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An introduction and Overview
to ITIL v3
Jisu Dasgupta
ITIL-ITSM Practitioner
Email:jisu037@gmail.com
• ITIL
• What in ITIL V3
• Key Terms
• Service Delivery and Management
• Service Lifecycle
• The Five Stages of the lifecycle
• ITIL Roles and Processes
• Functions and Process
Topics that will be covered
• It’s a Systematic approach to high quality IT service delivery
• It is a Documented best practice for IT Service Management
• Provides common language with well-defined terms
• Developed in 1980s by The Office of Government Commerce
• itSMF also involved in maintaining best practice documentation
in ITIL
– itSMF is global, independent, not-for-profit
ITIL(Information Technology
Infrastrucuture Library)
• 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
What about v3?
∗ What is a Service?
∗ Delivering 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 Terms
• 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
Key Concepts
∗ People – skills, training, communication
∗ Processes – actions, activities, changes, goals
∗ Products – tools, monitor, measure, improve
∗ Partners – specialist suppliers
4 Ps of Service Management
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
(domain-based
business expertise)
Outsourcing of particular processes,
with 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)
Service Delivery Strategies
The Service Lifecycle
How the Lifecycle stages fit together
• 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
Service Strategy has four activities
• 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 Assets
• Prioritises and manages investments and resource
allocation
• Proposed services are properly assessed
– Business Case
• Existing Services Assessed. Outcomes:
– Replace
– Rationalise
– Renew
– Retire
Service Portfolio 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
Demand Management
• 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?
Service Design
∗ Availability Management
∗ Capacity Management
∗ ITSCM (disaster recovery)
∗ Supplier Management
∗ Service Level Management
∗ Information Security Management
∗ Service Catalogue Management
Processes in Service Design
Service Catalogue
Keeps service information away from business information
Provides accurate and consistent information enabling service-focussed working
• Service Level Agreement
– Operational Level Agreements
• Internal
– Underpinning Contracts
• External Organisation
• Supplier Management
– Can be an annexe to a contract
– Should be clear and fair and written in easy-to-understand,
unambiguous language
• Success of SLM (KPIs)
– How many services have SLAs?
– How does the number of breaches of SLA change over time
(we hope it reduces!)?
Service Level Management
Things you might find in an SLA
∗ Service-based
∗ All customers get same deal for same services
∗ Customer-based
∗ Different customers get different deal (and different
cost)
∗ Multi-level
∗ These involve corporate, customer and service levels
and avoid repetition
Types of SLA
∗ This is capacity management
∗ Balances Cost against Capacity so minimises costs
while maintaining quality of service
Right Capacity, Right Time, Right
Cost!
• Ensure that IT services matches or exceeds agreed
targets
• Lots of Acronyms
– Mean Time Between Service Incidents
– Mean Time Between Failures
– Mean Time to Restore Service
• Resilience increases availability
– Service can remain functional even though one or more
of its components have failed
Is it available?
∗ IT Service Continuity Management
∗ Ensures resumption of services within agreed
timescale
∗ Business Impact Analysis informs decisions about
resources
∗ E.g. Stock Exchange can’t afford 5 minutes downtime
but 2 hours downtime probably wont badly affect a
departmental accounts office or a college bursary
ITSCM – what?
∗ Cold
∗ Accommodation and environment ready but no IT
equipment
∗ Warm
∗ As cold plus backup IT equipment to receive data
∗ Hot
∗ Full duplexing, redundancy and failover
Standby for liftoff...
∗ Confidentiality
∗ Making sure only those authorised can see data
∗ Integrity
∗ Making sure the data is accurate and not corrupted
∗ Availability
∗ Making sure data is supplied when it is requested
Information Security
Management
∗ Build
∗ Deployment
∗ Testing
∗ User acceptance
∗ Bed-in
Service Transition
• Set customer expectations
• Enable release integration
• Reduce performance variation
• Document and reduce known errors
• Minimise risk
• Ensure proper use of services
• Some things excluded
– Swapping failed device
– Adding new user
– Installing standard software
Good service transition
∗ Vital to enabling the right information to be provided
at the right place and the right time to the right
person to enable informed decision
∗ Stops data being locked away with individuals
∗ Obvious organisational advantage
Knowledge management
Data-Information-Knowledge-
Wisdom
Dat
a
Information
- who, what , where?
