Category: Knowledge Management
Hello, remember us? ITIL Tattle? We’ve been gone for a while and during that time Autumn has well and truly arrived. We’re now all adjusted to the new world and ways of working, our students are back studying and we’ve achieved a lot of great things since James last blogged back in September. In his last […]
Service desks exist on a spectrum from call logging to expert, and the University has the full range of service desks currently. However, what are the advantages and disadvantages of these approaches? Where is the best place to position your service desk? Let’s describe the two extremes ends of the spectrum initially. Call Logging This […]
A few weeks’ ago, I asked the question, “Is our knowledge management best practice?“, although I left the answer as an exercise for the reader… If you thought that our current practice could do with improving, but didn’t know where to start, I’m going to propose an alternative operational approach, drawn from Knowledge-Centered Service, some […]
Two weeks ago Robert asked us to consider if our Knowledge Management practice is best practice and to consider how we can move our current Knowledge Management practice closer to best practice. As a reminder, in ITIL4 Knowledge management aims to ensure that stakeholders get the right information, in the proper format, at the right level, and […]
What is best practice within Knowledge Management and what is our practice? ITIL (circa 2002) covered Knowledge Management in one of the books no one read (Application Management), so it was quietly ignored until v3 when it appeared as a “new process” within Service Transition (2007). The ITIL 4 summary (2019) is comprehensive, “Knowledge management […]
Recent comments