Skip to content
Deep Creek Center home.
  • Consulting
  • Services
  • Courses
    • Scrum
      • Scrum Master Certified
      • Scrum Developer Certified
      • Scrum Product Owner Certified
      • Agile Expert Certified
    • Business Analysis/ Business Relationship Management
      • Business Analysis For The IT Professional
      • Modeling Techniques For The Business Analyst
      • Software Quality Assurance
      • Effective Methods Of Software Testing Workshop
      • Effective Use Case Development
      • Business Relationship Management
      • Business Relationship Management Professional (BRMP®)
    • ITIL
      • ITIL 4 Foundations
      • ITIL Specialist: Create, Deliver, and Support
      • ITIL Specialist: Drive Stakeholder Value
      • ITIL Specialist: High Velocity IT
      • ITIL Strategist: Direct, Plan, and Improve
      • ITSM Workshop
    • Project Management / PMI
      • Project Management Principles For IT Professionals
      • Certified Associate In Project Management (CAPM)
      • Project Management Professional (PMP)
    • Cybersecurity
      • NIST Cybersecurity Professional® Foundation
      • NIST Cybersecurity Professional® Practitioner
      • NIST Cybersecurity Professional® 800-171 Specialist
      • NIST Cybersecurity Professional® ISO 27001 Specialist
    • Governance
      • COBIT 5.0 Foundation
  • Blog

Certification training vs tools

Posted on November 10, 2013 by Patrick von Schlag.

A number of our customers are struggling with how to implement training programs to support their service management initiative. Many approach the training need from a tools point-of-view. In other words, train them on using the Change management tools, not on the process itself. While understanding how to effectively leverage and use your tools is critical, understanding the context of the work in supporting your services is the critical link. What are the proper triggers, inputs, and outputs of the process? What are the dependency relationships between your process activities and that of other processes? How does what is happening in your functional group impact other groups?

We recommend at a minimum some core understanding of the Service Lifecycle and the role the different processes play in modeling, planning, transitioning, supporting, and improving services BEFORE the tools training. Otherwise, people will “fill in the boxes” to “get the work done” without the right level of quality or value capture in their documentation. Ultimately you are at risk of reduce quality and service availability without this core understanding.

Posted in Making IT Work, TrainingTagged change management, tools, Training

Post navigation

Does cloud computing spell death to ITIL?
ITIL implementation — the big picture

Sidebar

Search

Post Categories

  • Agile (8)
  • Business Analysis (8)
  • Case Studies (2)
  • Cybersecurity (2)
  • Default (6)
  • DevOps (2)
  • Featured (5)
  • Governance (3)
  • Information Security (1)
  • Inspiration (2)
  • Instructor (5)
  • IT Service Management (6)
  • ITIL (40)
  • ITIL Workshops Courses (7)
  • ITSM (17)
  • ITSM Concepts Series (10)
  • LEAN (6)
  • Making IT Work (48)
  • NIST (6)
  • Other Courses (5)
  • Press (6)
  • PRINCE 2 (2)
  • Project Management (5)
  • Project Management Courses (9)
  • RESILIA (2)
  • Scrum (10)
  • Simulations (2)
  • Training (10)

Upcoming Events

Notice
There are no upcoming events.

Footer

Copyright © 2026. All rights reserved. Deep Creek Center. Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Sitemap