management (arguablely also part of Service Delivery)

    If you apply an ITIL methodology throught IT Operations you will find that the IT operational projects are run more smoothly in a well controlled environment. You can google for a lot more information on ITIL, but I recommend certification, at least to Foundation level for anyone seriously interested in implementation. See also BS15000, the British Standard associated with ITIL which is expected to become an ISO (International Standard) in the future.

    -- Pete.

  3. PMBoK in plain english by sdanic · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've distilled the 9 knowledge areas from PMI into plain english.

    What are we doing?
    Who wants it?
    What could go wrong?
    Who's gonna do it?
    How long is it gonna take?
    How much is it gonnna cost?
    To get it done, what all do we have to buy?
    How are we gonna make sure that stuff works?
    How are we gonna bring this whole mess together?

    Recite that to yourself every day and you've covered the 9 PMBoK knowledge areas.:

    Scope
    Communications
    Risk
    HR
    Schedule
    Cost
    Procurement
    Quality
    Integration

    Also, get the PMBoK Guide
    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1930 69945X/qid=1109447541/sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_1/103-8164 264-6245456?v=glance&s=books&n=507846