Incident Management A Complete Guide - 2020 Edition
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About this ebook
Which incident management responsibilities is the service desk responsible for ? Is the incident solved with the offered resolution? Does the service provider allow for recovery of data and associated metadata when required? Do you have current contact information for key people? How is a computer event different from an incident?
This premium Incident Management self-assessment will make you the reliable Incident Management domain visionary by revealing just what you need to know to be fluent and ready for any Incident Management challenge.
How do I reduce the effort in the Incident Management work to be done to get problems solved? How can I ensure that plans of action include every Incident Management task and that every Incident Management outcome is in place? How will I save time investigating strategic and tactical options and ensuring Incident Management costs are low? How can I deliver tailored Incident Management advice instantly with structured going-forward plans?
There’s no better guide through these mind-expanding questions than acclaimed best-selling author Gerard Blokdyk. Blokdyk ensures all Incident Management essentials are covered, from every angle: the Incident Management self-assessment shows succinctly and clearly that what needs to be clarified to organize the required activities and processes so that Incident Management outcomes are achieved.
Contains extensive criteria grounded in past and current successful projects and activities by experienced Incident Management practitioners. Their mastery, combined with the easy elegance of the self-assessment, provides its superior value to you in knowing how to ensure the outcome of any efforts in Incident Management are maximized with professional results.
Your purchase includes access details to the Incident Management self-assessment dashboard download which gives you your dynamically prioritized projects-ready tool and shows you exactly what to do next. Your exclusive instant access details can be found in your book. You will receive the following contents with New and Updated specific criteria:
- The latest quick edition of the book in PDF
- The latest complete edition of the book in PDF, which criteria correspond to the criteria in...
- The Self-Assessment Excel Dashboard
- Example pre-filled Self-Assessment Excel Dashboard to get familiar with results generation
- In-depth and specific Incident Management Checklists
- Project management checklists and templates to assist with implementation
INCLUDES LIFETIME SELF ASSESSMENT UPDATES
Every self assessment comes with Lifetime Updates and Lifetime Free Updated Books. Lifetime Updates is an industry-first feature which allows you to receive verified self assessment updates, ensuring you always have the most accurate information at your fingertips.
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Incident Management A Complete Guide - 2020 Edition - Gerardus Blokdyk
Incident Management
Complete Self-Assessment Guide
The guidance in this Self-Assessment is based on Incident Management best practices and standards in business process architecture, design and quality management. The guidance is also based on the professional judgment of the individual collaborators listed in the Acknowledgments.
Notice of rights
You are licensed to use the Self-Assessment contents in your presentations and materials for internal use and customers without asking us - we are here to help.
All rights reserved for the book itself: this book may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
The information in this book is distributed on an As Is
basis without warranty. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of he book, neither the author nor the publisher shall have any liability to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused or alleged to be caused directly or indirectly by the instructions contained in this book or by the products described in it.
Trademarks
Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and the publisher was aware of a trademark claim, the designations appear as requested by the owner of the trademark. All other product names and services identified throughout this book are used in editorial fashion only and for the benefit of such companies with no intention of infringement of the trademark. No such use, or the use of any trade name, is intended to convey endorsement or other affiliation with this book.
Copyright © by The Art of Service
http://theartofservice.com
service@theartofservice.com
About The Art of Service
The Art of Service, Business Process Architects since 2000, is dedicated to helping stakeholders achieve excellence.
Defining, designing, creating, and implementing a process to solve a stakeholders challenge or meet an objective is the most valuable role… In EVERY group, company, organization and department.
Unless you’re talking a one-time, single-use project, there should be a process. Whether that process is managed and implemented by humans, AI, or a combination of the two, it needs to be designed by someone with a complex enough perspective to ask the right questions.
Someone capable of asking the right questions and step back and say, ‘What are we really trying to accomplish here? And is there a different way to look at it?’
With The Art of Service’s Standard Requirements Self-Assessments, we empower people who can do just that — whether their title is marketer, entrepreneur, manager, salesperson, consultant, Business Process Manager, executive assistant, IT Manager, CIO etc... —they are the people who rule the future. They are people who watch the process as it happens, and ask the right questions to make the process work better.
