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ITIL®: The Basics 
Valerie Arraj, Managing Director, 
Compliance Process Partners, LLC 
White Paper 
May 2010 
© Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 
This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
Contents 
1 What is ITIL and what are its origins? 3 
2 Why would an organization be interested in ITIL? 4 
3 What are the benefits of ITIL? 4 
4 Which companies use ITIL? 4 
5 Further information 4 
6 Trademarks and statements 4 
© Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 
This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
ITIL®: The Basics 3 
1 What is ITIL and what 
are its origins? 
It is hard to believe that the IT Infrastructure Library or ITIL® is 
20 years old. On its third version now, ITIL is the most widely 
adopted framework for IT Service Management in the world. 
It is a practical, no-nonsense approach to the identification, 
planning, delivery and support of IT services to the business. 
In the early 80’s, the evolution of computing technology 
moved from mainframe-centric infrastructure and centralized 
IT organizations to distributed computing and geographically 
dispersed resources. While the ability to distribute technology 
afforded organizations more flexibility, the side effect was 
inconsistent application of processes for technology delivery and 
support. The UKs Office of Government Commerce recognized 
that utilizing consistent practices for all aspects of a service 
lifecycle could assist in driving organizational effectiveness and 
efficiency as well as predictable service levels and thus, ITIL was 
born. ITIL guidance has since been a successful mechanism to 
drive consistency, efficiency and excellence into the business of 
managing IT services. 
Since ITIL is an approach to IT “service” management”, the 
concept of a service must be discussed. A service is something 
that provides value to customers. Services that customers can 
directly utilize or consume are known as “business” services. An 
example of a business service that has common applicability 
across industries would be Payroll. Payroll is an IT service that is 
used to consolidate information, calculate compensation and 
generate paychecks on a regular periodic basis. Payroll may rely 
on other “business” services such as “Time Tracking” or “Benefits 
Administration” for information necessary to calculate the correct 
compensation for an employee during a given time period. 
In order for Payroll to run, it is supported by a number of 
technology or “infrastructure” services. An infrastructure 
service does its work in the background, such that the business 
does not directly interact with it, but technology services are 
necessary as part of the overall value chain of the business 
service. “Server Administration”, “Database Administration”, 
“Storage Administration” are all examples of technology 
services required for the successful delivery of the Payroll 
business service. See Figure 1. 
IT has traditionally been focused on the “infrastructure” services 
and managing the technology silos. IT Service Management 
guidance in ITIL suggests a more holistic approach to managing 
services from end-to-end. Managing the entire business service 
along with its underlying components cohesively assures that 
we are considering every aspect of a service (and not just the 
individual technology silos) – to assure that we are delivering 
the required functionality (or utility – accurate paychecks for all 
employees) and service levels (or warranty – delivered within a 
certain timeframe, properly secured, available when necessary) 
to the business customer. 
Figure 1 – The End-To-End Service 
ITIL is typically used in conjunction with one or more other 
good practices to manage information technology such as: 
COBIT (a framework for IT G • overnance and Controls) 
• Six Sigma ( a quality methodology) 
• TOGAF (a framework for IT architecture) 
• ISO 27000 (a standard for IT security) 
The Service Lifecycle 
ITIL is organized around a Service Lifecycle: which includes: 
Service Strategy, Service Design, Service Transition, Service 
Operation and Continual Service Improvement. 
The lifecycle starts with Service Strategy – understanding who 
the IT customers are, the service offerings that are required to 
meet the customers’ needs, the IT capabilities and resource that 
are required to develop these offerings and the requirements 
for executing successfully. Driven through strategy and 
throughout the course of delivery and support of the service, IT 
must always try to assure that cost of delivery is consistent with 
the value delivered to the customer. 
Service Design assures that new and changes services are designed 
effectively to meet customer expectations. The technology and 
architecture required to meet customer needs cost effectively is 
an integral part of Service Design. Additionally, processes 
required to manage services are also part of the design phase. 
Service management systems and tools that are necessary to 
adequately monitor and support new or modified services must 
be considered as well as mechanisms for measuring service 
levels, technology and process efficiency and effectiveness. 
Through the Service Transition phase of the lifecycle the design 
is built, tested and moved into production to assure that the 
business customer can achieve the desired value. This phase 
addresses managing changes, controlling the assets and 
configuration items (underlying components – hardware, 
software, etc) associated with new and changed systems, 
© Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 
This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
4 ITIL®: The Basics 
service validation and testing and transition planning to assure 
that users, support personnel and the production environment 
has been prepared for the release to production. 
