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ITIL Managing Across Lifecycle-Invensis Learning

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The ITIL® MALC - Expert level certification is for participants who are interested in demonstrating ITIL knowledge in its entirety. This Expert level certificate is awarded to participants who have achieved a range of ITIL certifications and have achieved a well rounded, superior knowledge and skills base in ITIL Best Practices. This ITIL MALC courseware is prepared by international subject matter experts and gives candidates the skills to support an organization’s service delivery by bridging the service lifecycle stages. To know more about ITIL MALC Certification trainings worldwide, please contact us at - Email: support@invensislearning.com Phone - US +1-910-726-3695, Website: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ITIL Managing Across Lifecycle-Invensis Learning


1
ITIL Managing Across Lifecycle
Course Name ITIL Managing Across
Lifecycle Version INVL_ITILMALC_CW_1.
3 Course ID ITSM - 119
ITIL is a registered trade mark of AXELOS
Limited, used under permission of AXELOS Limited.
All rights reserved. The Swirl logo is a trade
mark of AXELOS Limited, used under permission of
AXELOS Limited. All rights reserved.
2
About Invensis Learning
  • Invensis Learning is a training and development
    division of Invensis Inc., a leading ISO 27001
    certified Business Process Management company
    offering services to clients that include Fortune
    100 companies globally. Invensis Learning is a
    internationally accredited professional training
    and certification organization with an extensive
    portfolio of professional certification courses.
    Our customized training programs are meant for
    enterprises looking to upskill their workforce
    through multiple modes of training delivery
    worldwide.

3
Module 1- Service Lifecycle
4
Service Lifecycle
  • Service
  • A means of delivering value to customers by
    facilitating the outcomes customers want to
    achieve without the ownership of specific costs
    and risks.
  • Outcome
  • The result of carrying out an activity, following
    a process, or delivering an IT service etc. The
    term is used to refer to intended results, as
    well as to actual results.

5
Service Lifecycle
  • IT Service
  • IT service A service provided by an IT service
    provider. An IT service is made up of a
    combination of information technology, people and
    processes.
  • A customer-facing IT service directly supports
    the business processes of one or more customers
    and its service level targets should be defined
    in a service level agreement.
  • Supporting services Not directly used by the
    business but are required by the service provider
    to deliver customer-facing services.
  • Core services deliver the basic outcomes desired
    by one or more customers.
  • Enabling services are services that are needed in
    order for a core service to be delivered.
  • Enhancing services are services that are added to
    a core service to make it more exciting or
    enticing to the customer.

6
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Management
  • A set of specialized organizational capabilities
    for providing value to customers in the form of
    services.
  • Service provider An organization supplying
    services to one or more internal or external
    customers.
  • IT service management (ITSM) The implementation
    and management of quality IT services that meet
    the needs of the business. IT service management
    is performed by IT service providers through an
    appropriate mix of people, process and
    information technology.
  • IT service provider A service provider that
    provides IT services to internal or external
    customers.

7
Service Lifecycle
  • Five Stages of Service Lifecycle
  • The ITIL core consists of five lifecycle
    publications
  • ITIL Service Strategy
  • ITIL Service Design
  • ITIL Service Transition
  • ITIL Service Operation
  • ITIL Continual Service Improvement

8
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Strategy
  • Value creation begins here with understanding
    organizational objectives and customer needs
  • Every organizational asset including people,
    processes and products should support the
    strategy
  • Provides guidance on how to view service
    management not only as an organizational
    capability but as a strategic asset
  • Topics covered in ITIL Service Strategy include
  • The development of market spaces
  • Characteristics of internal and external provider
    types
  • Service assets
  • The service portfolio and implementation of
    strategy through the service lifecycle.
  • Business relationship management, demand
    management, financial management, organizational
    development and strategic risks

9
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Strategy
  • Organizations should use ITIL Service Strategy
  • To set objectives and expectations of performance
    towards serving customers and market spaces
  • To identify, select and prioritize opportunities
  • Service strategy
  • Is about ensuring that organizations are in a
    position to handle the costs and risks associated
    with their service portfolios
  • Is set up not just for operational effectiveness
    but for distinctive performance

