ITIL 4 Foundation Glossary Flashcards

1
Q

A list of minimum requirements that a service or service component must meet for it to be acceptable to key stakeholders.

A

Acceptance criteria

Service Validation concerns address:
utility
warranty
Note:
-Must be based on customer requirements.
-The acceptance criteria are then measured via testing, based on the organization’s test strategy.

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2
Q

An umbrella term for a collection of frameworks and techniques that together enable teams and individuals to work in a way that is typified by collaboration, prioritization, iterative and incremental delivery, and timeboxing. There are several specific methods (or frameworks) that are classed as Agile, such as Scrum, Lean, and Kanban.

A

Agile

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3
Q

The practice of providing an understanding of all the different elements that make up an organization and how those elements relate to one another.

A

Architecture management practice

​Business architecture:** allows the organisation’s capabilities to be compared with its strategy to identify gaps.
**
​Service architecture:
provides a view of all services and interactions between services. *
​Information systems architecture: provides a view of the logical and physical data and information assets of the organisation, including how they are managed and shared.
​Technology architecture**: defines the software and hardware infrastructure of the organisation. **​Environmental architecture: describes external factors affecting the organisation, and environmental controls. This could include a PESTEL analysis.

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4
Q

A database or list of assets capturing key attributes such as ownership and financial value.

A

Asset register

Scope:
The scope of asset management will usually include: •​Software •​Hardware •​Networking •​Cloud services •​Client devices

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5
Q

The ability of an IT service or other configuration item to perform its agreed function when required.

A

Availability

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6
Q

The practice of ensuring that services deliver agreed levels of availability to meet the needs of customers and users.

A

Availability management practice
Service level management and relationship management can help availability management to talk to the customer and get precise definitions for ‘service up’ and ‘service down’.

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7
Q

A report or metric that serves as a starting point against which progress or change can be assessed.

A

Baseline

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8
Q

A way of working that has been proven to be successful by multiple organizations.

A

Best practice

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9
Q

The practice of analysing a business or some element of a business, defining its needs and recommending solutions to address these needs and/or solve a business problem, and create value for stakeholders.

A

Business analysis practice
Business analysis takes a holistic view, considering: *​Process *​Organisation change *​Technology *​Policies *​Information *​Strategic planning

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10
Q

A justification for expenditure of organizational resources, providing information about costs, benefits, options, risks, and issues.

A

Business case

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11
Q

A key activity in the practice of service continuity management that identifies vital business functions and their dependencies.

A

Business Impact Analysis (BIA)

Service continuity management “The purpose of the service continuity management practice is to ensure that the availability and performance of a service are maintained at sufficient levels in the case of a disaster.

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12
Q

A role responsible for maintaining good relationships with one or more customers

A

Business Relationship Manager (BRM)

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13
Q

An interaction (e.g. a telephone call) with the service desk, which could result in an incident or a service request being logged.

A

Call

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14
Q

An organization or business unit that handles large numbers of incoming and outgoing calls and other interactions.

A

Call/contact centre

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15
Q

The ability of an organization, person, process, application, configuration item, or IT service to carry out an activity.

A

Capability

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16
Q

The practice of ensuring that services achieve agreed and expected performance levels, satisfying current and future demand in a cost-effective way.

A

Capacity and performance management practice

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17
Q

The activity of creating a plan that manages resources to meet demand for services

A

Capacity planning

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18
Q

The addition, modification, or removal of anything that could have a direct or indirect effect on services

A

Change

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19
Q

A person or group responsible for authorizing a change.

A

Change authority

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20
Q

The practice of ensuring that risks are properly assessed, authorizing changes to proceed and managing a change schedule in order to maximize the number of successful service and product changes.

A

Change control practice

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21
Q

A repeatable approach to the management of a particular type of change

A

Change model

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22
Q

A calendar that shows planned and historical changes

A

Change schedule

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23
Q

The activity that assigns a price for services.

