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By Tom Mochal
Five years ago, no one outside the United Kingdom had heard about ITIL. Now, it seems like you cant pick up a trade magazine without someone mentioning it. But despite all the buzz, many IT pros dont fully understand what ITIL is all about. Here are the highlights.
ITIL contains a comprehensive set of best practices that are used to develop and execute IT service management. It offers a number of benefits, including increased competitive advantage through cost reduction, growth, and agility; more business efficiency through streamlining of IT processes; enhanced IT value through business and IT operational and goal alignment; and improved internal customer and user satisfaction.
The organization body that supports ITIL is located in the United Kingdom
The overall ITIL approach has been available since the late 1980s and has been published on the Internet for years. However, it was largely unknown in the United States until a critical mass of large companies and media publications started to take notice. More than 10,000 organizations worldwide have now adopted ITIL.
ITIL is undergoing some updates and restructuring to reflect technology changes. The books now encompass the following areas: Introduction to ITIL Service Support Service Delivery Planning to Implement Service Management Security Management The Business Perspective ICT Infrastructure Management Application Management Software Asset Management Small-Scale Implementation
Implementing ITIL practices is a culture change initiative. People are going to complain about having to do things differently than they did in the past. You need a strong sponsor to push the change. If you dont have one, dont attempt the implementationor look for limited success.
ITIL does not focus on creating things like projects do. Instead it focuses on delivering IT services to the company. Page 1
Copyright 2006 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. For more downloads and a free TechRepublic membership, please visit http://techrepublic.com.com/2001-6240-0.html
ITIL is a set of approaches and best practices. It is a model for IT service delivery. It does contain some processes and templates, but it is not a methodology and does not contain all the implementation details. Companies that want to use ITIL can follow the overall guidelines and then develop the more detailed processes that make sense for the individual organization.
You can implement many aspects of ITLI using tools, but tools are not required. If your organization is small, simple templates and spreadsheets may be all you need. If your organization is large, you may need to find appropriate software tools to help.
Since ITIL is a series of approaches in different areas, a company can implement some or the entire overall model. There is no rule that you have to implement everything.
There is also no rule that you have to implement the entire ITIL model at once. Many organizations implement ITIL in phases over a period of time.
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There are three levels of ITIL certification: Foundation. This level means you understand the terms and have a basic knowledge of the ITIL model. Practitioner. This level means that you understand the model to a degree necessary to apply the specific and correct ITIL processes where applicable. Manager. This level is available for practitioners who will be managing ITIL service management functions.
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Additional resources
TechRepublic's Downloads RSS Feed Sign up for TechRepublic's Downloads Weekly Update newsletter Sign up for our CIO Issues Newsletter Check out all of TechRepublic's free newsletters "Learn how ITIL can benefit your organization" (TechRepublic download) "Seven keys to implementing an ITIL framework" (TechRepublic download) "An Introduction to ITIL Concepts" (TechRepublic white paper)
Version history
Version: 1.0 Published: November 9, 2006
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Copyright 2006 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. For more downloads and a free TechRepublic membership, please visit http://techrepublic.com.com/2001-6240-0.html