COBIT 5 Foundation Workshop Courseware
COBIT 5 Foundation Workshop Courseware
COBIT 5 Foundation Workshop Courseware
COBIT 5:
A Business Framework for
the Governance and Management
of
Enterprise IT
Exam requirements :
50 Questions
40 minutes
Closed book
50% pass required
Exam preparation :
Approximately 2 hours
Comprises syllabus review
Test Questions
Questions ?
Chapter 1
Overview of COBIT 5
Achieve enterprise:
Value creation through effective and innovative use of enterprise IT
Connect to, and, where relevant, align with, other major frameworks and
standards in the marketplace, such as Information Technology
Infrastructure Library (ITIL), The Open Group Architecture Forum
(TOGAF), Project, Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK),
Projects IN Controlled Environments 2 (PRINCE2), Committee of
Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) and the
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standards.
Integrate all major ISACA frameworks and guidance, with a primary
focus on COBIT, Val IT and Risk IT as one single framework
Benefits
Enterprise Benefits
Enterprise and their executives strive to:
Maintain quality information to support business decisions.
Generate business value from IT-enabled investments i.e.
achieve strategic goals and realize business benefits through
effective and innovative use of IT.
Achieve operational excellence through reliable and efficient
application of technology.
Maintain IT-related risk at an acceptable level.
Optimize the cost of IT services and technology.
How can these benefits be realized to create enterprise
stakeholder value?
Stakeholder Value
Benefits
COBIT 5 :
Defines
Business Needs
Simplified
COBIT 5 directly addresses the needs of the viewer from
different perspectives.
Development continues with specific practitioner guides
The Framework
Process Reference Guide
Implementation Guide
5 principles and
7 enablers
ISO/IEC 38500
ISO/IEC 27000
ISO/IEC 31000
PRINCE2
CMM1
Questions ?
Chapter 2
COBIT 5 PRINCIPLES
COBIT 5 Principles
Principle 1:
Meeting Stakeholder Needs
COBIT 5
Goals Cascade
COBIT 5
Internal Stakeholders
COBIT 5
External Stakeholders
Principle 2:
Covering the Enterprise End-to-End
COBIT
COBIT
5:
This means
-
that COBIT 5:
Principle 3:
Applying a Single Integrated Framework
COBIT 5:
Aligns with the latest relevant standards and frameworks
Is complete in enterprise coverage
Provides a basis to integrate effectively other frameworks ,
standards and practices used
Integrated all knowledge previously dispersed over
different ISACA frameworks
Provides a simple architecture for structuring guidance
materials and producing a consistent product set
Principle 4:
Enabling a Holistic Approach
Enablers:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
StakeholdersEach enabler has stakeholders (parties who play an active role and/or have an interest
in the enabler).
Stakeholders can be internal or external to the enterprise, all having their own, sometimes
conflicting, interests and needs.
Stakeholders needs translate to enterprise goals, which in turn translate to IT-related goals for the
enterprise.
GoalsEach enabler has a number of goals, and enablers provide value by the achievement of these
goals. Goals can be defined in terms of:
The enabler goals are the final step in the COBIT 5 goals cascade. Goals can be further split up in
different categories:
Intrinsic qualityThe extent to which enablers work accurately, objectively and provide accurate,
objective and reputable results
Contextual qualityThe extent to which enablers and their outcomes are fit for purpose given
the context in which they operate. For example, outcomes should be relevant, complete, current,
appropriate, consistent, understandable and easy to use.
Access and securityThe extent to which enablers and their outcomes are accessible and
secured, such as:
Enablers are available when, and if, needed.
Outcomes are secured, i.e., access is restricted to those entitled and needing it.
Enterprises expect positive outcomes from the application and use of enablers. To
manage performance of the enablers, the following questions will have to be
monitored and thereby subsequently answeredbased on metricson a regular
basis:
Are stakeholder needs addressed?
Are enabler goals achieved?
Is the enabler life cycle managed?
Are good practices applied?
The first two bullets deal with the actual outcome of the enabler. The metrics used to
measure to what extent the goals are achieved can be called lag indicators.
The last two bullets deal with the actual functioning of the enabler itself, and metrics
for this can be called lead indicators.
Principle 5:
Separating Governance and Management
The COBIT 5
Governance
and Management
Encompass
Governance
Governance ensures that stakeholder needs, conditions and options are
evaluated to determine balanced, agreed-on enterprise objectives to be
achieved; setting direction through prioritisation and decision making;
and monitoring performance and compliance against agreed-on
direction and objectives.
Chapter 3
COBIT 5 IMPLEMENTATION
GUIDANCE
COBIT 5 Implementation
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Seven Phases
Implementation Life Cycle
What are the drivers ?
Where are we now?
Where do we want to be ?
What needs to be done ?
How do we get there?
Did we get there?
How do we keep the momentum going ?
COBIT 5 Implementation
Phase 1 starts with recognizing and agreeing to the need for an implementation or
improvement initiative. It identifies the current pain points and triggers and creates a
desire to change at executive management levels.
Phase 6 focuses on the sustainable operation of the new or improved enablers and
the monitoring of the achievement of expected benefits.
During phase 7, the overall success of the initiative is reviewed, further requirements
for the governance or management of enterprise IT are identified, and the need for
continual improvement is reinforced.
Phase 1:
What are the Drivers ?
Initiate the programme
Establish desire to change
Recognize need to act
Failed IT initiatives
Rising costs
Perception of low business
value for IT investments
Significant incidents related
to IT risk (e.g. data loss)
Service delivery problems
Failure to meet regulatory or
contractual requirements
Audit findings for poor IT
performance or low service
levels
Hidden and /or rogue IT
spending
Merger, acquisition or
divestiture
Shift in market, economy or
competitive position
Change in business operating
model or sourcing
arrangements
New regulatory or compliance
requirements
Phase 2:
Where are We now ?
