ITSM Consulting & Implementation by ITIL v4–Certified Engineers
SMC Consulting helps organisations structure and improve IT Service Management (ITSM) by combining ITIL v4-aligned practices with hands-on ITSM platform implementation. We define service management workflows, governance rules, and platform configuration so support teams can operate consistently and measure performance over time.
Scope we typically cover
- ITSM practices: Incident / Service Request / Change / Problem / Knowledge / CMDB
- ITIL v4: certified consultants involved in delivery (practice design, governance, implementation)
- Platform experience: ServiceNow , HaloITSM , Freshservice
Why ITIL® 4 certification matters for ITSM projects
Less risk
Clearer approvals, controls, and traceability for service operations.
More stability
Consistent workflows and ownership reduce avoidable exceptions.
Faster resolution
Better routing, escalation, knowledge use, and measurable SLAs.
Better alignment with the business
Services, priorities, and reporting are easier to standardise and review.
Meet our ITIL v4 consultants (ITSM delivery)
good operating design and workable execution inside the tool.

Hedi El Asmi
Senior IT Consultant | ITIL v4
See certifications
Hedi supports ITSM initiatives from a senior consulting and business analysis perspective: clarifying requirements, mapping operational workflows, defining role responsibilities, and translating service management needs into implementable specifications for ITSM platforms.
Typical ITSM focus areas
- Requirements and workflow specification (incident / request / change)
- Service catalogue structure and request form design
- KPI definitions and reporting requirements
- Operating procedures and documentation

Sara Gutiérrez López
Manager, Support & Delivery | ITIL v4
See certifications
Sara supports ITSM work from a support and delivery management angle: service desk operating model, team execution, handoffs between tiers, service ownership, and governance cadence—critical to ensure process designs are usable in real operations.
Typical ITSM focus areas
- Support operating model (roles, queues, escalation)
- Delivery coordination and governance cadence
- Adoption and operational readiness
- Service performance review routines

Zakaria Makboul
ITSM Implementation Engineer | Process Automation Specialist | ITIL v4
See certifications
Zakaria focuses on implementation: configuring workflows, automating fulfilment steps, integrating operational inputs, and ensuring ITSM processes are executed consistently inside the tool.
Typical ITSM focus areas
- ITSM platform implementation and configuration
- Workflow automation and standardisation
- Integrations and operational tooling alignment
- Data capture rules for reporting quality

Afaf Atraoui
IT Consultant | ITIL v4
See certifications
Afaf supports organisations in translating operational needs into structured requirements, documented workflows, and stakeholder alignment—so platform configuration reflects agreed processes and enables reliable reporting.
Typical ITSM focus areas
- Workflow clarification and documentation (as-is / to-be)
- Process-to-tool alignment (states, rules, ownership)
- Service catalogue structuring (services, request items, templates)
- Data capture rules and governance (mandatory fields, validation, quality)

Marc Abou Abdo
Consultant | ITIL v4
See certifications
Marc supports initiatives by structuring requirements through the ITIL v4 lens and aligning service management with business value. He helps standardise workflows, clarify RACI, define service levels, and improve reporting consistency.
Typical ITSM focus areas
- Requirements aligned with the ITIL Service Value System
- Workflow mapping and standardisation for efficiency
- KPI and reporting requirements tied to business value
- Stakeholder coordination and operational documentation
They Trusted Us
experience
ITSM implementations across organisations
of different sizes and sectors
- ITSM practice standardisation + reporting governance -> improved SLA visibility and decision-making
- Service catalogue + request workflows -> reduced manual handling and improved fulfilment consistency
- Tool configuration optimisation -> better routing, fewer reassignments, faster resolution
Our ITSM expertise aligned with ITIL v4 best practices
Our ITSM work covers the practices most often required to stabilise and standardise service operations: incident management, service request management, change enablement, problem management, knowledge management, and configuration management (CMDB). For each area, we translate operational requirements into clear workflow rules (states, responsibilities, approvals, exceptions), consistent data capture, and measurable targets.
In practical terms, this means turning ITIL v4 practice concepts into implementable decisions:
- Which states exist (and what triggers state changes)
- Who owns each step (RACI and operational handoffs)
- How exceptions are handled (escalations, major incidents, approvals)
- Which approvals are required (and under what conditions)
- What data must be captured (mandatory fields, validation, data quality)
- How success is measured (KPIs, SLAs, governance cadence)
ITIL v4 for ITSM implementation
- A defined scope per practice (included / excluded)
- Explicit roles (process owner, service owner, resolver groups, change authority)
- Standardised records (incident/change/problem/request fields and mandatory data)
- Measurable rules (SLA timers, pause conditions, breach handling)
- A continual improvement loop (review cadence + backlog + ownership)
SMC Consulting ITSM services
ITSM assessment & baseline
Inputs (typical)
- Ticket exports (3–6 months)
- Current SLA definitions
- Service catalogue list
- Workflow/config overview
Outputs
- Baseline KPIs (where data allows)
- Gaps and prioritised improvements
- Delivery plan / roadmap
ITSM practice design aligned with ITIL v4
- Incident management (priority model, escalation, major incident)
- Service request management + service catalogue (taxonomy, forms, fulfilment flows)
- Change management (risk model, approvals, standard changes, PIR)
- Problem management (RCA templates, known errors, linking rules)
- Knowledge management + self-service (templates, governance, search metadata)
- CMDB / configuration management (scope, CI model, ownership, quality controls)
Platform configuration & integrations
- SSO / identity
- Collaboration tools
- Monitoring/event intake
- Asset data sources
What’s included in an ITSM implementation
- Workflow/state design per practice (incident/request/change/problem)
- Routing & assignment logic (queues, resolver groups, skills-based assignment where relevant)
- Forms & data model (mandatory fields, validation, category structure)
- SLAs/OLAs (service hours, pause conditions, breach handling, reports)
- Portal & service catalogue (requests, approvals, fulfilment flows, templates)
- Knowledge base structure (taxonomy, ownership, publishing workflow)
- Roles & permissions (agents, approvers, stakeholders, access boundaries)
- Dashboards & KPIs (SLA compliance, backlog aging, resolution times, volume trends)
- Operational governance (cadence, review templates, continual improvement backlog)
- Go-live plan + hypercare (rollout, coaching, stabilisation period)
Reporting, KPIs & governance
We define KPI calculation rules (business hours, pause conditions, exclusions), build dashboards, and set up a review cadence that results in actions (not just charts). If you want a service management reference point beyond ITIL, you can also align governance to ISO/IEC guidance (overview: ISO).
Designed for organisations that need standardised ITSM practices at scale, with strong governance, extensibility, and integration options.
Known for quick adoption and usability. Covers core ITSM needs (service catalog, workflows, knowledge, approvals, reporting) and supports rapid rollout.
ITSM platforms we
work with
Most frequently asked questions on ITSM and ITIL v4
ITSM is the discipline of managing IT services end-to-end. ITIL v4 is a framework that describes practices and concepts commonly used to structure ITSM work.
It reduces ambiguity in how practices are designed and implemented: clearer roles, workflow rules, data capture standards, SLA logic, and governance—so processes and reporting stay consistent over time.
Often yes. Improvements can focus on workflow rules, queue structure, SLAs, knowledge structure, reporting definitions, governance routines, and data quality within the existing platform.
We define SLA targets, service hours, pause conditions, breach handling, and reporting rules so SLA compliance is measured consistently and supports operational decisions.