COBIT 5 Foundation Workshop Courseware

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COBIT 5 Foundation Workshop

COBIT is a trademark of the Information Systems Audit and


Control Association and the IT Governance Institute

COBIT 5:
A Business Framework for
the Governance and Management
of
Enterprise IT

Purpose COBIT 5 Foundation Certificate

The purpose of the Foundation Certificate is to confirm that a


candidate has sufficient knowledge and understanding of the
COBIT 5 Guidance and Management of enterprise IT, create
awareness with their business executives and senior IT
Management ; assess the current state of their Enterprise IT
with the objective of scoping what aspects of COBIT 5 would
be appropriate to implement.

The Foundation level training and certificate is also a pre


requisite for the following training and certificate courses

COBIT 5 Implementation Training & Certificate


COBIT 5 Assessor Training & Certificate

Target Audience for the COBIT 5 Foundation Level


Training and Certificate
Business Management
Chief Executives
IT/IS Auditors
Information Security and IT Practitioners
Consultants
IT/IS Management

Looking to gain an insight into the Enterprise Governance of


IT and looking to be certified as a COBIT Implementer or
Assessor

High Level Learning Outcomes

The candidate should understand the key principals and terminology


within COBIT 5. Specifically the candidate should know and
understand :

The major drivers for the development of a Framework.


The business benefits of using COBIT 5.
The COBIT 5 Product Architecture.
The IT management issues and challenges that affect enterprises.
The 5 Key Principles of COBIT 5 for the governance and management
of Enterprise IT
How COBIT 5 enables to be governed and managed in a holistic
manner for the entire enterprise.
Understand the key concepts in a Process Capability Assessment and
the key attributes of the COBIT 5 PAM (Process Assessment Model)
How the COBIT 5 Processes and the Process Reference Model (PRM)
help guide the creation of the 5 Principles and the 7 Governance and
Management Enablers.

Structure of the Material

The material is structured in 5 Learning Area Modules


Based on two specific COBIT 5 Guides
The COBIT 5 Business Framework for the Governance and
Management of Enterprise IT.
Supplementary Guide on Process Capability with extracts from the
COBIT 4.1 and COBIT 5 PAMs (Process Assessment Model).
Some aspects of the Enabling Process Guide have been used as
examples for more detailed walk through where appropriate Tips
and Notes have been provided in each guide.

Tips and Notes have been provided in each guide

Exam Requirement and Preparation

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

Major drivers for the development of


COBIT 5

Provide more stakeholders a say in determining what they expect from


information and related technology
Address the increasing dependency of enterprise success on external
business and IT parties such as outsourcers, suppliers, consultants,
clients, cloud and other service providers.
Deal with the amount of information, which has increased significantly.
Deal with much more pervasive IT; it is more and more an integral part
of the business.
Provide further guidance in the area of innovation and emerging
technologies.
Cover the full end-to-end business and IT functional responsibilities.
Get better control over increasing user-initiated and user-controlled IT
solutions

Achieve enterprise:
Value creation through effective and innovative use of enterprise IT

Business user satisfaction with IT engagement and services


Compliance with relevant laws, regulations, contractual agreements and
internal policies
Improved relations between business needs and IT objectives

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

Information is the business currency of the 21st Century

Information has a life cycle: it is created, used, retained,


disclosed and destroyed
Technology plays a key role in these actions.
Technology is becoming pervasive in all aspects of business
and personal life.
Every form of enterprise needs to be able to rely on quality
information to support quality executive decisions!

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

Delivering enterprise stakeholder value requires good


governance and maintenance of information and technology
(IT) assets.
Enterprise boards, executives and management have to
embrace IT like any other significant part of the business.
External legal, regulatory and contractual compliances
requirements related to enterprise use of information and
technology are increasing, threatening value if breached.

COBIT 5 provides a comprehensive framework that assists


enterprises to achieve their goals and deliver value through
effective governance and management of enterprise IT.

Benefits

COBIT 5 :
Defines

the starting point of governance and management


activities with the stakeholder needs related to enterprise
IT.
Creates a more holistic, integrated and complete view of
enterprise governance and management of IT that is
consistent, provides end to end view on all IT-related
matters and provides a holistic view.
Creates a common language between IT and business for
the enterprise governance and management of IT.
Is consistent with generally accepted corporate governance
standards, and thus helps to meet regulatory requirements.

Business Needs

Enterprises are under constant pressure to:

Increase benefits realization through effective and innovation of


enterprise IT

Generate business value from new enterprise investment with a


supporting IT investment.
Achieve operational excellence through application of technology.

Maintain IT related risk at an acceptable level


Contain cost of IT services and technology
Ensure business and IT collaboration, leading to business
satisfaction with IT engagement and services
Comply with ever increasing relevant laws, regulations and
policies.

The COBIT 5 Format

Simplified
COBIT 5 directly addresses the needs of the viewer from
different perspectives.
Development continues with specific practitioner guides

COBIT 5 is initially in 3 volumes:


1.
2.
3.

The Framework
Process Reference Guide
Implementation Guide

COBIT 5 is based on:

5 principles and
7 enablers

COBIT 5 Product Family

The COBIT 5 product family includes the following products:


COBIT 5 (the framework)
COBIT 5 enabler guides, in which governance and management enablers
are discussed in detail. These include:
COBIT 5: Enabling Processes
COBIT 5: Enabling Information (in development)
Other enabler guides (check www.isaca.org/cobit)

COBIT 5 professional guides, which include:


COBIT 5 Implementation

COBIT 5 for Information Security (in development)


COBIT 5 for Assurance (in development)
COBIT 5 for Risk (in development)
Other professional guides (check www.isaca.org/cobit)

A collaborative online environment, which will be available to support the


use of COBIT 5

COBIT 5 Mapping Summary

COBIT 5 Mapping Specifies

ISO/IEC 38500

ITIL v3 the following 5 areas and domains are covered by ITIL


v3:

A subset of processes in the DSS domain


A subset of processes in the BAI domain
Some processes in the APO domain

ISO/IEC 27000

ISOs 6 principles map to COBIT 5

Security and IT- related processes in domains EDM,APO and DSS


Some monitoring of security activities in MEA

ISO/IEC 31000

Risk management related activities in EDM and APO

TOGAF (The Open Group Architecture Framework)

PRINCE2

TOGAF components of the architecture board and governance areas.


