Snow ITIL Implementation Guide
Snow ITIL Implementation Guide
Snow ITIL Implementation Guide
PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Sat, 15 Mar 2014 17:57:23 PST
Service Design
Service Level Management
The Service Level Management process is designed to ensure customer satisfaction within IT service processes. Service level agreements are made between the IT staff and the customers, and the IT desk must monitor their performance as compared to the agreements. In addition, underpinning contracts with external vendors and operational level agreements with internal vendors ensures that these service level agreements are feasible. To find out how ServiceNow implements Service Level Management, visit ITIL Service Level Management.
Availability Management
The Availability Management process ensures that availability within a system is kept as close to 100% as possible. By both reacting to past service failures, and planning to avoid future service failures, Availability Management can greatly increase end-user satisfaction with services. To find out how ServiceNow implements Availability Management, visit ITIL Availability Management.
Capacity Management
The Capacity Management process is designed to ensure that business services are not made unavailable by over-capacity. By analyzing past failures and planning for growth of demand of services, Capacity Management can increase end-user satisfaction with services. To find out how ServiceNow implements Capacity Management, visit ITIL Capacity Management.
Supplier Management
Supplier Management is a process that defines and monitors agreements between an IT department and an external supplier. To find out how ServiceNow implements Supplier Management, visit ITIL Supplier Management.
Service Transition
Change Management
The Change Management process ensures that standardized methods and procedures are used for efficient and prompt handling of all changes to minimize the impact of change related incidents on service quality. Consequently, change management aims to improve the day-to-day operation of the organization. IT-related changes that may affect one or many customers are tracked with Change Management. Adding memory to one machine, getting a new server, and installing the latest Windows OS on all PCs are all examples.To find out how ServiceNow implements Change Management, visit ITIL Change Management.
Knowledge Management
The Knowledge Management process ensures that important information flows freely throughout the IT organization. Knowledge Management keeps the CMDB and knowledge base of an organization up-to-date, and uses a Knowledge-Centered Support approach to reduce repeat incidents and problems. For more information on how ServiceNow implements Knowledge Management, visit Knowledge Management with KCS
Asset Management
Asset Management enables a process of monitoring processes, organizations, people, information, applications, infrastructure, and financial capital within an organization. This allows the organization to collect accurate records of these business components, making them available for both internal and external auditing processes. To find out how out ServiceNow implements Asset Management, visit ITIL Asset Management.
Configuration Management
Configuration Management provides a logical model of the infrastructure or a service by identifying, controlling, maintaining and verifying the Configuration Items in existence. To find out how ServiceNow implements Configuration Management, visit ITIL Configuration Management.
Release Management
This discipline of IT Service Management is the management of all software configuration items within the organization. It is responsible for the management of software development, installation and support of an organization's software products. Software Control & Distribution procedures include the management of the software Configuration Items and their distribution and implementation into a production environment. This involves the definition of a release program suitable for the organization, the definition of how version control is implemented, and the procedures surrounding how software is built, released and audited. To find out how out ServiceNow implements Release Management, visit ITIL Release Management.
Service Operation
Request Fulfillment Management
The Request Fulfillment Management process responds to customers' requests for services and items in a timely and effective manner. For information on how ServiceNow implements Request Fulfillment Management, visit ITIL Request Fulfillment Management.
Event Management
The Event Management process analyzes and responds to events, ensuring that other processes are triggered at the appropriate time. Event management is involved with starting and maintaining processes based on events. To find out how ServiceNow implements Event Management, visit ITIL Event Management.
Incident Management
The Incident Management process aims to restore normal service operation as quickly as possible and minimize the adverse impact on business operations. This ensures that the best possible levels of service quality and availability are maintained. To find out how ServiceNow implements Incident Management, visit ITIL Incident Management.
Problem Management
The process of Problem Management diagnoses the underlying cause of the incidents identified by the Service Desk. It arranges for correcting errors in the IT infrastructure and performs proactive problem prevention. To find out how ServiceNow implements Problem Management, visit ITIL Problem Management.
Facilities Management
Facilities Management is a process for maintaining and operating facilities associated with an IT organization. To find out how ServiceNow implements Facilities Management, visit ITIL Facilities Management
Service Design
Service Level Management
Overview
In any IT process, it is imperative to guarantee a certain level of service to customers. In order to do so, the IT desk must also receive guarantees of certain levels of service from both internal and external providers. These guarantees are Service Level Agreements, Underpinning Contracts, and Operational Level Agreements. The ServiceNow platform allows these guarantees to be codified within the system, and dynamically tailored to specific contexts.