Related processes
Phase 3:
Where Do We Want To Be?
Phase 4:
What Needs To Be Done?
Phase 5:
How Do We Get There ?
Implement improvements
Phase 6:
Did We Get There?
Realize benefits
Phase 7:
How Do We Keep Momentum
Sustain
Initially this can be a high- level business case dealing with the strategic
benefits and costs and then progress to a more detailed business case. It is
a valuable tool available to management in guiding the creation of
business value.
Chapter 3
COBIT 5 ENABLERS
Enabler 1:
Principles, Policies & Framework
Their Scope
Consequences of falling to comply with the policy
The means of handling exceptions
How they will be monitored
Enabler 2:
Processes
Process description
Process Purpose statement
IT- related Goals(from the Goals cascade see example in the
Appendix)
Each IT- related goal is associated with a set of generic related metrics
Process goals (Also from the goals cascade mechanism and is referred
to as Enabler goals )
Each process contains a set of Management Practices
These are associated with a generic RACI chart (Responsible,
Accountable, Consulted, Informed)
Each management practices contains a set of inputs and outputs (called
work products in module PC)
Each management Practice is associated with a set of activities
Intrinsic Goals
Contextual Goals
Enabler 3:
Organizational Structures
Enabler 4:
Culture, Ethics and Behavior
Enabler 5:
Information
Information Stakeholders
Information
information
Information
maintaining
Information
information
Effectiveness
Efficiency
Confidentiality
Integrity
Availability
Compliance
Reliability
Semantic layer The rules and principles for constructing meaning out of
the syntax structures.
Semantics refers to the meaning of information.
Retention periodThe attribute that identifies how long information can be retained
before it is destroyed
Information statusThe attribute that identifies whether the information is operational
or historical
NoveltyThe attribute that identifies whether the information creates new knowledge
or confirms existing knowledge, i.e., information vs. confirmation
ContingencyThe attribute that identifies the information that is required to precede
this information (for it to be considered as information)
Social World layer The world that is socially constructed the use of
language structures at the pragmatic level of semi e.g. contracts, laws,
culture.
Enabler 6:
Services, Infrastructure and Applications
Five architecture principles that govern the implementation and use of IT- Related
resources
Architecture Principles are overall guidelines that govern the implementation and
use of IT-related resources within the enterprise. Examples of such principles :
Reuse- Common components of the architecture should be used when
designing and implementing solutions as part of the target or transition
architectures.
Buy vs. build Solutions should be purchased unless there is an approved
rationale for developing them internally.
Simplicity The enterprise architecture should be designed and maintained to
be simple as possible while still meeting enterprise requirements.
Agility- The enterprise architecture should incorporate agility to meet
changing business needs in an effective and efficient manner.
Openness The enterprise architecture should leverage open industry
standards.
Relationship To
Information-
other Enablers
Enabler 7:
People, Skills and Competencies
Questions ?
Chapter 4
Transition Message
Areas of Change
An IT management framework?
An IT governance framework?
COBIT 4.1 did not have enablers! Yes it did they were not
called enablers, but they were there, explicitly or
implicitly!
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www.isaca.org/Knowledge-Center/cobit/Pages /COBIT-AssessmentProgramme.aspx
Questions ?
Chapter 5
Historically most frameworks from COBIT, ITIL to PRINCE2 have adopted the SEI
(Software Engineering Institute) CMMI approach which combines a Capability and
a Maturity Assessment into a single assessment.
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Assessors
PAM Scope
Each capability level can be achieved only when the level below has been
fully achieved. For example, a process capability level 3 (established
process) requires the process definition and process deployment attributes to
be largely achieved, on top of full achievement of the attributes for a
process capability level 2 (managed process).
Mapping to PRMs
Measurement Framework
COBIT Assessment Process measures the extent to which
a given process achieves specific attributes relative to that
process
COBIT Assessment Process defines 9 Process Attributes
(based on ISO/IEC 15504-2)
Process performance
A measure of the extent to which the performance of the process is managed. As a result of
full achievement of this attribute:
a. objectives for the performance of the process are identified
e. resources and information necessary for performing the process are identified, made
available, allocated and used
f. interfaces between the involved parties are managed to ensure effective communication
and clear assignment of responsibility
A measure of the extent to which the work products produced by process are appropriately
managed. As a result of full achievement of this attribute:
Chapter 5
Initiation
Planning the Assessment
Briefing
Data Collection
Data Validation
Process Attribute Rating
Reporting the Results
1:
Initiation
Select the assessment participants, the assessment team and define the roles
of team members
Define assessment inputs and outputs
-Have them approved by the sponsor
2:
Planning the Assessment
developed and
an assessment schedule
Identify the project scope
Secure the necessary resources to perform the assessment
3:
Briefing
The assessment Team Leader ensures that the assessment team understands
the assessment
- input
- process and
- output
Brief the Organizational Unit on the performance of the assessment
- PAM, assessment scope ,scheduling ,constraints ,roles and
responsibilities,
resource requirements ,etc
4:
Data Collection
The objective evidence gathered for each attribute of each process assessed must be
sufficient to meet the assessment purpose and scope
Objective evidence that supports the assessors judgment of process attribute rating is
recorded and maintained in the assessment record.
This record provides evidence to substantiate the ratings and to verify compliance with the
requirements.
5:
Data Validation
6:
Process Attribute Rating
For each process assessed , a rating is assigned for each process attribute up
to and including the highest capability level defined in the assessment scope
7:
Reporting the Results
Assessor Certification
Assessor Competencies:
-Knowledge ,skills and Experience
Questions?