A post by our guest editor, John Worthington.
We've tried to balance efficiency and effectiveness for decades, but how weâve approached that balance has been deeply flawedâŠ.makes me wonder if the only thing thatâs changed are the buzzwords.
Why the ITSM World Still Struggles to Balance Effectiveness with Efficiency
Weâve been trying to balance efficiency and effectiveness for decades. ITIL told us. COBIT diagrammed it. Lean Six Sigma tattooed it on our foreheads. But letâs be honestâmaybe the only thing weâve balanced well is buzzword inflation.
âDoing things right and doing the right things.â Thatâs the mantra. Has been for years.
Todayâs hype cycle brings us XLAs (Experience Level Agreements) and HumanisingITâą (and now AI). These are not fadsâtheyâre smart responses to a stale obsession with SLAs, checklists, and tool worship. They remind us of something weâve always known deep down:
âPeople donât care how fast you closed the ticket. They care how you made them feel.â
Thatâs not fluff. Thatâs effectiveness, empathy, and actual outcomes.
But hereâs the rub: Weâre still spinning in circles trying to âmatureâ, while customer value quietly bleeds out in the background. Meanwhile, generative AI has crashed the party and stolen the mic.
đ§ The Risk: Surface Change, Systemic Stagnation
Much of the buzz around XLAs and HumanisingITâą still rests on the same fractured foundations:
- No shared service logic
- No universal management system
- No consistent process architecture
- No separation of process from practice
- No integration with governance
So what happens?
- Experience becomes another dashboard.
- Another âjourney map.â
- Another siloed initiative duct-taped onto a misaligned system.
Itâs experience theater. Teams smile in chatbots while the same broken workflows churn in the background. Surveys ask, âHow did we do?â without fixing whatâs behind the curtain. XLAs get signed without ever defining the service.
Itâs not the fault of the HumanisingITâą or XLA movementsâitâs what happens when you bolt new language onto old logic.
Without a system underneath, weâre just hanging empathy on a broken skeleton. Thatâs like duct-taping a compass to a shopping cart and calling it a GPS upgrade.
đ§ The Thing Thatâs Been Hiding in Plain Sight
This is where USM walks inâlike an engineer at a poetry reading. Uninvited. Slightly annoyed. Holding a whiteboard marker.
USM doesnât follow trends. It doesnât sell six-step transformation packages. It just gives you the system you didnât realize you were missing:
- A logically repeatable service specification
- Five generic, non-redundant processes
- Three universal roles
- Eight standard workflows to handle all service interactions
Thatâs it. No fluff. Just a clear, structured foundation.
USM separates process from practice, so you can innovate at the edges without trashing the core. It doesnât kill empathyâit makes it sustainable. And it embeds learning loops directly into the system, turning every failure into forward motion.
đŻ Why the XLA and HumanisingAI Movements Need USM
Now imagine HumanisingAIâą built on top of USM:
- Experience metrics tied to actual, agreed services
- Feedback loops that flow directly into the IMPROVE process
- AI assistants operating within a defined governance model
You donât lose the emotion. You enable it. You donât drown empathy in bureaucracy. You give it structure.
AI becomes more than a gimmickâit becomes a reflective surface. XLAs evolve from feel-good dashboards to contracts with context.
đșïž Where This Is All Going
This isnât about frameworks fighting each other.
- ITIL isnât wrong.
- COBIT isnât dead.
- XLAs arenât fluff.
- HumanisingAIâą isnât naive.
But without a management system to hold it all together, weâre just running faster inside the same hamster wheel.
USM doesnât replace these movements. It makes them workâconsistently, coherently, repeatably.
đ§ Final Thought on a Hot, Melting Day
You donât fix a broken machine by upgrading the paint job. You fix it by understanding how it was built.
And if youâre feeling like youâve been rolling uphill latelyâpushing value, pushing clarity, pushing empathy against the gravity of complexityâmaybe itâs time to stop pushingâŠ
âŠand start building.
With structure. With logic. With USM.
The waterâs fine. The method is simple.
đ§ Questions? Heatstroke? Want to argue about ITIL or maturity models? My inbox is open. đ Repost if youâve ever been burned by a mature process that delivered zero value.
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If you enjoyed John's post and it made you think about improving your own organization, please check out his USM Professional profile and his personal website, or better: contact John for a free consultation.
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