Resource related processes in EDM
Enterprise architecture processes of APO
Programme and project management processes in the BAI domain
Portfolio related processes in the APO domain

CMM1

Some organizational and quality related processes in the APO domain


Application building and acquisition related processes in BAI

Questions ?

Chapter 2

COBIT 5 PRINCIPLES

COBIT 5 Principles

Principle 1:
Meeting Stakeholder Needs

Enterprises have many stakeholders


Governance is about
Negotiating
Deciding amongst different stakeholder value interests
Considering all stakeholders when making benefit , resource and
risk assessment decisions

For each decision , ask:


For whom are the benefits?
Who bears the risk?
What resources are required?

Enterprises exist to create value for their stakeholders

Value Creation :realizing benefits at an optimal resource cost while


optimizing risk.

Stakeholder Needs have to be transformed into an enterprises actionable


strategy

The COBIT 5 Goals Cascade is the mechanism to translate Stakeholder Needs


into specific , practical and customized goals
The COBIT5 goals cascade allows the definition of priorities for
- Implementation
- Improvement
- Assurance of enterprise governance of IT

In practice , the goals cascade:

Defines relevant and tangible goals and objectives at various levels of


responsibility
Filters the knowledge base of COBIT 5,based on enterprise goals to extract
relevant guidance for inclusion in specific implementation , improvement or
assurance projects
Clearly identifies and communicates how enablers are used to achieve
enterprise goals

COBIT 5
Goals Cascade

Step 1. Stakeholder Drivers Influence Stakeholder


Needs
Step 2. Stakeholder Needs Cascade to Enterprise
Goals
Step 3. Enterprise Goals Cascade to IT-related
Goals
Step 4. IT-related Goals Cascade to Enabler Goals

Step 1. Stakeholder Drivers Influence Stakeholder Needs


Stakeholder needs are influenced by a number of drivers, e.g., strategy
changes, a changing business and regulatory environment, and new
technologies.

Step 2. Stakeholder Needs Cascade to Enterprise Goals


Stakeholder needs can be related to a set of generic enterprise goals. These
enterprise goals have been developed using the balanced scorecard (BSC)
dimensions, and they represent a list of commonly used goals that an
enterprise may define for itself. Although this list is not exhaustive, most
enterprise-specific goals can be mapped easily onto one or more of the generic
enterprise goals.

COBIT 5 defines 17 generic goals, which includes the following information:


The BSC dimension under which the enterprise goal fits
Enterprise goals
The relationship to the three main governance objectivesbenefits realization,
risk optimization and resource optimization. (P stands for primary
relationship and S for secondary relationship, i.e., a less strong relationship.)

Step 3. Enterprise Goals Cascade to IT-related Goals


Achievement of enterprise goals requires a number of IT-related outcomes,
which are represented by the IT-related goals. IT-related stands for information
and related technology, and the IT-related goals are structured along the
dimensions of the IT balanced scorecard (IT BSC). COBIT 5 defines 17 ITrelated goals.

Step 4. IT-related Goals Cascade to Enabler Goals


Achieving IT-related goals requires the successful application and use of a
number of enablers. Enablers include processes, organizational structures and
information, and for each enabler a set of specific relevant goals can be
defined in support of the IT-related goals.

COBIT 5
Internal Stakeholders

COBIT 5
External Stakeholders

Principle 2:
Covering the Enterprise End-to-End
COBIT

5 addresses the governance and management


of information and related technology from an
enterprise wide, end-to end perspective

COBIT

5:

- Integrates governance of enterprise IT into enterprise


governance
- Covers all functions and processes within the
enterprise
- Does not focus only on the IT Function

This means
-

that COBIT 5:

Integrates the governance of enterprise IT into enterprise


governance and
Covers all functions and processes required to govern and
manage enterprise information and related technologies
wherever that information is processed.
COBIT 5 addresses all relevant interval and external IT
services as well as external and internal business processes.

Main elements of the governance approach:


Governance Enablers comprising
- The organizational resources for governance
- The enterprises resources
- A lack of resources or enablers may affect the
ability of the enterprise to create value

Governance Scope comprising


- The whole enterprise
- an entity, a tangible or intangible asset ,etc .

Governance roles , activities and relationships define

Who is involved in governance


How they are involved
What they do and
How they interact

COBIT 5 defines the difference between governance and management


activities in Principle 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.

Principles ,policies and framework


Processes
Organizational structure
Culture ,ethics and behavior
Information
Services ,infrastructure and applications
People ,skills and competencies

COBIT 5 defines a set of enablers to support the implementation


of comprehensive governance and management system for
enterprise IT.

COBIT 5 enablers are:


Factors that ,individually and collectively, influence whether
something will work
Driven by the goals cascade
Described by the COBIT 5 framework in seven categories

COBIT 5 Enabler Dimensions:

All enablers have a set of common dimension that:


- Provide a common ,simple and structured way to deal
with enablers
- Allow an entity to manage its complex interactions
- Facilitate successful outcomes of the enablers

The 4 Common Dimensions for Enablers:

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:

Expected outcomes of the enabler

Application or operation of the enabler itself.

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.

Life cycleEach enabler has a life cycle, from inception through an


operational/useful life until disposal. This applies to information, structures,
processes, policies, etc. The phases of the life cycle consist of:
Plan (includes concepts development and concepts selection)
Design
Build/acquire/create/implement
Use/operate
Evaluate/monitor
Update/dispose

Good practicesFor each of the enablers, good practices can be defined.


Good practices support the achievement of the enabler goals. Good practices
provide examples or suggestions on how best to implement the enabler, and
what work products or inputs and outputs are required. COBIT 5 provides
examples of good practices for some enablers provided by COBIT 5 (e.g.,
processes). For other enablers, guidance from other standards, frameworks,
etc., can be used.

Enabler Performance Management

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

framework makes a clear distinction


between governance and management

Governance

and Management

Encompass

different types of activities


Require different organizational structures
Serve different purposes
COBIT 5

:Enabling Processes differentiates the


activities associated with each domain

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.