A

Charging

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24
Q

A model for enabling on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources that can be rapidly provided with minimal management effort or provider interaction.

A

Cloud computing

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25
Q

The act of ensuring that a standard or set of guidelines is followed, or that proper, consistent accounting or other practices are being employed.

A

Compliance

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26
Q

A security objective that ensures information is not made available or disclosed to unauthorized entities.

A

Confidentiality

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27
Q

An arrangement of configuration items (CIs) or other resources that work together to deliver a product or service. Can also be used to describe the parameter settings for one or more CIs.

A

Configuration

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28
Q

Any component that needs to be managed in order to deliver an IT service.

A

Configuration Item (CI)

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29
Q

A database used to store configuration records throughout their lifecycle. The CMDB also maintains the relationships between configuration records.

A

Configuration Management Database (CMDB)

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30
Q

A record containing the details of a configuration item (CI). Each configuration record documents the lifecycle of a single CI. Configuration records are stored in a configuration management database.

A

Configuration record

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31
Q

The practice of aligning an organization’s practices and services with changing business needs through the ongoing identification and improvement of all elements involved in the effective management of products and services.

A

Continual improvement practice

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32
Q

An integrated set of practices and tools used to deploy software changes into the production environment. These software changes have already passed predefined automated tests.

A

Continuous deployment

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33
Q

An integrated set of practices and tools used to merge developers’ code, build and test the resulting software, and package it so that it is ready for deployment.

A

Continuous integration/continuous delivery

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34
Q

The means of managing a risk, ensuring that a business objective is achieved, or that a process is followed.

A

Control

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35
Q

The amount of money spent on a specific activity or resource.

A

Cost

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36
Q

A business unit or project to which costs are assigned.

A

Cost centre

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37
Q

A necessary precondition for the achievement of intended results.

A

Critical success factor (CSF)

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38
Q

A set of values that is shared by a group of people, including expectations about how people should behave, ideas, beliefs, and practices.

A

Culture

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39
Q

A role that defines the requirements for a service and takes responsibility for the outcomes of service consumption.

A

Customer

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40
Q

The sum of functional and emotional interactions with a service and service provider as perceived by a service consumer.

A

Customer experience (CX)

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41
Q

A real-time graphical representation of data.

A

Dashboard

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42
Q

The value chain activity that ensures services are delivered and supported according to agreed specifications and stakeholders’ expectations.

A

Deliver and support

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43
Q

Input to the service value system based on opportunities and needs from internal and external stakeholders.

A

Demand

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44
Q

The movement of any service component into any environment.

A

Deployment

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45
Q

The practice of moving new or changed hardware, software, documentation, processes, or any other service component to live environments.

A

Deployment management practice

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46
Q

The value chain activity that ensures products and services continually meet stakeholder expectations for quality, costs, and time to market.

A

Design and transition

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47
Q

A practical and human-cantered approach used by product and service designers to solve complex problem sand find practical and creative solutions that meet the needs of an organization and its customers.

A

Design thinking

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48
Q

An environment used to create or modify IT services or applications.

A

Development environment

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49
Q

An organizational culture that aims to improve the flow of value to customers. DevOps focuses on culture, automation, Lean, measurement, and sharing (CALMS).

A

DevOps

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50
Q

The evolution of traditional business models to meet the needs of highly empowered customers, with technology playing an enabling role.

A

Digital transformation

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51
Q

A sudden unplanned event that causes great damage or serious loss to an organization. A disaster results in an organization failing to provide critical business functions for some predetermined minimum period.

A

Disaster

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52
Q

A set of clearly defined plans related to how an organization will recover from a disaster as well as return to apre-disaster condition, considering the four dimensions of service management.

A

Disaster recovery plans

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53
Q

Something that influences strategy, objectives, or requirements.

