ITIL® Service Lifecycle Service Transition

Get to know about the transitions between the different phases of Service Lifecycle

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Service Transition course that provides comprehensive knowledge regarding the areas of the ITIL® Service Lifecycle to prepare the delegates for ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Service Transition exam that leads to Service Transition 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.

  • Learn how to manage the transactions between various phases of the service lifecycle

  • PeopleCert accredits all the ITIL® courses of MSP Training

  • ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Service Transition course is delivered by highly qualified trainers

  • Key Learning Points and Tutor Support

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

Certificate

Delegates will get certification of completion at the end of the course.

Includes

Tutor Support

A dedicated tutor will be at your disposal throughout the training to guide you through any issues.

PREREQUISITES

The professionals who want to attend ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Service Transition course must hold ITIL® Foundation Certificate.

 

TARGET AUDIENCE

ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Service Transition course is best for the following professionals:

  • IT Professionals
  • Capacity Managers
  • Business Continuity Managers
  • Service Portfolio Managers
  • Availability Managers
  • Service Level Managers

WHAT WILL YOU LEARN?

  • Learn how to provide a consistent framework to evaluate the risk and challenges involved in the lifecycle
  • Understand how to create and maintain the integrity of all service assets effectively
  • Determine how the services can be operated or managed so that they are fulfilling the need of the customers
  • The customer requirements are fulfilled that are described in Service Design phase of the lifecycle
  • Plan and manage the resources to build and test the release into production

Enquire Program

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

ITIL® Service Transition course provides delegates with the knowledge regarding the transitions between the different phases of the service lifecycle. The course focuses on the managing the changes that may occur in a transition phase. This training is very crucial for those who are involved in these activities. Our trainer will help the delegates in ensuring that the service is developed according to the customer requirement.

 

                                                                  

 

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

*After completing 2 days of classroom training and successfully passing your Foundation Exam, the third day of this course is a flexible exam preparation day to complete at your convenience in order to prepare you to take and pass your exam online.

We provide comprehensive support during the exam process to make the experience as simple as possible. This exam can be taken at a suitable time, subject to availability; online, anywhere.

Benefits of online exams include:

  • Proven higher pass rates
  • Quicker Results
  • Save Travel Costs
  • Flexibility
  • Convenient
  • Take your exam at your home, office, or work when you are ready

PROGRAM CONTENT

Introduction: Fundamentals of Service Transition

  • Define Service Transition
  • Scope and objective
  • Value to business
  • Optimise the performance of Service Transition
  • Interfaces to other stages of service lifecycle
  • Service Transition Processes

Service Transition Principles

  • Principles supporting Service Transition
  • Policies for Service Transition

Introduction: Service Transition Processes

  • Transition Planning and Support
  • Change Management
    • Policies, principles and basic concepts
    • Remediation planning
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Triggers, input and output
    • Key performance indicators and metrics
  • Service Asset and Configuration Management
    • Scope and Objective
    • Value to business
    • Basic concepts and terminologies
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Triggers, input and output
  • Release and Deployment Management
    • Scope and Objective
    • Value to business
    • Basic Concepts and Principles
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Performing transfer, deployment and retirement
    • Triggers, input and output
    • Information Management
    • Key performance indicators and metrics
  • Service Validation and Testing
    • Goals and Objectives
    • Scope
    • Value to business
    • Basic concepts and terminologies
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Triggers, input and output
    • Information Management
    • Key performance indicators
  • Evaluation
    • Goals and Objectives
    • Scope
    • Value to business
    • Basic concepts and terminologies
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Triggers, input and output
    • Information Management
    • Key performance indicators
  • Knowledge Management
    • Goals and Objectives
    • Scope
    • Value to business
    • Basic concepts and terminologies
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Triggers, input and output
    • Information Management
    • Key performance indicators

Service Transition common operation activities

  • Manage communications and commitments
  • Manage organisation and stakeholder change
  • Stakeholder Management

