ITIL Service Transition

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Objective: The objective of ITIL Service Transition is to build and deploy IT services. The Service Transition lifecycle stage also makes sure that changes to services and service management processes are carried out in a coordinated way.

Part of: IT Service Management | ITIL processes

 

Processes: ITIL Service Transition

Service Transition builds and deploys new or modified services.

ITIL Service Transition
Fig. 1: ITIL Service Transition

The ITIL service lifecycle stage of Service Transition (see fig. 1) includes the following main processes:

Process Objective: To control the lifecycle of all Changes. The primary objective of Change Management is to enable beneficial Changes to be made, with minimum disruption to IT services.
Process Objective: To assess major Changes, like the introduction of a new service or a substantial change to an existing service, before those Changes are allowed to proceed to the next phase in their lifecycle.
Process Objective: To plan and coordinate the resources to deploy a major Release within the predicted cost, time and quality estimates.
Process Objective: To make available applications and systems which provide the required functionality for IT services. This process includes the development and maintenance of custom applications as well as the customization of products from software vendors.
Process Objective: To plan, schedule and control the movement of releases to test and live environments. The primary goal of Release Management is to ensure that the integrity of the live environment is protected and that the correct components are released.
Process Objective: To ensure that deployed Releases and the resulting services meet customer expectations, and to verify that IT operations is able to support the new service.
Process Objective: To maintain information about Configuration Items required to deliver an IT service, including their relationships.
Process Objective: To gather, analyze, store and share knowledge and information within an organization. The primary purpose of Knowledge Management is to improve efficiency by reducing the need to rediscover knowledge.

ITIL 4 Service Transition

The Service Transition processes described here (fig. 1) follow the specifications of ITIL V3, where Service Transition is the third stage in the Service Lifecycle.

ITIL V4 has moved from the Service Lifecycle concept to a more holistic approach that includes key concepts, the Four Dimensions Model and the Service Value System (SVS).

Instead of processes, ITIL 4 describes 34 'practices', and many of the 26 processes specified in ITIL V3 can be found in ITIL 4 as practices. For example, ITIL V4 refers to Change Management and Configuration Management as practices (Change Management has been renamed to "Change Enablement").

The shift from processes to practices means ITIL V4 is no longer prescriptive about processes and gives organizations more freedom to define tailor-made Service Transition processes.

Since the processes specified in ITIL V3 have not been invalidated with the introduction of ITIL V4, organizations that need to define their Service Transition processes can still use the processes specified in ITIL V3 as templates.

Note:
In our YaSM Service Management Wiki we describe a leaner set of 19 service management processes that are more in tune with ITIL 4 and its focus on simplicity and "just enough process".

The YaSM service management model includes a Service Transition / Service Implementation process that is a good starting point for organizations that wish to adopt ITIL 4.

KPIs | Templates | Roles

Downloads

Service Transition ITIL
The ITIL discipline Service Transition at a glance

Use the following links to open the process overview of Service Transition showing the most important interfaces:


Notes

By:  Stefan Kempter , IT Process Maps.

 

ITIL 4 Service Transition  › Change Management  › [...] › Release Mgmt.  › Service Validation  › Configuration Mgmt.  › Knowledge Mgmt.