A

Driver

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54
Q

A measure of whether the objectives of a practice, service or activity have been achieved

A

Effectiveness

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55
Q

A measure of whether the right amount of resources have been used by a practice, service, or activity

A

Efficiency

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56
Q

A change that must be introduced as soon as possible

A

Emergency change

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57
Q

The value chain activity that provides a good understanding of stakeholder needs, transparency, continual engagement, and good relationships with all stakeholders.

A

Engage

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58
Q

A subset of the IT infrastructure that is used for a particular purpose, for example a live environment or test environment. Can also mean the external conditions that influence or affect something.

A

Environment

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59
Q

A flaw or vulnerability that may cause incidents

A

Error

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60
Q

Problem management activities used to manage known errors.

A

Error control

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61
Q

The act of sharing awareness or transferring ownership of an issue or work item.

A

Escalation

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62
Q

Any change of state that has significance for the management of a service or other configuration item.

A

Event

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63
Q

A customer who works for an organization other than the service provider

A

External customer

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64
Q

A loss of ability to operate to specification, or to deliver the required output or outcome

A

Failure

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65
Q

A technique whereby the outputs of one part of a system are used as inputs to the same part of the system.

A

Feedback loop

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66
Q

The four perspectives that are critical to the effective and efficient facilitation of value for customers another stakeholders in the form of products and services.

A

Four dimensions of service management

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67
Q

Tangible resources that are transferred or available for transfer from a service provider to a service consumer, together with ownership and associated rights and responsibilities.

A

Goods

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68
Q

The means by which an organization is directed and controlled.

A

Governance

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69
Q

A unique name that is used to identify and grant system access rights to a user, person, or role.

A

Identity

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70
Q

The value chain activity that ensures continual improvement of products, services, and practices across all value chain activities and the four dimensions of service management.

A

Improve

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71
Q

An unplanned interruption to a service or reduction in the quality of a service.

A

Incident

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72
Q

The practice of minimizing the negative impact of incidents by restoring normal service operation as quickly as possible.

A

Incident management

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73
Q

One of the four dimensions of service management. It includes the information and knowledge used to deliver services, and the information and technologies used to manage all aspects of the service value system.

A

Information and technology

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74
Q

The practice of protecting an organization by understanding and managing risks to the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information.

A

information security management practice

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75
Q

The policy that governs an organization’s approach to information security management.

A

Information security policy

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76
Q

The practice of overseeing the infrastructure and platforms used by an organization. This enables the monitoring of technology solutions available, including solutions from third parties.

A

Infrastructure and platform management practice

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77
Q

A security objective that ensures information is only modified by authorized personnel and activities.

A

Integrity

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78
Q

A customer who works for the same organization as the service provider

A

Internal customer

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79
Q

The interconnection of devices via the internet that were not traditionally thought of as IT assets, but now include embedded computing capability and network connectivity.

A

Internet of Things

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80
Q

Any financially valuable component that can contribute to the delivery of an IT product or service.

A

IT asset

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81
Q

The practice of planning and managing the full lifecycle of all IT assets

A

IT asset management practice

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82
Q

All the hardware, software, networks, and facilities that are required to develop, test, deliver, monitor, manage, and support IT services.

A

IT infrastructure

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83
Q

A service based on the use of information technology.

A

IT service

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84
Q

Best-practice guidance for IT service management.

A

ITIL

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85
Q

Recommendations that can guide an organization in all circumstances, regardless of changes in its goals, strategies, type of work, or management structure.

A

ITIL guiding principles

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86
Q

An operating model for service providers that covers all the key activities required to effectively manage products and services.

A

ITIL service value chain

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87
Q

A method for visualizing work, identifying potential blockages and resource conflicts, and managing work in progress.

A

Kanban

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88
Q

An important metric used to evaluate the success in meeting an objective.

A

Key performance indicator (KPI)

89
Q

The practice of maintaining and improving the effective, efficient, and convenient use of information and knowledge across an organization.

A

Knowledge management practice

90
Q

A problem that has been analysed but has not been resolved.

A

Known error

91
Q

An approach that focuses on improving workflows by maximizing value through the elimination of waste.