Availability Management
Overview
The goal of Availability Management is to ensure that IT services are available at all times. This involves monitoring and analyzing services and their components, analyzing past failures, and planning ahead to avoid future ones. Availability management teams can use ServiceNow to collect important information and propose changes.
Availability Tools
Asset and Configuration Management
The Asset and Configuration Management applications, including the CMDB, provide an availability management team with information about the assets and configuration items within the network, as well as their relationships. This can provide the availability management team with crucial information to both understand past outages and prevent future outages. For more information, visit ITIL Asset Management and ITIL Configuration Management. With the Discovery product, these applications are auto-populated with accurate, up-to-date information from the network. One important table of information within the CMDB is the cmdb_ci_outage which tracks both planned and unplanned outages. With the establishment of a business rule, the cmdb_ci_outage table can be automatically populated with unplanned outages as they occur, and can be created as part of a change process. The Baseline CMDB Plugin extends the CMDB functionality with certain important enhancements. With the plugin, it is possible to take a snapshot of the CMDB labeled 'baseline' to have as a reference, and to automatically update CIs once changes are complete. The Enterprise CMDB Plugin also extends CMDB functionality to deal with large CMDBs.
Availability Management
Change Management
The Change Management application allows the availability management team to plan and coordinate changes. A change management task can be created and ushered through a defined workflow. For more information on the change management tools, see ITIL Change Management.
Capacity Management
Overview
The goal of Capacity Management is to ensure that IT services are available at all times by monitoring the capacity of the services. This involves monitoring and analyzing services and their components, analyzing past failures, and planning ahead to avoid future ones. Capacity management teams can use ServiceNow to collect important information and propose changes.
Capacity Tools
Asset and Configuration Management
The Asset and Configuration Management applications, including the CMDB, provide an capacity management team with information about the assets and configuration items within the network, as well as their relationships. This can provide the capacity management team with crucial information to both understand past outages and prevent future outages. For more information, visit ITIL Asset Management and ITIL Configuration Management. With the Discovery product, these applications are auto-populated with accurate, up-to-date information from the network. The Baseline CMDB Plugin extends the CMDB functionality with certain important enhancements. Withe the plugin, it is possible to take a snapshot of the CMDB labeled 'baseline' to have as a reference, and to automatically update CIs once changes are complete. The Enterprise CMDB Plugin also extends CMDB functionality to deal with large CMDBs.
Change Management
The Change Management application allows the availability management team to plan and coordinate changes. A change management task can be created and ushered through a defined workflow. For more information on the change management tools, see ITIL Change Management.
Supplier Management
Supplier Management
Overview
The goal of Supplier Management is to ensure the reliability and cost-effectiveness of outside suppliers. The supplier management team negotiates contracts with external suppliers, and regularly reviews these contracts to ensure that they are being met. The ServiceNow platform provides tools for defining and monitoring these contracts.
Note: The standard service catalog and request fulfillment setup can be extended with a variety of features to provide more flexible design and more powerful features for service catalog offerings. See Extending the Service Catalog for more information.
Enhancements
Dublin
Administrators can create service catalog record producers directly from the table record. Users can access the service catalog from mobile devices. On catalog item records, the Model field is now visible by default. The field is automatically populated for items created by publishing models.
Calgary
The following enhancements are available starting with the Calgary release: Searching and navigation enhancements. New reference qualifier variables. Support for catalog UI policy and catalog client scripts in Service Catalog Wizard screens. Catalog variable data lookup support. Support for HTML variables. Setting recurring prices on catalog items. Use of renderers to customize category look-and-feel. Coordination with Cloud Provisioning.
In addition, new catalog properties are available, to configure: Behavior for classes of catalog items. For example, use glide.sc.item.cannot_add_to_request to specify a list of class names for catalog items that cannot be added to an existing request. Display and view of categories in the service catalog. For example, use glide.sc.use_sub_cat_section to display subcategories in a panel. Search behavior. For example, use glide.sc.search.disabled_cats to search inactive categories. Catalog item displays. For example, use glide.sc.max_items to configure the number of catalog items or categories to preview in a section. CMS behavior. For example, use glide.sc.search.cms_page to specify a specific service catalog search page for CMS.
Service Transition
Change Management
Overview
Change Management helps organizations understand and work to minimize risks of changes to the IT environment. It is essentially a process for managing the people-side of change. ServiceNow helps implement your Change Management process by providing on-demand capabilities for creating, assessing, approving and implementing changes to your environment. Within the platform, changes are handled using the task record system. Each change is generated through a variety of means as a task record, populated with the pertinent information in individual fields. These tasks can be assigned to appropriate change management team members, who will deal with the task as appropriate. Once the change has been properly implemented, it is closed.
