• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Incident Managers Question

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #11
    Originally posted by malvolio
    ITIL is not about process, it's about people.

    ITIL is about process, although good people skills are amust but it is process.

    Comment


      #12
      You can tell the people in this thread are in management. Incident Management vs Problem Management - who cares? FFS, the job is to make sure that something gets fixed - that is all.
      Listen to my last album on Spotify

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by Cowboy Bob
        You can tell the people in this thread are in management. Incident Management vs Problem Management - who cares? FFS, the job is to make sure that something gets fixed - that is all.
        Yes, but also to make sure it gets fixed properly!!! And it also helps if we can understand why the hell it broke in the first place!!!

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by Cowboy Bob
          You can tell the people in this thread are in management. Incident Management vs Problem Management - who cares? FFS, the job is to make sure that something gets fixed - that is all.
          Cowboy, You must either be a developer or an ops techy

          Comment


            #15
            Originally posted by Orangutan
            Cowboy, You must either be a developer or an ops techy
            Titles are for permies and management only. No-one else cares.
            Listen to my last album on Spotify

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by Orangutan
              Cowboy, You must either be a developer or an ops techy

              God made us all equal...

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by Let-Me-In
                God made us all equal...
                We're all engineers now.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by Old Greg
                  We're all engineers now.

                  maybe some are more equal than others?

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Just had a private message, I hope the sender won't mind me sharing -
                    ' IM Question - So are you an agent or client or what? '

                    Answer - Just a humble contractor same as you good folks. Finding myself in a strange consultant role concerning total re-org of an Incident team. Plan is ambitious and relies on provision of a number of focussed and skilled Incident staff or people with comparable skills. These will be a mix of perm and contract (wherever the appropriate people can be found).
                    Cheers all.

                    Comment


                      #20
                      Originally posted by Let-Me-In
                      ITIL is about process, although good people skills are amust but it is process.
                      No, after some 15 years experience in ITIL (and rather more in Service Management) I would say that any damn fool can extract a viable process from the books, but it takes a lot of work and people skills to introduce those processes into an existing department and socialise them to a largely hostile technical support group. Yuo can't simply bolt a process map on to a team and suddenly become an ITIL-compliant organisation, much as most senior managers would like to think you can.

                      And if you want to be strictly accurate, ITIL is actually about running end-to-end IT departments and production life cycles, a view that is now being re-emphasised in the Version 3 release.

                      But I also have major issues with "ITIL compliance" as a fixed objective, since it is a best-practice framework, not a rigid methodology. Then again, I hate availability rates set to 99.98765% with 2 hours a week planned downtime as well, but that's a whole other story.
                      Blog? What blog...?

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X