A

Lean

92
Q

The full set of stages, transitions, and associated statuses in the life of a service, product, practice, or other entity.

A

Lifecycle

93
Q

Refers to a service or other configuration item operating in the live environment.

A

Live

94
Q

A controlled environment used in the delivery of IT services to service consumers

A

Live environment

95
Q

The ease with which a service or other entity can be repaired or modified.

A

Maintainability

96
Q

An incident with significant business impact, requiring an immediate coordinated resolution.

A

Major incident

97
Q

Interrelated or interacting elements that establish policy and objectives and enable the achievement of those objectives.

A

Management system

98
Q

A measure of the reliability, efficiency and effectiveness of an organization, practice, or process

A

Maturity

99
Q

A metric of how frequently a service or other configuration item fails.

A

Mean time between failures (MTBF)

100
Q

A metric of how quickly a service is restored after a failure.

A

Mean time to restore service (MTRS)

101
Q

The practice of supporting good decision-making and continual improvement by decreasing levels of uncertainty.

A

Measurement and reporting

102
Q

A measurement or calculation that is monitored or reported for management and improvement.

A

Metric

103
Q

A short but complete description of the overall purpose and intentions of an organization.

A

Mission

104
Q

A representation of a system, practice, process, service, or other entity that is used to understand and predict its behaviour and relationships.

A

Model

105
Q

The activity of creating, maintaining, and utilizing models.

A

Modelling

106
Q

Repeated observation of a system, practice, process, service, or other entity to detect events and to ensure that the current status is known.

A

Monitoring

107
Q

The practice of systematically observing services and service components and recording and reporting selected changes of state identified as events.

A

Monitoring and event management practice

108
Q

The value chain activity that ensures service components are available when and where they are needed, and that they meet agreed specifications.

A

Obtain or build

109
Q

The routine running and management of an activity, product, service, or other configuration item.

A

Operation

110
Q

The hardware and software solutions that detect or cause changes in physical processes through direct monitoring or control of physical devices such as valves, pumps, etc.

A

Operational technology

111
Q

A person or a group of people that has its own functions with responsibilities, authorities, and relationships to achieve its objectives.

A

Organization

112
Q

The practice of ensuring that changes in an organization are smoothly and successfully implemented and that lasting benefits are achieved by managing the human aspects of the changes.

A

Organizational change management practice

113
Q

The ability of an organization to anticipate, prepare for, respond to, and adapt to unplanned external influences.

A

Organizational resilience

114
Q

The speed, effectiveness, and efficiency with which an organization operates. It influences time to market, quality, safety, costs, and risks.

A

Organizational velocity

115
Q

One of the four dimensions of service management. It ensures that the way an organization is structured and managed, as well as its roles, responsibilities, and systems of authority and communication, is well defined and supports its overall strategy and operating model.

A

Organizations and people

116
Q

A result for a stakeholder enabled by one or more outputs.

A

Outcome

117
Q

A tangible or intangible deliverable of an activity.

A

Output

118
Q

The process of having external suppliers provide products and services that were previously provided internally.

A

Outsourcing

119
Q

One of the four dimensions of service management. It encompasses the relationships an organization has with other organizations that are involved in the design, development, deployment, delivery, support, and/or continual improvement of services.

A

Partners and suppliers

120
Q

A relationship between two organizations that involves working closely together to achieve common goals and objectives.

A

Partnership

121
Q

A measure of what is achieved or delivered by a system, person, team, practice, or service

A

Performance

122
Q

A test implementation of a service with a limited scope in a live environment.

A

Pilot

123
Q

The value chain activity that ensures a shared understanding of the vision, current status, and improvement direction for all four dimensions and all products and services across an organization.

A

Plan

124
Q

Formally documented management expectations and intentions used to direct decisions and activities.

A

Policy

125
Q

The practice of ensuring that an organization has the right mix of programs, projects, products, and services to execute its strategy within its funding and resource constraints.

