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Canadian firm slams complexity of ITIL certification

Canadian firm slams complexity of ITIL certification By:  Shane Schick On: 03 Jun 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

Version 3 of the IT Infrastructure Library was supposed to help executives do a better job of managing technology infrastructure, but do you take the "capability" or "lifecycle" courses? Pink Elephant calls for greater clarity



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A Canadian firm internationally recognized for providing ITIL education says the most recent version of the best practice library is creating confusion among those who want to do a better job of managing technology.

Late last week Pink Elephant, a Toronto-based company that has been offering consulting and education around the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL) for 20 years, said it was changing the names of nine certification courses to clear up who should enrol in each. These courses are part of the “intermediate” level of ITIL certification, and are divided into “capability” and “lifecycle” streams. Pink Elephant will now refer to these as “IT Manager” and “IT practitioner” courses, respectively.

ITIL grew out of efforts within the U.K. government to better handle IT procurement and consists of a set of books, each devoted to a different area of technology infrastructure management. Senior IT executives such as CIOs routinely seek ITIL certification, which is officially accredited by U.K.-based APM Group but provided by scores of partners around the world, to grow and validate their technology expertise.

Pink Elephant president David Ratcliffe said before the launch of ITIL Version 3 in spring of 2007, there were only a couple of choices for certification at the intermediate level.

“Now it’s just a lot tougher for us to explain to people what they should be thinking about,” he said. “At the intermediate level, there’s a really confusing mix of courses which are not very clear to the person who doesn’t live and breathe this every day.”

The “lifecycle” stream, for example, includes courses on service strategy, design, operation and continual service improvement. This is best aimed at IT managers, Ratcliffe explained. The “capability” stream, however, looks at more distinct areas such as operational support and analysis, service offerings and agreements, and release, control and validation. IT practitioners may want to pick and choose from these categories, he suggested.

“We’re trying to get people not to think of ITIL certification as always striving towards an end result of becoming an expert or three or four years, which is what it will take,” he said. “What are my needs to help my organization right now? That’s probably going to be from just one course plus, one deeper course.”

Sharon Taylor, chief examiner for the Version 3 qualification scheme, said Pink Elephant’s decision does not reflect that of other ITIL certification providers.


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada, a media company that brings together communities of technology professionals.     Shane joined the IT Business Group in 1997 as a sta... more

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