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CA promotes 'Lean IT' management approach

CA promotes 'Lean IT' management approach

By:  Shane Schick  On: 29 Apr 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

CA releases updates to 13 different enterprise applications, including service desk, service catalogue and application performance management tools. Plus: The Canadian country manager discusses the benefits of focusing solely on software

“The idea is before I throw something into production I’m going to knock the snot out of it with this tool, as it were, to make sure there are no vulnerabilities.”

Jasmine Noel, an analyst with Ptack, Noel and Associates in New York, said the CA products are focused on making it easier to strive for better IT management even as newer technologies like SOA and virtualization crop up.

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“I think CIOs have been headed down this road for a while; it’s just that new technology keeps throwing roadblocks in the way,” she said. “I think what CA is trying to do with Lean IT is make it easier to deal with the roadblocks so that CIOs can floor the accelerator.”

CA has been working on a comeback after accounting scandals involving its most senior executives made it a poster child for poor governance. Where some might have questioned CA’s viability over the last few years, Fulton suggested the company was among the few stable vendor partners for IT managers and CIOs.

“What I love the most about CA is it’s not changing. Among other vendors, the trend is to have a message du jour. That can no longer be said of CA,” he said, noting the recent consolidation among software titans like Oracle with systems companies such as Sun Microsystems. “CA has stayed its course on just software, not servers and software.”

Noel agreed. “CA's solutions manage infrastructure regardless of where it comes from, so customers can be sure that CA has no hardware or application platform agenda,” she said. “As long as enterprise IT continues to buy infrastructure from several vendors there should be a place for CA to compete.”

CA also said process changes and service provisioning will be sped up in its service catalogue, expanded asset inventories in its IT Client Manager and a unified view of planned or detected changes in its service desk software.

Meanwhile, CA plans to offer one-day seminars on Lean IT with key customers and a series of half-day seminars around the world with industry analyst firms such as Gartner and Forrester, but Fulton said CA Canada was focusing on attending targeted third-party events like the recent B.C. CIO Executive Summit.










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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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