ITIL Release, Control and Validation Capability Training in Owensboro

Enroll in or hire us to teach our ITIL Release, Control and Validation Capability class in Owensboro, Kentucky by calling us @303.377.6176. Like all HSG classes, ITIL Release, Control and Validation Capability may be offered either onsite or via instructor led virtual training. Consider looking at our public training schedule to see if it is scheduled: Public Training Classes
Provided there are enough attendees, ITIL Release, Control and Validation Capability may be taught at one of our local training facilities.
We offer private customized training for groups of 3 or more attendees.

Course Description

 
This 5 day course immerses students in the practical aspects of the ITIL Service Lifecycle and processes associated with the Release, Control and Validation of services and service delivery. The main focus of this course is on the operational level process activities and supporting methods and approaches to executing these processes. To implement new services in a controlled and cost effective manner, IT departments must successfully implement ITIL Release, Control and Validation best practices. Students gain the skills required to take the ITIL Release, Control and Validation Certification Exam.
Course Length: 5 Days
Course Tuition: $2,560 (US)

Prerequisites

Individuals who have an ITIL Foundation Certificate and want to pursue the intermediate and advanced level ITIL certifications. IT professionals involved in IT Service Management implementation and improvement programs.

Course Outline

 


Introduction and Overview

•  Analyzing and exploring the importance of the Service Capability stream

•  Service Management as a practice

•  The Service value proposition

•  How the Release, Control and Validation capabilities support the Service Lifecycle

Core Release, Control and Validation Processes: Change Management

•  Purpose, goals and objectives

•  Implementing change with minimum disruption and rework

•  Evaluating business, technical and financial aspects

•  Achieving successful service transition

•  Activities, methods and techniques

•  Post-implementation review

•  Key metrics to measure success

Service Asset and Configuration Management

•  Business value of monitoring service transition

•  Activities, methods and techniques

•  Establishing configuration baselines

•  Correlating IT services with need components

•  Tracking and reporting asset values

•  Establishing metrics that measure success

Service Validation and Testing

•  How Service Validation and Testing creates business value

•  Assuring transition integrity and quality

•  The Service V Model

•  Fit for purpose : Fit for Use

•  Acquiring relevant test data

Release and Deployment Management

•  Analyzing how services are released into production to enable effective use of services

•  Planning, scheduling and controlling releases

•  Moving to the live environment

•  Illustrating the main activities and how they relate to the capability of Release, Control and Validation

•  Maintaining information on service deployment

•  Defining metrics for process quality

Request Fulfillment and Service Evaluation: Analyzing how service requests should be handled

•  Avoiding congestion and obstruction of the normal incident and change management processes

•  Process scope and objectives

•  The triggers, input and output of request fulfillment

Evaluating services against target performance in the context of change

•  Meeting committed service level performance

•  Activities, methods and techniques

•  Key metrics to measure success

Knowledge Management

•  Purpose, goals and objectives

•  Enhancing decision support

•  Activities, methods and techniques

•  Establishing metrics to measure service delivery quality

Roles and Responsibilities

•  Change management

•  Service asset and configuration management

•  Service validation and testing

•  Release and deployment

•  Service desk (fulfillment) and service evaluation

Technology and Implementation Considerations

•  Technology as part of implementing service management

•  Special technology features related to Release, Control and Validation

•  Generic requirements and evaluation criteria

•  Good practices for implementation

•  Challenges, critical success factors and risks

Common Service Activities

•  Service monitoring and control

•  Deming cycle

•  CSI techniques

Continual Service Improvement

•  The relationship of CSI in respect to organizational change

•  Implementing an effective CSI program

•  Service reporting

•  Cost benefit justification

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