Introduction

IT change management process

Everyone knows change is never easy, but often quite necessary. The statement is never truer than in IT.

Solid change management capability will help you boost your ITSM maturity, break out of the "firefighting mode," align IT activity with business objectives, and transform IT from a service provider to a business innovator. However, these benefits don't come easily. Change management is one of the most difficult ITSM practices to get right. Why? Because change management is an ITSM process that needs the right mix of people, processes, and technologies.

When it comes to change management, 'implementation' isn't the end - it's just the beginning.

- Beth Banks Cohn

Think of IT change management as a three-legged stool. If one of the legs is weak, the stool will fall. The general guidance on ITSM best practices focuses a lot on terminologies and processes but contains little practical advice on the actual implementation of each process. This white paper lists the steps involved in implementing a solid change management process.

First, a quick definition of change: The addition, modification, or removal of anything that could have an effect on IT services.

This definition raises three change-related issues:

  • Why: The reason for the change. What is the business benefit you hope to achieve with the change?
  • What: Is it hardware, software, system architecture, a process, documentation, or a combination of these that will be subjected to change?
  • Impact: What are the possible negative consequences of the change (bearing in mind the complex interdependencies of today's computer systems) - and how to avoid these consequences?

Solid change management capability is based on a sound understanding of these three issues. In essence, implementing a successful change management process is about asking the right questions and having the right people, workflow, and technologies in place to get answers quickly and efficiently. The right questions typically include:

  • What is the cost of making the change?
  • Does the benefit outweigh the cost?
  • What is the business priority of the change?
  • How do we implement the change?
  • Who will implement the change?
  • When should we implement the change?
  • What do we do if the change goes wrong? Do we have a backup plan in place?

Answering these questions reliably is the hardest part; implementing the changes is easier.

Change management and configuration management

The best practice is to implement change management in conjunction with configuration management, but you don't need to implement 100% of configuration management before you can get started with change management. The key is to understand the touch points between the two. In simple terms, change management needs a view of the infrastructure to assess the impact of a change. Configuration management needs changes to be recorded, so that the configuration management database (CMDB) is kept up-to-date and always represents the live environment.

In this article, you will read about six simple steps to implement a successful change management process in an organization, with detailed descriptions of the workflows, categorization, change types, and more.

Identify why you want to implement IT change management

Change management process steps

Before we dive deep into the topic, check out these tips and tricks for successful change management implementation, to get a clear idea of what you should be doing and why. All of the activities involved in implementing change management should be focused on achieving the above-mentioned objectives. If something can't be linked back to one of these objectives, it's probably not a priority. It might help to write a bullet-point summary of why you need to do change management, print it big, and stick it to a wall where everybody can see it.

You know you have to constantly keep changing. But the problem with change is that change sometimes is not necessarily easy for people to embrace and be successful at.

- Frank Calderoni

Critical Success Factors:

  • Get executive buy-in for your change management implementation by selling the benefits and the objectives at a high level.
  • Agree to a high-level change policy that prohibits unauthorized changes and gives the change management function the authority to make decisions and handle resistance.

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Understand the importance of change management

What is change management process

If you want to improve infrastructure stability, service quality, and IT agility, change management is a "necessary evil." It's unpopular because it's fundamentally about asserting control. IT people already think they're often told how to do their jobs, so adding something like a cumbersome change control process will just slow them.

To succeed with change management, you need to identify the people who will be most affected by your proposed changes and get them invested in the project.

- Frank Calderoni

A McKinsey global survey that included over 2000 executives revealed that less than 50% of the respondents had their initial goals for a change, met and sustained. Implementing IT change management is more about organizational change than changing technical operations. Like any other organizational change, you have to sell the value to the stakeholder groups who will be affected by the implementation and get them on board. Identify the WIFM factor. Each individual is asking "what's in it for me?" It's important to answer this question to get a buy-in. A good starting point is to make a list of the distinct groups that will be affected by the implementation. Next, analyze what they do, how they do it, and what will change for them. Then, let each of these groups know what will be expected of them and how they will benefit.

Critical Success Factors:

  • Communicate the "why" before you communicate the "what."
  • Answer the question, "what's in it for me?" for each stakeholder group.

Identify what is IT change management & its types

IT change management

Don't expect everybody to be on the same page when you use the word "change." It means different things to different people, so it's essential to have a clear definition of a change model. The best practice is to define a change model that separates changes into groups according to scope, impact, and urgency.

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Change management is about balancing progress with risk, so a change model is an essential part of efficient change management, enabling low-risk changes to be applied quickly with minimal cost and resource usage. Without this distinction, all changes (no matter how minor) must go through the full process, which can mean tying people up with trivial changes, while larger, more transformative changes may be delayed. Typical levels in a change model might include the following, but this can be adapted to suit your organization:

Types of Change management

There are five types of change management in an organization

  • Standard changes
  • Minor changes
  • Normal changes
  • Major changes
  • Emergency changes

Standard changes

Simple, low-risk changes and service requests with a well-defined procedure for execution do not require assessment by change management and might only require the approval of the requester's line manager. The simplest types of change (e.g. a password reset) might not require any authorization at all. Standard changes do not generate Request for Changes, because change management does not assess them. Instead, for maximum efficiency, an automated service request system or service catalog should handle standard changes with requests automatically triggering a workflow that routes implementation actions to the relevant technical groups.

