I think that adherence to codified change control is really not the cause as this article suggests. These issues are management issues - claiming a framework for managing the chaos which results from bad management is poor root cause analysis.<p>Poor management results in both poor testing and underdeveloped project understanding.<p>If you have solid, well funded (with both money AND time) testing - the impact of change is minimal.<p>Further, the propensity for IT to say no stems from their understAnding of how poorly upper management allocates resources to IT as it is historicLly been seen as a liability/cost center rather than integral to business. (obviously this is far less true in silicon valley).<p>Clearly though, having good IT managers and staff are important and you find a lot less 'no' with good staff.<p>IT organizatiOns typically report to the CIO/CTO and are overshadowed by the CEO. If the CEO is of the typical Sales/Marketing DNA (or the "I used to be a developer - we don't need that much redundancy!" DNA, which can be worse) then they typically underfund all infrastructure projects.<p>Finally, IT gets the blame for all downtime, so it's their asses if the shitty managers decisions impact service.<p>So, ITIL is not the issue. People are. IT needs competent leadership to succeed.