10
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Design
  • Service design is the stage in the lifecycle that
    turns a service strategy into a plan for
    delivering the business objectives.
  • ITIL Service Design provides guidance for the
    design and development of services and service
    management practices
  • It covers design principles and methods for
    converting strategic objectives into portfolios
    of services and service assets
  • Design coordination, service catalogue
    management, service level management,
    availability management, capacity management, IT
    service continuity management, information
    security management, and supplier management

11
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Transition
  • Service Transition provides guidance for the
    development and improvement of capabilities for
    introducing new and changed services into
    supported environments.
  • Transition planning and support, change
    management, service asset and configuration
    management, release and deployment management,
    service validation and testing, change
    evaluation, and knowledge management.
  • Service knowledge management system

12
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Operation
  • Describes best practice for managing services in
    supported environments
  • Provides guidance on achieving effectiveness and
    efficiency in the delivery and support of
    services to ensure value for the customer, the
    users, and the service provider
  • Strategic objectives are ultimately realized
    through service operation
  • Event management, incident management, request
    fulfillment, problem management, and access
    management processes
  • Service desk, technical management, IT operations
    management, and application management functions

13
Service Lifecycle
  • Continual Service Improvement
  • Continual Service Improvement provides guidance
    on creating and maintaining value for customers
    through better strategy, design, transition and
    operation of services
  • CSI describes best practice for achieving
    incremental and large scale improvements in
    service quality, operational efficiency and
    business continuity, and for ensuring that the
    service portfolio continues to be aligned to
    business needs
  • PDCA
  • Seven step improvement process, CSI approach
  • Topics include service measurement, demonstrating
    value with metrics, developing baselines, and
    maturity assessments

14
Service Lifecycle
  • Stages of Service Lifecycle
  • Services and processes describe how things change
  • Structure describes how they are connected
  • Structure helps to determine the correct
    behaviors required for service management

15
Service Lifecycle
  • Stages of Service Lifecycle

ITIL Service Strategy Strategy management for IT services Service portfolio management Financial management for IT services Demand management Business relationship management
ITIL Service Design Design coordination Service catalogue management Service level management Availability management Capacity management IT service continuity management Information security management Supplier management
16
Service Lifecycle
  • Stages of Service Lifecycle

ITIL Service Transition Strategy management for IT services Service portfolio management Financial management for IT services Demand management Business relationship management
ITIL Service Operation Design coordination Service catalogue management Service level management Availability management Capacity management IT service continuity management Information security management Supplier management
ITIL Continual Service Improvement Seven-step improvement process
17
Service Lifecycle
  • Coordination Across lifecycle
  • Organizations need a collaborative approach for
    the management of assets which are used to
    deliver and support services for their customers
  • Coordination across the lifecycle creates an
    environment focused on business and customer
    outcomes instead of just IT objectives and
    projects
  • A clear understanding of how processes interact
    throughout the service lifecycle, within the
    organization, and with other parties (users,
    customers, suppliers)
  • A process interface is the boundary of the
    process.
  • Process integration is the linking of processes
    by ensuring that information flows from one
    process to another effectively and efficiently.
  • If there is management commitment to process
    integration, processes are generally easier to
    implement and there will be fewer conflicts
    between processes.
  • Stages of the lifecycle work together as an
    integrated system to support the ultimate
    objective of service management for business
    value realization.

18
Service Lifecycle
  • Coordination Across lifecycle
  • The SKMS enables integration across the service
    lifecycle stages
  • It provides secure and controlled access to the
    knowledge, information and data that are needed
    to manage and deliver services
  • The service portfolio represents all the assets
    presently engaged or being released in various
    stages of the lifecycle
  • Most ITIL processes and functions have activities
    that take place across multiple stages of the
    service lifecycle
  • The strength of the service lifecycle rests upon
    continual feedback throughout each stage of the
    lifecycle. This feedback ensures that service
    optimization is managed from a business
    perspective.