Minor changes

Minor changes are relatively low risk, but have some limited potential impact. Therefore, they will require a formal RFC and invoke a simple change management process that balances the level of risk against cost and resources. For such changes, planning and approval may be handled entirely by the change manager and not involve the Change Advisory Board (CAB).

Normal changes

Normal changes present a moderate risk to service continuity and will involve convening the CAB to be assessed and planned as per a comprehensive change management process.

Major changes

Major changes are significant in terms of business benefits, scale, and risk. The level of importance and risk is known to be high, so a major change will involve a large number of people to assess, plan, and execute it. Due to the high risk, a major change would usually be escalated to a higher change authority for approval.

Emergency changes

Emergency changes are those that must be performed quickly in response to an immediate need, such as an issue that is disrupting business operations. Consequently, emergency changes bring not only the greatest risk to business, but also the greatest benefit (e.g., restoring business continuity).

The Emergency CAB (ECAB) will be convened to deal with such emergencies quickly and decisively. The process for handling emergency changes will be streamlined and focused on making a change as quickly as is practically possible while accounting for the risk of compounding the problem. As such, some testing will be performed before implementation, but more comprehensive testing and tweaking may continue for some time afterwards.

When categorizing changes according to your change model, it is better to err on the side of caution. Map changes with unknown risk and impact to a high level in the change model (e.g., normal or major) to ensure the potential impact is fully and thoroughly assessed. At the tail end of the process, the evaluation stage will identify whether the change category can be moved down a level in the model, e.g., become a standard change that can be handled more quickly and efficiently next time around.

Critical Success Factors:

  • Communicate a management-sanctioned policy to ensure all changes to IT infrastructure and services run through change management and unauthorized changes stop.
  • Implement a change model to ensure cost and agility is balanced against risk.

Change management requires a disciplined approach to controlling change, reinforced by official policy and executive backing. The change management function needs the authority to enforce the process across the whole organization.

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Define change management roles & responsibilities

Change process

Processes need people to take actions and make decisions. That is, clearly defined roles and responsibilities are a must-have to ensure ownership is maintained and execution is smooth. So, who will you need to support your change management process?

Change Manager

The change manager is not a popular function (particularly in the early stages of an implementation), so it takes a certain type of person to fill the shoes of a change manager. Those who seek popularity and positive feedback need not apply. In small and mid-size organizations, the change manager is not necessarily a dedicated role. Sometimes the problem manager or the configuration manager might assume this role, although there are some potential risks involved when one person has authority over changes and updating the CMDB. The incident manager/service desk manager shouldn't be nominated as change manager due to conflict of interests between the two roles. In larger organizations, the change manager role may take the form of a steering group, headed up by a change leader who has final say on authorization. Generally, the change manager needs to be highly organized, communicative, diplomatic, understanding, decisive, and most of all, thick-skinned.

Deep technical skills are not essential but will certainly help when communicating with technical teams. The change manager is responsible for reviewing submitted RFCs, scheduling CAB meetings, authorizing changes, updating change records, coordinating the build/test/implementation of changes, reviewing implemented changes, producing reports, and improving the change process.

Make sure you've got key individuals, especially those in critical roles, that are your drivers. They understand what you're trying to accomplish and are willing participants, not resisters. That will give you the momentum to overcome.

- Frank Calderoni

Change Authority

Every change requires a formal authorization before it can be implemented. Depending on size, cost, and risk, an appropriate change authority is required to provide this approval. Clearly, it is not appropriate to pester the CIO for approval on a password reset, nor is it appropriate for an end user to be approving a network switch upgrade. For a standard change, the change authority may be the requester or his/her line manager. For a minor change it is likely that the change manager will be the suitable change authority. For normal changes, the CAB and the change manager will collectively form the change authority. And for major changes - those with a significant scale, cost, benefit, and potential business impact - the change authority may be a director, c-level manager, or indeed, the board of directors.

Change Advisory Board (CAB)

It is the CAB's responsibility to assess each change from a business, technical, and financial viewpoint and make recommendations on the impact, planning, and approval. CAB membership is flexible and draws in people from IT operations, development, and business to ensure all angles are represented when discussing the implementation of an individual change. The change manager will decide which CAB members will attend a meeting depending on the nature of the change (or changes) in question. CAB meetings around individual changes can be done virtually, but a core CAB team should also meet periodically to review policies and procedures, on-going changes, and change backlog.

Emergency Change Advisory Board (ECAB)

The ECAB is a smaller, core group of CAB members that is available on short notice to respond to emergency changes that must be made on a short notice (perhaps also outside of normal working hours) to remedy an urgent issue. The ECAB is the change authority for emergency changes and must have the power to make decisions in an emergency without escalation.