Knowledge
- How?
Wisdom
- Why?
Wisdom cannot be assisted by technology
– it only comes with experience!
Service Knowledge Information
Management System is crucial to retaining
this extremely valuable information
∗ Managing these properly is key
∗ Provides Logical Model of Infrastructure and Accurate
Configuration information
∗ Controls assets
∗ Minimised costs
∗ Enables proper change and release management
∗ Speeds incident and problem resolution
Service Asset and Configuration
Configuration Management
System
∗ A Baseline is a “last known good configuration”
∗ But the CMS will always be a “work in progress” and
probably always out of date. But still worth having
∗ Current configuration will always be the most recent
baseline plus any implemented approved changes
Painting the Forth Bridge...
• Respond to customers changing business requirements
• Respond to business and IT requests for change that will
align the services with the business needs
• Roles
– Change Manager
– Change Authority
• Change Advisory Board (CAB)
• Emergency CAB (ECAB)
• 80% of service interruption is caused by operator error or
poor change control (Gartner)
Change Management – or what we
all get wrong!
∗ Normal
∗ Non-urgent, requires approval
∗ Standard
∗ Non-urgent, follows established path, no approval
needed
∗ Emergency
∗ Requires approval but too urgent for normal procedure
Change Types
• Change Manager (VITAL)
• One or more of
– Customer/User
– User Manager
– Developer/Maintainer
– Expert/Consultant
– Contractor
• CAB considers the 7 Rs
– Who RAISED?, REASON, RETURN, RISKS, RESOURCES,
RESPONSIBLE, RELATIONSHIPS to other changes
Change Advisory Board
• Release is a collection of authorised and tested changes
ready for deployment
• A rollout introduces a release into the live environment
• Full Release
– e.g. Office 2007
• Delta (partial) release
– e.g. Windows Update
• Package
– e.g. Windows Service Pack
Release Management
∗ Phased release is less painful but more work
∗ Deploy can be manual or automatic
∗ Automatic can be push or pull
∗ Release Manager will produce a release policy
∗ Release MUST be tested and NOT by the developer or
the change instigator
Phased or Big Bang?
∗ Maintenance
∗ Management
∗ Realises Strategic Objectives and is where the Value is
seen
Service Operation
∗ Incident Management
∗ Problem Management
∗ Event Management
∗ Request Fulfilment
∗ Access Management
Processes in Service Operation
∗ Service Desk
∗ Technical Management
∗ IT Operations Management
∗ Applications Management
Functions in Service Operation
Service Operation Balances
• Deals with unplanned interruptions to IT Services or
reductions in their quality
• Failure of a configuration item that has not impacted
a service is also an incident (e.g. Disk in RAID failure)
• Reported by:
– Users
– Technical Staff
– Monitoring Tools
Incident Management
∗ 3 Types of events
∗ Information
∗ Warning
∗ Exception
∗ Can we give examples?
∗ Need to make sense of events and have appropriate
control actions planned and documented
Event Management
∗ Information, advice or a standard change
∗ Should not be classed as Incidents or Changes
∗ Can we give more examples?
Request Fulfilment
• Aims to prevent problems and resulting incidents
• Minimises impact of unavoidable incidents
• Eliminates recurring incidents
• Proactive Problem Management
– Identifies areas of potential weakness
– Identifies workarounds
• Reactive Problem Management
– Indentifies underlying causes of incidents
– Identifies changes to prevent recurrence
Problem Management
∗ Right things for right users at right time
∗ Concepts
∗ Access
∗ Identity (Authentication, AuthN)
∗ Rights (Authorisation, AuthZ)
∗ Service Group
∗ Directory
Access Management
• Local, Central or Virtual
• Examples?