Once transitioned, Service Operation then delivers the service on 
an ongoing basis, overseeing the daily overall health of the service. 
This includes managing disruptions to service through rapid 
restoration of incidents, determining the root cause of problems 
and detecting trends associated with recurring issues, handling 
daily routine end user requests and managing service access. 
Enveloping the Service Lifecycle is Continual Service Improvement 
(CSI). CSI offers a mechanism for IT to measure and improve the 
service levels, the technology and the efficiency and effectiveness 
or processes used in the overall management of services. 
2 Why would an organization 
be interested in ITIL? 
Although today’s technologies allow us to be able to provide 
robust capabilities and afford significant flexibility, they are very 
complex. The global reach available to companies via the 
internet provides tremendous business opportunity while 
presenting additional challenges regarding the confidentiality, 
integrity and availability or our services and our data. Additionally, 
IT organizations need to continue to be able to meet or exceed 
service expectations while working as efficiently as possible. 
Consistent repeatable processes are the key to efficiency, 
effectiveness and the ability to improve services. These consistent, 
repeatable processes are outlined in the ITIL framework. 
3 What are the benefits of ITIL? 
What are the benefits of ITIL? 
The main benefits of ITIL include: 
Alignment with business needs. I • TIL becomes an asset to the 
business when IT can proactively recommend solutions as a 
response to one or more business needs. The IT Strategy 
Group recommended in Service Strategy and the 
implementation of Service Portfolio Management gives IT the 
opportunity to understand the business’ current and future 
needs and develop service offerings that can address them. 
• Negotiated achievable service levels. Business and IT become 
true partners when they can agree upon realistic service 
levels that deliver the necessary value at an acceptable cost. 
• Predictable, consistent processes. Customer expectations can be 
set and are easier to meet with through the use of predictable 
processes that are consistently used. As well, good practice 
processes are foundational and can assist in laying the 
groundwork to meet regulatory compliance requirements. 
• Efficiency in service delivery. Well-defined processes with 
clearly documented accountability for each activity as 
recommended through the use of a RACI matrix can 
significantly increase the efficiency of processes. In 
conjunction with the evaluation of efficiency metrics that 
indicate the time required to perform each activity, service 
delivery tasks can be optimized. 
• Measurable, improvable services and processes. The adage 
that you can’t manage what you cannot measure rings true 
here. Consistent, repeatable processes can be measured and 
therefore can be better tuned for accurate delivery and 
overall effectiveness. For example, presume that a critical 
success factor for incident management is to reduce the time 
to restore service. When predictable, consistent processes are 
used key performance indicators such as Mean Time To 
Restore Service can be captured to determine whether this 
KPI is trending in a positive or negative direction so that the 
appropriate adjustments can be made. Additionally, under 
ITIL guidelines, services are designed to be measurable. With 
the proper metrics and monitoring in place, IT organizations 
can monitor SLAs and make improvements as necessary. 
• A common language – terms are defined. 
4 Which companies use ITIL? 
Literally thousands of companies world-wide and of all 
industries and sizes have adopted ITIL. These include: 
• Large technology companies such as Microsoft, HP, Fujitsu, IBM; 
• Retailers such as Target, Walmart and Staples 
• Financial services organizations such as Citi, Bank of America, 
Barclay’s Bank; 
• Entertainment entities such as Sony, Disney 
• Manufacturers such as Boeing, Toyota, Bombardier 
• Life Sciences companies such as Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Takeda 
Pharmaceuticals. 
5 Further Information 
The following websites include authoritative information as well 
as pointers to other informative sources: 
www.best-management-practice.com 
www.apmg-international.com 
© Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 
This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
ITIL®: The Basics 5 
© Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 
Acknowledgments 
Sourced by APM Group Limited and published by TSO on 
www.best-management-practice.com 
Our White Paper series should not be taken as constituting 
advice of any sort and no liability is accepted for any loss 
resulting from use of or reliance on its content. While every 
effort is made to ensure the accuracy and reliability of the 
information, APM Group Limited and TSO cannot accept 
responsibility for errors, omissions or inaccuracies. Content, 
diagrams, logos and jackets are correct at time of going to press 
but may be subject to change without notice. 
© Copyright TSO, APM Group Limited and Valerie Arraj, 
Compliance Process Partners LLC in full or part is prohibited 
without prior consent from the Author. 
