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What is ITSM? Understanding the Approach and Its Advantages for Business

19 June 2025

updated at: 24 July 2025

The term ITSM is gaining traction, largely because the service-based approach at its core has displaced the traditional resource-based model in many industries. Let's break down the difference between these approaches and explore the advantages that ITSM offers to a business.

ITSM (IT Service Management)
ITSM (IT Service Management)

The classic business approach to nearly every task emphasizes resources: people, equipment, time, finances, and so on. Consider, for example, the "man-hours" still used in some companies to calculate project costs. These are precisely the resources that are allocated during business processes. For example, reinstalling an operating system on a computer might require one man-hour. But if this also involves installing office suites, antivirus software, and specialized programs, it could take four man-hours. In the first case, the company sends one employee for one hour; in the second, it sends either one employee for four hours or two employees for two hours.

Recently, however, the classic resource-based approach has been giving way to a service-based one, as it is more forward-looking and beneficial for both service providers and their clients. This is exactly what ITSM — Information Technology Service Management — is. Behind this acronym lies a methodology or approach to managing IT as a service.

What is ITSM in Simple Terms?

ITSM (IT Service Management) is an approach to implementing, managing, and improving IT services within an organization.

ITSM

ITSM (IT Service Management) is an approach to implementing, managing, and improving IT services within an organization.

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With this approach, any activity in the IT sphere is treated as a service aimed at solving customers' problems. Customers can be external B2C or B2B clients and partners, or internal — employees from various company departments. Services can include technical support, providing access to corporate systems and applications, maintaining work equipment, and so on. The parameters for such services are defined in an SLA (Service Level Agreement), which governs the relationship between the service provider and the customer.

The primary goal of ITSM is to ensure that IT services are closely aligned with business needs and to maximize end-user satisfaction. This is achieved by building clear and transparent service delivery processes, introducing SLAs, monitoring quality, and resolving incidents promptly.

Are ITSM and ITIL the Same Thing?

Although the terms ITSM and ITIL often go hand-in-hand, they are not synonymous. ITIL (IT Infrastructure Library) is a library of best practices upon which ITSM processes are built. It emerged in the 1980s, based on documents created and collected by the UK's Central Computer and Telecommunications Agency to optimize the work of government institutions. A key feature of ITIL is its practice-oriented approach: all descriptions are framed within the service lifecycle.

The current version, ITIL 4, was released in 2019. Its key feature is a strategic shift: focusing not on services or processes, but on the ultimate value delivered to the customer. You can learn more about ITIL, its four dimensions of service management, and their role in value creation on our blog.

IT Service Management Processes

Implementing the ITSM concept in practice relies on the set of processes defined in ITIL. These processes cover the entire IT service lifecycle, from strategy to continual improvement.

Key ITSM processes include:

  • Incident Management: Quickly restoring service after an incident to minimize downtime. The process includes logging, classifying, prioritizing, and escalating incidents, as well as investigating, resolving, closing, and analyzing them to prevent recurrence.
  • Problem Management: Eliminating the root causes of incidents to prevent them from happening in the future. This consists of diagnosing the causes of problems, defining corrective measures, and proactively searching for potential issues.
  • Change Management: Minimizing risks and preventing service disruptions that result from making changes to the system. The process involves managing the lifecycle of all changes to infrastructure, applications, and services.
  • Asset Management: The process of inventorying, tracking, controlling, and monitoring all infrastructure components necessary for service delivery.
  • Knowledge Management: The process of creating, sharing, and applying knowledge related to IT services.

Why Do Businesses Implement ITSM Systems?

Transitioning to a service model or implementing an ITSM system primarily helps to optimize and improve the relationship between customers and IT service providers.

The IT department ceases to be a mere support function and becomes an engaged participant in executing the business strategy through process standardization.

Advantages of the ITSM methodology:

  • Greater IT customer satisfaction via structured communication;
  • Better quality of IT service management;
  • Effective task prioritization;
  • Increased service efficiency;
  • Faster incident response times;
  • Enhanced collaboration among specialists;
  • Increased overall company efficiency.

Who Needs ITSM?

The answer is simple: everyone. And that's no exaggeration. ITIL 4 is no longer confined to IT. The service-based approach can be applied to any type of activity, as the benefits of ITSM (transparency, manageability, fewer incidents, increased efficiency, etc.) are relevant to any business, regardless of its size.

The basic principles of ITSM break down service management into five stages that describe the lifecycle of any service:

  1. Service Strategy;
  2. Service Design;
  3. Service Transition;
  4. Service Operation;
  5. Continual Service Improvement;

Therefore, the core principles of ITSM can be applied to any service — and this is precisely how the concept of ESM was born.

Every business relying on IT infrastructure encounters risks—whether from system vulnerabilities or operational breakdowns. These issues can disrupt critical processes and result in significant financial damage. ITSM (IT Service Management) addresses these challenges by introducing a standardized framework for managing risks throughout the entire IT service lifecycle.  At its core, ITSM shifts the focus to delivering value through services, breaking down management into specialized processes with defined objectives. This structured approach enhances transparency, control, and service quality. While ITSM originates in IT, its principles are equally powerful when applied to other departments, from HR to finance. That’s why organizations of all sizes and industries benefit from adopting service management practices.

Every business relying on IT infrastructure encounters risks — whether from system vulnerabilities or operational breakdowns. These issues can disrupt critical processes and result in significant financial damage. ITSM (IT Service Management) addresses these challenges by introducing a standardized framework for managing risks throughout the entire IT service lifecycle.  

 

At its core, ITSM shifts the focus to delivering value through services, breaking down management into specialized processes with defined objectives. This structured approach enhances transparency, control, and service quality. While ITSM originates in IT, its principles are equally powerful when applied to other departments, from HR to finance. That’s why organizations of all sizes and industries benefit from adopting service management practices.

Luiz Telles
Luiz Telles

ITSM vs. ESM — What's the Difference?

ESM (Enterprise Service Management) is a concept for managing corporate services that is, in a sense, an evolution of ITSM. ESM applies the service-based approach to any department in a company, assuming that every department is a service provider to its customers, whether internal or external.

So, ESM and ITSM complement each other perfectly. Many companies first implement an ITSM system and then scale it into an ESM framework.

This is exactly what the IT company ITGLOBAL.COM did. Nearly three years ago, the organization implemented the SimpleOne ITSM system to automate its IT service delivery. Over several years, ITGLOBAL.COM scaled the system into a corporate ESM, automating service management for its administrative, accounting, HR, and legal departments.

Common Mistakes in ITSM Implementation

Implementing an ITSM system is a complex process that requires the involvement of both IT specialists and potential service customers. Despite all the benefits of ITSM, many implementation projects fail. Let's look at typical mistakes to avoid.

  • Underestimating the project's scope
    Companies often fail to grasp the full extent of the changes required for the transition to ITSM. This leads to unrealistic deadlines and budgets, causing projects to fail.
  • Lack of support from top management
    The success of an ITSM implementation directly depends on the involvement of senior leadership. If top managers are not committed to the principles of ITSM, the initiative is doomed to fail.
  • Focusing only on IT, not on business outcomes
    ITSM requires a focus on business goals and customers. If the IT team focuses solely on technology while ignoring customer needs, the project delivers no business impact.
  • Ignoring organizational change
    Implementing ITSM involves a significant transformation of processes, roles, and responsibilities. Neglecting this aspect can severely hinder adoption.
  • Lack of staff training
    Implementing the ITSM approach requires preparing employees beforehand. Without a proper training program, new practices will not stick.

An ITSM Use Case

Let's look at the ITSM approach with a practical example. When a company's client experiences a technical issue, they contact support through their preferred channel — a phone call, an email, a web form, etc. An ITSM system unifies all these channels into a single system with a common interface.

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When a request comes in, the system automatically creates a ticket with a detailed problem description, the client's contact information, and their previous support history. Based on predefined rules, the system assigns the ticket to the appropriate specialist.

From there, the full range of ITSM processes comes into play: logging the incident, diagnosing the issue, finding a solution, escalating if necessary, preventing repeat incidents, and saving the solution in the knowledge base.

The ITSM system tracks the entire ticket lifecycle and sends automated notifications if there is a risk of violating the SLA.

6 slide - Service 1

After the ticket is closed, the solution is published in the knowledge base, making it available to other employees. This is how knowledge management is implemented, helping to avoid recurring, similar problems.

This way, an ITSM system automates customer support processes, improves service quality, and prevents recurring incidents.

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