ITIL® Practitioner follows on from ITIL® Foundati...
The ITIL® Practitioner certification is the next progressional step on from the ITIL® Foundation certification and concentrates on adopting and adapting the ITIL® framework to support a business's needs. ITIL®'s aim is to facilitate the amalgamation of IT services with the organisation's needs. Doing so promotes the growth, adaptation, and success of the business.
The ITIL® Practitioner course can be taken either on its own in a 2-day course, or combined with the ITIL® Foundation certification in a convenient 5-day course.
Please be aware, if you plan on taking our ITIL® Practitioner only course, you must hold an ITIL® Foundation certification.
ITIL® Practitioner is not a prerequisite for the ITIL® intermediate Certifications, instead, the practitioner course provides the perfect intermediary stage between the Foundation and Intermediate ITIL® certifications.
Our ITIL® Practitioner course lasts for 2 days, during which, using instructor-led tuition and practical exercises, you will comprehensively cover:
-The CSI (Continual Service Improvement) approach
-The Nine Guiding Principle as described by AXELOS
-The three key areas crucial for the success of improvement initiatives (Organisational Change Management, Communication, and Measurement and Metrics)
-How to adopt ITIL® roles into your daily tasks to maximise business efficiency
-On the last day of training, you will take the ITIL® Practitioner exam
Gaining ITIL® Practitioner certification will bring with it a plethora of benefits, below are detailed just a few of them:
-The ITIL® Practitioner Certification will provide you with 3 credits towards the ITIL® Expert qualification
-It will also provide you with 15 points towards your ITIL® digital badge
-Better navigate your way through difficult decisions in service management and avoid project disaster
-Increase the quality of service design
-Improve the efficacy and efficiency of service delivery
-Put the ITIL® Foundation theory into practice and adopt the ITIL® method into your business
Enquire Now
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Reach us at +44 20 3608 9989 or enquire@itil.org.uk for more information.
Buxton, a spa city, located in Derbyshire, England. It has the maximum elevation (960 feet above sea level). A metropolitan area until 1974, Buxton was then fused with other areas mendacious chiefly to the north, including Glossop, to practice the local government district and area of High Peak within the county of Derbyshire. Frugally, Buxton is within the sphere of the impact of Greater Manchester.
Buxton is home to Poole's Cavern, a general limestone cave open to the public, and St Ann's Well, nursed by the geothermal spring bottled and sold globally by Buxton Mineral Water Company. Also in the city is the Buxton Opera House, which hosts many music and drama centenaries each year. The Devonshire Site of the University of Derby is limited in one of the town's historic structures.
Geography and Geology:
Built on the border of the Lower Carboniferous Limestone and the Upper Carboniferous shale, sandstone and gritstone, the early settlement was mostly of limestone structure. At the city’s southern edge, the River Wye has imprinted a wide limestone cavern, known as Poole's Cavern. More than 330 yards of its cavities are open to the community. The cavern covers Derbyshire's chief icicle, and there are sole 'poached egg' pillars. An infamous local highwayman called Poole gave the cave its name.
Climate:
Due to comparatively high promotion, Buxton inclines to be chiller than nearby cities, with daytime temperature characteristically around 2 °C lower than Manchester. A Met Office weather station has calm weather date for the city since 1908, with digitised data from 1959 obtainable online. In June 1975, the town smashed by a freak blizzard that stationary play during a cricket match.