Change Management Risk - In addition to manually evaluating the risk involved in a change, it is possible to install the Best Practice Change Risk Calculator to assist in this aspect of the process. Schedule - Includes a requested by date, a planned start and end date, and work start and end dates. This can be integrated with Outlook so that the change schedule will appear in Outlook's calendar. Note that changes made to the schedule in Outlook will not change the change record. Change/Backout/Test Plans Change Tasks - Can either be generated manually or created from a workflow. If Change Management Workflows is installed, the ITIL best practice workflow appropriate to the specified type (see above) will be used. Approvers - Can either be generated manually, using an approval engine, or generated from a workflow. Problems - If the change was generated from a problem, this related list will be automatically populated. Otherwise, this can be populated by hand. Affected CIs - a list of configuration items (from the CMDB) that will be affected by the change. Impacted Services - a list of business services (from the CMDB) that will be affected by the change.
10
Planning Changes
Changes can be planned directly in the change record, but for complex, multi-step changes, Project Management allows specificity of planning. Projects in the Project plugin can organize many layers of tasks, and present the tasks as a Gantt Chart timeline.
Authorizing Changes
Approvals for changes can be specified in one of several ways. Specified by hand, using the Approvers related list Generated using an Approval Rule Generated using a workflow. Using automated approvals, emails will be sent out informing the appropriate user that they need to approve the change. They can either update the Approval field on the form, or can simply respond to the email if the appropriate inbound email action is configured.
Closing Changes
Once the change has come to an end, and the change has been tested and confirmed, the change can be closed by changing the state. If the change was generated from an incident or problem, a business rule can be configured to automatically close them upon closing the change.
Knowledge Management
11
Knowledge Management
Overview
The knowledge management process ensures that important information flows freely throughout the IT department and to the entire organization. For organizations using knowledge centered support (KCS) processes, this information is also part of the incident management and problem management processes. By storing and making available information about common problems and issues, knowledge centered support helps prevent future redundant incidents. The ServiceNow Knowledge Base application provides role-based tools to create, store, and publish this important information. It also provides tools for all users to find and view the information as needed.
Published
Edit Retired
Feedback
View
Knowledge Management
12
Open Submissions
Lists all knowledge submissions with Status set to Submitted or Assigned. Review the record to determine whether to assign the submission to a knowledge worker, create an article and submit it for approval, or reject the submission and note the reason. Submissions are created only when the [Knowledge Workflow#Enabling Knowledge Submission Workflowknowledge submission workflow is enabled. To list submissions that have been closed, create a filter by clicking the arrow beside the breadcrumbs.. KCS
Flagged Articles
Lists articles that have been flagged as incomplete or inaccurate by users. Open the record to read the user's comment in the Knowledge Feedback related list and to modify the article as needed. This module is available only to users with admin or knowledge_admin role.
Ratings
Lists ratings from users. Click the Created date to open the rating record. Click the article number to open the article. This module is available only to users with admin or knowledge_admin role.
Search Log
Lists records of knowledge searches showing the search term and the number of results returned. Use this information to determine whether users are finding what they need in the knowledge base. This module is available only to users with admin or knowledge_admin role.
Overview
Opens the Knowledge Management homepage. Use the links at the top of the page to add content to the page or change its layout. This module is available only to users with admin or knowledge_admin role. Administration
Lets you add links on the knowledge portal to different search engines or related websites. This module is available only to users with admin or knowledge_admin role. Lets you configure the knowledge base. This module is available only to users with admin role.
Messages
Lets you customize the text that appears in various knowledge base locations, such as button labels, category names, and feedback options. This module is available only to users with admin role.
Using Knowledge
All users of the ServiceNow application can access the knowledge portal to search, where they can search for and view knowledge articles and provide feedback to help improve the knowledge base. For more information, see Using the Knowledge Base and Searching Knowledge..
Creating Knowledge
You can provide knowledge content: By creating new articles in the Knowledge form. By linking to content in other knowledge systems. From existing incidents. From existing problems. From the service catalog. From events by creating a business rule to generate relevant knowledge. By publishing managed documents to the knowledge base
Administrators can enable the knowledge submission workflow to have new knowledge articles created as submissions that are moderated by knowledge workers before they are published.
Knowledge Management
13
Translating Knowledge
Organizations with knowledge users who speak multiple languages can activate the optional knowledge internationalization features. For more information, see Knowledge Internationalization.
