Collaborative Business Design: The Fundamentals
Collaborative Business Design: The Fundamentals
Author(s):
Léon-Paul de Rouw
Publication Date: 22 March, 2018
Available in all formats
Series: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General
Publisher: IT Governance Publishing
ISBN: 9781849289764
Price: INR 1424.00
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Foreword
- Contents
- 1.IT-driven business services
- 1.1 Business need and value
- 1.2 Capturing the characteristics of IT-driven services in a service design statement
- 1.3 From business vision to operation: methods to use
- 1.4 Who should read this guide to fundamentals?
- 2.Understanding IT-driven service requirements
- 2.1 What is a business service?
- 2.2 Service lifecycle
- 2.3 Requirements origin and perspective
- 2.4 Business service design
- 2.4.1 Need and senior responsible owner
- 2.4.2 Business service coordination: I think therefore I am
- 2.4.3 Outcome and output must dictate behaviour
- 2.4.4 Service constellation
- 2.4.5 Service design statement
- 2.5 The Business Service Design session
- 3.Stakeholder dynamics in the service constellation
- 3.1 Delivering what is needed: Business service design
- 3.2 A stakeholder view of the enterprise
- 3.2.1 Stakeholders from the business services coordination perspective
- 3.2.2 Users
- 3.2.3 Providers
- 3.2.4 Customers
- 3.2.5 Board of directors/general management
- 3.2.6 Business service coordination (BSC)
- 3.3 The domains
- 3.3.1 Domain: Operations
- 3.3.2 Domain: Quality
- 3.3.3 Domain: Governance
- 3.3.4 Domain: Orchestration
- 4.Capabilities and resources within the constellation
- 4.1 Transactions, communications, resources and agreements
- 4.1.1 Transactions offer something or request something
- 4.1.2 Transactions have different characteristics
- 4.1.3 Transactions that are desirable or mandatory
- 4.1.4 Transactions set a condition or a delivery
- 4.2 Customer journey
- 4.3 Transactions derive from actions and resources
- 4.4 Risk management and compliance
- 4.5 Instruments for agreement
- 4.5.1 Policy
- 4.5.2 Service catalogue/product delivery catalogue (PDC)
- 4.5.3 Service level agreements (internal)
- 4.5.4 Contracts
- 4.1 Transactions, communications, resources and agreements
- 5.Service design statement
- 5.1 Business service design deliverable
- 5.2 Putting the pieces together
- 5.3 Balancing in a favourable design
- 5.4 Using the SDS
- 5.5 One final thing: managing the BSC
- Afterword
- ITG Resources
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Foreword
- Contents
- 1.IT-driven business services
- 1.1 Business need and value
- 1.2 Capturing the characteristics of IT-driven services in a service design statement
- 1.3 From business vision to operation: methods to use
- 1.4 Who should read this guide to fundamentals?
- 2.Understanding IT-driven service requirements
- 2.1 What is a business service?
- 2.2 Service lifecycle
- 2.3 Requirements origin and perspective
- 2.4 Business service design
- 2.4.1 Need and senior responsible owner
- 2.4.2 Business service coordination: I think therefore I am
- 2.4.3 Outcome and output must dictate behaviour
- 2.4.4 Service constellation
- 2.4.5 Service design statement
- 2.5 The Business Service Design session
- 3.Stakeholder dynamics in the service constellation
- 3.1 Delivering what is needed: Business service design
- 3.2 A stakeholder view of the enterprise
- 3.2.1 Stakeholders from the business services coordination perspective
- 3.2.2 Users
- 3.2.3 Providers
- 3.2.4 Customers
- 3.2.5 Board of directors/general management
- 3.2.6 Business service coordination (BSC)
- 3.3 The domains
- 3.3.1 Domain: Operations
- 3.3.2 Domain: Quality
- 3.3.3 Domain: Governance
- 3.3.4 Domain: Orchestration
- 4.Capabilities and resources within the constellation
- 4.1 Transactions, communications, resources and agreements
- 4.1.1 Transactions offer something or request something
- 4.1.2 Transactions have different characteristics
- 4.1.3 Transactions that are desirable or mandatory
- 4.1.4 Transactions set a condition or a delivery
- 4.2 Customer journey
- 4.3 Transactions derive from actions and resources
- 4.4 Risk management and compliance
- 4.5 Instruments for agreement
- 4.5.1 Policy
- 4.5.2 Service catalogue/product delivery catalogue (PDC)
- 4.5.3 Service level agreements (internal)
- 4.5.4 Contracts
- 4.1 Transactions, communications, resources and agreements
- 5.Service design statement
- 5.1 Business service design deliverable
- 5.2 Putting the pieces together
- 5.3 Balancing in a favourable design
- 5.4 Using the SDS
- 5.5 One final thing: managing the BSC
- Afterword
- ITG Resources