Service Level Agreement (SLA) Boot Camp

Service Level Agreements, or "SLA's" are tricky but useful mechanisms for managing the risk of an on-going relationship with IT service providers. Unfortunately, most SLA's that show up in service contracts as worthless, cosmetic paper additions. SLA's can be extremely powerful tools to help you and your service provider get the most out of a relationship.

What is an SLA?

A service level agreement (SLA), in its most basic form, is a contractual commitment to meet specific goals. If, for example, you sign up for a hosting contract with a provider, you may desire an SLA that measures the up-time of your website. If you outsource your help desk, you may want an SLA that measures the time it takes to answer the phone. Usually, an SLA includes a penalty and/or reward framework. For example, many web hosting companies offer a refund based on the number of hours your website is unavailable. On the flip-side, an SLA may include an extra bonus to your help desk provider if all calls are answered within 30 seconds. The following are typical examples of SLA's:

"All help desk call will be answered within 90 seconds"

"95% of all bills will be printed and delivered on time"

"The website will be available 99.99%"

"Project X will be delivered within 2 weeks of the planned schedule"

What isn't an SLA?

An SLA is not a way to cut your costs. Rather, SLA's are mechanisms for managing risks, sharing pain, and benefiting from success. Many SLA's are setup as "outs" to contracts that allow customers to penalize technology providers for non-performance. Although penalties do reduce costs and they do send a strong signal to service providers to improve their service, neither you nor the service provider "win" if an SLA is missed. Think of an SLA as a shared goal.

SLA Philosophy

The best SLAs are setup to allow both you and your service provider to share in the success and failure of an agreement. If you intend to turn over the operation of your billing system to a service provider, getting the bills out on time is critical. Whether you do it yourself or partner with someone, if you fail to produce invoices, you delay incoming revenue. In this example, your SLA should inspire your vendor to deliver on performance levels that have an actual impact to your business. Let's say your current billing accuracy is 90%. If you increase this accuracy to 95%, you have directly improved your company's bottom line. If you intend to outsource this function, your SLA should include a shared billing accuracy reward to the service provider if they help you improve revenues.

Make It Count

Some web hosting plans offer an up-time measure that, if not met, will result in a refund to you. Unfortunately, this "refund" may be calculated as a credit based on the time that your site was down and your monthly hosting fee. For example, if you pay $100 per month for hosting services, and your site is down for 1 hour, your credit may only be 14 cents! $100/720 (number of hours in a month) = $0.14. If, on average, you sell $50 worth of goods through your website each hour, 14 cents isn't much of a blow to your hosting company. I recognize that my example is slightly exaggerated. Many hosting companies offer a more material penalty and most web sites do not generate $50 in sales per hour. But you can see how this penalty and SLA is mis-aligned with the business model. If you know you make $50 per hour in sales through your website, your hosting company should incur a much greater penalty for not keeping your website up and running! Whether you negotiate an SLA with a hosting company or a large IT company, create an SLA that is specific to your business and truly establishes risk sharing (i.e. we "win" or "loose" together).

Devil In The Details

A good SLA has four critical components: description, target, measurement, and penalty/reward. If you have an SLA that is missing one of these components, you run the risk of losing the benefit of having the SLA to begin with. In the web hosting example above, the SLA sounds good, but the actual measurement and penalty weigh heavily in the favor of the hosting company (they have little to loose!) Make sure your SLA's are well defined and agreed upon before you ink the deal. Here's an example of a good SLA:

Description: Billing - All bills will be rendered, printed, and mailed on a timely basis to ensure unbilled revenue is minimized.


Target: 90%


Measurement: Ratio of number of planned bills / number of bills actually produced. The calculation is based on the number of records in the billing input file compared against the billing output log file which lists the bills actually rendered.


Reward/Penalty: If billing accuracy is below 90%, penalty is calculated as 1% of the unbilled revenue for that billing run. If billing accuracy is above 90%, a bonus is calculated as 1% of the additional revenue billed.

In this SLA example, your service provider stands to loose or gain substantially based on their performance. Similarly, your company stands to loose or gain substantially based on the performance of the service provider. Depending upon your daily billings, 1% could be significant. Note the specificity of the SLA measurement and calculation in my example. If you are not very specific with the calculation methods, actual performance against service levels are open for debate.

Negotiate Up Front

Many businesses strike deals with IT companies and leave SLA's as an open item. Many IT service providers will want to establish a "base line" period where SLA's are measured and then negotiated. In many cases, this request is reasonable, especially if an IT company has little to no understanding of your environment and your current performance record. However, if you wait to negotiate service levels until after you ink a deal, you loose tremendous leverage with your provider unless you really think you can walk away from the deal. Ideally, choose a provider that is willing to negotiate a service level up front. In my experience, these SLA negotiations are much more difficult on the back-end.