Trademarks and Statements 
ITIL® is a Registered Trade Mark of the Office of Government Commerce in the 
United Kingdom and other countries 
The Swirl logo™ is a Trade Mark of the Office of Government Commerce 
IT Infrastructure Library® is a Registered Trade Mark of the Office of Government 
Commerce in the United Kingdom and other countries 
This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group

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Itil the basics

  • 1. ITIL®: The Basics Valerie Arraj, Managing Director, Compliance Process Partners, LLC White Paper May 2010 © Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
  • 2. Contents 1 What is ITIL and what are its origins? 3 2 Why would an organization be interested in ITIL? 4 3 What are the benefits of ITIL? 4 4 Which companies use ITIL? 4 5 Further information 4 6 Trademarks and statements 4 © Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
  • 3. ITIL®: The Basics 3 1 What is ITIL and what are its origins? It is hard to believe that the IT Infrastructure Library or ITIL® is 20 years old. On its third version now, ITIL is the most widely adopted framework for IT Service Management in the world. It is a practical, no-nonsense approach to the identification, planning, delivery and support of IT services to the business. In the early 80’s, the evolution of computing technology moved from mainframe-centric infrastructure and centralized IT organizations to distributed computing and geographically dispersed resources. While the ability to distribute technology afforded organizations more flexibility, the side effect was inconsistent application of processes for technology delivery and support. The UKs Office of Government Commerce recognized that utilizing consistent practices for all aspects of a service lifecycle could assist in driving organizational effectiveness and efficiency as well as predictable service levels and thus, ITIL was born. ITIL guidance has since been a successful mechanism to drive consistency, efficiency and excellence into the business of managing IT services. Since ITIL is an approach to IT “service” management”, the concept of a service must be discussed. A service is something that provides value to customers. Services that customers can directly utilize or consume are known as “business” services. An example of a business service that has common applicability across industries would be Payroll. Payroll is an IT service that is used to consolidate information, calculate compensation and generate paychecks on a regular periodic basis. Payroll may rely on other “business” services such as “Time Tracking” or “Benefits Administration” for information necessary to calculate the correct compensation for an employee during a given time period. In order for Payroll to run, it is supported by a number of technology or “infrastructure” services. An infrastructure service does its work in the background, such that the business does not directly interact with it, but technology services are necessary as part of the overall value chain of the business service. “Server Administration”, “Database Administration”, “Storage Administration” are all examples of technology services required for the successful delivery of the Payroll business service. See Figure 1. IT has traditionally been focused on the “infrastructure” services and managing the technology silos. IT Service Management guidance in ITIL suggests a more holistic approach to managing services from end-to-end. Managing the entire business service along with its underlying components cohesively assures that we are considering every aspect of a service (and not just the individual technology silos) – to assure that we are delivering the required functionality (or utility – accurate paychecks for all employees) and service levels (or warranty – delivered within a certain timeframe, properly secured, available when necessary) to the business customer. Figure 1 – The End-To-End Service ITIL is typically used in conjunction with one or more other good practices to manage information technology such as: COBIT (a framework for IT G • overnance and Controls) • Six Sigma ( a quality methodology) • TOGAF (a framework for IT architecture) • ISO 27000 (a standard for IT security) The Service Lifecycle ITIL is organized around a Service Lifecycle: which includes: Service Strategy, Service Design, Service Transition, Service Operation and Continual Service Improvement. The lifecycle starts with Service Strategy – understanding who the IT customers are, the service offerings that are required to meet the customers’ needs, the IT capabilities and resource that are required to develop these offerings and the requirements for executing successfully. Driven through strategy and throughout the course of delivery and support of the service, IT must always try to assure that cost of delivery is consistent with the value delivered to the customer. Service Design assures that new and changes services are designed effectively to meet customer expectations. The technology and architecture required to meet customer needs cost effectively is an integral part of Service Design. Additionally, processes required to manage services are also part of the design phase. Service management systems and tools that are necessary to adequately monitor and support new or modified services must be considered as well as mechanisms for measuring service levels, technology and process efficiency and effectiveness. Through the Service Transition phase of the lifecycle the design is built, tested and moved into production to assure that the business customer can achieve the desired value. This phase addresses managing changes, controlling the assets and configuration items (underlying components – hardware, software, etc) associated with new and changed systems, © Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