In most enterprises, governance is the responsibility of the board of


directors under The leadership of the chairperson.
Management
Management plans, builds, runs and monitors activities in alignment
with the direction set by the governance body to achieve the enterprise
objectives.
In most enterprises, management is the responsibility of the executive
management under the leadership of the CEO.

Governance ensures that stakeholder needs, conditions and


options are:
Evaluated to determine balanced ,agreed -on enterprise
objectives to be achieved
Setting direction through prioritization and decision
making
Monitoring performance ,compliance and progress
against agreed direction and objectives (EDM)

Management plans, builds, runs and monitors activities in


alignment with the direction set by the governance body to
achieve the enterprise objectives (PBRM)

Chapter 3

COBIT 5 IMPLEMENTATION
GUIDANCE

COBIT 5 Implementation

ISACA has developed the COBIT 5 Framework to help


enterprises implement sound governance enablers. Indeed,
implementing good GEIT almost impossible without engaging
an effective governance framework. Best practices and
standards are also available to underpin COBIT 5.

However, frameworks, best practices and standards are useful


only if they are adopted and adapted effectively. There are
challenges that need to be overcome and issues that need to be
addressed if GEIT is to be implemented successfully.

COBIT 5 implementation provides guidance on how to do


this .

Enterprise Internal and External Environment

Understanding the Enterprise Internal and External


Environment as they apply to change management such as :
o

Ethics and culture

Applicable laws, regulations, policies

Mission, vision and values


Governance policies and practices

o
o
o
o
o
o
o

Business plans and strategic intensions


Operating model
Management style
Risk appetite
Capabilities and available resources
Industry practices

Key Success factors


Top management providing the direction and mandate for
the initiative as well as on-going commitment
All parties supporting the governance and management
processes to understand the business and IT objectives
Ensuring effective communication and enablement of the
necessary changes
Tailoring COBIT and other supporting good practices and
standard to fit the unique context of the enterprise and
Focusing on quick wins and prioritizing most beneficial
improvements that are easiest to implement.

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 2 is focused on defining the scope of the implementation or improvement


initiative using COBITs mapping of enterprise goals to IT-related goals to the
associated IT processes, and considering how risk scenarios could also highlight key
processes on which to focus. An assessment of the current state is then performed,
and issues or deficiencies are identified by carrying out a process capability
assessment.

During phase 3, an improvement target is set, followed by a more detailed analysis


leveraging COBITs guidance to identify gaps and potential solutions. Some
solutions may be quick wins and others more challenging and longer-term activities.
Priority should be given to initiatives that are easier to achieve and those likely to
yield the greatest benefits.

Phase 4 plans practical solutions by defining projects supported by justifiable


business cases. A change plan for implementation is also developed. A welldeveloped business case helps to ensure that the projects benefits are identified and
monitored.

In phase 5, the proposed solutions are implemented into day-to-day practices.


Measures can be defined and monitoring established, using COBITs goals and
metrics to ensure that business alignment is achieved and maintained and
performance can be measured. Success requires the engagement and demonstrated
commitment of top management as well as ownership by the affected business and
IT stakeholders.

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

Need for new or improved IT governance organization is


usually recognized by pain points or trigger events.
Board and executive management should :

Analyze pain points to identify root cause


Look for opportunities during trigger events

The goal of this phase of the lifecycle includes:

Outlining the business


Identification of stakeholders and roles & responsibilities
IT governance program wake-up call and kick-off
communications.

Typical Pain Points

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

Resources waste through


duplication or overlap in IT
initiatives
Insufficient IT resources
IT staff burnout/
dissatisfaction
IT enabled changes frequent
falling to meet business
needs (late deliveries or
budget overruns)
Multiple and complex IT
assurance efforts
Board members or senior
managers that are reluctant
engage with IT.

Relevant Trigger Events

Merger, acquisition or
divestiture
Shift in market, economy or
competitive position
Change in business operating
model or sourcing
arrangements
New regulatory or compliance
requirements

Significant technology change


or paradigm shift

An enterprise wise governance


focus or project
A new CIO,CFO,COO
External audit or consultant
assessments
A new business strategy or
priority

By using pain points or trigger events as the launching point for IT


governance initiatives, the business case for GEIT improvements can
be related to issues being experienced which will improve buy-in to
the business case

Phase 2:
Where are We now ?

Define the problems and opportunities [Programme management]

Understand the pain points that have been identified as governance


problems

Take advantages of trigger events that provide opportunity for


improvement

Form a powerful guiding team [change enablement]

Knowledge of business environment

Insight into influencing factors


Assess the current state [continual improvement life cycle attribute]

Identify the IT goals in respect to enterprise goals

Identify the most important processes

Understand management risk appetite

Understand the maturity of existing governance

Related processes

Phase 3:
Where Do We Want To Be?

Define the roadmap

Communicate desired vision

Describe the high level change enablement plan and objectives


Develop a communication strategy
Communicate the vision
Articulate the rationale and benefits of the change
Set the tone at the top

Define target state and perform gap analysis

Define the target for improvement


Analyze the gaps
Identify potential improvements

Phase 4:
What Needs To Be Done?

Develop program plan

Empower role players and identify quick wins

Prioritize potential initiatives


Develop formal and justifiable projects
Use plans that include contribution and program objectives
High benefit , easy implementations should come first
Obtain buy-in by key stakeholders affected by the change
Identify strengths in existing processes and leverage accordingly.

Design and build improvements

Plot improvements onto a grid to assist with prioritization


Consider approach, deliverables , resources needed , costs, estimated
time scales, project dependencies and risks.

Phase 5:
How Do We Get There ?

Execute the plan

Enable operation and use

Execute projects according to an integrated program plan


Provide regular update reports to stakeholders
Documents and monitor the contribution of projects while
managing risks identified
Build on the momentum and credibility of quick wins
Plan cultural and behavioral aspects of the broader transition
Define measures of success

Implement improvements

Adopt and adapt best practices to suit the enterprises approach


to policies and process changes

Phase 6:
Did We Get There?