Contact us when you need any support with this Self-Assessment and any help with templates, blue-prints and examples of standard documents you might need:
http://theartofservice.com
service@theartofservice.com
Included Resources - how to access
Included with your purchase of the book is the Incident Management Self-Assessment Spreadsheet Dashboard which contains all questions and Self-Assessment areas and auto-generates insights, graphs, and project RACI planning - all with examples to get you started right away.
How? Simply send an email to
access@theartofservice.com
with this books’ title in the subject to get the Incident Management Self Assessment Tool right away.
You will receive the following contents with New and Updated specific criteria:
•The latest quick edition of the book in PDF
•The latest complete edition of the book in PDF, which criteria correspond to the criteria in...
•The Self-Assessment Excel Dashboard, and...
•Example pre-filled Self-Assessment Excel Dashboard to get familiar with results generation
•In-depth specific Checklists covering the topic
•Project management checklists and templates to assist with implementation
INCLUDES LIFETIME SELF ASSESSMENT UPDATES
Every self assessment comes with Lifetime Updates and Lifetime Free Updated Books. Lifetime Updates is an industry-first feature which allows you to receive verified self assessment updates, ensuring you always have the most accurate information at your fingertips.
Get it now- you will be glad you did - do it now, before you forget.
Send an email to access@theartofservice.com with this books’ title in the subject to get the Incident Management Self Assessment Tool right away.
Purpose of this Self-Assessment
This Self-Assessment has been developed to improve understanding of the requirements and elements of Incident Management, based on best practices and standards in business process architecture, design and quality management.
It is designed to allow for a rapid Self-Assessment to determine how closely existing management practices and procedures correspond to the elements of the Self-Assessment.
The criteria of requirements and elements of Incident Management have been rephrased in the format of a Self-Assessment questionnaire, with a seven-criterion scoring system, as explained in this document.
In this format, even with limited background knowledge of Incident Management, a manager can quickly review existing operations to determine how they measure up to the standards. This in turn can serve as the starting point of a ‘gap analysis’ to identify management tools or system elements that might usefully be implemented in the organization to help improve overall performance.
How to use the Self-Assessment
On the following pages are a series of questions to identify to what extent your Incident Management initiative is complete in comparison to the requirements set in standards.
To facilitate answering the questions, there is a space in front of each question to enter a score on a scale of ‘1’ to ‘5’.
1 Strongly Disagree
2 Disagree
3 Neutral
4 Agree
5 Strongly Agree
Read the question and rate it with the following in front of mind:
‘In my belief,
the answer to this question is clearly defined’.
There are two ways in which you can choose to interpret this statement;
1.how aware are you that the answer to the question is clearly defined
2.for more in-depth analysis you can choose to gather evidence and confirm the answer to the question. This obviously will take more time, most Self-Assessment users opt for the first way to interpret the question and dig deeper later on based on the outcome of the overall Self-Assessment.
A score of ‘1’ would mean that the answer is not clear at all, where a ‘5’ would mean the answer is crystal clear and defined. Leave emtpy when the question is not applicable or you don’t want to answer it, you can skip it without affecting your score. Write your score in the space provided.
After you have responded to all the appropriate statements in each section, compute your average score for that section, using the formula provided, and round to the nearest tenth. Then transfer to the corresponding spoke in the Incident Management Scorecard on the second next page of the Self-Assessment.
Your completed Incident Management Scorecard will give you a clear presentation of which Incident Management areas need attention.