• Single point of contact
• Skills for operators
– Customer Focus
– Articulate
– Interpersonal Skills (patient!)
– Understand Business
– Methodical/Analytical
– Technical knowledge
– Multi-lingual
• Service desk often seen as the bottom of the pile
– Bust most visible to customers so important to get right!
Service Desk
∗ Focus on Process owners and Service Owners
∗ Ensures that service management processes continue
to support the business
∗ Monitor and enhance Service Level Achievements
∗ Plan – do –check – act (Deming)
Continual Service Improvement
• Technology (components, MTBF etc)
• Process (KPIs - Critical Success Factors)
• Service (End-to end, e.g. Customer Satisfaction)
• Why?
– Validation – Soundness of decisions
– Direction – of future activities
– Justify – provide factual evidence
– Intervene – when changes or corrections are needed
Service Measurement
7 Steps to Improvement
• Process Owner
– Ensures Fit for Purpose
• Process Manager
– Monitors and Reports on Process
• Service Owner
– Accountable for Delivery
• Service Manager
– Responsible for initiation, transition and maintenance.
Lifecycle!
ITIL Roles
∗ Business Relationship Manager
∗ Service Asset & Configuration
∗ Service Asset Manager
∗ Service Knowledge Manager
∗ Configuration Manager
∗ Configuration Analyst
∗ Configuration Librarian
∗ CMS tools administrator
More Roles
• Process
– Structured set of activities designed to accomplish a defined
objective
– Inputs & Outputs
– Measurable
– e.g. ??
• Function
– Team or group of people and tools they use to carry out one
or more processes or activities
– Own practices and knowledge body
– e.g. ??
Functions and Processes

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ITIL V3 by Jisu Dasgupta

  • 1. An introduction and Overview to ITIL v3 Jisu Dasgupta ITIL-ITSM Practitioner Email:jisu037@gmail.com
  • 2. • ITIL • What in ITIL V3 • Key Terms • Service Delivery and Management • Service Lifecycle • The Five Stages of the lifecycle • ITIL Roles and Processes • Functions and Process Topics that will be covered
  • 3. • It’s a Systematic approach to high quality IT service delivery • It is a Documented best practice for IT Service Management • Provides common language with well-defined terms • Developed in 1980s by The Office of Government Commerce • itSMF also involved in maintaining best practice documentation in ITIL – itSMF is global, independent, not-for-profit ITIL(Information Technology Infrastrucuture Library)
  • 4. • 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 What about v3?
  • 5. ∗ What is a Service? ∗ Delivering 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 Terms
  • 6. • 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
  • 7. • 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
  • 8. • 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 Key Concepts
  • 9. ∗ People – skills, training, communication ∗ Processes – actions, activities, changes, goals ∗ Products – tools, monitor, measure, improve ∗ Partners – specialist suppliers 4 Ps of Service Management
  • 10. 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 (domain-based business expertise) Outsourcing of particular processes, with 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) Service Delivery Strategies
  • 12. How the Lifecycle stages fit together
  • 13. • 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
  • 14. Service Strategy has four activities
  • 15. • 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 Assets
  • 16. • Prioritises and manages investments and resource allocation • Proposed services are properly assessed – Business Case • Existing Services Assessed. Outcomes: – Replace – Rationalise – Renew – Retire Service Portfolio Management
  • 17. ∗ 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 Demand Management
  • 18. • 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? Service Design
  • 19. ∗ Availability Management ∗ Capacity Management ∗ ITSCM (disaster recovery) ∗ Supplier Management ∗ Service Level Management ∗ Information Security Management ∗ Service Catalogue Management Processes in Service Design
  • 20. Service Catalogue Keeps service information away from business information Provides accurate and consistent information enabling service-focussed working
  • 21. • Service Level Agreement – Operational Level Agreements • Internal – Underpinning Contracts • External Organisation • Supplier Management – Can be an annexe to a contract – Should be clear and fair and written in easy-to-understand, unambiguous language • Success of SLM (KPIs) – How many services have SLAs? – How does the number of breaches of SLA change over time (we hope it reduces!)? Service Level Management
  • 22. Things you might find in an SLA
  • 23. ∗ Service-based ∗ All customers get same deal for same services ∗ Customer-based ∗ Different customers get different deal (and different cost) ∗ Multi-level ∗ These involve corporate, customer and service levels and avoid repetition Types of SLA
  • 24. ∗ This is capacity management ∗ Balances Cost against Capacity so minimises costs while maintaining quality of service Right Capacity, Right Time, Right Cost!
