Itilv3 Introduction and Overview: Tony Brett Head of It Support Staff Services Oucs
Itilv3 Introduction and Overview: Tony Brett Head of It Support Staff Services Oucs
Tony Brett
Head of IT Support Staff Services
OUCS
Agenda for the Session
• What is ITIL?
• What about v3?
• Key Concepts
• Service Management & Delivery
• The Service Lifecycle
• The Five Stages of the lifecycle
• ITIL Roles
• Functions and Processes
• Further Learning
• Accreditation
What is ITIL?
• Systematic approach to high quality IT service
delivery
• Documented best practice for IT Service
Management
• Provides common language with well-defined terms
• Developed in 1980s by what is now The Office of
Government Commerce
• itSMF also involved in maintaining best practice
documentation in ITIL
– itSMF is global, independent, not-for-profit
What about v3?
• ITIL started in 80s.
– 40 publications!
• v2 came along in 2000-2002
– Still Large and complex
– 8 Books
– Talks about what you should do
• v3 in 2007
– Much simplified and rationalised to 5 books
– Much clearer guidance on how to provide service
– Easier, more modular accreditation paths
– Keeps tactical and operational guidance
– Gives more prominence to strategic ITIL guidance relevant to senior
staff
– Aligned with ISO20000 standard for service management
Key Concepts
• Service
– Delivers value to customer by facilitating
outcomes customers want to achieve without
ownership of the specific costs and risks
– e.g. The HFS backup service means that you as
Unit ITSS don’t have to care about how much
tapes, disks or robots cost and you don’t have to
worry if one of the HFS staff is off sick or leaves
Key Concepts
• Service Level
– Measured and reported achievement against one or
more service level targets
– E.g.
• Red = 1 hour response 24/7
• Amber = 4 hour response 8/5
• Green = Next business day
• Service Level Agreement
– Written and negotiated agreement between Service
Provider and Customer documenting agreed service
levels and costs
Key Concepts
• Configuration Management System (CMS)
– Tools and databases to manage IT service provider’s
configuration data
– Contains Configuration ManagementDatabase
(CMDB)
• Records hardware, software, documentation and anything
else important to IT provision
• Release
– Collection of hardware, software, documentation,
processes or other things require to implement one
or more approved changes to IT Services
Key Concepts
• Incident
– Unplanned interruption to an IT service or an
unplanned reduction in its quality
• Work-around
– Reducing or eliminating the impact of an incident
without resolving it
• Problem
– Unknown underlying cause of one or more
incidents
4 Ps of Service Management
• People – skills, training, communication
• Processes – actions, activities, changes, goals
• Products – tools, monitor, measure, improve
• Partners – specialist suppliers
Service Delivery Strategies
Strategy Features
In-sourcing All parts internal
Out-sourcing External resources for specific and
defined areas (e.g. Contract cleaners)
Co-Sourcing Mixture of internal and external resources
Knowledge Process Outsourcing Outsourcing of particular processes, with
(domain-based business expertise) additional expertise from provider
Application Outsourcing External hosting on shared computers –
applications on demand (e.g. Survey
Monkey, Meet-o-matic)
Business Process Outsourcing Outsourcing of specific processes e.g. HR,
Library Circulation, Payroll
Partnership/Multi-sourcing Sharing service provision over the
lifecycle with two or more organisations
(e.g. Shared IT Corpus/Oriel)
The Service Lifecycle
How the Lifecycle stages fit together
Service Strategy
• What are we going to provide?
• Can we afford it?
• Can we provide enough of it?
• How do we gain competitive advantage?
• Perspective
– Vision, mission and strategic goals
• Position
• Plan
• Pattern
– Must fit organisational culture
Service Strategy has four activities
Service Assets
• Resources
– Things you buy or pay for
– IT Infrastructure, people, money
– Tangible Assets
• Capabilities
– Things you grow
– Ability to carry out an activity
– Intangible assets
– Transform resources into Services
Service Portfolio Management
• Prioritises and manages investments and
resource allocation
• Proposed services are properly assessed
– Business Case
• Existing Services Assessed. Outcomes:
– Replace
– Rationalise
– Renew
– Retire
Demand Management
• Ensures we don’t waste money with excess
capacity
• Ensures we have enough capacity to meet
demand at agreed quality
• Patterns of Business Activity to be considered
– E.g. Economy 7 electricity, Congestion Charging
Service Design
• How are we going to provide it?
• How are we going to build it?
• How are we going to test it?
• How are we going to deploy it?
Processes in Service Design
• Availability Management
• Capacity Management
• ITSCM (disaster recovery)
• Supplier Management
• Service Level Management
• Information Security Management
• Service Catalogue Management
Service Catalogue