Asset Management
Overview
IT Asset Management (ITAM) integrates the physical, technological, contractual, and financial aspects of information technology assets. ITAM business practices have a common set of goals: Control inventory that is purchased and used. Reduce the cost of purchasing and managing assets. Select the proper tools for managing assets. Manage the asset life cycle from planning to disposal. Achieve compliance with relevant standards and regulations. Improve IT service to end users. Create standards and processes for managing assets.
Most successful ITAM programs involve a variety of people and departments, including IT, finance, services, and end users. Asset management and configuration management (CMDB) are related, but have different goals. Asset management focuses on the financial tracking of company property. Configuration management focuses on building and maintaining elements that create an available network of services. The Asset Management application is available and automatically activated starting with the Berlin release. This application includes significant updates to the asset management functionality. For information on asset management functionality in releases prior to Berlin, see Asset Portfolio.
Asset Management services. Scanned data can be mapped directly into the configuration management database (CMDB). 2. Clean up information in the CMDB. Remove information that is obsolete or invalid. Ensure that all remaining information is accurate and complete. Add any necessary information. 3. Create categories of asset models such as computers, servers, printers, and software. If you are upgrading from a release prior to Berlin, use this step to migrate assets by setting an asset class. 4. Create asset models. Models are specific versions or various configurations of an asset, such as a MacBook Pro 17". 5. Create individual assets, such as hardware, consumables, and software licenses. If you used a discovery tool, you may already have many assets identified accurately. 6. Manage assets by counting software licenses, viewing assets that are in stock, setting asset states and substates, and analyzing unallocated software.
14
Enhancements
Dublin
Users can enter an asset depreciation effective date that is in the future. Users cannot enter a salvage value greater than the cost of an asset. This prevents negative depreciation amount calculations. Administrators can link a software vendor item to the software catalog for viewing. Administrators can force the creation of an asset manually from the Model Category form if no asset was created when the asset class was selected. Users with the asset role can access reports. These additional global reports on asset information are available: Asset Depreciation, Assets by Department, Assets by Location, Assets under Contract, List of Printers A gauge called Pending Asset Retirements replaces the Expiring Asset Contracts gauge, which appears in the Contract Management Overview module.
Asset Management
15
Calgary
Hardware models can now have a depreciation schedule. Based on the information specified in the asset record, the depreciation amount is automatically calculated daily using a scheduled job. Hardware models can now have disposal instructions. Information such as retired date, resale price, beneficiary, and disposal reason can be added. Fixed assets can now be created as containers for multiple assets. Depreciation can be added to fixed assets. When using stock rules and selecting the Vendor restocking option, a task is now created for the stockroom manager in addition to an email notification being sent. A new Product Catalog application enables you to organize all information about assets and models, and coordinate with the service catalog. This improves the quality of information and the ordering experience from within the service catalog. A new Procurement application enables you to track requests from the service catalog, create and manage purchase orders, source request items, and receive assets.
Berlin
A new model structure is introduced. Groups of items can now be organized into model categories in the completely redesigned model table. Model categories define how assets, configuration items, and other items (for example, contracts, consumables, and licenses) are related to each other. Bundled models, a model comprised of models, are now available. Assets are now in a separate table named Asset [alm_asset]. Prior to the Berlin release, assets were included in the Configuration Item [cmdb_ci] table. Removing assets from the cmdb_ci table provides more flexibility to build new features into the Asset Management application in the future and helps prevent the cmdb_ci table from growing too large. There is a relationship between the cmdb_ci table and the new alm_asset table. For example, assets linked to a configuration item (CI) can be seen on the CI form. Conversely, a CI linked to an asset is visible on the asset form. The relationship between CIs and assets helps customers that are tracking assets in the CMDB using a previous version - all information and reports are preserved when upgrading. Two new asset forms are added for consumables and bundles. The updated hardware and software asset forms are backward compatible and can be personalized to include the Old status and Old substatus fields. Asset status is now consolidated into two fields on the asset form: state and substate. (Prior to the Berlin release, there were five state fields in the CMDB.) Stock rules are available to help control stock levels. When stock levels go below a set threshold, an asset manager can be notified by email (and then generate a vendor order) or an automatic transfer can be done from one stockroom to another. Transfer order lines allow multiple assets on one transfer order. Prior to the Berlin release, one transfer order needed to be created per asset. Certain actions, such as shipment preparation and placing an asset in transit, can take place at the order level or the line level. Domain separated systems can use the updated version of asset management starting with the Berlin release.