  • 25. • Ensure that IT services matches or exceeds agreed targets • Lots of Acronyms – Mean Time Between Service Incidents – Mean Time Between Failures – Mean Time to Restore Service • Resilience increases availability – Service can remain functional even though one or more of its components have failed Is it available?
  • 26. ∗ IT Service Continuity Management ∗ Ensures resumption of services within agreed timescale ∗ Business Impact Analysis informs decisions about resources ∗ E.g. Stock Exchange can’t afford 5 minutes downtime but 2 hours downtime probably wont badly affect a departmental accounts office or a college bursary ITSCM – what?
  • 27. ∗ Cold ∗ Accommodation and environment ready but no IT equipment ∗ Warm ∗ As cold plus backup IT equipment to receive data ∗ Hot ∗ Full duplexing, redundancy and failover Standby for liftoff...
  • 28. ∗ Confidentiality ∗ Making sure only those authorised can see data ∗ Integrity ∗ Making sure the data is accurate and not corrupted ∗ Availability ∗ Making sure data is supplied when it is requested Information Security Management
  • 29. ∗ Build ∗ Deployment ∗ Testing ∗ User acceptance ∗ Bed-in Service Transition
  • 30. • Set customer expectations • Enable release integration • Reduce performance variation • Document and reduce known errors • Minimise risk • Ensure proper use of services • Some things excluded – Swapping failed device – Adding new user – Installing standard software Good service transition
  • 31. ∗ Vital to enabling the right information to be provided at the right place and the right time to the right person to enable informed decision ∗ Stops data being locked away with individuals ∗ Obvious organisational advantage Knowledge management
  • 32. Data-Information-Knowledge- Wisdom Dat a Information - who, what , where? Knowledge - How? Wisdom - Why? Wisdom cannot be assisted by technology – it only comes with experience! Service Knowledge Information Management System is crucial to retaining this extremely valuable information
  • 33. ∗ Managing these properly is key ∗ Provides Logical Model of Infrastructure and Accurate Configuration information ∗ Controls assets ∗ Minimised costs ∗ Enables proper change and release management ∗ Speeds incident and problem resolution Service Asset and Configuration
  • 35. ∗ A Baseline is a “last known good configuration” ∗ But the CMS will always be a “work in progress” and probably always out of date. But still worth having ∗ Current configuration will always be the most recent baseline plus any implemented approved changes Painting the Forth Bridge...
  • 36. • Respond to customers changing business requirements • Respond to business and IT requests for change that will align the services with the business needs • Roles – Change Manager – Change Authority • Change Advisory Board (CAB) • Emergency CAB (ECAB) • 80% of service interruption is caused by operator error or poor change control (Gartner) Change Management – or what we all get wrong!
