Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Rationalization Debate

posted by Peter Mollins at
In response to a great question from Rex, I placed some more discussion about the application rationalization vs. application modernization discussion. It is on the application modernization sister site.

Labels:

Monday, November 24, 2008

Portfolio Management is Top Priority for 2009

posted by Peter Mollins at
This week Baseline published its top IT trends for 2009. Among the usual contenders for top spot (such as virtualization and Software as a Service) was Project and Portfolio Management. The reason cited for its selection was the need to oversee IT activities and allocate resources toward high-priority tasks – which stands to reason in these challenging economic times.

The linkage between Project Portfolio Management (PPM) and Application Portfolio Management is an interesting one. PPM focuses on helping development managers to monitor and control in-flight development projects. Application Portfolio Management concentrates on the allocation of development and related infrastructure resources toward business priorities.

As discussed previously, Application Portfolio Management is at its most effective when measurements are placed into their appropriate business context. This could include managing applications by the business process they automate or by the geography that manages the applications, or other contexts or combinations of contexts. So, we could uncover complexities within a high-value business system managed in India, and decide to allocate resources to correct the issues.

We can think of PPM’s project entities as being another grouping through which we want to manage APM. This isn’t to say that APM should replicate PPM functionality, but rather that the technologies can effectively collaborate by sharing metadata. Much the same way that APM doesn’t replicate BPM functionality simply because it reuses business process models as a way to structure metrics reports.

Let’s look at how this can be deployed. A CIO of a bank is under pressure to improve responsiveness. Using APM, he looks at change request backlogs as organized by business process and spots an outlier in the customer management business process. He decides to investigate further. He looks at metrics for this process and sees that complexity levels are especially troublesome in the portion that is managed in Brazil. He decides to reallocate resources to attack complexity levels and whittle down the change request backlog.

This is clearly when PPM would become involved. Managers can use PPM to monitor deliverables, outcomes, and other elements that are part of a development project. But in parallel, APM continues to play a critical role. We could now overlay a new grouping onto our software; in this case the grouping would be by project. So, we are now tagging the portion of our application portfolio that is encompassed by the newly introduced project. Then, as we proceed we can collect metrics associated with the grouping of our project. This means that we can use APM to monitor the trend of value, cost, and risk of the software that is being enhanced by our project.

We can even start to combine business contexts, for instance by collecting metrics from software within Project A that is managed by Team A versus software managed by Team B. We start to see within APM very interesting metrics about adherence to SLAs as a result.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Best Practices for Application Portfolio Management: Gartner

posted by Peter Mollins at
An excellent piece of research by Jim Duggan came out from Gartner today. It details how companies should approach Application Portfolio Management – and of course, why you should be interested in APM in the first place. The why is clear: as the economy has slowed, companies must uncover and replicate efficiencies while slashing wasteful spending. The oft-quoted figure of 80% of IT budgets being dedicated to ‘lights-on’ activities is a primary reason why Application Portfolio Management has become such a hot topic.

But how should you discover where to focus rationalization and follow-on modernization activities? The paper relates a number of suggestions. The major thrust is that management should assess which portions of the application portfolio to rationalize based on different perspectives. That is, you should determine the ways in which you manage your business, and then rank your applications based on these views.

For instance, we could start with the most obvious perspective: cost. What are your most expensive applications and do you need to maintain these systems? Do they overlap and can be consolidated? Are they not used by the business? Is there a less expensive architecture?

You can then quickly move to other Application Portfolio Management perspectives. It could be by organization. Are applications that are managed by expensive / low-value providers that could be re-assigned? Or the perspective could be by business process. Are there business processes that could be better managed by an external service provider? Are there applications that support defunct business processes? You can see that executing APM from different perspectives allows you to rationalize based on KPIs that matter to your organization.

There is also a significant side advantage that comes from managing by these perspectives as you focus APM and continue to refresh APM. Once perspectives are in place – and rationalization decisions may have been made – you can focus modernization activities on sub-sets of the portfolio that matter to you. High-cost and low-business value areas? High-risk and frequently-changing applications? Now, resources can be applied to the right area. You may decide to deploy richer code analytics at this stage to get a complete picture about how developers should be concentrated.

Further, these perspectives –especially once placed onto the software – offer a ‘filtration mechanism’ for metrics as you collect them for APM. Looking for cost data on a business process, or risk information about applications managed by a particular organization? The perspectives provide the means to get these business answers. The result is highly business-centered development decisions.

Labels: , ,

Monday, November 10, 2008

Application Portfolio Management Resource Site

posted by Peter Mollins at
This new site exclusively is dedicated to best-practices for Application Portfolio Management is now online. The site explores what kinds of metrics that you should collect, how they should be combined into measures that have business utility, and what are the key attributes of an APM tool.

Application Portfolio Management is a methodology for identifying and prioritizing development activities. The aim is to locate misalignments between the application portfolio and business requirements, and then allowing managers and other IT professionals to adjust their resources accordingly.

APM is fundamentally about collecting business and technical metrics, combining them into useful KPIs in the right business context, and presenting them to decision-makers. On the site you'll find a wealth of relevant resources.

Labels: ,