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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
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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

Dependencies and relationships between ITSM processes

Technically, all ITSM processes in this chapter can be implemented independently in SCSM. Based on best practice, an order of implementing the process is recommended.

Getting ready

A general understanding of the objectives of ITSM frameworks is required for this recipe. Also, a basic understanding of all ITSM processes described in this chapter is required.

How to do it...

The following figure provides a diagram of information flow, trigger options, and relationships between the ITSM processes in SCSM:

How to do it...

The order of implementing the different ITSM processes in SCSM depends on the requirement of each individual organization, which might differ. In general, some combinations and orders of ITSM processes are a best practice to the successful implementation of SCSM.

Option 1:

  1. Configuration Management
  2. Incident Management
  3. Problem Management

Option 2:

  1. Configuration Management
  2. Service Request Fulfillment (Service Catalog)

Option 3:

  1. Configuration Management
  2. Incident Management
  3. Combination of the following:
  4. Problem Management
  5. Change Management
  6. Release Management

Option 4:

  1. Configuration Management
  2. Incident Management
  3. Combination of the following:
  4. Problem Management
  5. Change Management
  6. Service Request Fulfillment
  7. Release Management

The Incident Management and Service Request Fulfillment are typically supported by the Service Level Management (SLM). SLM provides information on the Service Level Agreements (SLAs) for the respective processes.

How it works...

The Configuration Management process with the Configuration Management System (CMS also commonly known as the Configuration Management Database (CMDB, provides technical information and details for all IT components (Configuration Items, CIs) for all other ITSM processes in SCSM. In addition, all ITSM processes update the CMS/CMDB with relevant information as each process is executed during its life cycle.

Incident Management is responsible for the fast remediation of disrupted IT services. Information from the Incident Records (Incident Ticket) can be used in the Problem Management process as related Problem Records. This is helpful in order to create workarounds, create Known Errors, discover the root cause of an incident, and optimize the IT services.

The Incident Management and the Problem Management processes can trigger required changes of an IT services. These changes are logged in Change Records in Change Management. A Change Record will contain different types of related activities (Review Activities, Manual Activities).

If the change is approved and all related activities in the Change Management process are completed, Release Management is responsible for rolling out the change to the affected IT service components. This will be logged as a Release Record with all the related activities of the roll-out.

An incident can also trigger a Service Request to provide a new service. For instance, an incident with the issue Can't open a file because of missing application on a client computer can be resolved by a Service Request to install the required application on the client computer.

The Service Level Management with defined Service Level Agreements supports the Incident Management and Service Request Fulfillment processes to monitor and report on the agreed SLM objectives.

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