19
Service Lifecycle
  • Coordination Across lifecycle

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
20
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages Service
    Strategy
  • Links service provider activities to customer
    outcomes
  • Service provider understands what makes its
    customers successful and then organizes itself
    accordingly
  • Enables the service provider to respond quickly
    and effectively to changes in the business
    environment, ensuring increased competitive
    advantage
  • Supports the creation and maintenance of a
    portfolio of quantified services that will enable
    the business to achieve positive return on its
    investment in services
  • Facilitates functional and transparent
    communication between the customer and the
    service provider, so that both have a consistent
    understanding of what is required and how it will
    be delivered

21
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • The value of a service can be considered to be
    the level to which that service meets a
    customers expectations
  • The value of a service comes from what it enables
    someone to do
  • It is often measured by how much the customer is
    willing to pay for the service, rather than the
    cost of the service or any other intrinsic
    attribute of the service itself
  • The value of a service is not determined by the
    provider, but by the person who receives it
    because they decide what they will do with the
    service, and what type of return they will
    achieve by using the service.

22
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • What service(s) did IT provide?
  • What did the service(s) achieve?
  • How much did the service(s) cost?
  • Value definition
  • The business outcomes achieved
  • The customers preferences
  • The customers perception of what was delivered

23
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
24
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages

Value can be added at different levels. What
matters is the net difference
Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
25
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • Value is realized when a service is provided to
    an external customer and meets their
    expectations.
  • Value is measured in terms of whether a business
    outcome has been met. In commercial
    organizations, this is usually measured as profit
    or margin.
  • In non-profit and government agencies this is
    more often measured in non-financial terms
  • Value-added services will only be identified as
    such if they can be linked to a service to an
    external customer
  • If there is no linkage to an external service, it
    will be viewed as a money spent
  • Supporting services are at least one more step
    removed from the external services. To be
    considered valuable, the service provider must be
    able to link them to an internal or external IT
    service.

26
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
27
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • Value capture is the ability of a service
    provider to retain a portion of the value that
    has been created and realized.
  • The ability of a service provider to
    differentiate themselves and offer more value
    over time depends on whether they are able to
    obtain funding to develop and improve services,
    over and above the cost of operating the
    services.

28
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • Service operation is responsible for
  • Executing and performing processes that optimize
    the cost and quality of services
  • Enabling the business to meet its objectives
  • Effective functioning of components that support
    services
  • Execution of operation control activities to
    manage and deliver services
  • Delivering services efficiently and at acceptable
    cost
  • Delivering services within prescribed service
    levels
  • Maintaining user satisfaction with IT services
  • It is through the service operation lifecycle
    stage that the business directly sees and
    receives value from its IT investments.

29
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • From a customer viewpoint, service operation is
    where actual value is seen.
  • The service has to be run within the budgetary
    and ROI targets
  • Unavailability of funding for addressing design
    or other issues which were not part of original
    value proposition
  • Unavailability of funding for tooling for
    improved efficiency
  • Fixing the services that are not broken
    (perception)
  • Change evaluation is, by its very nature,
    concerned with value
  • Effective change evaluation will establish the
    use made of resources in terms of delivered
    benefit, and this information will allow a more
    accurate focus on value in future service
    development and change management.

30
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages
  • Quality is the key objective of monitoring
  • Monitoring will focus on the effectiveness of a
    service, process, tool, organization or CI
  • The emphasis is on identifying where improvements
    can be made to the existing level of service, or
    IT performance
  • If an SLA is consistently met over time, the CSI
    activities may also be interested in determining
    whether that level of performance can be
    sustained at a lower cost

31
Service Lifecycle
  • Classification of Services
  • Core services That deliver the basic outcomes
    desired by one or more customers
  • Enabling services The services that are needed
    in order for a core service to be delivered
  • Enhancing services The services added to a core
    service to make it more attractive to the
    customers

32
Service Lifecycle
  • Service Value Across Lifecycle Stages

Core service Enabling service Enhancing service
IT services (office automation) Word processing Download and installation of updates Documents publication to professional printer for high-quality brochure
IT service (benefits tracking) Employees of a company can monitor the status of their benefits (such as health insurance and retirement accounts). A portal that provides a user-friendly front-end access to the benefits tracking service. Customers can create and manage a fitness or Weight loss Program. Customers who show progress in their program are awarded a discount on their premiums.
Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
33
Service Lifecycle
  • Organizing for Service Management
  • The starting point for organizational design is
    strategy.
  • Functions A function is a team or group of
    people and the tools or other resources they use
    to carry out one or more processes or activities
  • An organization will need to clearly define the
    roles and responsibilities required to undertake
    the processes and activities involved in each
    lifecycle stage
  • These roles will need to be assigned to
    individuals, and an appropriate organization
    structure of teams, groups or functions will need
    to be established and managed
  • Group, Team, Department, Division
  • ITIL Functions Service Desk, IT Operations
    Management, Technical Management, Application
    Management