Realize benefits

Embed new approaches

Monitor the overall performance of the program against business case


objectives
Monitor and measure the investment performance
Provide transition from project mode to business as usual mode
Monitor whether new roles and responsibilities have been taken on
Track and assess objectives of the change response plans
Maintain communication and ensure communication between
appropriate stakeholders continues

Operated and measure

Set targets for each metric


Measure metrics against targets
Communicate results and adjust targets as necessary

Phase 7:
How Do We Keep Momentum

Continual improvements keeping the momentum is critical to


sustainment of the lifecycle
Review the program benefits

Sustain

Review program effectiveness through a program review gathered


Conscious reinforcement (reward achievers)
Ongoing communication campaign (feedback on performance)
Continuous top management commitment

Monitor and evaluate

Identify new governance objectives based on program experience


Communicate lessons learned and further improvement requirements
for the next iteration of the cycle

Making the Business Case

The characteristics of a good business case :

The importance of a business case cannot be over stated. An appropriate


level of urgency needs to be instilled and the key stakeholders should be
aware of the risk of not taking action. An initiative should be owned by a
sponsor (senior), involve all key stakeholders, and be based on a business
case.

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.

Characteristics of Good Business Case

At a minimum a Business case should include :

The business benefits that will be realized


The business changes required
The investments needed
The on-going IT operating costs
Constraints and dependencies delivered from the risk
assessment
Roles, responsibilities and accountabilities relative to other
initiative.
How the investment will be monitored.

Chapter 3

COBIT 5 ENABLERS

The COBIT 5 Enterprise Enablers

Recap Principle 4 : Enabling a Holistic Approach


Enablers :
1. Principles , policies and frameworks
2. Processes
3. Organizational structures
4. Culture , ethics and behavior
5. Information
6. Services , infrastructure and applications
7. People , skills and competencies

Recap Principle 4 : Enabling a Holistic Approach


COBIT 5 enabler dimensions :
All enablers have a set of common dimensions that :

Provides a common, simple and structured way to deal with


enablers
Allow an entity to manage its complex interactions
Facilitate successful outcomes of the enablers

Enabler 1:
Principles, Policies & Framework

The purpose of this enabler is to convey the governing


bodys management direction and instructions . They are
instruments communicate the rules of the enterprise , in
support of the governance objectives and enterprise values
as defines by the board and executive management.

Differences between principles and policies

Principles need to be limited in number


Put in simple language , expressing as clearly as possible the core
values of the enterprise
Policies are more detailed guidance on how to put principles into
practice

The characteristics of good policies ; they should

Policies should have a mechanism (framework) in place where


they can be effectively managed and users know where to go.
Specifically they should be :

Be effective achieve their purpose


Be efficient especially when implementing them
Non- intrusive Should make sense and be logical to those who have
to comply with them

Comprehensive , covering all required areas


Open and flexible allowing for easy adaptation and change.
Current and up to date

The purpose of a policy life cycle is that it must support a


policy framework in order to achieve defined goals.

The Good Practice Requirements for policies and


frameworks, are important, specifically :

Their Scope
Consequences of falling to comply with the policy
The means of handling exceptions
How they will be monitored

The links and relationships between principles, policies


and frameworks and other enablers :

Principles , policies and frameworks reflect the culture, ethics


and values of the enterprise
Processes are the most important vehicle for executing policies
Organizational structures can define and implement policies
Policies are part of information

Enabler 2:
Processes

Enabler 2 Process - Definitions

A process is defined as a collection of practices influences by


the enterprises policies, and procedures that takes inputs from a
number of sources(including other processes) manipulates the
inputs and produces outputs(e.g. products and services)
Process Practices are defined s the guidance necessary to
achieve process goals.
Process Activities are defined as the Guidance to achieve
management practices for successful governance and
management of enterprise IT.
Inputs and Outputs are the process work products/ artifacts
considered necessary to support operation of the process.

Each process is divided into :

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

Processes complements COBIT 5 and contains a detailed


reference guide to the processes that are defined in the
COBIT 5 process reference model:
The COBIT

5 goals cascade is recapitulated and


complemented with a set of example metrics for the
enterprise goals and the IT related goals.
The COBIT 5 process model is explained and its
components defined.
The Enabler process guide which is referenced in this
module contains the detailed process information for all 37
COBIT 5 processes shown in the process reference model.

COBIT 5 : Enabling Processes


The COBIT 5 process reference model subdivides the IT-related practices and activities of the enterprise into two
main areas- governance and management with
management further divided into domains of processes :
The GOVERNANCE

domain contains five Governance


Processes; within each process, evaluate, direct and
monitor (EDM) practices are defined.
The four MANAGEMENT domains are in line with the
responsibility areas of plan, build, run and monitor
(PBRM)

COBIT 5 Process Reference Model

Structure of the PRM Template(Based on the ISO 15504


process definitions and structure)
The PRM

is divided into a Governance Domain with 5


Processes titled EDM (Evaluate , Direct and Monitor)
Four management domains titled APO(Align, Plan and
Organize); BAI(Build, Acquire and Implement) DSS
(Deliver, Service and Support) and MEA (Monitor,
Evaluate and Assess)
APO contains 13 processes, BAI 10 processes, DSS 6
processes and MEA 3 processes
This makes a total of 37 processes, 32 for management and
5 for Governance

Key Characteristics of Process Goals:

Process Goals are defined as a statement describing the desired


outcome of a process. An outcome can be an artifact, a significant
change of a state or a significant capability improvement of other
processes. They are part of the goals cascade in which process goals
link to IT- related goals which link to enterprise goals.

Intrinsic Goals

Does the process have intrinsic quality? Is it accurate and in


line with good practice? Is it compliant with internal and
external rules?

Contextual Goals

Is the process customized and adapted to the enterprises specific


situation? Is the process relevant, understandable, easy to apply?

Accessibility and Security Goals

The process remains confidential, when required, and is known and


accessible to those who need it.

Relationship between Process and other enablers:

Processes need information as one form of input.


Processes need organizational structure.
Processes produce and require services, infrastructure and applications
Processes are dependent on other processes.
Processes need policies and procedures to ensure consistent
implementation.

