What is Enterprise Request Management (ERM)?
Enterprise request management (ERM) is a service delivery strategy that combines a single intuitive Web portal with a workflow automation software engine to automate and accelerate fulfillment processes across an enterprise. Customers (internal or external) can request any type of service, resource, or equipment, as well as check on the status of pending requests, from a single point of entry.Get Your Copy Now
[tek_button button_text="Download" button_action="button-action-link" button_link="url:https%3A%2F%2Fkineticdata.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F02%2Fkinetic-data-erm-security-white-paper.pdf|target:_blank" button_width="100%" button_position="button-center"]Not only do customers benefit via an improved experience and ease of use, but there are also substantial benefits to the organization from a business perspective. Those benefits include:- Increased process efficiency via centralization and standardization of delivery
- Improved employee productivity
- Faster fulfillment of customer requests, equating to happier customers
- Service delivery cost reduction through automation
- Improved alignment with corporate compliance through reduction of manual, human-based tasks
Visibility, Control and Efficiency
Effectively managing access to key corporate resources is a continuously evolving battle in today’s large enterprise. Organizations need not only to manage access to corporate and personal data, intellectual property, and customer information, but also to ensure safe and secure access to physical assets, facilities, and people. More often than not, the processes supporting various “entry points” to these key resources are managed within functional silos. Access governance is divided across multiple shared service groups (HR, facilities, IT, security), creating the need for multiple fulfillment areas to participate in delivering access. Shared services organizations each utilize their own tools to automate the access provisioning falling into their areas of responsibility. With respect to the enterprise, the siloed delivery model leads to gaps in process consistency, user experience and service levels. Essentially, due to their size and complexity, corporations, government agencies, and service providers have struggled to implement consistent access controls that are easily manageable for customers and can be automated end-to-end across the enterprise.Illusions of Safety: A Risk Management Example
Frequently in the news, one hears of corporations dealing with security breaches wherein sensitive data is compromised, creating massive exposure and liability. Leaking of customer, financial, or other sensitive data is costly and damaging to a company’s reputation. Most often, the breach isn’t a result of the affected organization not having a mature approach to information security, or the right tools to minimize exposure, but rather to the lack of a true enterprise-oriented approach to the process. The following example illustrates how ERM addresses this. A healthcare organization (Sithco) engages with a service provider (ACME) to manage the implementation of a new data center. ACME assigns a team to manage and implement the project (building out the data center and infrastructure). The team consists of a project manager, a technical architect, a network administrator, and 10 staff who will perform the physical installation. Before the project begins, all of the people on the ACME team must pass background checks in order to be provided with approved access to key resources:- Sithco’s corporate time-keeping system (managed by HR)
- The physical data center location to do the build (managed by facilities)
- The Sithco corporate project management system (managed by the IT PMO)
- Corporate email address and IDs for network access (managed by IT security)