  • 4. 4 ITIL®: The Basics service validation and testing and transition planning to assure that users, support personnel and the production environment has been prepared for the release to production. Once transitioned, Service Operation then delivers the service on an ongoing basis, overseeing the daily overall health of the service. This includes managing disruptions to service through rapid restoration of incidents, determining the root cause of problems and detecting trends associated with recurring issues, handling daily routine end user requests and managing service access. Enveloping the Service Lifecycle is Continual Service Improvement (CSI). CSI offers a mechanism for IT to measure and improve the service levels, the technology and the efficiency and effectiveness or processes used in the overall management of services. 2 Why would an organization be interested in ITIL? Although today’s technologies allow us to be able to provide robust capabilities and afford significant flexibility, they are very complex. The global reach available to companies via the internet provides tremendous business opportunity while presenting additional challenges regarding the confidentiality, integrity and availability or our services and our data. Additionally, IT organizations need to continue to be able to meet or exceed service expectations while working as efficiently as possible. Consistent repeatable processes are the key to efficiency, effectiveness and the ability to improve services. These consistent, repeatable processes are outlined in the ITIL framework. 3 What are the benefits of ITIL? What are the benefits of ITIL? The main benefits of ITIL include: Alignment with business needs. I • TIL becomes an asset to the business when IT can proactively recommend solutions as a response to one or more business needs. The IT Strategy Group recommended in Service Strategy and the implementation of Service Portfolio Management gives IT the opportunity to understand the business’ current and future needs and develop service offerings that can address them. • Negotiated achievable service levels. Business and IT become true partners when they can agree upon realistic service levels that deliver the necessary value at an acceptable cost. • Predictable, consistent processes. Customer expectations can be set and are easier to meet with through the use of predictable processes that are consistently used. As well, good practice processes are foundational and can assist in laying the groundwork to meet regulatory compliance requirements. • Efficiency in service delivery. Well-defined processes with clearly documented accountability for each activity as recommended through the use of a RACI matrix can significantly increase the efficiency of processes. In conjunction with the evaluation of efficiency metrics that indicate the time required to perform each activity, service delivery tasks can be optimized. • Measurable, improvable services and processes. The adage that you can’t manage what you cannot measure rings true here. Consistent, repeatable processes can be measured and therefore can be better tuned for accurate delivery and overall effectiveness. For example, presume that a critical success factor for incident management is to reduce the time to restore service. When predictable, consistent processes are used key performance indicators such as Mean Time To Restore Service can be captured to determine whether this KPI is trending in a positive or negative direction so that the appropriate adjustments can be made. Additionally, under ITIL guidelines, services are designed to be measurable. With the proper metrics and monitoring in place, IT organizations can monitor SLAs and make improvements as necessary. • A common language – terms are defined. 4 Which companies use ITIL? Literally thousands of companies world-wide and of all industries and sizes have adopted ITIL. These include: • Large technology companies such as Microsoft, HP, Fujitsu, IBM; • Retailers such as Target, Walmart and Staples • Financial services organizations such as Citi, Bank of America, Barclay’s Bank; • Entertainment entities such as Sony, Disney • Manufacturers such as Boeing, Toyota, Bombardier • Life Sciences companies such as Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Takeda Pharmaceuticals. 5 Further Information The following websites include authoritative information as well as pointers to other informative sources: www.best-management-practice.com www.apmg-international.com © Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group
  • 5. ITIL®: The Basics 5 © Official Accreditor of the OGC ITIL Portfolio: – APM Group Limited 2010 Acknowledgments Sourced by APM Group Limited and published by TSO on www.best-management-practice.com Our White Paper series should not be taken as constituting advice of any sort and no liability is accepted for any loss resulting from use of or reliance on its content. While every effort is made to ensure the accuracy and reliability of the information, APM Group Limited and TSO cannot accept responsibility for errors, omissions or inaccuracies. Content, diagrams, logos and jackets are correct at time of going to press but may be subject to change without notice. © Copyright TSO, APM Group Limited and Valerie Arraj, Compliance Process Partners LLC in full or part is prohibited without prior consent from the Author. Trademarks and Statements ITIL® is a Registered Trade Mark of the Office of Government Commerce in the United Kingdom and other countries The Swirl logo™ is a Trade Mark of the Office of Government Commerce IT Infrastructure Library® is a Registered Trade Mark of the Office of Government Commerce in the United Kingdom and other countries This document must not be reproduced without express permission from The APM Group