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Improving Reliability and Making Things Cheaper to Run Tuesday 20th September

James Linsell-Fraser, Senior Architect & Client Technical Advisor September 2011. Improving Reliability and Making Things Cheaper to Run Tuesday 20th September. Why am I here?. Background Challenge Approach / Plan Opportunities. Background. My Background

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Improving Reliability and Making Things Cheaper to Run Tuesday 20th September

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  1. James Linsell-Fraser, Senior Architect & Client Technical Advisor September 2011 Improving Reliability and Making Things Cheaper to RunTuesday 20th September

  2. Why am I here? • Background • Challenge • Approach / Plan • Opportunities

  3. Background • My Background • Complex systems integration programmes in financial services and public sector • Trusted advisor - driving value out of IBM products and services • Not here talk specifically about IBM and what it is and does – will answer what I can! • IBMs technical community • I am a representative of IBMs technical leadership capability in UK and Ireland • Day job versus eminence – exploiting IBMs technical council, shared values • Innovation drives value in front of the client: technology and service orientated • We represent a significant influence in the market and clients expect the best • A services world, consuming IT services (SOA, Cloud) – helping define the standards

  4. Challenge • “Complex Systems Integration” – a process that adopts service based patterns • For me, the hardest part of what we do in IT delivery • Integration of disparate technologies, current & legacy • Integrating technology with business – service orientated architecture • But, because it is hard, we don’t always get it right! (but we need to learn) • What can we learn from other industries about improving our effectiveness? • Team of 6 started an initiative to compare and contract the IT and Automotive Industries • The challenge is – where do you start and what do you compare? • Problem is, we are not intellects / experts in Automotive manufacturing…. • …..but there must be some synergies in method and process?

  5. Approach – Auto manufacture example Operational Architecture • Needs to be: • reliable and perform to customer expectations • dependable • realistic total cost of ownership/support • economic to run and decommission Sounds just like IT… Manufacturer and supplier ecosystem Integration Architecture e.g. Electrical, entertainment, mechanical, user interface, etc sub systems to integrate • Based on design principles and best practice • Define the relationships between the components • Complex interactions required, modelled and understood • Multiple layers of complexity to integrate Functional Architecture e.g. SatNav, Bluetooth, Aircon are from 3rd party vendors. Engine might be shared amongst models and partners. Body panels bespoke • Based on design principles and best practice • Legacy components • Custom design components • Shared asset components • 3rd party vendor components Technology Architecture e.g. Shared chassis, drive train and engine between group members. Heritage and brand. • Tried and tested principles and best practice • Based on assets, products and design patterns • Could be shared amongst different business units • Best of breed materials and components, affordable

  6. Problem Statement “Complex SI in the 2010s is more about component integration than “blank sheet” engineering” How can we make complex IT integration projects more reliable and cheaper to run?

  7. AUTO The lifecycle of automotive delivery is well established to control change and maximise profit. It is a highly competitive, global industry with a complex supplier ecosystem. There are established global brands for which product quality is a fundamental requirement. Compare & Contrast the two industries IT IT is a relatively new industry which has grown dramatically both in business impact and in technology. IT is a competitive and global industry with an increasingly complex supplier ecosystem. There are established global brands for which service quality is a fundamental requirement.

  8. What we want to achieve STUDY GOALS • Compare the lifecycle of Auto production and maintenance • Understand how Delivery Excellence affects our business and is contained • Identify engineering influences that can be translated into IT process improvement RESULTS FROM THE STUDY • Recommendations on how the IT Services business could change its delivery models • A model of the transformation effort and investment required • A model of the IT return on the potential Delivery Excellence improvement

  9. Using hypothesis to focus on the problem – “Service Patterns” “Due to an accurate estimating method and automated build processes the motor industry is able to invest more on the design phase and design for run” “The motor manufacturing process has mastered core engineering principles that are common throughout the industry and used to drive down cost and improve reliability” “The motor industry has overcome the equivalent of the Business-IT-IT gap in efficiently managing the transition from requirements to build to run” “The motor industry is more adept at managing change than the IT industry” “The motor industry has adopted and matured testing processes using accurate input data to improve quality and optimise manufacturing. The IT industry has not yet reached a similar level of maturity”

  10. The plan is to undertake research using a variety of sources to evidence the hypotheses and identify if there are relevant improvements that we could adopt into IT design and delivery capabilities Refer to published industry research e.g. Gartner Consult academia to identify relevant studies/sources Reference case studies from both IT and Auto projects Work with innovative bodies such as the NoAE Leverage relationships with auto manufacturers e.g. JLR Compare and contrast processes, metrics and outcomes NoAE: Network of Automotive Excellence

  11. Opportunities for IBM and Manchester Business School What could the Academic community / business school do for us? • Help identify research, assets or experiences that we could study • Introduce us to bodies, communities, knowledge or leaders in this this area What we could do to thank you for that • Share our analysis and results with you, perhaps an opportunity to collaborate? • Understand how our work could contribute to your work • Build relationships with IBM so that you could leverage R&D, capability and industry leadership (our) Timescales • End of Q411 – identify the sources of input and collaboration • End of Q112 – outline business case, review early recommendations • End of Q212 – finalise work, publish • Remember – we are doing this voluntarily in time we make around our day jobs !

  12. Questions?

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