Administering Service Management with Atlassian Cloud
Students will learn how team Jira Administration enables Service Management team leaders in Atlassian tools:
- How ITSM works, a process overview
- How to leverage core Jira Skills in Jira Service Management projects
- How JSM fits into a complete ITSM solution in the Atlassian Ecosystem
- How to approach integrations and provide customers multiple “ways to ask for help” in an Atlassian ITSM solution.
Professionals who would benefit from this training include:
- Atlassian Administrators that will be assisting teams that will be using ITSM.
- Atlassian Tool Governance team members that need to understand the tool's capabilities.
- Support Team “power users” Interested in understanding all the administrative parts of the solution (rather than just their own Project Administration capabilities)
Outline
Part 1: Atlassian ITSM, an overview
- A tour of Atlassian’s Multiple-Tool approach to ITSM
Part 2: Customer Authentication and Access, Service Catalog Permissions
- How customers are onboarded (intro)
- How a customer interacts with your teams
- Identity Protection and Customer Permissions
Part 3: The four types of work Incident, Service Request, Problem Management, Change Management
- How ITSM organizes and measures work
- Service Requests, and Approvals
- Incidents reported and alerts from monitored services
- Orchestrated incident response
- Change Management, and approval rules for groups
- Problem Management
Part 4: Incident Management
- Incident Management process
- How to mark incidents as major incidents in Jira Service Management
- How to create and send updates to a Slack channel directly from an incident
- How to send incident updates to internal stakeholders
- Learn how to access and create post-incident reviews (PIRs)
- How to link multiple incidents into a problem report
Part 5: Change Management:
- The change management process
- Using the default change management workflow
- Set up enforced approvals
- Auto-approve standard changes
- Schedule changes with the change calendar
Part 6: Preparing teams for building and maintaining their service catalog requests
- What a JSM Project Administration can and should do themselves (with your support): Create and maintain all their own teams’ requests, Invite customers, Configure Queues, Modifying automated responses, Configuring Service Level Agreements, Place agents into “Roles”
- How JSM Requests are associated with Jira Issues Types
- JSM Jira Workflow configurations
- Use of Forms for “in process” information gathering
- Helping teams with SLA creation
- Email Requests
Part 7: How to help teams organize their Knowledge Base
- Creating KB Articles by answering customer questions
- Converting word documents to KB Articles
- Protecting internal KB Articles
Part 8: OpsGenie: Proactively Monitoring and resolving Incidents
- Connecting OpsGenie to your monitoring
- Events, Alerts and Incidents
- “On Call Team” availability
- How the Services asset data connects OpsGenie to JSM
Part 9: Status Page: Transparently reporting on service status to engage customers
- Status Page configurations (internal vs. External)
- How customer manage Status Page notifications
- Setting rules for Status Page incidents
Part 10: Assets (JSM Cloud Premium):
- Overview on IT asset management, Service configuration management and where to start
- Access Insight in Jira Service Management
- Create an object schema
- Create an object type
- Create an object
- Set up your Insight objects custom field
- Import objects into Jira Service Management
- Insight discovery
Part 11: How JSM and Jira Software work together
- Add Jira Service Management to your Atlassian cloud site
- Understanding user types and roles
- Optimize your Custom fields
- How to link an issue
- Automation for linked services
Part 12: Chat Integrations Guidance
- Chat integrations (included)
- Chat operations supported by JSM
- Which chat integration features to focus on
Part 13: Helping teams create their own automations (and ensuring they do so safely)
- Controls to prevent Automations created by users from “going rogue”
- How automation is metered
- Using a Role account
- Advanced Automations Calling one automation from another
- Creating a “Rest End Point” of your own with Automation for Jira
Part 14: Configuring JSM for non IT teams to activate Enterprise Service Management
- Enabling JSM without the IT centric elements
- Categorizing issue types to activate service management reporting across the entire enterprise
- Advice for Onboarding non-IT Teams
Part 15: Resources for Continued Learning
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