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.
Eastleigh is in Hampshire, England, and the central city in the Region of Eastleigh. The town deceits between Southampton and Winchester, and is part of the South Hampshire conurbation. The first considerable growth was a railway town. Now it is home to many businesses, with industrial plant owned by Prysmian Cables & Systems. The city lies on the River Itchen, one of England's premier chalk streams for fly fishing, a selected site of Unusual Scientific Interest.
Education:
Eastleigh has two more education colleges: Barton Peveril Sixth Form College and Eastleigh College. Secondary schools comprise Crestwood College, and primary schools contain Norwood Primary School, Cherbourg Primary School, the Crescent Primary School and Shakespeare Infant.
Religion:
Emmanuel Baptist Church was established in the early 1930s. The building dates to 1905.
Sport
Eastleigh F.C.: Eastleigh F.C. are the town's single senior football team playing, from 2014–15, in the Conference Premier as well as arriving the FA Cup and the FA Trophy.
Solent Kestrels: Solent Kestrels are the town and area's basketball club and compete in the English Basketball League Division 1, the second-highest level of the sport in the nation, behindhand the countrywide British Basketball League. The team were endorsed to Division 1 in 2016, after concluding as champions of Division 2 in the 2015-16 season. Matt Guymon coaches them and shows home games at the Fleming Park Leisure Centre.
Eastleigh Ladies Hockey Club: Eastleigh Ladies Hockey Club is grounded in South Hampshire. It fields two teams in the Hampshire Women's League as well as playing floodlit and indoor league games.
Policy
Eastleigh is designated in Parliament by Traditional MP Mims Davies. She was chosen for the first time in the 2015 voting with a majority of 9,147, taking over from Mike Thornton. Mike Thornton was designated in the 2013 by-election after the resignation of Chris Huhne, in a by-election that was methodically boxed with UKIP coming second and the Traditionalists coming third.
In 2005 Huhne had been chosen as the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament (MP) for the Eastleigh electorate after the former MP discharged. Eastleigh has a practice of close contests, and Huhne narrowly beat the Conservative applicant Conor Burns with the second lowest swing alongside the Liberal Democrats of any seat with a retiring MP. David Chidgey had prospered the Conservative MP Stephen Milligan after his high-profile death. Chris Huhne was selected as Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change following the 2010 general election. Huhne reconciled the seat in February 2013 after pleading guilty to perverting the course of justice over a 2003 speeding situation.