ITIL® Expert Level

Manage interactions between different stages of service lifecycle

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TOPIC INFORMATION

ITIL® Managing Across the Lifecycle is the final step in attaining ITIL® Expert Certification. You will get complete knowledge regarding strategic design, implementation and management of capabilities and resources that are required in Service Lifecycle. Managing Across the Lifecycle course will help you in combining knowledge of various ITIL® areas in the lifecycle into a single service management strategy. Following are five core publications of ITIL®:

  • Service Design
  • Service Strategy
  • Service Transition
  • Service Operation
  • Continual Service Improvement

 

What are the benefits of choosing this course?

Benefits for you as an individual

In Managing Across the Service Lifecycle, you will learn about the lifecycle approach that is used for managing the services from inception to retirement and also integrating the organisational processes to maximum effect.

After clearing this exam, you will obtain a widely recognised qualification that is ITIL® Expert.

Benefits for your organisation

  • The quality value of service and productivity of staff will be increased with ITIL® Experts within the organisation
  • You will be able to determine the high level of understanding and competency in service delivery across the lifecycle

 

Why choose us?

Become ITIL® certified with our Customary ITIL® training program to understand and implement key concepts for enhancing the productivity of the organisation. Our well trained and certified instructors will help you to clear the exam in the first attempt. Our ITIL® courses are accredited by PeopleCert. Our courses are delivered in various modes like a classroom, online and onsite.

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Reach us at +44 20 3608 9989 or enquire@itil.org.uk for more information.

About Canterbury

Canterbury is an English cathedral city. It is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Canterbury lies on the famous river named as Stour. The Archbishop of Canterbury is the chief bishop of the Church of England. The globally Anglican Communion functioned as the Apostle to the  Kingdom known as pagan of Kent around the turn of the 7th century. The city's cathedral turns into a key focus of pilgrimage. It is because of the martyrdom of Thomas Becket in 1170.

 

Early history

The Canterbury area has been inhabited since old times. Lower Palaeolithic axes and pots of Neolithic and Bronze Age have been found in the area. Canterbury was first noted as the main settlement of the Celtic tribe of the Cantiaci. In the 1st century, the Romans captured the settlement and named it as “Durovernum Cantiacorum”.

 

Geography

Canterbury is located at the position of 51°16′30″N 1°05′13″E (51.275, 1.087) in East Kent. The coastal towns of Herne Bay and Whitstable are 6 miles ( nearly 10 km) to the north, and Faversham is 8 miles (approximately 13 km) to the north-west. The civil township of Thanington Without is to the south-west; the rest of the city is unparished. Harbledown, Wincheap and Hales Place are chief suburbs of the city.

 

Demography

At the 2001 UK census, the total population of the Canterbury's urban area wards was 43,432. In the year of 2011, the total area population was counted up as 151,200, with an 11.7% increase from 2001.

The 2001 census, residents of the Canterbury, had an average age of 37.1 years. Of the 17,536 households, 10% were lone parents, 39% were couples, 35% were one-person households, and 15% other. Of those aged from 16 to 74 in the city, 27% had a higher education qualification, which was higher than the 20% national average.

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