Critical Success Factors:

  • Clearly defined roles and responsibilities.
  • Strong skills in organizational change management.
  • Executive sponsorship to deal with resistance to change.
  • The CAB must represent all stakeholder groups across both IT and business, including business managers, end users, developers, system administrators, the service desk, customers, and suppliers, as appropriate to each individual change.
  • A clear interaction and a good understanding among staff is needed when interactions related to change management and other service management processes happen.

6 Steps to Implement a Successful IT Change Management

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Design the IT change management process flow

IT change management process

RFCs need to go through a managed process to guide decision making and execution toward a successful outcome. A formal change management process is critical to implementing change in a fast, resource-efficient, low-risk manner.

The change management process will never be 100% right the first time around, but some process is better than no process. If the initial process is insufficient for managing changes, you will still see a high incidence of failed changes. Failed changes means extra work for IT, impact on business productivity, and lost revenue. If you look back at the end of your change management process and how well it performed, you can tweak it for the next time round. Over time, it will become more efficient and effective.

The typical process for handling a change is as follows:

  • Record- All changes to the infrastructure must be recorded by submitting a Request for Change (RFC).
  • Review- The change manager acts as gatekeeper and will make a quick review of each RFC to decide whether it should proceed. Is it valid, specific, beneficial, feasible, and necessary? If so, the RFC will be accepted and classified. Otherwise, it might be rejected and returned to the requesting party.
  • Assess- The change manager and the CAB (containing appropriate representatives from the business, user community, development, support, and any appropriate third parties) will assess the costs, resources, benefits, and risks (including impact on services) and will plan the execution of the change, including a back-out procedure.
  • Authorize- Based on the recommendations from the CAB, the change manager will authorize the change or escalate it to a higher management echelon for authorization, depending on the type of change and potential impact. Once authorized, the change should be added to the Forward Schedule of Changes (FSC).
  • Coordinate implementation- It is the responsibility of the change manager to coordinate execution of the change plan, including ensuring build, testing, and implementation actions in the right manner and at the right time as agreed and published in the FSC.
  • Evaluate and close- If the change has been successful, the RFC will be closed and the Post Implementation Review (PIR) will commence to assess the benefits of the change and how well the change process supported the implementation. The PIR will answer questions such as did the change achieve the objective? Is everybody satisfied with the results? Were there any side effects? Did the implementation exceed planned costs, resource usage, or downtime? It is here that continual improvement of the change management process happens. Any lessons learned from the experience can be fed back into the process to make it more efficient and effective.
Change management process flow

Critical Success Factors:

  • Communicate the change process to IT and the business to improve understanding and reduce the number of unauthorized changes circumventing the process.
  • Most organizations will need tools to log RFCs, perform automated classification, trigger and manage process workflows, and support impact assessment with a service-oriented view of the infrastructure.
  • Publish an FSC - a calendar of all authorized changes - in a place that is accessible to everybody in the business.
  • Ensure each RFC is logged with a unique reference number and date-stamp that contains as much detail as possible on what the change is and why it is required also references the project or problem record from which it originates.
  • Don't implement any change without a back-out plan that can be used to quickly roll back to a stable configuration if the change fails.
  • Ensure changes and back-out plans are tested in a safe environment, e.g., a sandbox that mirrors the live environment as closely as possible.
  • Embed continual improvement in the evaluation stage to refine the process over time.

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Measure change management KPI

Implementing change management

Change management is one of the most difficult ITSM practices to implement, but also one of the most valuable and critical to increasing IT maturity. To maintain momentum, it is important to report on the business value that the change management function is delivering. Key performance indicators (KPIs) will vary from one organization to the next, but the following metrics generally indicate how well change management is working and the value it is bringing to service management and the business.

Key performance indicators refer to the:

  • Number of successful changes
  • Number of failed changes that were rolled back
  • Number of changes in the backlog
  • Number of incidents caused by change
  • Number of emergency/out-of-hours changes
  • Number of unauthorized changes identified
  • Resources used and funds spent on changes
  • Percentage of changes that happened as per the FSC

Critical Success Factors:

  • Define a set of KPIs that are relevant to your organization.
  • Use KPIs to communicate the value of change management to the business and specific IT groups on a regular basis.

Conclusion

Change management steps

A solid IT change management process means IT can safely say "yes" to more requests for change from the business and IT might shake off its image as "The No Department." Through change management, IT can quickly improve infrastructure quality, reduce service disruption, and be more responsive to the business. The business will undoubtedly notice the difference.

By following this 6-step process of implementation, you can improve your chances of a successful implementation, shorten the time-to-value, and gain support for further ITSM process work.

  • Identify why you want to implement IT change management
  • Understand the importance of change management
  • Identify what is IT change management & its types
  • Define change management roles & responsibilities
  • Design the IT change management process flow
  • Measure change management KPI

Watch this webinar to learn how to execute a foolproof plan for implementing a major change