Raise the Bar

A service level agreement should be changed periodically. Let's look back at my billing SLA example. Let's assume that after 1 year of service, your provider is billing at an accuracy, on average, of 95%, and in turn, you are rewarding them consistently for beating the original service level. It's time to raise the bar! If your provider can increase your accuracy from 90% to 95%, maybe they can increase your accuracy from 95% to 99%. Raise the SLA bar (target) to 95%, and only reward them if they beat this new level of quality. By providing the right incentives to improve upon service levels, both you and your service provider can benefit.

The Shorter, The Better

I have seen service contracts with dozens and dozens of SLA's. If you establish multiple SLA's, you and your service provider will have broad visibility into performance levels. However, establishing many SLA's can water down the over-arching performance of a service provider. Put simply, a service provider can "make-up" poor performance on one SLA by beating the performance target of another SLA. To keep things simple, pick the few critical success factors of your business and establish applicable service levels that your provider can truly focus on.

Service Level Agreements should be established as a "dashboard" for you and your service provider to share in the success and failure of your arrangement. SLA's are less effective if they are established as contract "outs" or as penalty frameworks, because they fail to drive a partnering relationship. Negotiate SLA's which, if met or beaten, truly benefit your company and your service provider. Always define SLA's to the lowest level of detail possible before you finalize the arrangement since negotiations become even more difficult after the deal is executed. And never commit to an SLA that could hurt you but not your provider.

About The Author

Andy Quick is co-founder of Findmyhosting.com (http://www.findmyhosting.com), a free web hosting directory offering businesses and consumers a hassle free way to find the right hosting plan for their needs. Feel free to contact Andy at andy@findmyhosting.com in case you have any questions or comments regarding this article.

In The News:


Google News
Updated : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 05:49:35 GMT

Genomics project unites four Wisconsin research institutions - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Genomics project unites four Wisconsin research institutions
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - 19 minutes ago
By KATHLEEN GALLAGHER Wisconsin’s four biggest academic research institutions will collaborate on an initiative aimed at giving the state national stature in the fast-emerging field of individualized medicine, Gov.
Marshfield Clinic gets biggest donation yet Chicago Tribune
Wis. governor unveils gene research triangle Forbes
Bizjournals.com - GenomeWeb News (subscription) - WJFW-TV - WISN.com
all 51 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 05:29:44 GMT

Paulson Indicates Need to Purchase Bank Equity `Soon as We Can' - Bloomberg


Telegraph.co.uk
Paulson Indicates Need to Purchase Bank Equity `Soon as We Can'
Bloomberg - 1 hour ago
By John Brinsley and Rebecca Christie Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) -- US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson indicated that pumping government funds into banks is a priority and said financial markets will remain volatile.
US planning to buy equity in financial institutions Reuters
Treasury Weighs Investing In Banks Washington Post
International Herald Tribune - MarketWatch - CNNMoney.com - Bizjournals.com
all 1,783 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 04:21:05 GMT

Bush: US authority able to solve financial crisis - People's Daily Online


Telegraph.co.uk
Bush: US authority able to solve financial crisis
People's Daily Online - 1 hour ago
US President George W. Bush arrives in the Rose Garden at the White House to makes a statement on the economy in Washington, October 10, 2008.
President Bush vows action on financial crisis Los Angeles Times
Bush's Lullaby to the Markets Washington Post
Birmingham Star - Wall Street Journal - CNN - Bloomberg
all 1,302 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 04:12:49 GMT

McCain Lauds and Attacks Obama in Same Day - New York Times


CBS News
McCain Lauds and Attacks Obama in Same Day
New York Times - 41 minutes ago
Senator John McCain of Arizona and his supporters at a rally on Friday in La Crosse, Wis. By ELISABETH BUMILLER LAKEVILLE, Minn. - After a week of trying to portray Senator Barack Obama as a friend of terrorists who would drive the country into ...
McCain Moves to Soften the Tone at Rallies Washington Post
John McCain, speaking to supporters, tries to defuse an anti ... Los Angeles Times
Reuters - DetNews.com - Austin American-Statesman - The Miami Herald
all 304 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 05:08:14 GMT

