The ITIL 7 Guiding Principles are the most practical part of ITIL. If you use these principles as your base, share them with your colleagues and use them to make decisions, then you will make great use of them. Following ITIL Guiding Principles, you will create bigger value for all stakeholders involved in your organisation.
When ITIL 4 came to life, the 7 Guiding Principles were also updated. They are now the core part of the ITIL architecture. The 7 Guiding Principles provide guidance, encourage decision making and promote continual improvements at all levels.
7 Guiding Principles
The 7 ITIL Principles are:
- Focus on value
- Start where you are
- Progress iteratively with feedback
- Collaborate and promote visibility
- Think and work holistically
- Keep it simple and practical
- Optimise and automate
All together, the ITIL 7 Guiding Principles embody the core messages of ITIL and service management in general. They can be used to guide organisations as they ‘adopt’ a service management approach and ‘adapt’ ITIL guidance tailored to the organisation’s specific needs and circumstances. The ITIL 7 Guiding Principles are recommendations that guide an organisation, regardless of changes in its goals, strategies, type of work or management structure. The 7 ITIL Principles are universal and enduring.
Focus on value
Everything that the organisation does needs to deliver, directly or indirectly, value for the stakeholders. Therefore it is important that the organisation has a clear understanding of who the stakeholders are.
It is also key that the organisation understands what is truly of value to the service consumer. This is something that changes over time and circumstances. Last but not least the organisation needs to understand the customer experience, whether subjective or objective, in order to offer the best service.
Start where you are
ITIL does not request that you build something new. The guiding principle ‘start where you are’ is there to remind you that it is not wise to start over without considering what is already available.
It is important to have a clear view of the current situation in order to build something new. So with this guiding principle, organisations are advised to assess where they are. This includes a clear overview of available data and measurements.
Progress iteratively with feedback
This guiding principle is there to remind organisations not to do everything at once. Instead, ITIL recommends using improvement iterations. Hereby work is organised in smaller, manageable sections that can be executed in a timely manner.
Important is that these iterations are continually reevaluated and potentially revised. This to reflect any changes and to make sure the focus on value is still there.
Collaborate and promote visibility
Key for all initiatives is collaboration and trust. Therefore it is important to inform, understand and trust. organisations have to be transparent and share as much as possible. They also have to keep track of the flow of work in progress, identify bottlenecks and uncover waste.
To create the best output, organisations also have to make sure that the right employees have the right roles and responsibilities. Collaboration and communications is important, but can be different in every situation depending on the stakeholders.
Think and work holistically
To create the best service, it needs to be clear that all is connected. No service, practice, process, department or supplier stands alone. All activities should be aligned with the same focus on the delivery of value. This is done by clear communication, automation and a clear view of patterns.
Keep it simple and practical
This guiding principle is there to make sure things are not over-complicated. To do this, exceptions need to be defined and rules need to be put into place. Another activity is to judge what to keep, done by asking the question: ‘Does this practice/process/service really contribute to value creation?’
To keep things simple, sometimes it is better to do fewer things, but to do them better. In the end, simplicity is the ultimate sophistication!
Optimise and automate
This principle is put into place to make sure there is a focus to maximise the value of work carried out by both human and technical resources. Automation can help the work on frequent and repetitive tasks, freeing human resources. These human resources can then be put into place for more complex tasks that contribute to the value.
Important is that automation is not done for automation’s sake. It needs to be clear beforehand how automation will help the complete organisation to increase value.
How to use the ITIL 7 Guiding Principles
As an organisation you do not choose one or two principles to apply, you should consider the relevance of each of them and how they apply together. The 7 Guiding Principles interact and depend upon each other. None are critical, but all could be useful. The guiding principles should be reviewed on each occasion to assess how appropriate they are. The 7 Guiding Principles are universally applicable to practically any initiative and to all relationships with stakeholders.
It is important to refer to the principles at every decision making process or plan of improvement. But also when you are stuck, face some challenges or need some help. You might even consider printing them out and hanging them somewhere where you can see them multiple times a day!
The ITIL 7 Guiding Principles do not stand alone
These principles are not just connected to ITIL but are reflected in many other frameworks, methods, standards, philosophies and/or bodies of knowledge. This allows organisations to effectively integrate the use of multiple methods into an overall approach to service management.
Do you want your list of guiding principles to print out? We made a clear overview for you. Download it here.