Enabler 3:
Organizational Structures

A number of Good Practices of organizational structure


can be distinguished such as :

Operating principles The practical arrangements regarding how the


structure will operate, such as meeting frequency documenting and
other rules.
Span of control- The boundaries of the organization structures
decision rights.
Level of authority the decisions that the structure is authorized to
take.
Delegation of responsibility The structure can delegate a subset of its
decision rights to other structures reporting to it.
Escalating procedures The escalating path for a structure describes
the required actions in case of problems in making decisions.

Enabler 4:
Culture, Ethics and Behavior

Good practices for creating, encouraging and maintaining


desired behavior throughout the enterprise include:

Communication throughout the enterprise of desired behaviors


corporate values.(This can be done via a code of ethics).
Awareness of desired behavior, strengthened by senior manager .
Example. This is one of the keys to a good governance environment
when senior management and the executives walk the talk so to speak.
It is sometimes a difficult areas and one that causes many enterprises
to fail because it leads to poor governance. (Typically will be part of a
training and awareness sessions around areas of ethics)
Incentives to encourage and deterrents to enforce desired behavior.
There is a clear link to HR payment and reward schemes.
Rules and norms which provide more guidance and will typically be
found in a Code of Ethics.

Relationship of Goals for culture, ethics and behavior

Organizational Ethics determine by the values by which the enterprise


to live(its code)
Individual ethics determined by each persons personal values and
dependent to some extent on external factors not always under the
enterprises control such as religion, ethnicity..etc
Individual behaviors which collectively determine the culture of the
enterprise and is dependent on both organizational and individual
ethics. Some examples are :
Behavior towards risk taking
Behavior towards the enterprises principles and policies.
Behavior towards negative outcomes, e.g. loss events

The relationship of this enabler is to other enablers

Links to processes for execution process activities


Links to organizational structures for the implementation of
decisions and
Links to principles and policies to be able to communicate the
corporate values.(many organizations include their code of
ethics with their policies)

Enabler 5:
Information

Information Stakeholders

Information
information
Information
maintaining
Information
information

producer - responsible for creating the

custodian - responsible for storing and


the information
consumer - responsible for using the

Importance of the Information Quality categories and


dimensions;
The concept

of information criteria was introduces in


COBIT 4.1;these were very important to be able show how
to meet business requirements.

Importance of Information Criteria


COBIT

4.1 introduces us to the concept of 7 Key


information criteria to meet Business requirements. This
concept has been retained but translated differently

Enabler 5 The COBIT 4.1 Information Criteria Cube

To satisfy business objectives, information needs to


conform to certain control criteria which COBIT refers
to as business requirements for information. Base
broader quality, fiduciary and security requirements,
seven distinct information criteria are defined. These
are:

Effectiveness
Efficiency
Confidentiality
Integrity
Availability
Compliance
Reliability

The attributes required to assess the context and quality of


information to the user, specifically

Relevancy The extent to which information is applicable and helpful for


the task at hand
Completeness the extent to which information is not missing and is of
sufficient depth and breadth for the task at hand.
Appropriateness The extent to which the volume of information is
appropriate for the task at hand.
Conciseness The extent to which the information is compactly
represented.
Consistency The extent to which the information is presented in same
format.
Understandability The extent to which the information is easily
understandable.
Ease of Manipulation The extent to which information is easy to
manipulate and to apply to different tasks.

COBIT 5 Enabler 5 Information Meta data


Information Cycle

Information attributes applied to the following layers :

Physical World Layer The world where all phenomena


that can be empirically observed takes place.

The attribute that identifies the physical carrier of the


information, e.g., paper, electric signals, sound waves

Empirical layer The empirical observation of the signs


used to information and their distinction from each other.

The attribute that identifies the access channel of the information,


e.g., user interfaces

Syntactical Layer The rules and principles for constructing sentence in


natural or artificial language. Syntax refers to the form of information.

Attribute that identifies the representational language/format used for


encoding the information and the rules for combining the symbols of the
language to form syntactic structures.

Semantic layer The rules and principles for constructing meaning out of
the syntax structures.
Semantics refers to the meaning of information.

Information typeThe attribute that identifies the kind of information, e.g.,


financial vs. non-financial information, internal vs. external origin of the
information, forecasted/predicted vs. observed values, planned vs. realized
values
Information currencyThe attribute that identifies the time horizon referred
to by the information, i.e., information on the past, the present or the future
Information levelThe attribute that identifies the degree of detail of the
information, e.g., sales per year, quarter, month

Pragmatic layer The rules and structures for constructing layer


language structures that fulfill specific purposes in human
communication. Pragmatics refers to the use 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.

The possible used of the Information Model

Use for Information Specifications


Use to determine required protection
Used to determine ease of data Use.

Enabler 6:
Services, Infrastructure and Applications

Five architecture principles that govern the implementation and use of IT- Related
resources

This is part of the Good Practices of this enabler

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

is a service capability that is leveraged


through processes to deliver internal and external
services.
Cultural and behavioral aspects relevant when a serviceoriented culture needs to be built
Process inputs and outputs- Most of the inputs and outputs
(work products) of the process management practices and
activities in the PRM include service capabilities.

Enabler 7:
People, Skills and Competencies

Identify the good practices of People, Skills and


Competencies, specifically :

Described by different skill levels of different roles.


Defining Skill categories requirements for each role.
Mapping skill categories to COBIT 5 process domains( APO; BAI
etc)
These correspond to the with IT- related activities undertaken, eg.
Business analysis, information management etc.
Using external sources for good practices
There exist in frameworks such as ITIL 3; which contains extensive
guidance on how to design and operate services.
Consider also TOGAF (www.opengroup.org/togaf) which provides
an integrated information infrastructure reference model.

Questions ?

Chapter 4

COBIT 4.1 Differences to COBIT


5

Transition Message

COBIT 4.1,Val IT and Risk IT users who are already


engaged in governance of enterprise IT (GEIT)
implementation activities can transition to COBIT 5 and
benefit from the latest and improved guidance that it
provides during the next iterations of their enterprises
improvement life cycle .

