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SolarWinds report highlights key ITSM improvement strategies

Yesterday

SolarWinds has released its new 2024 State of ITSM Report, revealing insights into Information Technology Service Management (ITSM) and strategies for improvement.

The report analyses data from more than 2,000 ITSM systems and from over 60,000 data points. It indicates that the average organisation deals with around 750 ITSM incidents each month, with an average resolution time of 21 hours.

According to the report, average resolution times vary significantly across industries. In financial services, organisations average 14 hours to resolve incidents, whereas educational institutions take approximately 33 hours.

The ratio of service desk agents to employees has little impact on the resolution times, while organisations that leverage automation rules save over 3 hours per ticket on average. Implementing service-level agreements (SLAs) is associated with resolving tickets two hours faster, it says.

The report suggests that simply adding more staff does not streamline ITSM operations. "Overall, the data asserts that organisations cannot streamline their ITSM operations by simply adding more staff members. Instead, based on SolarWinds' findings, improving operations requires a multi-faceted strategy of deploying additional effective methods," the report advises.

Automation rules

According to the data, implementing automation throughout the ITSM workflows improves an organisation's ability to meet its SLAs. The report shows that increased levels of automation correlate with a lower percentage of SLA misses (or the ratio of SLA misses to total tickets submitted.) Automation also helps organisations reduce the manual workload on service desk agents, scale their ITSM operations, and free up team members to focus on more strategic initiatives that drive long-term business success.

Self-Service portals and KB Articles

The study indicates that the effects of self-service portals are two-fold. First, they allow the user to take charge of their ticket resolution, facilitating an immediate response to the problem. Second, it reduces the overall resolution time, which results in a more efficient service desk.  

According to the study, KB articles are often the lifeblood of efficient self-service operations, as they allow users to find solutions to their issues, sometimes without even needing to submit an IT ticket. KB articles are most effective when they include information that is easy to understand, easy to access, and most relevant to a customer's problem. Ideally, the result is a reduction in the number of tickets and more time � for both customer and agent � to focus on more pressing issues.

Service level agreements

Automation, self-service portals, and KB articles are each important in helping the service desk maintain its SLAs with its customers. SLAs help set critical benchmarks for customers to judge the level of service. According to the report, maintained SLAs help improve customer trust and enhance resource optimisation. They also create avenues for continuous improvement. As a service desk continually meets its SLAs, it can look for opportunities to develop new benchmarks and enhance response times and operational efficiencies.  

Changing conventional thinking

Conventional thinking suggests that more ITSM staff translates to better ITSM services. However, the report shows no definitive correlation between the number of service desk agents and the time necessary to resolve tickets. Instead, ITSM teams should ensure they have a comprehensive plan in place, focusing less on large-scale hiring efforts and more on sound SLAs, intuitive automation, refined self-service portals, and easily accessible knowledge-based articles. 

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