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.
Oxford is a town in the South East region of England and the county town of Oxford-shire. With a projected 2015 populace of 168,270, it is the 52nd main town in the United Kingdom, and one of the wildest rising and most culturally diverse. The town is recognised worldwide as the home of the University of Oxford, the oldest university in the English-speaking world. Buildings in Oxford validate prominent instances of every English architectural period since the late Saxon period. Oxford is documented as the city of dreaming tips, a term conceived by poet Matthew Arnold. Oxford has a complete financial base. Its businesses comprise motor industrial, education, publication and a large number of information skill and science-based trades, some being theoretical side-shoots.
Geography
The town is recognised worldwide as the home of the University of Oxford, the oldest college in the English-speaking world. Constructions in Oxford confirm notable examples of every English architectural age since the late Saxon period. Oxford is known as the city of fantasising spires, a term invented by poet Matthew Arnold. Oxford has a comprehensive economic base. Its businesses cover motor engineering, education, publication and many information technology and science-based crafts, some being academic side-shoots.
Climate:
Oxford has a marine temperate weather. Rainfall is consistently distributed throughout the year and is provided mostly by weather systems that arrive from the Atlantic. The lowest fever ever logged in Oxford was −16.6 °C (2.1 °F) in January 1982. During European heat wave, the maximum temperature recorded in Oxford's is 35.6 °C in August. Oxford's climate is similar to that of Pershore, Worcestershire. The regular circumstances below are from the Radcliffe Meteorological Station. It claims the longest sequence of temperature and rainfall records for one site in Britain. These files are incessant from January 1815. Uneven comments of rain, cloud and high temperature exist from 1767.