A

Portfolio management practice

126
Q

A review after the implementation of a change, to evaluate success and identify opportunities for improvement.

A

Post-implementation review (PIR)

127
Q

A set of organizational resources designed for performing work or accomplishing an objective.

A

Practice

128
Q

The practice of reducing the likelihood and impact of incidents by identifying actual and potential causes of incidents and managing workarounds and known errors.

A

Problem management practice

129
Q

A documented way to carry out an activity or a process

A

Procedure

130
Q

A set of interrelated or interacting activities that transform inputs into outputs. It takes one or more defined inputs and turns them into defined outputs. It defines the sequence of actions and their dependencies.

A

Process

131
Q

A configuration of an organization’s resources designed to offer value for a consumer

A

Product

132
Q

A set of related projects and activities, and an organization structure created to direct and oversee them.

A

program

133
Q

A temporary structure that is created for the purpose of delivering one or more outputs (or products) according to an agreed business case.

A

Project

134
Q

The practice of ensuring that all an organization’s projects are successfully delivered.

A

Project management practice

135
Q

An improvement that is expected to provide a return on investment in a short period of time with relatively small cost and effort.

A

Quick win

136
Q

A document stating results achieved and providing evidence of activities performed

A

Record

137
Q

The activity of returning a configuration item to normal operation after a failure.

A

Recovery

138
Q

The point to which information used by an activity must be restored to enable the activity to operate on resumption.

A

Recovery point objective (RPO)

139
Q

The maximum acceptable period of time following a service disruption that can elapse before the lack of business functionality severely impacts the organization.

A

Recovery time objective (RTO)

140
Q

The practice of establishing and nurturing links between an organization and its stakeholders at strategic and tactical levels.

A

Relationship management practice

141
Q

A set of tools, data, and information that is used to support service configuration management.

A

Configuration Management System (CMS)

142
Q

A version of a service or other configuration item, or a collection of configuration items, that is made available for use.

A

Release

143
Q

The practice of making new and changed services and features available for use.

A

Release management practice

144
Q

The ability of a product, service, or other configuration item to perform its intended function for a specified period of time or number of cycles.

A

Reliability

145
Q

A view of the service catalogue, providing details on service requests for existing and new services, which is made available for the user.

A

Request catalogue

146
Q

A description of a proposed change used to initiate change control

A

Request for change (RFC)

147
Q

The action of solving an incident or problem.

A

Resolution

148
Q

A person, or other entity, that is required for the execution of an activity or the achievement of an objective. It can used by an organization may be owned by the organization or used according to an agreement with the owner.

A

Resource

149
Q

The act of permanently withdrawing a product, service, or other configuration item from use.

A

Retire

150
Q

A possible event that could cause harm or loss or make it more difficult to achieve objectives. Can also be defined as uncertainty of outcome and can be used in the context of measuring the probability of positive outcomes as well as negative outcomes.

A

Risk

151
Q

An activity to identify, analyse, and evaluate risks.

A

Risk assessment

152
Q

A means of enabling value co-creation by facilitating outcomes that customers want to achieve, without the customer having to manage specific costs and risks.

A

Service

153
Q

Any action required to deliver a service output to a user. Service actions may be performed by a service provider resource, by service users, or jointly.

A

Service action

154
Q

A view of all the services provided by an organization. It includes interactions between the services, and service models that describe the structure and dynamics of each service.

A

Service architecture

155
Q

Structured information about all the services and service offerings of a service provider, relevant for a specific target audience.

A

Service catalog

156
Q

The practice of providing a single source of consistent information on all services and service offerings and ensuring that it is available to the relevant audience.

A

Service catalog management practice

157
Q

The practice of ensuring that accurate and reliable information about the configuration of services, and the configuration items that support them, is available when and where needed.

A

Service configuration management practice

158
Q

Activities performed by an organization to consume services. It includes the management of the consumer’s resources needed to use the service, service actions performed by users, and the receiving (acquiring) of goods

A

Service consumption

159
Q

The practice of ensuring that service availability and performance are maintained at a sufficient level in case of a disaster.

