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Service Level Agreements: Evaluating and Negotiating Law School Technology SLAs Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School
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Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Service Level Agreements:Evaluating and Negotiating Law School Technology SLAs

Ramsey DonnellAssoc. Director for Access & OrganizationThe John Marshall Law School

Page 2: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

What is an SLA?

• Service Level Agreement•Core component of many technology contracts•Ancillary•Sometimes offered at added cost

•Promise by a vendor to meet a certain level of service

Page 3: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Examples

• Categories of agreements•Hosting•Cloud computing –ASP, software-as-service•Network connectivity•Technical support/maintenance

Page 4: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Examples

• Library/Law School agreements• Internet connection•Website hosting• ILS hosting/maintenance•Course management system hosting/support•Lecture capture•Server maintenance/support

Page 5: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Are SLAs negotiable?

• Often they are• If not…•Is it worth the price?•Does it signal a problem with the service provider?

• Ask to see SLA early in process

Page 6: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Why an SLA?

SLA

• Certainty • Immediacy• Incentive

No SLA

• Uncertainty • Delay• Cost of Litigation

Page 7: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Other incentives?

•Reputation•Renewal

Page 8: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

The Bones of an SLA

1. What is being measured?• Availability, performance,

support

2. How is it measured?• Metrics—uptime, etc.

3. Remedy• Credits

Page 9: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

First things first…

• Is the SLA part of the signed contract?•How can the SLA be modified?•“We reserve the right to change the terms of this SLA…”

Page 10: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Services & Metrics

•Availability of system/service•Metric—uptime•E.g., 99.9% over 365 days, 24/7

Page 11: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Availability, cont’d

•Exclusions from calculation•Scheduled maintenance•Hours per month?•Advance notice?•Limitations?

Page 12: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Availability, cont’d

•Exclusions from calculation•Emergency maintenance/unplanned downtime•Plan to minimize unplanned downtime?

Page 13: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Availability, cont’d

•Exclusions from calculation•Force majeure•Acts of god, war, natural disaster…•Overbroad?•Mitigation?

Page 14: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Force majeure• “Provider shall not be liable to Customer

for any failure or delay caused by events beyond Provider’s control, including, but not limited to, Customer’s failure to furnish necessary information, sabotage, failure or delays in transportation, communication or utilities, failures or substitutions of equipment, labor disputes, accidents, shortages of labor, fuel, raw materials or equipment, or other technical failures.”

Page 15: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Calculating Service Availability

AV Availability of service/system in a given month (percentage)

Total DT Minutes in a given calendar month for which service/system is not in operation

Permitted DT

Minutes of DT in a given month that is excluded from the calculation of AV (e.g., scheduled maintenance, DT due to force majeure)

Total service time

Total number of minutes in the given calendar month

Page 16: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Services & Metrics

• System/service performance•Metrics•Response time•Latency

Page 17: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Performance, cont’d

•Metrics•Consistency•Be wary of averages• Jitter

Page 18: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Performance, cont’d

•Metrics•Packet loss•Different data transfers tolerate different packet loss

Page 19: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Provider assumptions

• Assumptions underlying service levels•If exceeded, no remedy under SLA•Volume and transaction assumptions•Orders per second•System queries•Data transfer•Expansion

Page 20: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Services & Metrics

• Technical support•The system is down!•Mechanism for reporting?•Help desk—phone support•Online ticketing system

Page 21: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Technical support

•Call support—quality measures•English•Max. hold times•Live vs. automated system

Page 22: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Technical support

•Response time•Time to resolution

Page 23: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Technical support

• Response time•Severity Levels•Critical—faster response times•How defined?•Who assigns?

Page 24: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Technical support

• Time to resolution/workaround•When must work begin?•What resources devoted?•When will it be resolved?

Page 25: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Sample severity levels

Severity Level

Response Time

Resources Resolution

Severity 1 – service unusable

15 minutes

Immediate assignment of dedicated technician, continuous effort

2 hours or less

Severity 2 – portion of service unusable

2 hours Reasonable personnel and effort

8 hours or less

Severity 3 – minor errors

8 hours As needed As mutually agreed

Page 26: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Remedy

•Certainty + immediacy = Incentive

Page 27: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Remedy

•Service credits•Monetary•Objective•Incentive

Page 28: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Remedy

• Termination right•Chronic failures•Transition

Page 29: Ramsey Donnell Assoc. Director for Access & Organization The John Marshall Law School.

Recap – Evaluating an SLA• Binding, no unilateral modification?• Structure•What is being measured?• Availability• Performance• Technical support

•Metrics – objective•Remedy• Credits• Termination