  • 37. ∗ Normal ∗ Non-urgent, requires approval ∗ Standard ∗ Non-urgent, follows established path, no approval needed ∗ Emergency ∗ Requires approval but too urgent for normal procedure Change Types
  • 38. • Change Manager (VITAL) • One or more of – Customer/User – User Manager – Developer/Maintainer – Expert/Consultant – Contractor • CAB considers the 7 Rs – Who RAISED?, REASON, RETURN, RISKS, RESOURCES, RESPONSIBLE, RELATIONSHIPS to other changes Change Advisory Board
  • 39. • Release is a collection of authorised and tested changes ready for deployment • A rollout introduces a release into the live environment • Full Release – e.g. Office 2007 • Delta (partial) release – e.g. Windows Update • Package – e.g. Windows Service Pack Release Management
  • 40. ∗ Phased release is less painful but more work ∗ Deploy can be manual or automatic ∗ Automatic can be push or pull ∗ Release Manager will produce a release policy ∗ Release MUST be tested and NOT by the developer or the change instigator Phased or Big Bang?
  • 41. ∗ Maintenance ∗ Management ∗ Realises Strategic Objectives and is where the Value is seen Service Operation
  • 42. ∗ Incident Management ∗ Problem Management ∗ Event Management ∗ Request Fulfilment ∗ Access Management Processes in Service Operation
  • 43. ∗ Service Desk ∗ Technical Management ∗ IT Operations Management ∗ Applications Management Functions in Service Operation
  • 45. • Deals with unplanned interruptions to IT Services or reductions in their quality • Failure of a configuration item that has not impacted a service is also an incident (e.g. Disk in RAID failure) • Reported by: – Users – Technical Staff – Monitoring Tools Incident Management
  • 46. ∗ 3 Types of events ∗ Information ∗ Warning ∗ Exception ∗ Can we give examples? ∗ Need to make sense of events and have appropriate control actions planned and documented Event Management
  • 47. ∗ Information, advice or a standard change ∗ Should not be classed as Incidents or Changes ∗ Can we give more examples? Request Fulfilment
  • 48. • Aims to prevent problems and resulting incidents • Minimises impact of unavoidable incidents • Eliminates recurring incidents • Proactive Problem Management – Identifies areas of potential weakness – Identifies workarounds • Reactive Problem Management – Indentifies underlying causes of incidents – Identifies changes to prevent recurrence Problem Management
  • 49. ∗ Right things for right users at right time ∗ Concepts ∗ Access ∗ Identity (Authentication, AuthN) ∗ Rights (Authorisation, AuthZ) ∗ Service Group ∗ Directory Access Management
  • 50. • Local, Central or Virtual • Examples? • Single point of contact • Skills for operators – Customer Focus – Articulate – Interpersonal Skills (patient!) – Understand Business – Methodical/Analytical – Technical knowledge – Multi-lingual • Service desk often seen as the bottom of the pile – Bust most visible to customers so important to get right! Service Desk
  • 51. ∗ Focus on Process owners and Service Owners ∗ Ensures that service management processes continue to support the business ∗ Monitor and enhance Service Level Achievements ∗ Plan – do –check – act (Deming) Continual Service Improvement
  • 52. • Technology (components, MTBF etc) • Process (KPIs - Critical Success Factors) • Service (End-to end, e.g. Customer Satisfaction) • Why? – Validation – Soundness of decisions – Direction – of future activities – Justify – provide factual evidence – Intervene – when changes or corrections are needed Service Measurement
  • 53. 7 Steps to Improvement
  • 54. • Process Owner – Ensures Fit for Purpose • Process Manager – Monitors and Reports on Process • Service Owner – Accountable for Delivery • Service Manager – Responsible for initiation, transition and maintenance. Lifecycle! ITIL Roles
  • 55. ∗ Business Relationship Manager ∗ Service Asset & Configuration ∗ Service Asset Manager ∗ Service Knowledge Manager ∗ Configuration Manager ∗ Configuration Analyst ∗ Configuration Librarian ∗ CMS tools administrator More Roles
  • 56. • Process – Structured set of activities designed to accomplish a defined objective – Inputs & Outputs – Measurable – e.g. ?? • Function – Team or group of people and tools they use to carry out one or more processes or activities – Own practices and knowledge body – e.g. ?? Functions and Processes