Search icon CANCEL
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Conferences
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Microsoft System Center 2016 Service Manager Cookbook

You're reading from   Microsoft System Center 2016 Service Manager Cookbook Discover over 100 practical recipes to help you master the art of IT service management for your organization

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464897
Length 638 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Arrow right icon
Authors (5):
Arrow left icon
Steve Buchanan Steve Buchanan
Author Profile Icon Steve Buchanan
Steve Buchanan
Anders Asp Anders Asp
Author Profile Icon Anders Asp
Anders Asp
Steve Beaumont Steve Beaumont
Author Profile Icon Steve Beaumont
Steve Beaumont
Dieter Gasser Dieter Gasser
Author Profile Icon Dieter Gasser
Dieter Gasser
Andreas Baumgarten Andreas Baumgarten
Author Profile Icon Andreas Baumgarten
Andreas Baumgarten
+1 more Show less
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. ITSM and ITIL Frameworks and Processes FREE CHAPTER 2. Personalizing SCSM 2016 Administration 3. Configuring Service Level Agreements (SLAs) 4. Building the Configuration Management Database (CMDB) 5. Deploying Service Request Fulfilment 6. Deploying and Configuring the HTML5 Self-Service Portal 7. Working with Incident and Problem Management 8. Designing and Configuring Change Management and Release Management 9. Implementing Security Roles 10. Working with the Data Warehouse and Reporting 11. Extending SCSM with Advanced Personalization 12. Automating Service Manager 2016 13. Whats New in SCSM 2016 and Upgrading from SCSM 2012 R2 A. Community Extensions and Third-Party Commercial SCSM Solutions B. Useful Websites and Community Resources

Creating an Asset Management process

This recipe will provide steps for creating a sample Asset Management process.

Getting ready

For this recipe, the authors recommend you read up on the difference between asset inventory and asset management as an organizational process.

How to do it...

Asset Management is a life cycle process, which tracks an IT asset with its associated financial data from when the asset is requested to when the asset is retired, as shown in the following figure:

;

How to do it...

An example of the steps for creating an Asset Management process is as follows:

  1. Agree and document the organization's asset management policy.
  2. Document the operational process to support the asset management policy.
  3. Create and assign people roles to manage the process. At a minimum, you should plan to include the following:
    • Hardware Asset Managers
    • Hardware Asset Inventory agents
    • Software Asset Managers
    • Software Asset Inventory agents
  4. Identify and agree on an asset register management system. An asset register in its basic form is a manual process. In advanced scenarios, you may be able to automate this process with a tool such as a bar-code scanner. It should capture the following:
    • Capture the IT asset type
    • Capture financial information
    • Align the IT asset to its financial data
    • Capture the input to a Configuration Management system (CMS)
    • Continually aligned to the CMS
  5. Implement Asset Management in SCSM using one of the following methods:
    • Manually extend the Configuration Items (CI) class to include financial data for assets
    • Purchase an asset management solution for SCSM (for example, Provance IT Asset Management Pack for SCSM or Cireson Asset Management)
  6. Continually review the policy and operational process. The goal of this step is to improve the process and ensure compliance.

How it works...

Asset Management begins and ends with people and ultimately can cost or add value to a business. A non-IT related analogy is the lessons from retail stock takes, which typically happen annually. The stock take is the best opportunity for a retail shop to get the most accurate figure for its profit or loss on stock. Two forms of lost revenues are as follows:

  • Damaged goods
  • Missing goods

IT asset management is the stock take required for all your technological assets, and its resultant analysis for intelligent decision making to provide factual compliance measurements. The IT equivalent of the stock take process is referred to as audits for software and hardware. SCSM with partner extensions or in-house authoring provides 80 % of the Asset Management for the organization. People and process critically account for the high value of 20 percent.

There's more...

There are various tools (products) labeled as Asset Management tools. The true Asset Management tools should have the capability of tracking assets from order to decommissioning, and in some cases, recommissioning.

Asset Management is an end-to-end process, and the tools are enablers of successful implementation. Successful Asset Management organization programs recognize the full life cycle management of assets.

See also

See the Using the SCSM Authoring Tool and Extending Service Manager classes recipes in Chapter 11, Extending SCSM with Advanced Personalization, for advanced recipes on management pack authoring.

You have been reading a chapter from
Microsoft System Center 2016 Service Manager Cookbook - Second Edition
Published in: Feb 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781786464897
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $19.99/month. Cancel anytime