US Near Changing Stance on North Korea as Terrorist - Wall Street Journal


BBC News
US Near Changing Stance on North Korea as Terrorist
Wall Street Journal - 1 hour ago
By JAY SOLOMON WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration is hoping to announce as soon as Saturday that it is tentatively removing North Korea from its list of state sponsors of terrorism, in a bid to kick-start a stalled nuclear disarmament agreement, ...
AP: US to remove North Korea from terror blacklist The Associated Press
US May Remove North Korea From Terrorism List, AP Reports Bloomberg
Los Angeles Times - Voice of America - Financial Times - The Miami Herald
all 1,714 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 04:02:40 GMT

Democrats Are Gaining, Registration Data Shows - New York Times


Los Angeles Times
Democrats Are Gaining, Registration Data Shows
New York Times - 2 hours ago
By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE and GRIFF PALMER Some longtime Republican strongholds in New York are becoming increasingly Democratic, a striking change driven by demographic shifts, intense voter registration drives by Democrats and allied groups and sagging ...
Campus registration drives in full swing KARE
Ott, Hook face off for open county office St. Joseph News-Press
The News-Press - Winston-Salem Journal - Tampabay.com - Beaufort Gazette
all 739 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 03:20:33 GMT

G-7 Commit to `All Necessary Steps' to Stem Global Meltdown - Bloomberg


Voice of America
G-7 Commit to `All Necessary Steps' to Stem Global Meltdown
Bloomberg - 1 hour ago
By Simon Kennedy Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Group of Seven finance chiefs, meeting after stocks plunged and as a global recession looms, vowed to prevent the failure of vital banks while failing to unveil new initiatives for thawing credit markets.
Group of 7 Nations Seek Coordination in Rescue New York Times
In latest bold step, Treasury will buy bank stakes The Miami Herald
CNNMoney.com - The Associated Press - Boston Globe - FN Arena News
all 890 news articles

Publ.Date : Sat, 11 Oct 2008 04:03:42 GMT

RSS Parser
Increase Online Traffic


PARLOT::Ebooks, Scripts, Websites, and more...

Adsense websites

Innovation Management ? Measuring Failure!

Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More

Empowering Others - Giving Them Some Control

It's been a pretty good weekend around the place -... Read More

Smart Hiring: What Makes the Right Employee?

Good hires do not happen by accident or luck. In... Read More

Creativity and Innovation Management ? Competition versus Collaboration

There is much confusion as to whether competition or collaboration... Read More

Poor Employee Performance: How to Deal

KEEP WRITTEN RECORDS: "Document !Document! Document!" Keep a record of... Read More

People Are Our Most Important Asset!

How many times have you heard or uttered this phrase... Read More

Think Twice Before Selling ROI

When we're selling to business people, our value proposition has... Read More

Mantra for Managers

What do organizations look for in a prospective employee with... Read More

Innovation, Idea Selection, Valuation

There is no sure fire route to commercial success, but... Read More

Preparing a Budget

Ok, you say, I know I need a budget, but... Read More

The Seven Cs: Partnership Danger Signs - Conflict Becoming the Norm ? Part 2

A series of articles exploring the seven critical areas that... Read More

Employee Performance - If You Want the Best, Get Personal!

This is a story about a man and three dogs.I... Read More

Four Corners of a Triangle: Why Organizations Succeed or Fail

When we want to hire people for a corporation or... Read More

Setting Direction Within an Organization

FINDING DIRECTION: An organization can't succeed without direction. Direction means... Read More

Tales from the Corporate Frontlines: Employee Ideas Achieve Work Life Balance

This article relates to the Work/Life Balance competency, which investigates... Read More

The Most Important Thing Youll Ever Do

The wellspring of confidence is belief. When you believe in... Read More

Creativity Management and Behaviour

What behaviour maximises the chances of thinking of great ideas?... Read More

6 Shared Factors of Successful Executives

These factors where determined by interviews with and books from... Read More

Group Discussion Guidelines

DISCUSSION METHODS: There are two basic types of discussion methods;... Read More

Six Honest Business Friends - They Guide Me In All I Do

SIX "HONEST BUSINESS FRIENDS" - THEY GUIDE ME IN ALL... Read More

Questions To Ask Employees You Want To Retain

Times of cost cutting and downsizing has dramatically impacted the... Read More

The 20/60/20 Rule Of Leadership. Dont Go Solving The Wrong Problems

Several decades ago, a passenger jet approached a Florida airport... Read More

Diversity in the Workplace

As you look around your office, is everyone just like... Read More

The Three-Dimensional Communication System

Human communication is always three-dimensional. No spoken or written message... Read More

Dont Let Your Measurements Mislead You

Don't Let Your Measurements Mislead You ... Read More