ITIL® Service Lifecycle Continual Service Improvement

Learn to continuously improve the organisational services

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Continual Service Improvement (CSI) course that provides in-depth knowledge regarding the areas of the ITIL® Service Lifecycle to prepare the delegates for ITIL® Continual Service Improvement exam that leads to ITIL® CSI Certification. It is one of the nine intermediate qualifications and one of the five lifecycle stream qualification through which credits can be gained for the ITIL® Expert Certification.

  • PeopleCert accredits all the courses of ITIL®

  • Learn how to manage the activities and techniques in CSI stage of Service Lifecycle

  • Key Learning Points and Tutor Support

  • Determine how to measure the performance of Continual Service Improvement stage

WHAT'S INCLUDED ?

Find out what's included in the training programme.

Includes

Exam(s) included

Exams are provided, as part of the course. Obtaining certification is dependant on passing these exams

Includes

Key Learning Points

Clear and concise objectives to guide delegates through the course.

Includes

Pre Course Material

It provides some basic knowledge about the course before training.

PREREQUISITES

The professionals who want to attend ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Continual Service Improvement (CSI) course must hold ITIL® Foundation Certificate.

TARGET AUDIENCE

ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Continual Service Improvement (CSI) course is best suited for the following audience:

  • IT Professionals
  • CIOs
  • CTOs
  • IT Managers
  • IT Consultants and Architecture

WHAT WILL YOU LEARN?

  • Gain knowledge regarding concepts and terminologies used in Service Lifecycle
  • Enhance the quality of organisational services
  • Get to know about the processes, functions, and activities used in continual service improvement
  • Discover the roles and responsibilities of CSI of Service Lifecycle

 

Enquire Program

Fill in the form below & we'd get back to you.

PROGRAM OVERVIEW

MSP Training introduces ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Continual Service Improvement (CSI) course that focuses on the organisational or individual review of services. These services are produced by following the activities of plan, strategy, design, implementation and maintenance.  We provide the best training with latest study material available in the market.

Exam

To Measure the knowledge attained by the delegates in training. An exam is conducted at the end of training. Each delegate has to go through the examination in order to get certified. The exam will have the following pattern:

  • 8 Multiple Choice Questions
  • Exam Duration- 90 minutes
  • 70% marks are needed to clear the exam that is 28 out of 40
  • It will be closed book exam

PROGRAM CONTENT

Introduction: Continual Service Improvement

  • Scope and goals of CSI
  • Objective and purpose of CSI
  • How to embed CSI into organisational processes
  • How to create business value
  • CSI approach

Principles of Continual Service Improvement

  • Establish accountability
    • Define unambiguous ownership and roles
    • Support CSI application and register
    • Service Level Management and CSI
  • Provide adequate governance
    • Knowledge management
    • Apply or implement CSI with the Demand cycle
    • Service Measurement
    • Ensure effective governance with CSI
    • Support CSI with frameworks, models, standards and quality systems

The seven-step improvement process

  • Determine what to measure
    • Define what to measure
    • Conduct gap analysis
  • Gather Data
    • Data processing
    • Analysing data
    • How to present and use the information?
    • Implement corrective actions
    • Integrate CSI with the other stages of the lifecycle

Methods and Techniques

  • Activities for delivering CSI
    • Perform gap analysis
    • Implement benchmarking
    • Design and Analyse service measurement frameworks
    • Create ROI (Return on Investment)
    • Articulating service reporting
  • Key metrics
    • Technology metrics
    • Process metrics
    • CSFs and KPIs
    • Service metrics
    • Initiating a SWOT analysis
    • Measure benefits to the business
  • Support CSI activities
    • Availability Management
    • Capability Management
    • IT Service Continuity Management
    • Problem Management
    • Knowledge Management

Organisation and Technology Considerations

  • Define roles and responsibilities
  • Organisational structure supporting CSI
  • Specify tool requirements for implementation success
  • Automated incident and problem resolution
  • Statistical analysis tools
  • Business intelligence and reporting

Implementing Continual Service Improvement

  • Key considerations
    • Analyse the starting point
    • Relating role of governance
    • Determine the effect of organisational change
    • Construct a communication strategy and plan
  • Implementation Challenges and risks
    • Establish critical success factors
    • KPIs
    • Develop risk-benefit analysis

ITIL® Service Lifecycle - Continual Service Improvement Enquiry

 

Enquire Now


----- OR -------

Reach us at 0121 368 7851 or info@msptraining.com for more information.

ABOUT Worcester

Worcester is a town in Worcestershire, England. It is a non-metropolitan country. It is a junction point for Gloucester and Birmingham. It is a non-metropolitan district. River Severn flows to the west of the town Centre. The Population of the region is nearly 1 lakh. During civil war era, the Battle of Worchester was the last and most deadly war in the region. The famous composer Edward Elgar also belongs to this place. The world oldest newspaper Berrow’s Worchester journal is published here.

History

Roman Ryknild Street was a trading route in New Stone age. During the 3rd century, most of the Worchester area lost to Roman Empire. Some area had become useless because of the silting of Diglis Basin. It also impacted the industrial production. St. Helen’s is the famous church of the region. The major devastation of the town did happen in 1041 after rebellion for taxation. The cloth industry boomed during the medieval era where 10000 population approximately shifted to this industry and ultimately hub for the corporate world. Worcester was the place of war when Charles II tried to regain the territory. Again he lost. Finally, he escaped to France to save his life. Worcester always fought for a parliamentarian form of government. During late 16th century, the Severn’s river banks got burst and it leads to heavy loss of property. During Second World War time, the role of the city was very prominent. It was termed as the safest evacuation route in case of the German forces invade. The Royal Worcester porcelain company puts off its services in 2009. The medical museum ‘’Infirmary’’ is constructed from old wards infrastructure in 2012.

Governance

Till 2007, the conservatives had control over the council. They lost the control after losing by-election seat to the Labour party. Still, they are leading in councillors numbers with 17 seats out of 35. But it has been Worchester city council that is looking after its administration. Robin Walker of the conservative party is the current MP of this region. The local government structure is formed as a non-metropolitan council.

Climate

It has a mild climate with warm summers and mild winters throughout the year. It also encounters with extreme climatic conditions. The floods came in subsequent years. In the year 2009-2011, it encountered with sub-freezing temperatures and massive snowfalls. The average rainfall of this region is below 600 mm.

Demography and religion

The last population census was done in 2001. Most of the population is white and a large section of society follows Christian religion which accounts 79% of the population. 21% of the population does not follow any religion. Others religions have percentage below 2. The minorities include Bangladeshi, Chinese, Indian, Pakistani and others. This small population makes the diverse group of religious people.

Economy

The economy is favourable to many light industries. During the industrial revolution in 18th century, it got pace in the development project. The glove industry is the suitable example which is accelerating at a constant pace. Other are engineering products, machinery tools, sauce industry and shopping centres.

Transportation

The longest path of the Worcester is M5 Motorway that runs to the north-south corridor. The city is situated at junction 6 and junction 7.  A car traveller can easy access to rest of the region. The capital city is just 118 miles far from it. There are two famous stations of the region i.e Worcester Foregate Street and Worcester Shrub Hill. First Midland Red is the main service provider of the city. There are also a few smaller operators. The major airport near to the city is Birmingham Airport. Another important airport is Gloucestershire Airport.

Overview of ITIL® 2011 Edition

Information Techno...