
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of The ITSM Practice Podcast, Luigi Ferri explains why IT maturity is the decisive factor in successful IT carve-outs. From dependency mapping to ITIL v3 governance and continuity stress testing, the episode shows how disciplined IT Service Management prevents disruption, cost overruns, and failed separations during complex enterprise transitions.
In this episode, we answer to:
Where is the real boundary between what IT owns and what a carved-out unit must take?
What breaks first when a shared IT service disappears during a carve-out?
Why does IT governance need to come before architecture and migration design?
Resources Mentioned in this Episode:
AvenDATA website, article "What is a carve-out and why is it important?", link https://avendata.com/blog/what-is-a-carve-out-and-why-does-it-matter
Umbrex website, article "Stakeholder Alignment and Governance", https://umbrex.com/resources/carve-out-playbook/stakeholder-alignment-and-governance/
Invgate website, article "The most flexible no-code ITSM solution", link https://invgate.com/itsm/itil/itil-service-lifecycle
Rezolve AI website, article "ITIL v3: Framework & Best Practices", link https://www.rezolve.ai/blog/itil-v3-framework-best-practices
Alloy Software website, article "5 Stages of the ITIL Service Lifecycle: A Simple Guide to Better IT Service Management", link https://www.alloysoftware.com/blog/itil-lifecycle/
Eurostep website, article "Data carve-out best practices: Insights into streamlining data separation for business units", link https://www.eurostep.com/data-carve-out-best-practices-insights-into-streamlining-data-separation-for-business-units/
Connect with me on:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/theitsmpractice/
Website: http://www.theitsmpractice.com
And if you want more tips and guidance, follow me on LinkedIn. I am sharing daily posts regarding Enterprise Service Management, IT Service Management, and IT Security.
Credits:
Sound engineering by Alan Southgate - http://alsouthgate.co.uk/
Graphics by Yulia Kolodyazhnaya
By Luigi FerriIn this episode of The ITSM Practice Podcast, Luigi Ferri explains why IT maturity is the decisive factor in successful IT carve-outs. From dependency mapping to ITIL v3 governance and continuity stress testing, the episode shows how disciplined IT Service Management prevents disruption, cost overruns, and failed separations during complex enterprise transitions.
In this episode, we answer to:
Where is the real boundary between what IT owns and what a carved-out unit must take?
What breaks first when a shared IT service disappears during a carve-out?
Why does IT governance need to come before architecture and migration design?
Resources Mentioned in this Episode:
AvenDATA website, article "What is a carve-out and why is it important?", link https://avendata.com/blog/what-is-a-carve-out-and-why-does-it-matter
Umbrex website, article "Stakeholder Alignment and Governance", https://umbrex.com/resources/carve-out-playbook/stakeholder-alignment-and-governance/
Invgate website, article "The most flexible no-code ITSM solution", link https://invgate.com/itsm/itil/itil-service-lifecycle
Rezolve AI website, article "ITIL v3: Framework & Best Practices", link https://www.rezolve.ai/blog/itil-v3-framework-best-practices
Alloy Software website, article "5 Stages of the ITIL Service Lifecycle: A Simple Guide to Better IT Service Management", link https://www.alloysoftware.com/blog/itil-lifecycle/
Eurostep website, article "Data carve-out best practices: Insights into streamlining data separation for business units", link https://www.eurostep.com/data-carve-out-best-practices-insights-into-streamlining-data-separation-for-business-units/
Connect with me on:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/theitsmpractice/
Website: http://www.theitsmpractice.com
And if you want more tips and guidance, follow me on LinkedIn. I am sharing daily posts regarding Enterprise Service Management, IT Service Management, and IT Security.
Credits:
Sound engineering by Alan Southgate - http://alsouthgate.co.uk/
Graphics by Yulia Kolodyazhnaya