ITIL Event Management – Entry point of Service Operation

How do you find out that there is an issue with your IT infrastructure and/or services? If your answer exclusively relies on end-users reporting issues to the Service Desk, you may want to learn more about an interesting ITIL Service Operations chapter – Event Management.

Monitoring is not Event Management

An event can be defined as any detectable or discernible occurrence that has significance for the management of the IT Infrastructure (or the delivery of IT service). Event Management is responsible for the evaluation of the impact a deviation might cause to the services. Events are typically notifications created by an IT service, Configuration Item (CI), or monitoring tool.

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Figure 1 – From an event to the root cause (problem)

Therefore, simply establishing monitoring capabilities doesn’t mean that you have Event Management, but there is no Event Management without effective monitoring.

There are two types of monitoring systems:

Event Management objectives

The ability to detect events, make sense of them, and determine the appropriate control action is provided by Event Management. Therefore, Event Management is often referred to as the entry point for the execution of many Service Operation processes and activities. In addition, it provides a way of comparing actual performance and behavior against design standards and Service Level Agreements.

Event Management objectives include:

The scope of Event Management

Event Management can be applied to any aspect of service management that needs to be controlled and which can be automated. These include: