Service Manager powered by HEAT
Analyzing and Classifying Potential Changes
•About Analyzing and Classifying Potential Changes
•Changing Urgency, Impact, and Priority
About Analyzing and Classifying Potential Changes
Effective change management involves the proper processing of requests for change. Usually, a change is driven by a configuration item that has been identified in need of a change. The configuration item is usually the purpose for a change.
Sometimes a graphical representation of the personnel, organization structure, and equipment can help you to determine how a change can affect the organization. See Working with the CI Map.
Standard change templates are used for preapproved standardized types of changes. These changes bypass the approval process. Change Managers, however, always have the option of classifying some standard changes as major or emergency, thereby making the change go through an approval process.
After a non-standard change has been requested, the Change Manager assesses the risk, the impact, the cost, and other factors that determine whether the change is feasible or not.
After a change goes into requested status, the Change Manager can decide whether the change should go forward, be deferred, or be denied. The Change Manager can determine the risk associated with the change (see Setting the Risk Level for a Change). The Change Manager can also view the CI map for a visual of the services that might be impacted by or impact the change.
Changing Urgency, Impact, and Priority
Change Managers can prioritize the change based on urgency and impact. By default, Ivanti Service Manager prioritizes change requests based on the urgency and impact, as follows:
•Impact: The impact is the extent to which the loss of service will impact the business organization. For example, if a single system is down, it will have less business impact than a server being down.
•Urgency: The affected user's tolerance for resolution delay. Urgency is usually time-related. For example, the loss of the Sales department's network printer before the end of the fiscal quarter might be assigned a greater urgency than at another time.
•Priority: The order in which it needs to be resolved, based on impact and urgency.
The default priority values are calculated as follows:
URGENCY | ||||
High | Medium | Low | ||
IMPACT |
High | 1 | 2 | 3 |
Medium | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
Low | 3 | 4 | 5 |
The priority is automatically calculated by the system and appears in the change record:
Change Priority
Change Type Fields
Based on ITIL change management categories, Ivanti Service Manager allows Change Managers to categorize changes as follows:
Category | Description |
---|---|
Minor | Small changes that have a minor impact on the organization. |
Emergency | Urgent changes that must be made. Emergency changes are typically implemented first and created after the change has been made due to the urgent nature of the change. As a result, emergency changes are typically posted to the calendar after the change has been made for auditing purposes. |
Major | These changes usually consist of a great number of items or dependencies and can also lead to other associated change requests. |
Significant | These changes have a large significant impact on the organization. |
Standard | These changes are routine, understood, and generally accepted changes that the entire organization understands as necessary for normal operations. As a result, the approval board does not need to meet and accept a standard change. Changes of this type are generally performed on a regular basis. These changes are preapproved. Some of the changes that are created from a service request fall into this category. The customer is already entitled to the service, so approval is not necessary. |
Was this article useful?
The topic was:
Inaccurate
Incomplete
Not what I expected
Other
Copyright © 2017, Ivanti. All rights reserved.