COBIT 5 builds on previous versions of COBIT (and Val


IT and Risk IT) and so enterprises can also build on what
they have developed using earlier versions.

Areas of Change

The following slides summaries the major changes in


COBIT content and how they may impact GEIT
implementation/improvement:
1. New GEIT Principles
2. Increase Focus on Enablers
3. New Process Reference Model
4. New and Modified processes separating Governance from
Management
5. Practices and Activities
6. Revised and Expanded Goals and Metrics
7. Inputs and Outputs provided at Management verse process level in
COBIT4.1
8. Expanded RACI charts at management process
9. New process Capability Maturity Model.

The goals cascaded is not new to COBIT.

It was introduced in COBIT 4.0 in 2005.

Those COBIT users who have applied the thinking to their


enterprises have found value, but not everyone has
recognized this value.
The goals cascaded supports the COBIT 5 stakeholder
needs principle that is fundamental to COBIT and has
therefore been made prominent early in the COBIT 5
guidance.
The goals cascaded has been revisited and updated for the
COBIT 5 release.

Governance and Management Defined

What sort of framework is COBIT ?


o

An IT audit and control framework?

An IT management framework?

COBIT(1996) and COBIT 2 nd Edition(1998)


Focus on Control Objectives
COBIT 3rd Edition(2000)
Management guidelines added.

An IT governance framework?

COBIT 4.0 (2005) and COBIT 4.1 (2007)


Governance and compliances process added
Assurance processes removed

What is the difference between governance and management ?


The COBIT 5 process reference model subdivides the IT related practices
and activities of the enterprise into two main areas- governance and
management- with management further divided into domains of
processes:

The Governance Domain


Contains five Governance
Processes; within each process
Evaluate, direct and monitor
(EDM) practices are defined.

The four MANAGEMENT domains are in line with the


responsibility areas of plan, build, run and monitor(PBRM)

1. New GEIT Principles

Val IT and Risk IT frameworks are principles-based.


Feedback indicated that principles are easy to understand
and put into an enterprise context, allowing value to be
divided from the supporting guidance more effectively.
ISO/IEC 38500 also incorporates principles to underpin its
messages to achieve the same market benefit delivery,
although the principles in this standard and COBIT 5 are
not the same.

2. Increased Focus on Enablers

COBIT 4.1 did not have enablers! Yes it did they were not
called enablers, but they were there, explicitly or
implicitly!

Information, infrastructure, applications(services) and


people (people, skills and competencies) were COBIT 4.1
resources.
Principles, policies and frameworks were mentioned in a
few COBIT 4.1 processes.
Processes were central to COBIT 4.1 use.
Organizational structure was implied through the
responsible, accountable, consulted or informed(RACI)
roles and their definitions.
Culture, ethics and behavior were mentioned in few
COBIT 4.1 processes.

3. New Process Reference Model

COBIT 5 is based on a revised process reference model


with a new governance domain and several new and
modified processes that now cover enterprise activities
end to end i.e. business and IT function areas.
COBIT 5 consolidates COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT into
one framework, and has been updated to align with current
best practices e.g. ITIL,TOGAF.
The new model can be used as a guide for adjusting as
necessary the enterprises own process model (just like
COBIT 4.1).

4.New and Modified Processes

COBIT 5 introduces five new governance processes that


have leveraged and improved COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk
IT governance approaches.
This guidenance :
o
o

Helps enterprise to further refine and strengthen executive


management-level GEIT practices and activities.
Supports GEIT integration with existing enterprise governance
practices and is aligned with ISO/IEC 38500.

COBIT 5 has clarified management level processes and


integrated COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT content into one
process reference model.

There are several New and Modified Processes that reflect


current thinking, in particular:
o
o
o
o
o
o

o
o

o
o

APO03 Manage enterprise architecture.


APO04 Manage innovation.
APO05 Manage portfolio.
APO06 Manage budget and costs.
APO08 Manage relationships.
APO13 Manage security.
BAI05 Manage organizational change enablement.
BAI08 Manage knowledge.
BAI09 Manage assets.
DSS05 Manage security service.
DSS06 Manage business process control.

COBIT 5 processes now cover end to end business and IT


activities i.e. a full enterprise level view.
This provides for a more holistic and complete coverage
of practices reflecting the pervasive enterprise wide nature
of IT use.
It makes the involvement, responsibilities and
accountabilities of business stakeholders in the use of IT
more explicit and transparent.

5. Practices and Activities

COBIT 5 governance or management practices are


equivalent to the COBIT 4.1 control objectives and Val IT
and Risk IT processes.
The COBIT 5 activities are equivalent to the COBIT 4.1
control practices and Val IT and Risk IT management
practices.
COBIT 5 integrates and updates all of the previous
content into one new model, making it easier for users to
understand and use this material when implementing
improvements.

6. Enhanced Goals and Metrics

COBIT 5 follows the same goal and metric concepts as


COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT, but these are renamed
enterprise goals, IT related goals and process goals
reflecting an enterprise level view.
COBIT 5 provides a revised goals cascade based on
enterprise goals driving IT related goals and then
supported by critical processes.
COBIT 5 provides examples of goals and metrics at the
enterprise, process and management practice levels. This
is a change to COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT, which went
down one level lower.

7. Revised and Enhanced Inputs and Outputs

COBIT 5 provides inputs and outputs for every


management practice whereas COBIT 4.1 only provides
these at the process level.
This provides additional detailed guidance for designing
processes to include essential work products and to assist
with interprocess integration.

8. Expanded RACI Charts

COBIT 5 provides RACI charts describing roles and


responsibilities in a similar way to COBIT 4.1, Val IT and
Risk IT.
COBIT 5 provides a more complete, detailed and clearer
range of generic business and IT role players and charts
than COBIT 4.1 for each management practice, enabling
better definition of role player responsibilities or level of
involvement when designing and implementing processes.

