
Welcome to the ITIL Course — Start your ITIL and ITSM learning journey with a practical overview of service management, course structure, real-world scenarios, and how ITIL supports modern digital service delivery.
Understand the difference between ITIL 4 and ITIL Foundation Version 5, including how modern ITIL connects ITSM practices with digital products, services, value, and transformation.
Learn why ITIL evolved beyond traditional IT support toward digital product and service management, cloud, AI, user experience, and business value.
Compare digital products and digital services using practical examples, and understand how ITIL helps organizations manage features, support, reliability, and user outcomes.
Explore updated ITIL value creation concepts, including outputs, outcomes, value co-creation, utility, warranty, user experience, and business impact.
Learn how ITIL applies to AI-enabled service desks, automation, cloud services, suppliers, monitoring, escalation, data protection, and human oversight.
Get a clear overview of ITIL Version 5 direction across Product, Service, Experience, Strategy, and Transformation for modern digital organizations.
Understand ITIL Foundation Bridge Version 5, transition options for ITIL 4 learners, and how to choose the right path for certification or workplace application.
See why ITIL 4 practices remain valuable for incidents, changes, problems, service desk, suppliers, configuration, service levels, and continual improvement.
Learn how to use this course whether you are new to ITIL, already studied ITIL 4, preparing for Version 5 updates, or improving practical ITSM skills.
Understand why ITIL remains relevant for IT support, cloud, cybersecurity, DevOps, digital services, governance, risk management, and service value.
Learn ITIL in beginner-friendly language and understand how it helps organizations deliver, support, improve, and manage technology-enabled services.
See how ITSM practices connect across incidents, problems, changes, requests, service desk, suppliers, assets, configuration, SLAs, and improvement.
Follow a realistic ITSM case study showing service desk issues, failed changes, recurring incidents, supplier gaps, weak SLAs, and poor improvement.
Understand core ITIL concepts including service, product, value, outcome, cost, and risk, and how they shape service management decisions.
Learn the difference between utility and warranty and how services must be both fit for purpose and fit for use to create real business value.
Explore ITIL’s four dimensions: organizations and people, information and technology, partners and suppliers, and value streams and processes.
Understand the ITIL Service Value System and how governance, practices, guiding principles, value chain activities, and improvement create service value.
Learn the ITIL Service Value Chain and how plan, improve, engage, design and transition, obtain or build, and deliver and support work together.
Master the seven ITIL guiding principles and learn how they support decision-making, improvement, collaboration, simplicity, feedback, and value focus.
IT Asset Management Purpose — Understand the purpose of IT asset management and how it supports cost control, lifecycle management, risk reduction, compliance, and operational visibility.
Asset Lifecycle in Practice — Learn the IT asset lifecycle from planning and acquisition to use, maintenance, optimization, retirement, and disposal in real IT environments.
Service Configuration Management and CIs — Understand service configuration management, configuration items, service relationships, dependency tracking, and how CIs support impact analysis.
Asset vs Configuration Item — Compare IT assets and configuration items, and learn when something is tracked for cost, lifecycle, service dependency, support, or risk management.
Learn how a CMDB works in real organizations, including service relationships, dependency mapping, data quality challenges, ownership, and practical CMDB value.
Understand supplier management and how it protects service value through contracts, performance monitoring, risk management, service levels, and relationship governance.
Learn practical supplier management activities including supplier selection, performance reviews, escalation, contract alignment, risk monitoring, and improvement.
Monitoring and Event Management Purpose — Understand monitoring and event management and how events help detect service health issues, outages, warnings, automation triggers, and operational risks.
Event Types and Event Response — Learn different event types, including informational, warning, and exception events, and how teams respond through monitoring, escalation, and automation.
From Event to Incident — Understand when an event becomes an incident and how monitoring signals, user impact, service degradation, and escalation rules support response decisions.
Incident Management Purpose — Learn the purpose of incident management and how it restores normal service operation, reduces business impact, and improves user confidence during disruption.
Incident Lifecycle — Understand the incident lifecycle from detection and logging to categorization, prioritization, escalation, resolution, closure, and learning.
Incident Categorization — Learn how incident categorization improves routing, reporting, trend analysis, service desk performance, problem management, and operational visibility.
Impact, Urgency, and Priority — Understand how impact and urgency determine incident priority and how correct prioritization supports faster response and better business alignment.
Escalation Models — Learn functional and hierarchical escalation models and understand how escalation improves incident handling, ownership, communication, and resolution speed.
Major Incident Management — Understand major incident management, including severity, coordination, war room structure, communication, stakeholder updates, recovery, and post-incident review.
Swarming and Modern Incident Response — Learn how swarming brings the right experts together quickly to resolve incidents, reduce handoffs, improve collaboration, and accelerate restoration.
Incident Communication — Understand how clear incident communication reduces confusion, builds trust, informs users, supports leadership, and improves major incident response.
Incident Closure and Learning — Learn how incident closure, user confirmation, documentation, lessons learned, and trend analysis help improve service quality over time.
Incident Management Case Study — Apply incident management concepts to a realistic outage scenario involving impact, prioritization, escalation, communication, recovery, and improvement.
Problem Management Purpose — Understand problem management and how it reduces recurring incidents, identifies root causes, documents known errors, and improves long-term reliability.
Reactive vs Proactive Problem Management — Compare reactive and proactive problem management and learn how teams investigate incidents, analyze trends, and prevent future service disruption.
Problem Control — Learn problem control activities including problem identification, logging, analysis, investigation, prioritization, ownership, and progress tracking.
Root Cause Analysis Techniques — Explore root cause analysis techniques such as five whys, fishbone diagrams, timeline analysis, and evidence-based investigation.
Error Control — Understand error control and how known errors, workarounds, permanent fixes, and change records support better service reliability.
Workarounds and Known Errors — Learn how workarounds and known errors reduce incident impact, improve service desk response, and support problem management.
Linking Incidents, Problems, Known Errors, and Changes — Understand how incidents, problems, known errors, workarounds, and changes connect in a mature ITSM environment.
Problem Management Case Study — Apply problem management to a recurring incident scenario and practice root cause thinking, known error documentation, and improvement planning.
Change Enablement Purpose — Learn the purpose of change enablement and how it helps organizations deliver improvements while controlling risk, disruption, and business impact.
Why Changes Fail — Understand common reasons changes fail, including weak testing, poor communication, unclear ownership, bad timing, missing rollback, and underestimated impact.
The Three Change Types — Learn the difference between standard changes, normal changes, and emergency changes, and when each type should be used.
Standard Changes — Understand standard changes, pre-authorization, low-risk repeatable workflows, service requests, automation, and operational efficiency.
Normal Changes — Learn how normal changes are assessed, authorized, scheduled, implemented, reviewed, and controlled based on risk and business impact.
Emergency Changes — Understand emergency changes, urgent approval, risk control, documentation, post-implementation review, and how to avoid misuse.
Change Authority and CAB — Learn the role of change authority and Change Advisory Board in reviewing risk, impact, scheduling, and business readiness.
Change Schedule and Change Calendar — Understand how change schedules and change calendars reduce conflicts, improve visibility, protect critical periods, and coordinate releases.
Risk Assessment for Changes — Learn how to assess change risk using impact, urgency, affected services, rollback, dependencies, security, compliance, and business timing.
Change Enablement Case Study — Apply change enablement concepts to a realistic scenario involving failed change, risk review, communication, rollback, and lessons learned.
Release Management Purpose — Understand release management and how it coordinates packaged changes, communication, readiness, deployment planning, and business value delivery.
Deployment Management Purpose — Learn deployment management and how new or changed components are moved into live environments with planning, control, validation, and support.
Release vs Deployment vs Change — Compare release management, deployment management, and change enablement, and understand how they work together in ITSM.
Deployment Approaches — Explore deployment approaches such as big bang, phased, pilot, blue-green, canary, and rollback-supported deployment models.
Release Communication and Business Readiness — Learn how release communication, training, stakeholder readiness, support preparation, and adoption planning improve release success.
Release and Deployment Case Study — Apply release and deployment concepts to a practical scenario involving business readiness, deployment risk, communication, and post-release support.