Configuration Management
16
Configuration Management
Overview
Build and maintain the logical service configurations of the infrastructure and application domains that support a service. These logical service configurations are mapped with the physical configuration / inventory data of the supporting infrastructure and application elements in the respective domains. They track the physical and logical state of IT service elements and associate incidents to the state of service elements, which helps in analyzing trends and reducing problems and incidents. The configurations are stored in a configuration management database (CMDB) which consists of entities, called Configuration Items (CI), that are part of your environment. A CI may be: A physical entity, such as a computer or router A logical entity, such as an instance of a database Conceptual, such as a Requisition Service In each case, there are attributes about the CI that you want to maintain, and there is control you want to have over the CI. There are changes that may need to be made and tracked against the CI. Also, to be sure, a CI does not exist on its own. CI's have dependencies and relationship with other CI's. For example, the loss of a bank of disk drives may take a database instance down, which effects the requisition service that the HR department uses to order equipment for new employees. It is this relationship data that makes the CMDB a powerful decision support tool. Understanding the dependencies and other relationships among your CIs can tell you, for example, exactly who and what is effected by the loss of that bank of disk drives. When you find out that a router has failed, you will be able to determine who is affected by that outage. When you decide to upgrade the processor in a server, you can tell who or what will be effected during the outage. Configuration Items are a personal issue, because each customer has a unique environment. Details about the exact physical attributes of a computer may be needed by one customer, but may just represent meaningless data to another. ServiceNow therefore provides a mechanism to easily define new classes of Configuration Items and new relationships that may exist between CI's. New classes can be defined that extend other classes. For example, a laptop class exists that extends the computer class. The computer class itself extends the base CI class. Customer class extensions are automatically part of the ServiceNow environment and blend seamlessly into the integration points for other ITIL processes. Relationships between CI's can be displayed in a hierarchical fashion, and adding or removing relationship instances is done with a simple double-click of your mouse. For a more detailed description of relationships click here.
Auto-Discovery
The key to any Configuration Management business practice is the initial and on-going inventory or discovery of what you own. ServiceNow provides three options for auto-discovery: 1. Our separate and highly robust Discovery product. 2. ServiceNow provides a lightweight native discovery tool, Help the Help Desk, as part of the overall CMDB. Help the Help Desk enables organizations to proactively scan their network to discover all Windows-based PCs and the software packages installed on those PCs. This WMI-based discovery is included in the core ServiceNow functionality, in the Self Service application, at no additional cost. 3. For organizations that want to leverage the discovery technologies they already have deployed (SMS, Tally NetCensus, LanDesk etc.), ServiceNow can support integration to those technologies via Web Services. Scanned
17
Integration
The CMDB has relationships with IT service management processes in the following areas.
Financial Management
With the Cost Management Plugin, costs can be associated with configuration items, so that the cost associated with Configuration Management can be tracked, and bundled into expense lines, budgets, or cost centers.
Release Management
18
Release Management
Overview
Release Management encompasses the planning, design, build, configuration and testing of hardware and software releases to create a defined set of release components. ServiceNow handles releases using the task record system. Each planned feature is generated through a variety of means as a task record, populated with the pertinent information in individual fields. These tasks can be assigned to appropriate release management team members, who will deal with the task as appropriate until the release has been properly deployed. Release Management can be effectively used to coordinate releases as a vehicle for planning releases, composed of individual features. Once a release is finalized, a Change Item can be generated (using a custom-built UI Action), allowing the implementation and deployment of a release to be handled within the change management process.
Release Management
19
20
Service Operation
Request Fulfillment Management
Overview
When a user orders a catalog item, ServiceNow creates a request and attaches the catalog item attached to it. The processing of this request (request fulfillment) is driven by a fulfillment process that must be defined. This process lets administrators automate requesting approvals, assigning requests, and fulfilling requests, using tools similar to those used elsewhere in task administration or workflow. To define the fulfillment process, administrators need to: 1. Set up fulfillment groups to perform the work. 2. Define the fulfillment processes those groups use to perform the work.
21
Workflows
Service catalog workflows allow administrators to easily define a complex, multi-step process for fulfilling and approving the request. Service catalog workflows can be defined using the graphical workflow editor, allowing you to: Edit workflows graphically Modify Activities and Conditions Define transitions between workflow activities Summarize workflow progress through Stages Validate workflows to identify potential problems Publish workflows for other users
ServiceNow typically recommends using workflows for request fulfillment processes. For more information, see Defining a Service Catalog Workflow.
Execution Plans
Execution plans allow you to describe simple, linear processes. Although execution plans are useful in some circumstances (for example, if you need to build your processes programmatically or through imports), ServiceNow typically recommends using workflows for request fulfillment processes. For more information, see Using Execution Plans.
