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ITIL
The ITIL 2011 Editions have been updated for clarity, consistency, correctness and completeness. ITIL is based upon a lifecycle approach and the core guidance consists of five publications: ITIL Service Strategy, ITIL Service Design, ITIL Service Transition, ITIL Service Operation, ITIL Continual Se...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
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TSO
2011
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1553539 |
_version_ | 1780930348546260992 |
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author | Collective |
author_facet | Collective |
author_sort | Collective |
collection | CERN |
description | The ITIL 2011 Editions have been updated for clarity, consistency, correctness and completeness. ITIL is based upon a lifecycle approach and the core guidance consists of five publications: ITIL Service Strategy, ITIL Service Design, ITIL Service Transition, ITIL Service Operation, ITIL Continual Service Improvement. Each of the five publications represents a stage in the ITIL service lifecycle. With each stage influencing and relying upon the others, the lifecycle moves cyclically from service strategy (where the business requirements are set) to the design, transition, operation and continual improvement of IT services. The lifecycle is driven by business needs and requirements and has a continual feedback system built into every stage to ensure that an organizations service management offering continues to provide measurable value to the business. The process-based framework of the service lifecycle can be adopted and adapted by organizations of all types and sizes. The suite of titles offers considerable costs savings against purchasing all five titles individually: save 29% against purchasing all five individually. Key Features The updated ITIL publications share a similar standard structure (including generic content in Chapters 1, 2 and 6) to improve consistency and aid navigation. Some content has been reorganized to improve flow and readability, and ensure alignment across the suite including clarification around interfaces, and inputs and outputs across the service lifecycle. Terminology has been clarified and made consistent across the publications and the ITIL glossary. |
id | cern-1553539 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2011 |
publisher | TSO |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-15535392021-04-21T22:39:36Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1553539engCollectiveITILComputing and ComputersThe ITIL 2011 Editions have been updated for clarity, consistency, correctness and completeness. ITIL is based upon a lifecycle approach and the core guidance consists of five publications: ITIL Service Strategy, ITIL Service Design, ITIL Service Transition, ITIL Service Operation, ITIL Continual Service Improvement. Each of the five publications represents a stage in the ITIL service lifecycle. With each stage influencing and relying upon the others, the lifecycle moves cyclically from service strategy (where the business requirements are set) to the design, transition, operation and continual improvement of IT services. The lifecycle is driven by business needs and requirements and has a continual feedback system built into every stage to ensure that an organizations service management offering continues to provide measurable value to the business. The process-based framework of the service lifecycle can be adopted and adapted by organizations of all types and sizes. The suite of titles offers considerable costs savings against purchasing all five titles individually: save 29% against purchasing all five individually. Key Features The updated ITIL publications share a similar standard structure (including generic content in Chapters 1, 2 and 6) to improve consistency and aid navigation. Some content has been reorganized to improve flow and readability, and ensure alignment across the suite including clarification around interfaces, and inputs and outputs across the service lifecycle. Terminology has been clarified and made consistent across the publications and the ITIL glossary.As the introduction, and heart, of the service lifecycle, ITIL Service Strategy is ideal for both service provider executives and their business customers. It provides a well-defined, best-practice approach to creating and managing a sound IT service strategy that can deliver significant business benefits.Essential reading for any IT professional looking to deliver change, ITIL Service Transition provides best-practice guidance on managing service change in a timely, cost-effective manner with minimal disruption to operations, customers, users and the business.For the best possible business outcomes, continual service improvement should be an integral part of every stage of the service lifecycle. ITIL Continual Service Improvement provides best practice guidance on identifying and introducing a cycle of service management improvements, as well as a structured approach for assessing and measuring services.Ensuring the successful, day-to-day delivery of IT services, service operation is a critical stage of the service lifecycle. ITIL Service Operation provides best-practice guidance on efficiently and effectively delivering these services for the benefit of the business, customers and users.TSOoai:cds.cern.ch:15535392011 |
spellingShingle | Computing and Computers Collective ITIL |
title | ITIL |
title_full | ITIL |
title_fullStr | ITIL |
title_full_unstemmed | ITIL |
title_short | ITIL |
title_sort | itil |
topic | Computing and Computers |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1553539 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT collective itil |