I'd appreciate your recommendations for developing in operations management

Submitted by Stephen Gordon
in

Hi All,

Yesterday I accepted an offer with my employer to move into a role with leadership responsibility for the IT support and development of Engineering and Manufacturing systems. This is a great opportunity for me and I am looking forward to it.

I'm preparing to build on existing relationships and create new ones with both my new directs and my new (internal) customers. Both are aware that my background is in a different IT space but I'd like to demonstrate my commitment by better developing my knowledge of operations management so I can 'speak their language'.

I'd appreciate all your recommendations for books, pod-casts or other media that you have used and feel would improve my effectiveness in the role.

Best Regards

Stephen

Submitted by kim aglietti on Wednesday May 23rd, 2012 1:53 pm

ITIL is the most widely accepted standard approach to IT Service Management in the world.  All sorts of organizations offer training, certification, etc. but you can start here:
http://www.itil-officialsite.com/
 
 

Submitted by Stephen Gordon on Thursday May 24th, 2012 4:13 am

 Thanks Kima. I'm also looking for how to development my knowledge on areas like supply chain, warehousing and manufacturing. Any suggestions?

Submitted by Mads Singers S… on Friday June 15th, 2012 5:16 pm

Follow the MT direction with frequent 1:1's and learn from your teams. 
Start reading more about the topic's in general so you have a better understanding of what's happening in those "industries" so that you can show your interest.
It's challenging to come from a area where you know how things works to one where you dont - but you task is not to dig deep and understand ever step, but find the people that can deliver for the organisation what needs to be delivered.
Kind Regards
Mads Sorensen
Disc 4536

Submitted by Dani Martin on Tuesday July 10th, 2012 11:13 am

Stephensan -- As someone with very little knowledge about manufacturing/plant operations, I recommend reading "The Goal: A Process of Ongoing Improvement" by Goldratt. It's written like fiction so there's a story which helped keep my high-I interest. It reads fairly quickly and is enjoyable. And I learned a lot!

Best,
Dani