ITIL4 Session3
ITIL4 Session3
Lobna Alkomy
Agenda
• ITIL Guiding Principles
• Governance
• The Service Value Chain
• Continual Improvement
Guiding Principles
1- Focus on Value
CX: The sum of functional and emotional interactions with a service and service provider as perceived by
a service consumer.
• May influence how the consumer feels about the service provider and the products.
• Partly objective
• Partly subjective
Apply the Principle
• Business context changes in real time emphasize the necessity for useful feedback.
• When improvements lack communications, people make poor guesses. Right roles
Better
Outcomes
Make work visible
• Important to prioritize improvements to demonstrate commitment.
Right
Information
• Easier to do this when value and work is more visible.
• Understand the flow of work in progress
• Identify bottlenecks, as well as excess capacity
• Uncover waste
• Customer collaboration leads to better outcomes and better understand business issues.
• Good communication provides clarity, direction, and motivation around and in service management.
• Collaboration is key.
• Ensure value.
• Consider:
• Financial limitations
• Compliance requirements
• Time constraints
• Resource availability
Automation
• Can also be the creation of predefined rules so human responses are “automated.”
•
• Advantages of automation:
• Saving costs.
• Reducing human error.
• Improving the employee experience.
Apply the Principle
• Simplify and optimize before automating.
• Focusing on what will truly be valuable to the customer makes it easier to keep things simple and
practical.
• Activities:
• Plan
• Improve
• Engage
• Design and Transition
• Obtain/Build
• Deliver and Support
Inputs and Outputs The Plan Activity
• Inputs are received from other components of the SVC. • Purpose is to ensure a shared understanding
of:
• Outputs are produced and used elsewhere in the SVC.
• Vision
• The Input / Output relationships: • Current status
• Improvement direction
• Are interconnected in a complex and dense manner.
• Fundamental part of planning is prioritizing
• Support the interactions among all activities in the different alternatives and making decisions.
SVC. • During this activity, you create strategic plans,
• The Input / Output relationships are not: project plans, and service plans.
• Must consider all four dimensions of service
• Linear
management to ensure a holistic approach.
• One-to-one • All other SVC activities will use and apply
plans from this activity.
The Improve Activity The Engage Activity
• Purpose is to ensure that services are delivered and supported according to:
• Agreed specifications
• Stakeholders’ expectations
• In this activity, you create data about incidents, service requests, events, and other performance
data that is used to identify potential service improvements.
• The Improve, Engage, and Plan activities extensively use this data.
The Continual Improvement Model
What is the vision?
• Organization’s vision and objectives need to be translated for the specific business unit,
department, team, and/or individual.
• Context, objectives, and boundaries for any improvement initiative are understood.
• Ensure that:
• High-level direction has been understood
• Planned improvement initiative is described and understood in that context
• Stakeholders and their roles have been understood
• Expected value to be realized is understood and agreed
• Role of the person or team responsible for carrying out the improvement is clear in relation to
achieving the organization’s vision
Where are we now?
• Current state assessment:
• Existing services
• Perception of value received
• People’s competencies and skills
• Processes and procedures
• Technical capabilities
• Culture:
• What level of organizational change management is required?
Take action
• Execute the improvement.
• Use a Waterfall or an Agile approach.
• Remain open to feedback and course correction as needed.
• Each person who contributes to the provision of a service should keep continual improvement in
mind, and should always be looking for opportunities to improve.
Where do we want
to be? X X X X X X X
How do we get
there? X X X X X X X
Take action
X X X X X X X
• The weakest link in the value chain determines the flow and
throughput of the system.
• The weakest link must be elevated as much as possible.
• Sometimes this will reveal a new weakest link!
• All the other steps in the value chain must be organized around it.