- IT infrastructure managers have conflicting accountabilities. It can be difficult to fight fires as they appear while engaging in systematic fire prevention.
- Repetitive interruptions erode faith in IT. If incidents recur consistently, why should the business trust IT to resolve them?
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- Don’t risk muddling the chain of command during a crisis. Streamline the process. When senior technical staff are working on incidents, they report to the service desk manager.
- Incidents defy planning, but problem management is schedulable. Schedule problem management; reduce unplanned work.
- Just because a problem has not caused an incident doesn’t mean it never will. Get out in front of problems. Maximize uptime.
Impact and Result
- Define the roles and responsibilities of the incident manager and the problem manager.
- Develop a critical incident management workflow that will save money by streamlining escalation.
- Create a problem management standard operating procedure that will reduce incident volume, save money, and allow upper tier support staff to engage in planned work as opposed to firefighting.
Member Testimonials
After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.
9.6/10
Overall Impact
$43,761
Average $ Saved
23
Average Days Saved
Client
Experience
Impact
$ Saved
Days Saved
Vancouver Island University
Guided Implementation
10/10
$2,000
5
Ben was super helpful, made many practical suggestions, and was very valuable in helping us to tailor the templates to meet our specific needs. Th... Read More
Hydro Tasmania
Guided Implementation
9/10
N/A
5
Loomis AB
Guided Implementation
10/10
$71,000
5
the informtation was informative and easy to understand and more on the site for me to look at. If i also have any questions Frank is available for... Read More
New York Property Insurance Underwriting Association
Workshop
10/10
N/A
N/A
The sessions were very informative, and material provided will help us improve our processes further. We've not done any RoI so I wont be able to p... Read More
Pioneer Natural Resources
Workshop
10/10
$259K
120
The workshop was exceptional. Jeremy is extremely knowledgeable. He gives relatable examples, talks specifics where applicable, and keeps things mo... Read More
Highlands County Clerk of Courts
Guided Implementation
10/10
$2,599
20
Geidea
Guided Implementation
9/10
N/A
N/A
clear explanations from Franck for Problem Management and outcome of calls very interesting, thanks. We will certainly contact Franck for Crisis Ma... Read More
State of Ohio - Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation
Workshop
9/10
N/A
N/A
The best and the worst are the same. We were given a great deal of knowledge in these sessions. That is very good. Finding the time to make the cha... Read More
SCEE
Guided Implementation
10/10
$1,719
10
Nieuport Aviation
Guided Implementation
9/10
$6,000
14
Guided Implementation
9/10
$64,999
10
Best: Validated our approach and our current path. Analyst was very knowledgable. Worse: Was about structure - yes, the uber topic is Inciden... Read More
Mount Royal University
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
It was a pleasure to meet with Sandi. She took the time to understand my needs and then directed me to the best resource and materials. San... Read More
Virginia Community College System
Workshop
10/10
N/A
20
The best part of the workshop was how the leaders skillfully walked us through the material and lead us towards a better understanding of how our o... Read More
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
Workshop
9/10
$26,649
20
The communication that the workshop engendered within our team was helpful. We had worked a lot out prior to the workshop but this helped us to ref... Read More
Oregon Secretary of State
Guided Implementation
10/10
$2,519
N/A
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP
Workshop
9/10
$30,999
5
The University of Texas at San Antonio
Guided Implementation
8/10
$68,199
120
World Bank Group
Guided Implementation
10/10
$2,519
5
I really appreciated the follow-up notes after each meeting. Especially additional resources to review and get more information from. I also enjoye... Read More
Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Guided Implementation
10/10
$100K
20
The presentation was concise and well presented. The presentation gave me food for thought as to how to rethink problem management. Thank you.
Mott MacDonald LLC
Guided Implementation
10/10
$42,750
9
Shentel Management Company
Workshop
10/10
$46,097
5
Best - Clearer Understanding of Problem vs Incident, our current configuration and what is best practices and would work better. Worst - Seeing ... Read More
University of North Texas System
Workshop
10/10
$34,099
75
Best Parts: Sharon and Paul were fabulous facilitators. We enjoyed their structured presentations and collaborative engagement. Worst Parts: None
Milwaukee Metro Sewerage District
Guided Implementation
5/10
$2,419
2
I was looking for very specific to address cultural obstacles we have in managing critical events. The information Infotech has is based upon proc... Read More
Varian Medical Systems, Inc.
Guided Implementation
10/10
$35,017
5
The validation of our direction, and the followup materials with guidance to fine-tune our methodology and metrics.
Lee County Clerk of Courts
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
Bermuda Monetary Authority
Workshop
9/10
N/A
N/A
Incident and Problem Management
Resolve service issues faster and eliminate recurring incidents.
This course makes up part of the Infrastructure & Operations Certificate.
- Course Modules: 4
- Estimated Completion Time: 2-2.5 hours
- Featured Analysts:
- John Annand, Senior Manager, Infrastructure Research
- Fred Chagnon, Research Director, Infrastructure and Operations Research
Workshop: Improve Incident and Problem Management
Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.
Module 1: Optimize Ticket Handling
The Purpose
- Improve how tickets logged, categorized, and prioritized.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Efficient ticket processing and consistent treatment of tickets based on severity.
Activities
Outputs
Review the incident lifecycle and your current challenges.
- Challenges summary.
Improve how you identify, log, and categorize incidents.
- Action items to improve initial ticket processing.
Define a ticket prioritization scheme.
Consistent ticket prioritization scheme.
Drive more efficient ticket intake.
- Streamline how users submit tickets.
Module 2: Standardize and Streamline Incident Response
The Purpose
- Clarify incident management steps, roles, and responsibilities.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Incident Management SOP and Workflows documented to drive consistent and effective incident response.
Activities
Outputs
Document your target-state Incident Management Workflow.
- Incident Management Workflow.
Document your target-state Critical Incident Response Workflow.
- Critical Incident Response Workflow.
Define SLOs and escalation rules.
- SLOs and escalation timelines.
Module 3: Incident Management Wrap-Up, and Effective Problem Management
The Purpose
- Outline a standard process for resolving problems.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Efficient and effective problem management, reducing incident recurrence and impact.
Activities
Outputs
Identify knowledgebase article candidates and create templates to expedite incident response.
- Knowledgebase article candidates identified.
Identify opportunities to improve efficiency with shift-left and automation.
- Action items to explore shift-left and automation opportunities.
Define problem management.
- Problem management parameters defined.
Standardize your problem intake process.
- Problem intake process documented.
Standardize your problem action process (investigate, root cause analysis, resolve).
Module 4: Problem Management Wrap-Up, and Next Steps
The Purpose
- Plan how you will implement improvements.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Translate ideas into action, with specific steps to implement tangible improvements in the areas of people (training), process, and technology.
Activities
Outputs
Establish appropriate problem management governance.
- Problem Management SOP updated.
Create a plan to communicate process changes.
- Initiatives to communicate process improvements.
Create a project roadmap to implement improvements.
- Project roadmap to improve incident and problem management.
Review workshop results.
- Workshop outcomes and next steps summarized.
Improve Incident and Problem Management
Rise above firefighter mode with structured incident management to enable effective problem management
EXECUTIVE BRIEF
AnalystPerspective
Keep it simple. Good data and consistent processes will help you break out of firefighter mode.
Incident management teams often find themselves too busy to create the knowledgebase (KB) articles or track the incident data that will save them time in the future. It becomes a vicious cycle that keeps them constantly in firefighter mode.
The key to breaking this cycle is to keep it simple as you seek to implement better structure and processes and right-size your approach. For example, avoid complex categorization schemes, and start with KB articles for known recurring incidents. Don’t jump to automation before you have the processes and resources to support it.
Similarly, when it comes to problem management, keep it simple by starting with Sev 1 tickets and recurring incidents that are obvious candidates for problem management. Support problem management with a consistent, structured approach that enables you to prioritize your limited resources.
As you build momentum with quick wins and better structure, improved incident management will drive more effective problem management and reduce future incidents as the incident-problem lifecycle comes full circle.
Frank Trovato
Research Director, Infrastructure and Operations
Info-Tech Research Group
Executive Summary
Your Challenge
Establish a consistent incident management process to better categorize, prioritize, and resolve incidents.
Enable faster resolution time through well-defined escalation protocols.
Prevent incidents from happening in the first place by identifying and resolving the underlying root cause via problem management.
Leverage event management to predict problems before potential incidents occur.
Common Obstacles
IT managers have conflicting accountabilities. It can be difficult to set aside time for preventing incidents (i.e., problem management) when staff are already busy resolving existing incidents and working on projects.
Resolving incidents quickly boosts confidence in IT, but recurring incidents erodes confidence, as does the need to use cumbersome workarounds.
Info-Tech’s Approach
Implement structured incident management to drive efficiency (e.g., effective use of categorization to drive appropriate ticket routing), and build out a knowledgebase to expedite future incident response.
On the problem management side, acknowledge that you have limited time for this, so start with obvious problems (e.g., recurring incidents) and then expand from there as problem management starts to reduce incident volume.
Info-Tech Insight
Effective problem management drives business value by preventing incidents, but it starts with good incident management that produces the data needed to identify problems that are driving recurring and related incidents. Specifically, logical categorization and resolution codes drive effective trend analysis to identify problems, and documenting troubleshooting, resolution details, and known errors provides a solid starting point for root cause analysis via problem management.
Common challenges to incident management success
Organizations that struggle with incident management (IM) are typically faced with these barriers:
Unresolved issues
- Tickets are not created for all incidents.
- Tickets are lost or escalated to the wrong technicians.
- Poor data impedes root-cause analysis of incidents.
Low productivity
- Lack of cross-training and knowledge sharing.
- Time is wasted troubleshooting recurring issues.
- Reports unavailable due to lack of data and poor categorization.
Poor planning
- Lack of data for effective trend analysis leads to poor demand planning.
- Lack of data leads to lost opportunities for templating and automation.
Expedite incident resolution with better data and focused documentation
ITIL Incident Mgmt. Lifecycle | Key data and documentation to improve incident management |
---|---|
1. Detection (identify, triage) | Improve ticket intake methods and triage to gather better data upfront (e.g., a web portal that can make required data mandatory). |
2. Registration (log ticket) | Capture as much detail as you can (e.g., context, affected system) to expedite troubleshooting, post-incident review, & problem management. |
3. Classification (categorize, prioritize) | Define a categorization scheme that drives appropriate ticket routing and identifying recurring incidents, but keep it simple — 3 layers max. |
4. Diagnosis (investigate) | Document known errors and KB articles for common incidents to increase first-call resolution and expedite troubleshooting. |
5. Resolution (solve, validate) | *Record solution details, update the category if necessary, and assign a resolution code to ensure more-accurate trends reporting. |
6. Closure (final updates) | Determine if a KB would expedite future troubleshooting or incident resolution. Don’t let lessons learned float away into the ether. |
*Category and resolution can also be updated at Closure if needed.
The Info-Tech difference:
- Start by analyzing your existing tickets. This translates theoretical goals and challenges into your reality.
- Identify specific issues that get in the way of better incident data and processes. Are there quick wins available?
- Define action items with a realistic time frame — short, medium, and long-term — to improve processes right-sized for your organization.
Leverage improved incident data to move from reactive to proactive mode with improved problem management
The Info-Tech difference:
- Problem management is a planned activity but with limited resources, so prioritizing your efforts is crucial.
- Start with known issues – critical incidents and recurring incidents identified through effective incident classification. This drives tangible business benefits that justify time spent on problem management.
- Not every problem has a viable or practical permanent resolution. A workaround that expedites resolving future occurrences of the incident can make more business sense, depending on the time and money needed for a permanent resolution.
STOP: Ensure you have foundational Service Desk operations before continuing
This blueprint will help you improve existing incident management processes, and then build on that foundation to implement or improve problem management.
If you need more foundational improvements to your Service Desk operations, we recommend starting with the blueprint Standardize the Service Desk.
Specifically, the following are pre-requisites for this blueprint:
- There is a formal process for submitting tickets or reporting issues (e.g., Service Desk email address, phone number, or portal).
- Ticket intake process separates incidents from service requests.
- Tier 1 roles are defined that manage ticket intake and provide first-call resolutions for low-complexity issues (e.g., forgot my password).
Info-Tech’s methodology to improve incident and problem management
1. Optimize Ticket Intake and Routing | 2. Standardize and Streamline Incident Response | 3. Establish Effective Problem Management | 4. Implement Improvements | |
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Insight summary
Shift-left starts with a good knowledge base
A good knowledge base expedites incident resolution and supports “shift-left” (e.g., enabling Tier 1 to solve incidents that would otherwise escalate to Tier 2 or 3).
Every incident is potentially an opportunity to document a solution, troubleshoot steps, or establish relevant operational documentation needed solve the incident.
If you capture this information only in the ticket or your own personal repository, you limit the ability to shift left and expedite future incident resolution.
Don’t reinvent your processes because of a critical incident
All hands on deck doesn’t mean abandoning processes. Instead, supplement your existing incident management processes to maintain structure to your response. For example:
- Alert senior IT leads in case they’re needed but follow existing processes to triage and assign the incident to the right SMEs.
- Notify affected users as usual but add appropriate updates to senior leadership.
- Leverage existing incident response collaboration methods – e.g., use the same MS Teams channel you normally use to collaborate on incidents; if necessary, set up a separate channel for leadership updates.
Apply structure to problem management to find value
Time must be allocated to problem management to get the long-term benefits. It’s not going to be driven by the urgency of an outage, but rather the foresight to predict and prevent future incidents.
Effective problem management follows a structured process to get the most out of the time allocated to this proactive effort. This includes appropriate prioritization, a root cause analysis methodology, and a decision point on whether to adopt a workaround or continue to pursue a permanent solution.
If problem management is ad-hoc or “when I have time,” something else will always take precedence.
Blueprint deliverables
Each step of this blueprint is accompanied by supporting deliverables to help you accomplish your goals:
Incident Knowledgebase Article Examples
Use the examples as a guide for your KB article templates.
Incident, Critical Incident, and Problem Workflows
Workflows are critical to communication process expectations and driving consistent execution.
Incident Status Updates and Incident Report Templates
Modify our examples to suit your requirements.
Incident and Problem Management Project Roadmap
Identify, prioritize, and present initiatives to improve incident and problem management.
Key deliverable:
SOPs for Incident Management and Problem Management
Clarify process and role expectations to improve consistency, efficiency, and effectiveness.
Blueprint benefits
IT Benefits
- Documented incident management processes clarify expectations for Tier 1, 2, and 3 roles and drive consistent process execution.
- Capturing good incident data makes it easier to identify and resolve problems.
- Similarly, promoting knowledgebase development as part of your core process (e.g., identifying KB opportunities as part of resolving a ticket) not only expedites future incident resolution but also provides input to problem management to resolve the underlying root cause.
Business Benefits
- Quicker incident resolution through better process (e.g., routing tickets to the correct SMEs) and leveraging KB articles.
- Preventing recurring incidents by resolving the root cause.
- Predicting and preventing future incidents through proactive problem management.
Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs
DIY Toolkit
“Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful.”
Guided Implementation
“Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track.”
Workshop
“We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place.”
Consulting
“Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project.”
Diagnostics and consistent frameworks used throughout all four options
Guided Implementation
What does a typical GI on this topic look like?
A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series
of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.
A typical GI is between eight and 12 calls over the course of four to six months.
Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 |
---|---|---|---|
Call #1: Scope requirements, objectives, and your specific challenges. | Call #3: Incident Management Workflows. | Call #6: Problem ticket sources. | Call #9: Plan how you will communicate changes. |
Call #2: Incident ticket intake and routing. | Call #4: Critical Incident Workflows. | Call #7: Problem management workflows. | Call #10: Create a project roadmap to implement improvements. |
Call #5: Complete the Incident Management SOP | Call #8: Complete the Problem Management SOP |
Workshop Overview
Contact your account representative for more information.
workshops@infotech.com 1-888-670-8889
Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Activities | Optimize Ticket Intake and Routing | Standardize and Streamline Incident Response | Incident Wrap-Up and Establish Effective Problem Management | Problem Management Wrap-Up and Next Steps |
1.1 Review the incident lifecycle and your current challenges. 1.2 Improve how you identify, log, and categorize incidents. 1.3 Define a ticket prioritization scheme. 1.4 Drive more efficient ticket intake. | 2.1 Document your target-state Incident Management Workflow. 2.2 Document your target-state Critical Incident Response Workflow. 2.3 Define SLOs and escalation rules. | 2.4 Identify knowledgebase article candidates and create templates to expedite incident response. 2.5 Identify opportunities to improve efficiency with shift-left and automation (introduction). 3.1 Define problem management. 3.2 Standardize your problem intake process. 3.3 Standardize your problem action process (investigate, root cause analysis, resolve). | 3.4 Establish appropriate problem management governance. 4.1 Create a plan to communicate process changes. 4.2 Create a project roadmap to implement improvements. 4.3 Review workshop results. | |
Deliverables |
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Phase 1: Optimize Ticket Intake and Routing
Phase 1
Optimize Ticket Intake and Routing
Phase 2
Standardize and Streamline Incident Response
Phase 3
Establish Effective Problem Management
Phase 4
Implement Improvements
This phase will walk you through the following steps:
- Review the incident lifecycle and your current challenges.
- Improve how you identify, log, and categorize incidents.
- Define a ticket prioritization scheme.
- Drive more efficient ticket intake.
Improve Incident and Problem Management
Step 1.1
Review the incident lifecycle and your current challenges
Activities
1.1.1 Identify challenges with your existing incident management processes
This step will guide you through the following content and activities:
- Establish a common understanding of the incident lifecycle.
- Identify challenges with your existing incident management processes.
This step involves the following participants:
- Incident Management Team (e.g., Tier 1 and 2 roles and the Incident Manager)
- Tier 3 reps from relevant IT teams (e.g., network, servers, security, apps, etc.)
Outcomes of this step
- Level-setting across the team regarding incident lifecycle stages, based on ITIL.
- High-level challenges identified with your existing incident management processes.
Blueprint pre-step: Gather your data to relate this blueprint to your reality
Before you begin this project, gather the data from your existing ticketing system.
You will use this data as you work through this blueprint to help you make decisions on what the target state of your incident management program looks like.
You will need:
- An export of your existing ticket categorization scheme; raw data is better so you can easily manipulate the data as you are analyzing it.
- Each person on the project team will pull ten tickets from each priority level you are currently using (10 sev1, 10 sev2, 10 sev3).
- A snapshot of the incident ticket interface to be able to quickly reference existing fields and functionality.
This image will help remind you to search through your own ticket data to help guide your decisions during the design phase of incident management.
Establish a common understanding of the incident lifecycle
1) Detection: User reporting an issue, event triggering an alert, and so on. Conduct initial triage/discovery. Confirm it’s an incident (for service requests, follow a separate process).
2) Registration: Create/update the ticket based on initial triage (e.g., incident details) or monitoring system that generated the alert (e.g., relevant system).
3) Classification: Categorize, prioritize, and conduct initial investigation (e.g., check KB for known errors). Escalate or re-assign if necessary.
4) Diagnosis: Additional investigation if solution not already identified. Peer discussion, check KB, and/or consult vendor. Escalate or re-assign if necessary.
5) Resolution: Apply solution (permanent fix or workaround) to restore service. If applicable, submit a change request to move the fix into production.
6) Closure: Finalize ticket details, including status (Closed). Provide final update to affected users. Identify if a KB is needed to expedite future troubleshooting or incident resolution.
Note: Ideally, steps 1 to 3 are executed by Tier 1 staff so that Tier 2 and 3 are included only when an issue needs to be escalated. This drives lower-cost resolution and frees time for Tier 2 and 3 to focus on project work, more-complex incidents, and problem management. Ticket updates occur throughout and are finalized as needed at Closure.
1.1.1 Identify challenges with your existing incident management processes
1-3 hours
Materials
- Whiteboard or flip chart
Participants
- Incident Management Team (e.g., Tier 1 and 2 roles and the Incident Manager)
- Tier 3 reps from relevant IT teams (e.g., network, servers, security, apps, etc.)
- As a group, outline the challenges or weaknesses you have in each step of the incident lifecycle. Separate the challenges into people, process, and technology for a wholistic view.
- Record those challenges for reference purposes. Phase 4 will include creating a project roadmap to address gaps and improve processes.
- Below are examples of common challenges to consider:
- Are incidents resolved at the appropriate Tier? Are Tier 2 and 3 resolving incidents that could be solved at a lower Tier?
- Any challenges with identifying ticket type, category, or severity level? Is it clear where to route tickets (e.g., based on category)?
- Is it clear when to escalate tickets? Is Tier 1 gathering enough information before escalating?
- Is ticket data updated appropriately by Tier 2 or 3 staff?
- Is there appropriate documentation available to support ticket troubleshooting (e.g., system information, relevant KB articles, etc.)?
- Any common complaints from users or executives (e.g., slow response, ticket status is unclear)?
- Below are examples of common challenges to consider: