benefits
UPGRADE YOUR SKILLS

THE LEARNING CURVE

01 Course Pre-requisites

To attend, you must hold ITIL® 4 Foundation certification.

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02 Course Overview

What's Included

  • ITIL® 4 Specialist High Velocity IT Training Manual
  • 3 days of instructor-led tuition
  • Certificate
  • Exam
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03 What will the delegates learn ?

You will learn the following main ITIL 4 practices:

  • Architecture management
  • Business analysis
  • Deployment management
  • Service validation and testing
  • Software development and management
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04 Course Content

The syllabus of the ITIL 4 Specialist High Velocity IT (HVIT) certificate training courseware consists of:

1. Understand concepts regarding the high-velocity nature of the digital enterprise, including the demand it places on IT

1.1 Understand the following terms:

  • Digital organisation
  • High-velocity IT
  • Digital transformation
  • IT transformation
  • Digital product
  • Digital technology

1.2 Understand when the transformation to high-velocity IT is desirable and feasible

1.3 Understand the five objectives associated with digital products to achieve:

  • Valuable investments – strategically innovative and effective application of IT
  • Fast development - quick realisation and delivery of IT services and IT-related products
  • Resilient operations - highly resilient IT services and IT-related products
  • Co-created value - effective interactions between service provider and consumer
  • Assured conformance - to governance, risk and compliance (GRC) requirements

2. Understand the digital product lifecycle in terms of the ITIL ‘operating model’

2.1 Understand how high-velocity IT relates to:

  • The four dimensions of service management
  • The ITIL service value system
  • The service value chain
  • The digital product lifecycle

3. Understand the importance of the ITIL guiding principles and other fundamental concepts for delivering high-velocity IT

3.1 Understand the following principles, models and concepts:

  • Ethics
  • Safety culture
  • Lean culture
  • Toyota Kata
  • Lean / Agile / resilient / continuous
  • Service-dominant logic
  • Design thinking
  • Complexity thinking

3.2 Know how to use the following principles, models and concepts:

  • Ethics
  • Safety culture
  • Lean culture
  • Toyota Kata
  • Lean / Agile / resilient / continuous
  • Service-dominant logic
  • Design thinking
  • Complexity thinking
  • How the above contribute to:
  • Help get customers’ jobs done
  • Trust and be trusted
  • Continually raise the bar
  • Accept ambiguity and uncertainty
  • Commit to continual learning

4. Know how to contribute to achieving value with digital products

4.1 Know how the service provider ensures valuable investments are achieved.

4.2 Know how to use the following practices to contribute to achieving valuable investments

  • Portfolio management
  • Relationship management

4.3 Know how the service provider ensures fast development is achieved.

4.4 Know how to use the following practices to contribute to achieving fast development

  • Architecture management
  • Business analysis
  • Deployment management
  • Service validation and testing
  • Software development and management

4.5 Know how the service provider ensures resilient operations are achieved.

4.6 Know how to use the following practices to contribute to achieving resilient operations

  • Availability management
  • Capacity and performance management
  • Monitoring and event management
  • Problem management
  • Service continuity management
  • Infrastructure and platform management

4.7 Know how the service provider ensures co-created value is achieved.

4.8 Know how to use the following practices to contribute to achieving co-created value with the service consumer

  • Relationship management
  • Service design
  • Service desk

4.9 Know how the service provider ensures assured conformance is achieved

4.10 Know how to use the following practices to contribute to achieving assured conformance

  • Information security management
  • Risk management
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About Birmingham

Birmingham, located in the West Midlands, England, has a population of 1,101,360 (as of 2014). Birmingham became a centre of prominence with the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. As such it prospered in the fields of science and technology. It underwent economic development and a saw a series of innovations taking place that was responsible for shaping Birmingham into how we know it today. Birmingham became "the first manufacturing town in the world" by the year 1791.

During the period of 1940 to 1943 in the Second World War, the German Luftwaffe heavily bombed Birmingham in what was later made popular by the name of the Birmingham Blitz. However, this damage to the city's infrastructure and its demolition led to its redevelopment in next few decades.

The  Brummies, a term derived from the city's nickname of Brum and is used for the citizens of Birmingham.This seems to have originated from the city's earlier name, Bromwicham. The city has a distinctive Brummie accent and dialect as well.

Education

Primary and Secondary

England’s largest local education authority is the Birmingham City Council which is either directly or indirectly responsible for the education of all the students in Birmingham25 nursery schools, 328 primary schools, 77 high schools and 29  schools for the specially abled. There are around 3,500 adult education courses throughout the year in such schools. A majority of Birmingham's state schools are directly run by the Birmingham City Council. Birmingham is also home to a number of schools that are supported by the state system. The secondary schools in Birmingham since the 1970s have been 11-16/18 large schools. On the other hand post, GCSE students have the choice of continuing their education in either a school's sixth form or at a college. In Birmingham’s school system, students are categorised into two groups during their primary schooling i.e. 4-7 and 7-11 years.

Further and higher education

Home to five major universities: Aston University, University of Birmingham, Birmingham City University, University College Birmingham and Newman University, Birmingham also houses the University of Law and BPP University campuses, along with the Open University's West Midlands regional base. In 2011 Birmingham had 78,259 full-time students aged 18–74 resident in the city during term time, more than any other urban location in the United Kingdom outside London. Birmingham has 32,690 research students, also the highest number of any major city outside London.

 

Cricket

Edgbaston Cricket Ground, known as the home ground for Warwickshire County Cricket Club, also hosts Test and ODI’s.Next to the Lord's, it is the biggest cricket ground in the whole of United Kingdom. It was at Brian Laa scored 501 not out for Warwickshire in 1994 at this ground.

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