Incident Management
Scorecard Example
Example of how the finalized Scorecard can look like:
Incident Management
Scorecard
Your Scores:
BEGINNING OF THE
SELF-ASSESSMENT:
Table of Contents
About The Art of Service11
Included Resources - how to access11
Purpose of this Self-Assessment13
How to use the Self-Assessment14
Incident Management
Scorecard Example16
Incident Management
Scorecard17
BEGINNING OF THE
SELF-ASSESSMENT:18
CRITERION #1: RECOGNIZE19
CRITERION #2: DEFINE:29
CRITERION #3: MEASURE:42
CRITERION #4: ANALYZE:54
CRITERION #5: IMPROVE:71
CRITERION #6: CONTROL:86
CRITERION #7: SUSTAIN:101
Incident Management and Managing Projects, Criteria for Project Managers:140
1.0 Initiating Process Group: Incident Management141
1.1 Project Charter: Incident Management143
1.2 Stakeholder Register: Incident Management145
1.3 Stakeholder Analysis Matrix: Incident Management146
2.0 Planning Process Group: Incident Management148
2.1 Project Management Plan: Incident Management150
2.2 Scope Management Plan: Incident Management152
2.3 Requirements Management Plan: Incident Management155
2.4 Requirements Documentation: Incident Management157
2.5 Requirements Traceability Matrix: Incident Management159
2.6 Project Scope Statement: Incident Management161
2.7 Assumption and Constraint Log: Incident Management163
2.8 Work Breakdown Structure: Incident Management165
2.9 WBS Dictionary: Incident Management167
2.10 Schedule Management Plan: Incident Management169
2.11 Activity List: Incident Management171
2.12 Activity Attributes: Incident Management173
2.13 Milestone List: Incident Management175
2.14 Network Diagram: Incident Management177
2.15 Activity Resource Requirements: Incident Management179
2.16 Resource Breakdown Structure: Incident Management181
2.17 Activity Duration Estimates: Incident Management183
2.18 Duration Estimating Worksheet: Incident Management186
2.19 Project Schedule: Incident Management188
2.20 Cost Management Plan: Incident Management190
2.21 Activity Cost Estimates: Incident Management192
2.22 Cost Estimating Worksheet: Incident Management194
2.23 Cost Baseline: Incident Management196
2.24 Quality Management Plan: Incident Management198
2.25 Quality Metrics: Incident Management200
2.26 Process Improvement Plan: Incident Management202
2.27 Responsibility Assignment Matrix: Incident Management204
2.28 Roles and Responsibilities: Incident Management206
2.29 Human Resource Management Plan: Incident Management208
2.30 Communications Management Plan: Incident Management210
2.31 Risk Management Plan: Incident Management212
2.32 Risk Register: Incident Management214
2.33 Probability and Impact Assessment: Incident Management216
2.34 Probability and Impact Matrix: Incident Management218
2.35 Risk Data Sheet: Incident Management220
2.36 Procurement Management Plan: Incident Management222
2.37 Source Selection Criteria: Incident Management224
2.38 Stakeholder Management Plan: Incident Management226
2.39 Change Management Plan: Incident Management228
3.0 Executing Process Group: Incident Management230
3.1 Team Member Status Report: Incident Management232
3.2 Change Request: Incident Management234
3.3 Change Log: Incident Management236
3.4 Decision Log: Incident Management238
3.5 Quality Audit: Incident Management240
3.6 Team Directory: Incident Management243
3.7 Team Operating Agreement: Incident Management245
3.8 Team Performance Assessment: Incident Management247
3.9 Team Member Performance Assessment: Incident Management250
3.10 Issue Log: Incident Management252
4.0 Monitoring and Controlling Process Group: Incident Management254
4.1 Project Performance Report: Incident Management256
4.2 Variance Analysis: Incident Management258
4.3 Earned Value Status: Incident Management260
4.4 Risk Audit: Incident Management262
4.5 Contractor Status Report: Incident Management264
4.6 Formal Acceptance: Incident Management266
5.0 Closing Process Group: Incident Management268
5.1 Procurement Audit: Incident Management270
5.2 Contract Close-Out: Incident Management273
5.3 Project or Phase Close-Out: Incident Management275
5.4 Lessons Learned: Incident Management277
Incident Management and Managing Projects, Criteria for Project Managers:279
1.0 Initiating Process Group: Incident Management280
1.1 Project Charter: Incident Management282