A

Service continuity management practice

160
Q

The practice of designing products and services that are fit for purpose, fit for use, and that can be delivered by the organization and its ecosystem.

A

Service design practice

161
Q

The point of communication between the service provider and all its users.

A

Service desk

162
Q

The practice of capturing demand for incident resolution and service requests.

A

Service desk practice

163
Q

One or more metrics that define expected or achieved service quality.

A

Service level

164
Q

A documented agreement between a service provider and a customer that identifies both services required and the expected level of service.

A

Service level agreement (SLA)

165
Q

The practice of setting clear business-based targets for service performance so that the delivery of a service can be properly assessed, monitored, and managed against these targets.

A

Service level management practice

166
Q

A set of specialized organizational capabilities for enabling value for customers in the form of services.

A

Service management

167
Q

A formal description of one or more services, designed to address the needs of a target consumer group. A service offering may include goods, access to resources, and service actions.

A

Service offering

168
Q

A role that is accountable for the delivery of a specific service.

A

Service owner

169
Q

A complete set of products and services that are managed throughout their lifecycles by an organization.

A

Service portfolio

170
Q

A role performed by an organization in a service relationship to provide services to consumers.

A

Service provider

171
Q

Activities performed by an organization to provide services. It includes management of the provider’s resources, configured to deliver the service; ensuring access to these resources for users; fulfilment of the agreed service actions; service level management; and continual improvement. It may also include the supply of goods.

A

Service provision

172
Q

A cooperation between a service provider and service consumer. It includes service provision, service consumption, and service relationship management.

A

Service relationship

173
Q

Joint activities performed by a service provider and a service consumer to ensure continual value co-creation based on agreed and available service offerings.

A

Service relationship management

174
Q

A request from a user or a user’s authorized representative that initiates a service action which has been agreed as a normal part of service delivery.

A

Service request

175
Q

The practice of supporting the agreed quality of a service by handling all pre-defined, user-initiated service requests in an effective and user-friendly manner.

A

Service request management practice

176
Q

The practice of ensuring that new or changed products and services meet defined requirements.

A

Service validation and testing practice

177
Q

A model representing how all the components and activities of an organization work together to facilitate value creation.

A

Service value system (SVS)

178
Q

The practice of ensuring that applications meet stakeholder needs in terms of functionality, reliability, maintainability, compliance, and auditability.

A

Software development and management practice

179
Q

The activity of planning and obtaining resources from a particular source type, which could be internal or external, centralized or distributed, and open or proprietary.

A

Sourcing

180
Q

A documented description of the properties of a product, service, or other configuration item

A

Specification

181
Q

A person who authorizes budget for service consumption. Can also be used to describe an organization or individual that provides financial or other support for an initiative.

A

Sponsor

182
Q

A person or organization that has an interest or involvement in an organization, product, service, practice, or other entity.

A

Stakeholder

183
Q

A document, established by consensus and approved by a recognized body, that provides for common and repeated use, mandatory requirements, guidelines, or characteristics for its subject.

A

Standard

184
Q

A low-risk, preauthorized change that is well understood and fully documented, and which can be implemented without needing additional authorization.

A

Standard change

185
Q

A description of the specific states an entity can have at a given time

A

Status

186
Q

The practice of formulating the goals of an organization and adopting the courses of action and allocation of resources necessary for achieving those goals.

A

Strategy management practice

187
Q

A stakeholder responsible for providing services that are used by an organization.

A

Supplier

188
Q

The practice of ensuring that an organization’s suppliers and their performance levels are managed appropriately to support the provision of seamless quality products and services.

A

Supplier management practice

189
Q

A team with the responsibility to maintain normal operations, address users’ requests, and resolve incidents and problems related to specified products, services, or other configuration items.

A

Support team

190
Q

A combination of interacting elements organized and maintained to achieve one or more stated purposes.