9. New Process Capability Assessment Model

COBIT 5 discontinues the COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT


CMM-based capability maturity modeling approach.
COBIT 5 will be supported by a new process capability
assessment approach based on ISO-IEC 15504, and the
COBIT Assessment Programme has already been
established for COBIT 4.1 as an alternative to the CMM
approach. COBIT 5 will be launched soon; a supplementary
guide has been provided for ATOs

www.isaca.org/Knowledge-Center/cobit/Pages /COBIT-AssessmentProgramme.aspx

The COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT CMM-based approaches


are not considered compatible with the ISO-IEC 15504
approach because the methods use different attributes and
measurement scales.

The COBIT Assessment Programme approach is


considered by ISACA to be more robust, reliable and
repeatable as a process capability assessment method.
The COBIT Assessment Programme supports:

Formal assessment by accredited assessors (assessor training is


being developed)
Last rigorous self-assessments for internal gap analysis and
process improvement planning.

The COBIT Assessment Programme, in the future will


also potentially enable an enterprise to obtain an
independent and certified assessment aligned to the
ISO/IEC standard.

COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT users wishing to move to


the new COBIT Assessment Programme approach will
need to realign their previous ratings, adopt and learn the
new method, and initiate a new set of assessments in order
to gain the benefits of the new approach.
Although some of the information gathered from previous
assessments may be reusable, care will be needed in
migrating this information forward because there are
significant differences in requirements.

Questions ?

Chapter 5

COBIT 5 Process Capability


Model

What is a Process Assessment

ISO/IEC 15504 identifies process assessment as an activity that


can be performed as part of a process improvement initiative or
as part of a capability determination approach
The purpose of process improvement is to continually improve
the enterprises effectiveness and efficiency
The purpose of process capability determination is to identify
the strengths, weaknesses and risk of selected processes with
respect to a particular specified requirement through the
processes used ad their alignment with the business need
It provides an understandable, logical, reputable, reliable and
robust methodology for assessing the capability of IT
processes.

Process Capability Assessment

The COBIT Assessment Programme approach is


considered by ISACA to be more robust, reliable and
repeatable as a process capability assessment method.
The COBIT Assessment Programme supports:

Formal assessment by accredited assessors


Less rigorous self-assessment for internal gap analysis and
process improvement planning

The COBIT Assessment Programme potentially enables


an enterprise to obtain an independent and certified
assessments aligned to the ISO/IEC standards.

What is the COBIT Assessment Program?

The COBIT Assessment Program includes:

COBIT Process Assessment Model (PAM) using COBIT 4.1


COBIT Process Assessment Model (PAM) using COBIT 5
COBIT Assessors Guide - using COBIT 4.1
COBIT Assessors Guide - using COBIT 5.0
COBIT Self Assessors Guide - using COBIT 4.1
COBIT Self Assessors Guide - using COBIT 5.0

The COBIT Process Assessment Model (PAM) brings together


two proven heavyweights in the IT arena, ISO and ISACA.
The COBIT PAM adapts the existing COBIT 4.1 & COBIT 5.0
content into an ISO 15504 compliant process assessment
model.

Process Capability Assessment

COBIT Process Assessment Model(PAM): Using COBIT


4.1 & COBIT 5.0

COBIT Assessors Guide : Using COBIT 4.1 & COBIT 5.0

Serves as a base reference document for the performance of a


capability assessment of an organization's current IT processes
against COBIT
Provides details on how to undertake a full ISO-compliant assessment

COBIT Self-Assessment Guide : Using COBIT 4.1 &


COBIT 5.0

Provides guidance on how to perform a basic self-assessment against


COBIT processes.

Differences Between a Capability & Maturity


Assessment

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.

ISO 15504 argues that they are two separate assessments:


A Maturity Assessment is done at an Enterprise or Organizational level
and uses a different measurement scale than a capability assessment and
different criteria and attributes.
A Capability Assessment is done at a Process Level and is done for purpose
of process improvement. You cannot role up an assessment of many different
processes mathematically to an enterprise level. It works for SEIs CMMI
because they are assessing a single process, software engineering development
or application development. Most frameworks like COBIT contain 34 and 37
processes respectively for COBIT 4.1 and COBIT 5.
So the concept of a Maturity Assessment has been redeveloped in COBIT 5 to
the ISO 15504 Process Capability Assessment

Differences to a CMM Model ?


But dont we already have maturity models for COBIT 4.1
processes ?
The new COBIT Assessment Program

o
o

A robust assessment process based on ISO 15504


Aligns COBITs maturity model scale with ISO 15504 standard
New capability based assessment model includes:
Specific process requirements derived from COBIT 4.1
Ability of process to achieve process attributes based on 15504
Evidence requirements
Assessors qualifications and experiential requirements.

Results in a more robust, objective and reputable assessment.


Assessment results will likely vary from existing COBIT
maturity models.
COBIT 5 only adopts the ISO 15504 approach

Process Capability Assessment Differences COBIT


4.1 & 5
The
o

key difference to note from the above definitions:

A Maturity Assessment is done at an Enterprise organizational


level and uses a different measurement scale than a capability
Assessment different criteria and attributes.
A Capability Assessment is done at a process level and is done
for purposes of process improvement

Advantages of the ISO 15504 Approach


assessment process based on ISO 15504
An alignment of COBITs maturity model scale with the
internal standard
A new capability-based assessment model which includes:
A robust

o
o
o

Specific process requirements derived from COBIT 4.1 &


COBIT 5
Ability to achieve process attributes based on ISO 15504
Evidence requirements

Assessors

qualifications and experiential requirements


Results in a more robust, objective and reputable
assessment.

Key ISO 15504 definitions

ISO 15504 defines the following key terms:


Process purpose The high-level measurable objectives
of performing the process and the likely outcomes of
effective implementation of the process.
Process Outcomes - an observable result of a process
(Note: An outcome is an artifact, a significant change of
state or the meeting of specified constraints.)
Base practices the activities that, when consistently
performed, contribute to achieving the process purpose
Work product an artifact associated with the execution
of a process defined in terms of process inputs and
process outputs.

COBIT 5 Process Reference Model

COBIT 4.1, Val IT and Risk IT users wishing


to move to the new COBIT Assessment
Programme approach will need to:

Realign their previous ratings


Adopt and learn the new method
Initiate a new set of assessments

The Process Assessment Model


(PAM) Explained

PAM Scope

A Process Assessment Model is related to one more Process


Reference Models. It forms the basis for the collection of
evidence and rating of process capability. A Process
Assessment Model shall relate to at least one process from the
specified Process Reference Model(s).