1.2 Stakeholder Register: Incident Management284
1.3 Stakeholder Analysis Matrix: Incident Management285
2.0 Planning Process Group: Incident Management287
2.1 Project Management Plan: Incident Management289
2.2 Scope Management Plan: Incident Management291
2.3 Requirements Management Plan: Incident Management293
2.4 Requirements Documentation: Incident Management295
2.5 Requirements Traceability Matrix: Incident Management297
2.6 Project Scope Statement: Incident Management299
2.7 Assumption and Constraint Log: Incident Management301
2.8 Work Breakdown Structure: Incident Management303
2.9 WBS Dictionary: Incident Management305
2.10 Schedule Management Plan: Incident Management308
2.11 Activity List: Incident Management310
2.12 Activity Attributes: Incident Management312
2.13 Milestone List: Incident Management314
2.14 Network Diagram: Incident Management316
2.15 Activity Resource Requirements: Incident Management318
2.16 Resource Breakdown Structure: Incident Management320
2.17 Activity Duration Estimates: Incident Management322
2.18 Duration Estimating Worksheet: Incident Management325
2.19 Project Schedule: Incident Management327
2.20 Cost Management Plan: Incident Management329
2.21 Activity Cost Estimates: Incident Management331
2.22 Cost Estimating Worksheet: Incident Management333
2.23 Cost Baseline: Incident Management335
2.24 Quality Management Plan: Incident Management337
2.25 Quality Metrics: Incident Management339
2.26 Process Improvement Plan: Incident Management341
2.27 Responsibility Assignment Matrix: Incident Management343
2.28 Roles and Responsibilities: Incident Management345
2.29 Human Resource Management Plan: Incident Management347
2.30 Communications Management Plan: Incident Management349
2.31 Risk Management Plan: Incident Management351
2.32 Risk Register: Incident Management353
2.33 Probability and Impact Assessment: Incident Management355
2.34 Probability and Impact Matrix: Incident Management357
2.35 Risk Data Sheet: Incident Management359
2.36 Procurement Management Plan: Incident Management361
2.37 Source Selection Criteria: Incident Management363
2.38 Stakeholder Management Plan: Incident Management365
2.39 Change Management Plan: Incident Management367
3.0 Executing Process Group: Incident Management369
3.1 Team Member Status Report: Incident Management371
3.2 Change Request: Incident Management373
3.3 Change Log: Incident Management375
3.4 Decision Log: Incident Management377
3.5 Quality Audit: Incident Management379
3.6 Team Directory: Incident Management382
3.7 Team Operating Agreement: Incident Management384
3.8 Team Performance Assessment: Incident Management386
3.9 Team Member Performance Assessment: Incident Management389
3.10 Issue Log: Incident Management391
4.0 Monitoring and Controlling Process Group: Incident Management393
4.1 Project Performance Report: Incident Management395
4.2 Variance Analysis: Incident Management397
4.3 Earned Value Status: Incident Management399
4.4 Risk Audit: Incident Management401
4.5 Contractor Status Report: Incident Management403
4.6 Formal Acceptance: Incident Management405
5.0 Closing Process Group: Incident Management407
5.1 Procurement Audit: Incident Management409
5.2 Contract Close-Out: Incident Management412
5.3 Project or Phase Close-Out: Incident Management414
5.4 Lessons Learned: Incident Management416
Index418
CRITERION #1: RECOGNIZE
INTENT: Be aware of the need for change. Recognize that there is an unfavorable variation, problem or symptom.
In my belief, the answer to this question is clearly defined:
5 Strongly Agree
4 Agree
3 Neutral
2 Disagree
1 Strongly Disagree
1. What organizational aspects and issues limit, preclude, or enable effective traffic incident management practices and tools?
<--- Score
2. What does Incident Management success mean to the stakeholders?
<--- Score
3. What is the problem or business need?
<--- Score
4. Why do you need or want to outsource certain services?
<--- Score
5. Do you need to ensure service availability or is it OK to take the system offline?
<--- Score
6. What needs to be done?
<--- Score
7. As a sponsor, customer or management, how important is it to meet goals, objectives?
<--- Score
8. What are the stakeholder objectives to be achieved with Incident Management?
<--- Score
9. Has a meeting been held between the