Introduction: Organising Service Transition

  • Service Transition Organisation
  • Process owner role
  • Service owner role
  • Organisational context for transitioning a service
  • Organisation models to support Service Transition
  • Relationship of service transition with other stages of the lifecycle

Introduction: Technology considerations

  • Knowledge Management tools
  • Collaboration
  • Configuration Management System

Introduction: Implementation of Service Transition

  • Stages of Introducing Service Transition
  • Justifying Service Transition
  • Designing Service Transition
  • Introducing Service Transition
  • Cultural change aspects
  • Risk and value

Challenges, critical success factors and risks

  • Challenges
  • Critical success factors
  • Risks
  • Service Transition under difficult conditions

ITIL® Service Lifecycle- Service Transition Enquiry

 

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

ABOUT Lincoln

Lincoln which is situated in Lincolnshire, is a cathedral city and as per 2011 census had a population of 94,600. In the early periods, it was known as Lindum Colonia, a Roman colony. Lindum Colonia had come up from a settlement of the Iron Age that belonged to the 1st Century B.C. The settlement was the result of a deep pool and the name also probably comes from the word Lindon which was later converted to the Latin form Lindum. The full name for the location was  Colonia Domitiana Lindensium, which went by its founder, Domitian’s name. The colony was established within the walls of the hilltop fortress, to which an extension was also added later on, of an equal area.

Cathedral

First of all the construction of the Lincoln Cathedral began with the see being removed from the backwater of Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. It was completed in 1092 but had to be rebuilt after a fire destroyed it. The cause of the fire is said to have been an earthquake that shook Lincoln in 1185. When the Lincoln Minster was rebuilt it had an added portion to the east.  The construction was completed on a superb scale with the crossing tower decorated by a pinnacle that rose to 525 ft, and considered to be the highest Europe has ever had till date. After the completion of all the three spires, the central spire is expected to be the tallest man-made structure in the world after the Great Pyramids of Egypt.

The Bishops of Lincoln were said to be one of the richest people in medieval England. The Diocese of Lincoln, considered to be the biggest in England, was home to more monasteries than the entire English counties put together.

When Magna Carta, the charter to bring peace between the king and rebel barons, was signed, one of the witnesses happened to be the Bishop of Lincoln, Hugh of Wells. There is only one copy that remains of the four originals and that is in the Lincoln Castle.

Lincoln Cathedral

The bishops of Lincoln who were most known were :

  • Robert Bloet
  • Hugh of Avalon
  • Robert Grosseteste
  • Henry Beaufort
  • Thomas Wolsey
  • Philip Repyngdon
  • Thomas Rotherham

Theologian William de Montibus was the chancellor and head of the cathedral school till his death in 1213. The Bishop’s Palace was the centre of administration. Built towards the end of the 12th Century, it was a magnificent building of that era in England. The East Hall of the Palace, designed by Hugh of Lincoln, is the earliest enduring example of a roofed domestic hall. Bishop William of Alnwick was responsible for building the other two parts namely the chapel range and entrance tower. It was he who also improvised upon the existing structure and lend a modern look to it in the 1430s. King Henry VIII and James I are said to have been e guests of the bishops at Lincoln Cathedral. Some royal troops ransacked the cathedral in 1648 during the civil war. The cathedral had another recent break-in due to which the stained glass had to be replaced.

 Notable people

  • Penelope Fitzgerald, born in 1916 was a novelist and biographer
  • George Boole, born in Lincoln in 1815 and developed the Boolean Algebra
  • Sir Francis Hill, mayor of Lincoln was born in Lincoln in 1899.
  • William Byrd, organist and composer
  • Neville Marriner (1924–2016).
  • Sam Clucas, a Hull City footballer was born in Lincoln in 1990.
  • Steve Race, broadcaster, was born in Lincoln

Famous Attractions

  • Jew’s House
  • Jew’s Court
  • Lincoln Castle
  • Lincoln Cathedral
  • Steep Hill
  • Viking Way

Overview of ITIL® 2011 Edition

Information Techno...