Event Management
Overview
The goal of Event Management is to detect and analyze events and determine the appropriate process for dealing with the events. This can include categorizing opened tickets, automating processes, comparing performance/behavior against Service Level Agreements, and creating the basis of service improvement and reporting. The ServiceNow platform tracks these events in a number of System Logs, and can respond to them in automated ways using specific policies.
System Logs
The platform contains a number of logs in the System Logs applications which can be viewed, reported on, or used as the basis of automated policies (see below). These logs include: Transactions Emails Events Imports Warnings Errors
The platform also provides a log file browser, as well as allowing a log file download.
Event Management
22
Each of these rules are customizable in the form of IF/THEN: they search for a set of conditions and, once the conditions are triggered, perform a script or task. Because of the extreme flexibility of these event rules, they can be incorporated into any process in a variety of ways, requiring only a knowledge of the appropriate script.
Task Interceptor
Most of the ITIL processes in ServiceNow are driven by task records of a particular type. By creating a particular type of task, the user already defines what process will handle the task created. If a user attempts to create a generic task, the task interceptor will first ask them what type of task record they'd like to create. Once the user specifies a type, they are taken to the form for that type of record. In that way, users are prevented from creating tickets or tasks without already directing which process will handle them.
Business Rules
Business rules provide the flexibility to create automated responses to any event. Out-of-box, there are hundreds of business rules that power many of the functions within the platform. Business rules have two crucial elements: the conditions and the script. The business rule is triggered if the conditions are met, and runs the script. For instance, one business rule called Post Outage to News is triggered if a business critical business service changes operational status. That is the condition. If that condition is met, it runs a script which checks the new operational status. If the new operational status is down, then the script creates a knowledge base article in the News category informing users of an outage of a business critical service. Clearly, business rules can be used to automate many processes within the system. This allows IT staff in any department to focus their energies on solving the real-world problems and less time keeping the system accurate.
Events
One use for business rules is to dynamically generate an event in the Event Log. This creates a log of notable events, as distinguished from the system log. Furthermore, email notifications (see below) use events as their trigger.
Email Notifications
Email notifications are a crucial communication tool, keeping users informed of information that concerns them. In fact, between email notifications and inbound email actions (see below), some users find that they can go for weeks at a time without visiting their instance in the browser, using email to send and receive communication from the system.
Event Management Unlike business rules, email notifications require no scripting knowledge. Email notifications are triggered by events (see above). The administrator writes a simple form email that will be sent out every time a certain event occurs. The email notification form allows pasting of variables that will call up fields from whatever table is generating the email notification. For instance, an email notification generated by an incident can contain in the body information about who opened the incident, what priority the incident is, and what the incident's description is. Users can enable or disable the email notifications for themselves. Users who receive email notifications can respond to the email, which will trigger an inbound email action. Users can also specify more specific rules regarding which email notifications to receive if the Subscription Based Notifications Plugin is installed.
23
System Scheduler
The system scheduler is another method of automating scripts. A schedule item in the system scheduler specifies an interval and run time for the script, and the script itself. This can be useful for automating operational tasks, such as cleaning temporary files and periodically cleaning certain tables. This can also be used, however, for any automated task that uses a specific time interval as its condition.
Workflow
Workflows are defined processes that generate events based on a defined process. At each step in a workflow, the workflow generates an activity. Once the activity has been responded, the workflow generates the next activity based on how the last activity was resolved. For instance, one common workflow activity is an approval. The workflow generates the request for an approval, and once the user responds, the workflow will generate the next task based on whether the request was approved or rejected. This allows standard ITIL processes to be codified as workflows, and the standard events within that workflow to be dynamically generated within the workflow.
Approval Engines
Approval engines are used both within the workflow and independent of them. Approval engines create approval events and connect them to the appropriate approval party, allowing automation of certain approval processes. There are two options for approval engines: Approval Rules Process Guides Approval rules are the simpler of the two, and are specialized versions of business rules. They search for conditions, and once the conditions are triggered, run an approval script. For instance, the approval rule Catalog Request Approval >$1000 looks for any catalog requests where approvals have not yet been requested, and the price of the request is greater than $1000. If such a request is created, the approval rule requests an approval from the Catalog
Event Management Request Approvers, and automatically changes the catalog request state to Requested. Process guides are the more robust version of the approval engine. Whereas the approval rule creates one approval request, the process guide sets in motion a series of steps in an approval process. The process guide searches for a set of conditions, and once the conditions are approved, initiates the first step in the approval process. Once that defined process step is complete, it continues to the next process step, and so on until the process is complete. These two processes help automate and drive the necessary approval tasks, and put in place standard procedures for approval events.