34
Service Lifecycle
  • Organizing for Service Management
  • A role is a set of responsibilities, activities
    and authorities granted to a person or team
  • A role is defined in a process or function
  • One person or team may have multiple roles
  • Organizational culture is the set of shared
    values and norms that control the service
    providers interactions with all stakeholders,
    including customers, users, suppliers, internal
    staff etc.
  • An organizations values are desired modes of
    behavior that affect its culture
  • RACI
  • Since services, processes and their component
    activities run through an entire organization,
    the individual activities should be clearly
    mapped to well-defined roles
  • Clear definitions of accountability and
    responsibility are critical success factors
    (CSFs) for any improvement activity
  • The RACI model provides a compact, concise, easy
    method of tracking who does what in each process
    and it enables decisions to be made with pace and
    confidence

35
Service Lifecycle
  • Organizing for Service Management

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
36
Service Lifecycle
  • Risk Assessment and Risk Management
  • Risk may be defined as uncertainty of outcome,
    whether a positive opportunity or negative
    threat.
  • A number of different methodologies, standards
    and frameworks have been developed for risk
    management.
  • MoR, ISO31000, RiskIT, ISO27005.
  • MoR provides a route map of risk management,
    bringing together principles, an approach, a
    process with a set of interrelated steps and
    pointers to more detailed sources of advice on
    risk management techniques and specialisms.
  • Identify, Assess, Plan, Implement, Communicate

37
Service Lifecycle
  • Risk Assessment and Risk Management

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
38
Service Lifecycle
  • Risk Assessment and Risk Management
  • Design risks Design coordination should use
    formal risk assessment and management techniques
    to manage risks associated with design activities
    and reduce the number of issues that can
    subsequently be traced to poor design.
  • Service operation risks Potential failures, new
    projects, environmental risk, supplier risk,
    security risk, new customers/services risk
  • Risk management is part of many processes such as
    change management, ITSCM, availability
    management, information security management and
    strategic risk management.
  • Risks to all elements of warranty and utility
    need to be assessed and mitigated where possible.

39
Service Lifecycle
  • Sharing knowledge Across the Lifecycle
  • Quality knowledge and information enable people
    to perform process activities and support the
    flow of information between service lifecycle
    stages and processes.
  • Understanding, defining, establishing and
    maintaining information is a responsibility of
    the knowledge management process
  • Knowledge management policies are required to
    guide all staff in the behaviors needed to make
    knowledge management effective.
  • D-I-K-W structure

40
Service Lifecycle
  • Sharing Knowledge Across the Lifecycle

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
41
Service Lifecycle
  • Sharing Knowledge Across the Lifecycle
  • Knowledge management strategy
  • Knowledge identification, capture and maintenance
  • Knowledge transfer
  • Learning style
  • Knowledge visualization
  • Driving behavior
  • Seminars, webinars, documentation
  • Journals, newsletters
  • Discussion forums, social media
  • Capturing, organizing, assessing for quality and
    using knowledge is great input in CSI activities

Copyright AXELOS Limited 2011. All rights
reserved. Material is reproduced under license
from AXELOS.
42
  • To know more about our ITIL MALC
  • Certification Training, please visit
  • www.invensislearning.com

43
CONTACT INVENSIS LEARNING Email Us
support_at_invensislearning.com
www.invensislearning.com
Copyright 2018 Invensis Learning. Invensis is
a registered trademark of Invensis Technologies
Pvt Ltd. ITIL is a registered trade mark of
AXELOS Limited, used under permission of AXELOS
Limited. All rights reserved. The Swirl logo is
a trade mark of AXELOS Limited, used under
permission of AXELOS Limited. All rights reserved.
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