A

System

191
Q

A holistic approach to analysis that focuses on the way that a system’s constituent parts work, interrelate, and interact over time, and within the context of other systems.

A

Systems thinking

192
Q

The total rework backlog accumulated by choosing workarounds instead of system solutions that would take longer.

A

Technical debt

193
Q

A controlled environment established to test products, services, and other configuration items

A

Test environment

194
Q

A stakeholder external to an organization.

A

Third party

195
Q

A measure of the amount of work performed by a product, service, or other system over a given period of time.

A

Throughput

196
Q

A unit of work consisting of an exchange between two or more participants or systems.

A

Transaction

197
Q

A technique using realistic practical scenarios to define functional requirements and to design tests.

A

Use case

198
Q

A person who uses services.

A

User

199
Q

The functionality offered by a product or service to meet a particular need. It can be summarized as ‘what the service does’ and can be used to determine whether a service is ‘fit for purpose’. To have it, a service must either support the performance of the consumer or remove constraints from the consumer. Many services do both.

A

Utility

200
Q

Functional requirements which have been defined by the customer and are unique to a specific product.

A

Utility requirements

201
Q

Confirmation that the system, product, service, or other entity meets the agreed specification.

A

Validation

202
Q

The perceived benefits, usefulness, and importance of something.

A

Value

203
Q

A series of steps an organization undertakes to create and deliver products and services to consumers.

A

Value stream

204
Q

A defined aspiration of what an organization would like to become in the future

A

Vision

205
Q

Assurance that a product or service will meet agreed requirements. It can be summarized as ‘how the service performs’ and can be used to determine whether a service is ‘fit for use’. It often relates to service levels aligned with the needs of service consumers. This may be based on a formal agreement, or it may be a marketing message or brand image. It typically addresses such areas as the availability of the service, its capacity, levels of security, and continuity. A service may be said to have it, if all defined and agreed conditions are met.

A

Warranty

206
Q

Typically, non-functional requirements captured as inputs from key stakeholders and other practices.

A

Warranty requirements

207
Q

A development approach that is linear and sequential with distinct objectives for each phase of development.

A

Waterfall method

208
Q

A detailed description to be followed in order to perform an activity

A

Work instruction

209
Q

A solution that reduces or eliminates the impact of an incident or problem for which a full resolution is not yet available. It may reduce the likelihood of incidents.

A

Workaround

210
Q

The practice of ensuring that an organization has the right people with the appropriate skills and knowledge and in the correct roles to support its business objectives.

A

Workforce and talent management practice

211
Q

The four dimensions of Service Management

A
212
Q

Components of the Service Value System (SVS)

A
213
Q

Components of the Service Value Chain

A
214
Q

What are some of the main ITIL management practices?

A
  • Continual improvement
  • Change enablement
  • Incident management
  • Problem management
  • Service request management
  • Service desk
  • Service level management
  • Information security management
  • Relationship management
  • Supplier management
  • IT Asset management
  • Monitoring and Event Management
  • Release management
  • Service Configuration Management
  • Deployment management
215
Q

Which ITIL practice involves the below?

Supplier planning
Evaluation of suppliers and contracts
Supplier and contract negotiation
Supplier categorization
Supplier and contract management
Warranty management
Performance management
Contract renewal or termination

A

Supplier Management Practice

216
Q

These are changes that need to be scheduled, assessed, and authorized
in order to follow a standard process

A

Normal changes

217
Q

The infrastructure and process necessary for the effective
management, control, and protection of the software assets within an
organization, throughout all stages of their lifecycle.

A

Software asset management (SAM)

218
Q

Two types of IT asset management

A

IT asset management (ITAM)

This is a sub-practice of asset management that is specifically aimed at managing the lifecycles and total costs of IT equipment and infrastructure.

Software asset management (SAM)

This is the infrastructure and process necessary for the effective management, control, and protection of the software assets within an organization, throughout all stages of their lifecycle

219
Q

Distinct approaches that can be used for deployment

A