Service Request Management Purpose — Understand service request management and how it handles standard user requests such as access, information, equipment, and routine services.
Incident vs Service Request — Learn the difference between incidents and service requests and how correct classification improves routing, reporting, automation, and user experience.
Request Models and Catalog Items — Understand request models, service catalog items, approval flows, fulfillment steps, ownership, automation, and user-friendly request design.
Request Fulfillment Workflow — Learn how service requests move from submission and approval to fulfillment, communication, closure, and improvement.
Automating Service Requests — Explore service request automation and how self-service, workflows, approvals, integrations, and standard models improve speed and consistency.
The Service Desk Purpose — Understand the service desk as the main point of contact for users, communication, support, knowledge, escalation, and service experience.
Service Desk Channels — Learn service desk channels such as phone, portal, email, chat, walk-in, virtual agents, and self-service, and how channel strategy affects support.
Shift-Left Support — Understand shift-left support and how knowledge, self-service, automation, and first-contact resolution reduce escalations and improve user experience.
Empathy and User Experience — Learn why empathy, communication, clarity, and trust are essential for service desk quality, user satisfaction, and perceived service value.
Service Request and Service Desk Case Study — Apply service request and service desk concepts to a realistic scenario involving catalog design, fulfillment, communication, and user experience.
Service Level Management Purpose — Understand service level management and how it defines, agrees, monitors, reports, and improves service expectations and business outcomes.
SLA, OLA, and Underpinning Contract — Learn the difference between SLA, OLA, and underpinning contract, and how internal and external commitments support service delivery.
Designing Good SLAs — Learn how to design effective SLAs with clear scope, realistic targets, business alignment, measurable indicators, and meaningful reporting.
SLA Metrics and Reporting — Understand SLA metrics, service reporting, performance trends, breach analysis, dashboards, and how metrics support better decisions.
SLA Breaches and Service Reviews — Learn how to handle SLA breaches through analysis, communication, service reviews, corrective actions, and continual improvement.
Experience Level Agreements and Customer Experience — Understand XLAs and customer experience measurement, and learn how experience complements traditional SLA reporting.
Service Level Management Case Study — Apply service level management to a realistic scenario involving SLA design, breach review, stakeholder expectations, and service improvement.
This course contains the use of Artificial Intelligence to support production and content alignment, the course is designed for learners who want to understand ITIL and ITSM in a practical, modern, and workplace-focused way.
The course combines strong ITIL Four practice-based learning with an updated ITIL Foundation Version Five orientation, helping you understand both the proven operational practices of IT service management and the newer direction toward digital product and service management.
You will learn how ITIL concepts apply in real organizations, not only as theory. The course explains how services create value, how incidents are managed, how problems are investigated, how changes are enabled safely, how service requests are fulfilled, how service desks support users, how suppliers affect service quality, how assets and configuration items are controlled, how service levels are designed, and how continual improvement helps organizations mature over time.
The course also introduces important modern topics such as digital products versus digital services, updated value creation language, AI-enabled service environments, complex supplier ecosystems, user experience, and how ITIL Four practice knowledge still supports ITIL Version Five-style digital service management.
Throughout the course, you will follow practical examples, real-world scenarios, case studies, and operational situations that help you understand how ITSM practices work together. Instead of memorizing isolated definitions, you will learn how to think like a service management professional who can connect incidents, problems, changes, service levels, service desk, suppliers, assets, configuration, monitoring, and continual improvement to business value.
This course is suitable for IT support professionals, service desk analysts, system administrators, network engineers, cybersecurity professionals, cloud professionals, GRC professionals, IT managers, service managers, consultants, and learners preparing for ITIL-related roles.
Please note that this is an independent practical ITIL and ITSM learning course. It is not official accredited PeopleCert training unless explicitly stated. If you are preparing for an official ITIL certification exam, you should always review the latest official syllabus and exam guidance.
By the end of this course, you will understand how ITIL-based ITSM practices work in real environments and how modern ITIL thinking supports digital products, digital services, user experience, operational reliability, and continual improvement.