24
Assignment Rules
Similar to approval rules, assignment rules are a specialized business rule that searches for conditions and then runs an assignment script. This is used to auto-assign tasks to appropriate parties. An incident that has a category of Database can be auto-assigned to the database group. Some assignment rules can become very sophisticated, such as the Assignment Based on Workload Script, which assigns a task to the user within a group who has the least amount of work already assigned to them.
External Events
Operational events, and other events generated by event management systems outside of the platform, can be integrated into the platform so that information flows between both systems. To see which integrations are available and learn how to implement them, visit Integration portal.
Delegations
Service Delegation enables a user to delegate assignments, approvals, and email notifications for a specific period of time. This prevents events from being directed towards a user who is on vacation, or otherwise indisposed. The Group On-Call Rotation Plugin adds the ability to specify on-call rotations. This means that when an event is automatically assigned to a specific group, the on-call rotation functionality ensures that the users who are on-call at the time that the event is created are the recipients of the event. This prevents high-priority incidents from being assigned to off-duty support members.
Incident Management
25
Incident Management
Overview
The goal of incident management is to restore normal service operation as quickly as possible following an incident, while minimizing impact to business operations and ensuring quality is maintained. The ServiceNow platform supports the incident management process with the ability to log incidents, classify according to impact and urgency, assign to appropriate groups, escalate, and manage through to resolution and reporting. Any ESS user can log in to ServiceNow to record the incident and track it though the entire incident life cycle until service has been restored and the issue has been completely resolved. Within the platform, incidents are handled with the task record system. Each incident is generated through a variety of methods as a task record, and populated with the pertinent information in individual fields. These tasks can be assigned to appropriate service desk members, who will deal with the task as appropriate. Once the incident has been properly dealt with, it is closed. ServiceNow also supports many integrations with outside software. To find out more, visit the integration portal.
Note: The incident alert management application allows you to manage communications around high-priority incidents, and is available starting with the Dublin release.
Identifying Incidents
In addition to having users log incidents, it is possible to automatically generate incidents from pre-established conditions. Business rules use JavaScript to generate an incident after a certain series of conditions has been met. It is also possible to generate incidents from outside the platform with SOAP messaging.
Logging Incidents
By default, any user can create an incident within the system. There are a number of ways to do this provided in the base system: Employee Self Service: ITIL users or administrators can use the Create New module in the Incident application, or select New from the Incident list. The Watch list, Incident state, and Impact fields is available on the ESS view of the Incident form and the variable formatter is not available. ESS users have write access to the Watch list and Impact fields. Record Producers: Using the Create a New Incident record producer in the service catalog. (Note that this record producer sets the Contact Type field of the resulting incident to Self-Service.) Inbound Email Actions: An email addressed to the instance mailbox can create an incident according to inbound email actions.
Incident Management
26
Categorizing Incidents
Incident forms have fields for category and subcategory, which allow for easy classification of incidents. These categories can be used by the system to create automatic assignment rules or notifications. For instance, with a certain assignment rule, an incident with a category of Database could automatically be assigned to a Database group that always handles database issues. Another important category for incidents is the incident state. This allows the service desk to track how much work has been done and what the next step in the process might be. For more information, see Categorizing Incidents.
Prioritization of Incidents
ITIL uses three metrics for determining the order in which incidents are processed. All three are supported by Incident forms: Impact: The effect an incident has on business. Urgency: The extent to which the incident's resolution can bear delay. Priority: How quickly the service desk should address the incident. ITIL suggests that priority be made dependent on impact and urgency. In the base system, this is true on Incident forms. Priority is generated from urgency and impact according to the following data lookup rules (Berlin release):
Impact 1 - High 1 - High 1 - High Urgency 1 - High Priority 1 - Critical
2 - Medium 1 - High
2 - Medium 2 - Medium 3 - Moderate 2 - Medium 3 - Low 3 - Low 3 - Low 3 - Low 1 - High 4 - Low 3 - Moderate
By default, the Priority field is read-only and must be set by selecting Impact and Urgency values. To change how priority is calculated, administrators can either alter the priority lookup rules or disable the Priority is managed by Data Lookup - set as read-only UI policy and create their own business logic.
Versions prior to Berlin Instances on Aspen or earlier versions calculate priority with the calculatePriority business rule. Earlier versions do not include any UI policy on the Priority field, so users can override the automatically generated priority value by simply changing the value.
