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Microsoft System Center 2016 Service Manager Cookbook

You're reading from   Microsoft System Center 2016 Service Manager Cookbook Discover over 100 practical recipes to help you master the art of IT service management for your organization

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464897
Length 638 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (5):
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Steve Buchanan Steve Buchanan
Author Profile Icon Steve Buchanan
Steve Buchanan
Anders Asp Anders Asp
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Anders Asp
Steve Beaumont Steve Beaumont
Author Profile Icon Steve Beaumont
Steve Beaumont
Dieter Gasser Dieter Gasser
Author Profile Icon Dieter Gasser
Dieter Gasser
Andreas Baumgarten Andreas Baumgarten
Author Profile Icon Andreas Baumgarten
Andreas Baumgarten
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. ITSM and ITIL Frameworks and Processes 2. Personalizing SCSM 2016 Administration FREE CHAPTER 3. Configuring Service Level Agreements (SLAs) 4. Building the Configuration Management Database (CMDB) 5. Deploying Service Request Fulfilment 6. Deploying and Configuring the HTML5 Self-Service Portal 7. Working with Incident and Problem Management 8. Designing and Configuring Change Management and Release Management 9. Implementing Security Roles 10. Working with the Data Warehouse and Reporting 11. Extending SCSM with Advanced Personalization 12. Automating Service Manager 2016 13. Whats New in SCSM 2016 and Upgrading from SCSM 2012 R2 A. Community Extensions and Third-Party Commercial SCSM Solutions B. Useful Websites and Community Resources

The Service Level Management process

Service Level Management (SLM) is the foundation and underpinning element of ITSM. This recipe looks at the common input components of SLM and the deliverables of the process. SLM typically can be applied internally, externally, or both. The external application of SLM can be complex as it typically requires legal contracts with external providers outside an organization. In this recipe, our focus will be on the internal execution of SLM.

Getting ready

SLM is a vital organization function. The goal of SLM is to ensure that the customers' expectations are met in line with formal published agreements. We must be able to consistently capture the inputs, and accurately report on the adherence or non-compliance to the agreed SLM objectives. We must have organization buy-in and a full understanding of SLM through official ITIL© material, or appropriate training in the SLM discipline.

How to do it...

SLM is the key to all processes and functions in ITIL©. The common area in SLM is Service Level Agreements (SLAs. We will use Incident Management and Service Request Fulfillment to implement this:

  1. Agree and publish Service Level Agreements for Incident Management response times and resolution times. The following table provides an example of the SLM inputs for five categories (priority) of incidents based on urgency and impact. The second table provides an example of the SLM inputs for the Service Request Fulfillment:

    Incident Priority

    Target first response

    Target resolution time

    1

    30 minutes

    4 hours

    2

    2 hours

    8 hours

    3

    8 hours

    24 hours

    4

    16 hours

    80 hours

    5

    24 hours

    120 hours

    Service Request priority

    Target first response

    Target implementation

    1

    8 hours

    16 hours

    2

    16 hours

    24 hours

    3

    24 hours

    72 hours

  2. Install and configure an appropriate ITSM tool with SLM implementation capabilities (for example, SCSM).
  3. Configure the tool with the details of the organization SLM requirements.
  4. Capture the SLM metrics. Examples of some incident metrics are as follows:
    • Number of SLA breaches
    • Average time to resolve incidents
    • Number of incidents per week/month/quarter
  5. Monitor the operational adherence to the SLM metric.
  6. Report and adjust the appropriate execution of the processes to ensure adherence is in line with the agreed SLM objectives.

How it works...

Service Level Management is what we use to ensure that IT capabilities are aligned with customer expectations of the services provided by IT. The successful implementation of SLM involves creating agreements between the supplier of services (IT and supporting third parties), and the consumer of the services (business customers). A driver for successful SLM is when an organization commits to compliance with industry-recognized standards. The following standards are typical drivers:

  • ISO 9001
  • ISO 27001
  • ITIL© certification

The overall goal is to ensure services are delivered at the right cost to the expectations of the service consumers. SLM is at its most effective when we create credible agreements, report proactively on performance of the service, and accurately capture the service consumer's feedback (for example, using customer satisfaction surveys).

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