2.2 ITIL

The objective of ITIL Service Management is to provide IT services to business customers that are fit for purpose, stable and reliable to the point of a business trusting them as a utility. This is achieved by encouraging service providers to adapt a common framework of practices across all areas of IT with the single aim of delivering value to the business.

An ITIL approach to service management protects an organization's IT investment. It ensures organizations baseline services and build capabilities to learn in one area of the organization while providing improvements elsewhere. ITIL delivers service management functionality with sound structure, stability and strength that is built on principles, methods and tools.

The essence of ITIL core practice is captured by the Service Lifecycle that demonstrates an iterative and multidimensional approach to providing services. The phases of the Service Lifecycle include:

  • Service Strategy: sets the objectives and performance expectations for IT Services and IT Service Management in line with the organizational needs.

  • Service Design: focuses on designing new or changed services for introduction into the production environment.

  • Service Transition: plans and manages the capacity and resources needed to package, build, test and deploy a release into production, while establishing the service within the customer and stakeholder requirements.

  • Service Operations: coordinates and conducts activities and processes needed to deliver and support services at agreed levels to business users and customers.

  • Continual Service Improvement:constantly aligns and realigns IT service to the evolving business requirements by identifying and implementing to the IT services that underpin the business processes.

Our service management application offers the following capabilities: