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Transition Projects Over to the Service Desk

Increase the success of project support by aligning your service desk and project team.

  • IT suffers from a lack of strategy and plan for transitioning support processes to the service desk.
  • Lack of effective communication between the project delivery team and the service desk, leads to an inefficient knowledge transfer to the service desk.
  • New service is not prioritized and categorized, negatively impacting service levels and end-user satisfaction.

Our Advice

Critical Insight

Make sure to build a strong knowledge management strategy to identify, capture, and transfer knowledge from project delivery to the service desk.

Impact and Result

  • Build touchpoints between the service desk and project delivery team and make strategic points in the project lifecycles to ensure service support is done effectively following the product launch.
  • Develop a checklist of action items on the initiatives that should be done following project delivery.
  • Build a training plan into the strategy to make sure service desk agents can handle tickets independently.

Transition Projects Over to the Service Desk Research & Tools

1. Transition Projects Over to the Service Desk – A guideline to walk you through transferring project support to the service desk.

This storyboard will help you craft a project support plan to document information to streamline service support.

2. Project Handover and Checklist – A structured document to help you record information on the project and steps to take to transfer support.

Use these two templates as a means of collaboration with the service desk to provide information on the application/product, and steps to take to make sure there are efficient service processes and knowledge is appropriately transferred to the service desk to support the service.


Transition Projects Over to the Service Desk

Increase the success of project support by aligning your service desk and project team.

Analyst Perspective

Formalize your project support plan to shift customer service to the service desk.

Photo of Mahmoud Ramin, Senior Research Analyst, Infrastructure and Operations, Info-Tech Research Group

As a service support team member, you receive a ticket from an end user about an issue they’re facing with a new application. You are aware of the application release, but you don’t know how to handle the issue. So, you will need to either spend a long time investigating the issue via peer discussion and research or escalate it to the project team.

Newly developed or improved services should be transitioned appropriately to the support team. Service transitioning should include planning, coordination, and communication. This helps project and support teams ensure that upon a service failure, affected end users receive timely and efficient customer support.

At the first level, the project team and service desk should build a strategy around transitioning service support to the service desk by defining tasks, service levels, standards, and success criteria.

In the second step, they should check the service readiness to shift support from the project team to the service desk.

The next step is training on the new services via efficient communication and coordination between the two parties. The project team should allocate some time, according to the designed strategy, to train the service desk on the new/updated service. This will enable the service desk to provide independent service handling.

This research walks you through the above steps in more detail and helps you build a checklist of action items to streamline shifting service support to the service desk.

Mahmoud Ramin, PhD

Senior Research Analyst
Infrastructure and Operations
Info-Tech Research Group

Executive Summary

Your Challenge

  • IT suffers from a lack of strategy and planning for transitioning support processes to the service desk.
  • Lack of effective communication between the project delivery team and the service desk leads to an inefficient knowledge transfer to the service desk.
  • New service is not prioritized and categorized, negatively impacting service levels and end-user satisfaction.

Common Obstacles

  • Building the right relationship between the service desk and project team is challenging, making support transition tedious.
  • The service desk is siloed; tasks and activities are loosely defined. Service delivery is inconsistent, which impacts customer satisfaction.
  • Lack of training on new services forces the service desk to unnecessarily escalate tickets to other levels and delays service delivery.

Info-Tech’s Approach

  • Build touchpoints between the service desk and project delivery team and make strategic points in the project lifecycles to ensure service support is done effectively following the product launch.
  • Develop a checklist of action items on the initiatives that should be done following project delivery.
  • Build a training plan into the strategy to make sure service desk agents can handle tickets independently.

Info-Tech Insight

Make sure to build a strong knowledge management strategy to identify, capture, and transfer knowledge from project delivery to the service desk.

A lack of formal service transition process presents additional challenges

When there is no formal transition process following a project delivery, it will negatively impact project success and customer satisfaction.

Service desk team:

  • You receive a request from an end user to handle an issue with an application or service that was recently released. You are aware of the features but don’t know how to solve this issue particularly.
  • You know someone in the project group who is familiar with the service, as he was involved in the project. You reach out to him, but he is very busy with another project.
  • You get back to the user to let them know that this will be done as soon as the specialist is available. But because there is no clarity on the scope of the issue, you cannot tell them when this will be resolved.
  • Lack of visibility and commitment to the service recovery will negatively impact end-user satisfaction with the service desk.

Project delivery team:

  • You are working on an exciting project, approaching the deadline. Suddenly, you receive a ticket from a service desk agent asking you to solve an incident on a product that was released three months ago.
  • Given the deadline on the current project, you are stressed, thinking about just focusing on the projects. On the other hand, the issue with the other service is impacting multiple users and requires much attention.
  • You spend extra time handling the issue and get back to your project. But a few days later the same agent gets back to you to take care of the same issue.
  • This is negatively impacting your work quality and causing some friction between the project team and the service desk.

Link how improvement in project transitioning to the service desk can help service support

A successful launch can still be a failure if the support team isn't fully informed and prepared.

  • In such a situation, the project team sends impacted users a mass notification without a solid plan for training and no proper documentation.
  • To provide proper customer service, organizations should involve several stakeholder groups to collaborate for a seamless transition of projects to the service desk.
  • This shift in service support takes time and effort; however, via proper planning there will be less confusion around customer service, and it will be done much faster.
    • For instance, if AppDev is customizing an ERP solution without considering knowledge transfer to the service desk, relevant tickets will be unnecessarily escalated to the project team.
  • On the other hand, the service desk should update configuration items (CIs) and the service catalog and related requests, incidents, problems, and workarounds to the relevant assets and configurations.
  • In this transition process, knowledge transfer plays a key role. Users, the service desk, and other service support teams need to know how the new application or service works and how to manage it when an issue arises.
  • Without a knowledge transfer, service support will be forced to either reinvent the wheel or escalate the ticket to the development team. This will unnecessarily increase the time for ticket handling, increase cost per ticket, and reduce end-user satisfaction.

Info-Tech Insight

Involve the service desk in the transition process via clear communication, knowledge transfer, and staff training.

Integrate the service desk into the project management lifecycle for a smooth transition of service support

Service desk involvement in the development, testing, and maintenance/change activity steps of your project lifecycle will help you logically define the category and priority level of the service and enable service level improvement accordingly after the project goes live.

Project management lifecycle

As some of the support and project processes can be integrated, responsibility silos should be broken

Processes are done by different roles. Determine roles and responsibilities for the overlapping processes to streamline service support transition to the service desk.

The project team is dedicated to projects, while the support team focuses on customer service for several products.

Siloed responsibilities:

  • Project team transfers the service fully to the service desk and leaves technicians alone for support without a good knowledge transfer.
  • Specialists who were involved in the project have deep knowledge about the product, but they are not involved in incident or problem management.
  • Service desk was not involved in the planning and execution processes, which leads to lack of knowledge about the product. This leaves the support team with some vague knowledge about the service, which negatively impacts the quality of incident and problem management.

How to break the silos:

Develop a tiered model for the service desk and include project delivery in the specialist tier.

  • Use tier 1 (service desk) as a single point of contact to support all IT services.
  • Have tier 2/3 as experts in technology. These agents are a part of the project team. They are also involved in incident management, root-cause analysis, and change management.

Determine the interfaces

At the project level, get a clear understanding of support capabilities and demands, and communicate them to the service desk to proactively bring them into the planning step.

The following questions help you with an efficient plan for support transition

Questions for support transition

Clear responsibilities help you define the level of involvement in the overlapping processes

Conduct a stakeholder analysis to identify the people that can help ensure the success of the transition.

Goal: Create a prioritized list of people who are affected by the new service and will provide support.

Why is stakeholder analysis essential?

Why is stakeholder analysis essential

Identify the tasks that are required for a successful project handover

Embed the tasks that the project team should deliver before handing support to the service desk.

Task/Activity Example

Conduct administrative work in the application

  • New user setup
  • Password reset

Update documentation

  • Prepare for knowledge transfer>
Service request fulfillment/incident management
  • Assess potential bugs
Technical support for systems troubleshooting
  • Configure a module in ITSM solution

End-user training

  • FAQs
  • How-to questions
Service desk training
  • Train technicians for troubleshooting

Support management (monitoring, meeting SLAs)

  • Monitoring
  • Meeting SLAs

Report on the service transitioning

  • Transition effectiveness
  • Four-week warranty period
Ensure all policies follow the transition activities
  • The final week of transition, the service desk will be called to a meeting for final handover of incidents and problems
Transition Projects Over to the Service Desk preview picture

About Info-Tech

Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.

We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.

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Author

Mahmoud Ramin

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