In an environment where the IT department must both ensure operational stability and accelerate the delivery of new features, it becomes crucial to adopt a structured approach to transform IT into a genuine value driver.
ITIL 4, the evolution of the IT service management framework, integrates Agile, DevOps, and cloud practices while refocusing attention on value creation. Combined with a modern IT Service Management (ITSM) platform like Jira Service Management, this framework aligns IT processes with business objectives, enhances agility, controls risks, and fosters a culture of continuous improvement.
Understanding the ITIL 4 Service Value System
The Service Value System (SVS) defines how all components and activities of an organization work together to facilitate value creation through IT services. It is based on five interdependent elements that, collectively, structure and guide IT efforts toward meeting business needs. Each element provides an essential perspective: from guiding principles to steer decisions, to continual improvement to ensure ongoing adaptation.
Guiding Principles
The guiding principles serve as a decision-making compass. They help teams choose priorities, ensure consistency across projects, and prevent counterproductive deviations.
These principles include focusing on value, keeping things simple, iterating, and collaborating. They encourage building on existing assets, avoiding unnecessary complexity, and favoring regular feedback over rigid planning.
In practice, this framework enables rapid decision-making when unforeseen events occur by systematically evaluating impacts on business value and user satisfaction.
Governance
Governance defines the structures, roles, and policies by which the organization is directed and controlled. It ensures strategic alignment and balances risk-taking with compliance.
A clear governance model enables efficient resource allocation, investment management, and transparency over key indicators (SLAs, KPIs). Steering committees, charters, and escalation models are levers to avoid silos and standardize processes without creating bureaucracy.
This dimension secures decision-making and promotes stakeholder buy-in through shared rules and formal monitoring mechanisms.
Service Value Chain
The value chain comprises six key activities—ranging from planning to delivery and improvement—that take an idea to production. It ensures workflow coherence and deliverable traceability.
Each activity can be tailored to different contexts: continuous integration, change management, test validation, automated deployment, and more. To avoid the pitfalls of application modernization, precise scoping is essential.
Example: A Swiss financial institution redesigned its critical update process by reorganizing the value chain. Through automated orchestration of tests and approvals, average deployment time dropped from 10 to 4 days. This adjustment demonstrated that rigorous activity modeling significantly reduces time-to-market.
Continual Improvement
Continual improvement is at the heart of the SVS. It provides a framework for identifying improvement opportunities, measuring outcomes, and planning optimizations.
Iterative loops (PDCA, Kaizen) enable quick correction of deviations and process adjustments based on field feedback. Regular reports feed performance reviews and can leverage process intelligence tools to spot opportunities swiftly.
In practice, a team might hold monthly reviews to assess major incidents, calculate SLA deviations, and define priority corrective actions.
The Four Dimensions of Service Management
To deliver services effectively, ITIL 4 identifies four dimensions that must be addressed in balance: organization and people, information and technology, partners and suppliers, and value streams and processes. Each dimension must be considered to avoid silos and ensure service longevity. Neglecting any dimension can undermine ITSM efforts and impact business satisfaction.
Organization and People
Skills, roles, and corporate culture shape IT teams’ adaptability. Clear responsibility governance (RACI) and continuous training plans prevent knowledge loss and promote versatility.
Without nurturing an improvement culture, best practices remain unused. Rituals such as post-mortems and feedback workshops are essential to foster transparency and engagement.
Documenting procedures and defining career pathways reduce reliance on experts and limit knowledge turnover.
Information and Technology
A centralized knowledge base, configuration management databases (CMDBs), and monitoring tools provide visibility into applications and infrastructure. They enable incident tracking, congestion forecasting, and SLA management.
Obsolete or poorly integrated technologies create data silos and diagnostic errors. Adopting modular tools compatible with standard APIs ensures extensibility and platform resilience.
Real-time metric collection feeds dashboards and guides strategic decisions, for example, when a spike in load triggers software quality measurement tools.
Partners and Suppliers
Managing contracts, service levels, and external dependencies is critical to control costs and ensure end-to-end quality. Clear agreements on escalations and penalties guarantee commitment compliance.
Poorly governed partnerships can lead to extended resolution times and blurred responsibilities. Quarterly performance reviews help reassess risks and implement corrective measures.
Choosing open-source providers aligns with Edana’s approach to limit vendor lock-in and retain ecosystem control.
Value Streams and Processes
Each process must be mapped to identify bottlenecks and eliminate redundant steps. An optimized workflow reduces cycle time and improves business satisfaction.
Indicators such as MTTR, change success rate, or satisfaction scores help prioritize improvements. Targeted automations (approvals, escalations, notifications) streamline collaboration.
Example: A Swiss logistics operator redefined its incident management workflows. By automating escalations and grouping similar requests, MTTR was halved and sorting effort dropped by 30%. This improvement highlighted the direct impact of detailed mapping on resolution times.
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Step-by-Step Application of ITIL 4 Guiding Principles
The seven guiding principles of ITIL 4 offer a pragmatic roadmap for initiating ITSM transformation, emphasizing experimentation, collaboration, and simplification. Each principle provides actionable advice to secure early wins and scale the approach organization-wide.
Focus on Value & Start Where You Are
The “Focus on Value” principle urges aligning every action with the outcomes expected by the business. It requires systematically questioning the usefulness of each service, metric, or process.
“Start Where You Are” recommends leveraging existing assets before embarking on full-scale overhauls. This mindset avoids the costs and delays associated with unjustified from-scratch projects.
For implementation, a proof of concept in a limited scope (for example, change management) can demonstrate the approach’s effectiveness while minimizing operational risk.
Progress Iteratively with Feedback & Collaborate and Promote Visibility
Short iterative cycles (sprints, Kanban) provide the flexibility needed to adjust the approach quickly. Regular feedback from business users strengthens buy-in and ensures deliverable relevance.
Cross-functional collaboration and visible dashboards (incident status, change progress) foster trust, reduce misunderstandings, and speed decision-making.
A weekly backlog review involving the IT department, business stakeholders, and vendors supports prioritization and enables immediate response to detected issues.
Think and Work Holistically, Keep It Simple & Optimize and Automate
“Think and Work Holistically” reminds us that services extend beyond a single process or tool and result from end-to-end orchestration. This vision prevents silos.
“Keep It Simple” limits complexity creep and lightens maintenance tasks. “Just enough” solutions often outperform heavier alternatives in performance and resilience.
Automating low-value tasks (provisioning, routing, escalation) frees up skills for innovation. An automated test or scripted workflow contributes as much to quality as it does to team satisfaction.
Example: A healthcare provider in French-speaking Switzerland implemented automation for minor change approvals. Processing times fell from 2 days to 2 hours, demonstrating that a well-placed script can save significant person-hours and enhance reliability.
Implementing ITIL 4 with Jira Service Management
Putting ITIL 4 into practice relies on a set of high-impact practices combined with a modern ITSM platform like Jira Service Management. A structured action plan and critical success factors ensure progressive adoption, minimizing risks and maximizing business benefits.
High-Impact ITIL 4 Practices
Among the 34 ITIL practices, several are critical for mid-sized organizations: incident, change, knowledge, and asset management. They cover identification, analysis, resolution, and information sharing.
Incident management reduces MTTR through clear escalation workflows and tracking dashboards.
Knowledge management empowers users with quick access to procedures, while asset management controls costs and tracks dependencies.
Leveraging Jira Service Management
Jira Service Management provides an intuitive user portal, configurable workflows, and a collaborative knowledge base. SLAs can be customized to reflect business commitments.
Native integration with development and monitoring tools supports DevOps continuity, while unified dashboards offer a comprehensive view of IT governance.
Low-code or no-code configuration allows rapid adaptation of ITIL workflows to each department’s specific needs.
Action Plan and Critical Success Factors
An effective deployment starts with auditing existing practices and training users and sponsors. Defining a pilot in a limited scope enables measurement of key indicators (MTTR, incident frequency, business satisfaction).
Subsequently, a phased rollout and dedicated governance ensure stakeholder buy-in and process compliance. Regular reviews and continual improvement loops strengthen ITSM maturity.
It is crucial not to try to cover everything at once, to plan strong change management, and to involve business users to avoid resistance and sustain momentum.
Modernize Your ITSM to Become a Value Driver
Modernizing IT service management goes beyond selecting a tool or framework: it entails a holistic transformation of governance, processes, and technology, all centered on business value and operational agility.
By combining the ITIL 4 SVS, the four dimensions, the guiding principles, and the key practices—and implementing them through Jira Service Management—organizations can shorten delivery times, manage risks, and establish a culture of continuous improvement.
Edana’s experts support these projects by blending ITSM consulting, technology integration, and change management with an open-source, modular, and contextualized approach, ensuring proximity, quality, and risk control.