A Process Assessment Model shall address, for a given process,


all, or a continuous subset of the levels(starting at level 1) of
the measurement framework for process capability for each of
the processes within its scope.

Note It would be permissible for a model, for example, to


address solely level1, or to address levels 1,2 and 3, but it
would not be permissible to address levels 2 and 3 without
level 1.

Level 0, Incomplete processThe process is not implemented or fails to achieve its


process purpose. At this level, there is little or no evidence of any systematic
achievement of the process purpose.

Level 1, Performed process (one attribute)The implemented process achieves its


process purpose.

Level 2, Managed process (two attributes)The previously described performed


process is now implemented in a managed fashion (planned, monitored and
adjusted) and its work products are appropriately established, controlled and
maintained.

Level 3, Established process (two attributes)The previously described managed


process is now implemented using a defined process that is capable of achieving its
process outcomes.

Level 4, Predictable process (two attributes)The previously described established


process now operates within defined limits to achieve its process outcomes.

Level 5, Optimizing process (two attributes)The previously described predictable


process is continuously improved to meet relevant current and projected business
goals.

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).

There is a significant distinction between process capability level 1 and the


higher capability levels. Process capability level 1 achievement requires the
process performance attribute to be largely achieved, which actually means
that the process is being successfully performed and the required outcomes
obtained by the enterprise. The higher capability levels then add different
attributes to it.

Mapping to PRMs

A Process Assessment Model shall provide an explicit


mapping from the relevant elements of the model to the
relevant process attributes of the measurement framework.

The mapping shall be complete, clear and unambiguous.


The mapping of the indicators within the Process
Assessment Model shall be:

The purpose and outcomes of the processes in the specified Process


Reference Model
The process attributes (including all of the results of achievements
listed for each process attribute) in the measurement framework.
This enables Process Assessment Models that are structurally
different to be related to the same Process Reference Model.

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)

PA1.1- process performance


PA2.1- work product management
PA2.2- performance management
PA 3.1- process definition
PA 4.1- process deployment
PA 4.2- process control
PA 5.1- process innovation
PA 5.2- continuous optimization

Process Attributes (example)


PA 1.1

Process performance

The process performance attribute is a measure of the extent to


which the process purpose is achieved.
As a result of full achievement of this attribute the process
achieves its defined outcomes.

PA 2.1 Performance Management

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

b. performance of the process is planned and monitored


c. performance of the process is adjusted to meet plans
d. Responsibilities and authorities for performing the process are defined, assigned and
communicated

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

PA 2.2 Work Product Management

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:

a. Requirements for the work products of the process are defined.


b. Requirements for documentation and control of the work products are defined.
c. work products are appropriately identified, documented and controlled
d. work products are reviewed in accordance with planned arrangements and adjusted as
necessary to meet Requirements

Process Attributes Rating Scale

COBIT Assessment Process measures the extent to which


a given process achieves the Process Attributes
N, Not achieved 0 to 15% achievement
There is little or no evidence of achievement of the defined attributes in the
assessed process
P, Partially achieved >15 to 50% achievement
There is some evidence of an approach to and some achievement of the
defined attributes in the assessed process. Some aspects of achievement of
the attribute may be unpredictable.
L, Largely achieved >50 to 85% achievement
There is evidence of a systematic approach to and significant achievement
of the defined attributes in the assessed process. Some weakness related to
this attribute may be exist in the process.
F, Fully achieved >85 to 100% achievement
There is evidence of a complete & systematic approach to and full
achievement of the defined attributes in the assessed process. No
significant weakness related to this attribute exist in the assessed process.

Chapter 5

Assessor Assessment Steps

Assessment Process Activities

Initiation
Planning the Assessment
Briefing
Data Collection
Data Validation
Process Attribute Rating
Reporting the Results

1:
Initiation

Identify the sponsor and define the purpose of the assessment


-why it is being carried out.
Define the scope of the assessment
-which processes are being assessed
-what constraints ,if any, apply to the assessment
Identify any additional information that needs to be gathered

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

An assessment plan describing all activities performed in conducting the


assessment is

developed and

documented together with

an assessment schedule
Identify the project scope
Secure the necessary resources to perform the assessment

Determine the method of colleting, reviewing ,validating and documenting


the information required for the assessment

Co-ordinate assessment activities with the organizational unit being


assessed

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 assessor obtains (and documents) an understanding of the process(es)


including process purpose ,inputs ,outputs and work products, sufficient to
enable and support the assessment
Data required for evaluating the processes within the scope of the
assessment is collected in a systematic manner
The strategy and techniques for the selection ,collection ,analysis of data
and justification of the ratings are explicitly identified and demonstrable
Each process identified in the assessment scope is assessed on the basis of
objective evidence.

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

Actions are taken to ensure that the data is accurate


and sufficiently covers the assessment scope,
including
-

Seeking information from first hand ,independent sources


Using past assessment results ; and
Holding feedback sessions to validate the information collected.

Some data validation may occur as the data being


collected

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

The rating is based on data validated in the previous activity


Traceability shall be maintained between the objective evidence collected
and the process attribute ratings assigned
For each process attribute rated , the relationship between the indicators
and the objective evidence is recorded.

7:
Reporting the Results

The results of the assessment are analyzed and


presented in a report
The report also covers any key issues raised during
the assessment such as:
Observed areas of strength and weakness
Findings of high risk

i.e. magnitude of gap between assessed capability and


desired/required capability

Assessor Certification

COBIT process Assessment roles:


- Lead Assessor-a competent assessor responsible for overseeing the
assessment activities
- Assessor- an individual ,developing assessor competencies , that
performs the assessment activities

Assessor Competencies:
-Knowledge ,skills and Experience

With the process Reference Model ; Process Assessment Model ,


methods and tools ;
and rating processes
With the processes/domains being assessed
Personal attributes which contribute to effective performance

An assessors training and certificate course for assessors is being


developed for COBIT 4.1 and COBIT 5.0 Availability Q1 2013

Questions?

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