Incident Management
27
Escalation of Incidents
The platform has a built-in system of escalation rules which can ensure that incidents are handled speedily. Two escalators are available in the system: Service Level Agreements: SLAs monitor the progress of the incident according to defined rules. As time passes, the SLA will dial up the priority of the incident, and leave a marker as to its progress. SLAs can also be used as a performance indicator for the service desk. Inactivity Monitors: The inactivity monitors prevent incidents from slipping through the cracks by generating an event, which in turn can create an email notification or trigger a script, when an incident has gone a certain amount of time without being updated.
Incident Management
28
Closure of Incidents
Closed incidents will be filtered out of view, but will remain in the system for reference purposes. Closed incidents can be reopened if the user or service desk believes that it needs to be reopened. Incidents that are on the Related Incidents list of a problem can be configured to close automatically when the problem is closed through business rules. If the knowledge check box is selected, a business rule is triggered by closing the incident, and a knowledge article is generated with the information from the incident. This is useful for knowledge management, and knowledge-centered support, reducing the number of repeat incidents by distributing the information related to the incident. It is also possible to generate customer satisfaction surveys upon closure of incidents. This allows the service desk to gather information about their quality of service directly from the user.
Problem Management
29
Problem Management
Overview
Problem Management helps to identify the cause of an error in the IT infrastructure that is usually reported as occurrences of related incidents. Resolving a problem means fixing the error that will stop these incidents from occurring in the future. While Incident Management deals with fighting symptoms to incidents, Problem Management seeks to remove the causes of incidents permanently from the IT infrastructure. Problem resolution and elimination of root cause often calls for applying a change to the configuration item in the existing IT environment. The ServiceNow platform supports the Problem Management process with capabilities to record problems, create knowledge from problems, request changes, assign to appropriate groups, escalate, and manage through to resolution and reporting. This page attempts to detail the out-of-box functionality provided by the platform to manage problems in accordance with the ITIL process. Within the platform, problems are handled using the task record system. Each problem is generated through a variety of means as a task record, populated with the pertinent information in individual fields. These tasks can be assigned to appropriate problem management team members, who will deal with the task as appropriate. Once the problem has been properly dealt with, the problem task is closed.
Problem Management
30
As a problem is updated, email notifications will be sent to concerned parties. If inbound email actions are specified, the problem can be updated via email. The platform has an in-built system of Escalations rules which can ensure that problems are handled speedily. Two escalators are available in the system: Service Level Agreements - SLAs monitor the progress of the problem according to defined rules. As time passes, the SLA will dial up the priority of the problem, and leave a marker as to its progress. SLAs can also be used as a performance indicator for the problem management team. Inactivity Monitors - The inactivity monitors prevent incidents from slipping through the cracks by generating an event (which in turn can create an email notification or trigger a script) when a problem has gone a certain amount of time without being updated.
Resolving Problems
If a problem needs a change in order to be resolved, it is possible to request a change, which will be then resolved using the change management process. Once a change has been requested, the problem will appear on a related list on the change item's form. Once the problem is associated with a change item, change the Problem State to Pending Change. It is possible to create a business rule that will close the problem automatically if the change it is associated with is closed. This automates the process of closing problems that are Pending Change. It is also possible to create a business rule that will automatically close all incidents associated with the problem if the problem is closed. If a problem's cause has been determined but there is no permanent fix, changing the Problem State to Known Error communicates this fact to the IT staff. This helps reduce the time spent on incidents dealing with the known problem by making known errors easy to find, automatically creating a list of Known Errors. To communicate knowledge related to this problem to users, Create Knowledge from Problem can either communicate a workaround, create a knowledge base article, or create a news item. This is important in the Knowledge-Centered Support process, which reduces repeat incidents and problems, and in the Knowledge Management process.
Facilities Management
31
Facilities Management
ITIL Facilities Management Facilities Management
Overview
Facilities Management is a process by which an IT organization can maintain and operate its facilities. Although the ServiceNow platform does not provide a Facilities Management application out-of-box, the easy-to-install Facilities Management plugin, available free of charge, is designed to handle this process. The platform handles the facilities management process using task request records. A user creates a request record, and a number of processes can usher the request from start to finish, automating the underlying process.
Facilities Management
32
Field Services
If the Facilities Management team includes field services, the Field Service Management Plugin provides functionality for managing field services. Included in the plugin are: Skills Management tools, which track the skills that users and groups have at their disposal. Territory Management tools, which manages the areas managed by different teams. Resource Management tools, which manages the assignment of Field Service Agents to Service Orders. Inventory Management tools, which manages parts selection and delivery. Service Order Management tools, which enables the creation of Service Orders.
33
34