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Canadian firm slams complexity of ITIL certification

Canadian firm slams complexity of ITIL certification

By:  Shane Schick  On: 03 Jun 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

Version 3 of the IT Infrastructure Library was supposed to help executives do a better job of managing technology infrastructure, but do you take the "capability" or "lifecycle" courses? Pink Elephant calls for greater clarity

“We’ve not really received that same kind of feedback. Generally speaking, the consuming public tends to understand the scheme fairly well,” she said. “The choice of certifying to the new scheme compared to the one it’s about to replace is actually increasing.”

Taylor, a Canadian who was highly involved in developing ITIL Version 3, said the scheme released in 2007 was designed to support an entire refresh of the body of knowledge on which ITIL is based. The feedback from the community, she said, is that Version 2 only covered a small subset of what ITIL practices really are.

“We’re offering a way to measure competency in the procession, not just area of practice,” she said. “ITIL moved from being a process-based framework to a lifecycle-based framework.”

Although training budgets are often among the first things cut during an economic downturn, that may not apply to ITIL, said Dave Senf, an analyst with IDC Canada in Toronto.

“We’ve seen a spike in ITIL interest over the last couple of years,” he said. “(The growth of) virtualization is playing a role . . . (there’s been) less CMDB, though.”

Two weeks ago Ratcliffe said he met with the CEO from the APM Group during a Toronto visit to discuss Pink Elephant’s concerns.

“Pink Elephant used to have a huge amount of influence over the previous schemes to Version 3. Now it’s a lot more democratic,” he said. “I guess you could say that’s a good thing, but what’s happening is we’re getting mired in decisions are taking forever to get made. There are a lot of people who have a voice at the table now.”

When Version 3 was launched, for example, Ratcliffe said he hoped to see the opportunity to introduce additional, specialized or complementary courses. This could include ITIL best practices for someone focusing on CMDB, he added. So far, however, nothing has materialized.

“There are 20 different vendors all arguing about the pros and cons. We’ve almost lost interest in it,” he said. “We were hoping in a few months or, heavens, a year maybe, there’d be additions to the program.”

Taylor insisted that the APM Group and the ITIL Certification Management Board are continuously looking for improvements and new certifications, but right now the emphasis is measuring the success and adoption of the existing programs. This involves studying the volume of certification candidates and whether the exam performance.

“We’ve chosen consciously to make sure the existing scheme as it was launched is running at a stable performance measure across all of the modules before we start introducing any additional complexity to that,” she said, adding that a master’s level is already under development.










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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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