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By Beth Ellyn Rosenthal, Editor
Outsourcing Center consultant Robert Damm, an ASP specialist, says the basic rule for SLAs is: Suppliers do nothing for free. "If you ask for it, you pay," he points out. Damm says executives must decide what they need to monitor before they start penning SLAs. "Be sure you need that special report," exhorts the consultant. Too often, he notices companies make extraneous -- and expensive -- requests that do not materially affect the operation of the business. There is a better use of precious capital, in his opinion. For that reason, the first crucial step in establishing strong SLAs is to always have the business executives and the IT professionals make decisions jointly. Damm says each side has a wish list that the other side tempers with reality. Together they can craft a decision that works on all fronts. The second step is to ensure all SLA have some kind of penalty associated with failure. Damm says buyers need to understand the goal of the penalty is to capture the vendor's attention and announce that this area is important to you. Penalties can never recapture the amount of money lost if a supplier does not perform according to plan. Damm says penalties end up reimbursing the buyer for only a portion of the loss at best. Three Musts for SLAsDamm says the one of the most popular ASP uses is for enterprise resource planning (ERP) software. In this case, he says there are three major elements to measure. Each needs its own SLA and should be written at the component level.
The Importance of EnforcementSLAs do no good if you, the buyer, do not follow up. Too often buyers get so wrapped up in the day to day details they forget about the SLAs. "If you don't ask for a report when it's due, it will slide," observes Damm. If a report is due on the first of the month, that's when you want it. If your monthly meetings have to be some time during the first week , schedule them accordingly. The consultant says a vendor will assume you're not interested in SLA monitoring if you become lax about the deadlines. If you view them as ironclad, they will be. What should you do if an ASP vendor is violating an SLA? Damm suggests sitting down with the vendor face to face, if possible, and ferret out the various reasons why the SLAs are not being met. Damm says it is easier to play detective and solve problems when the buyer measures the components of the ERP system and does not look at the system as a monolithic whole. The consultant suggests using the four measures for each of the ERP components. For example, you can see the servers are always up but the network connection keeps going down. "Compartmentalizing allows you to talk intelligently with the vendor about what's going wrong. That way you don't get a song and dance from the vendor," says Damm. Lessons from the Outsourcing Primer:
Publish Date: February 2001
For more information... Related Articles Copyright © 2001 - Everest Partners, L.P. |
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