Pict

Change Management

Minimize the Impact of Change

Gain control of your changing IT demands. Change Management enables you to minimize the impact of change by managing, tracking and optimizing changes, and ensuring that your business goals and IT services are in constant alignment.

Benefits

  • Minimize costs
  • Streamline workflow
  • Increase productivity
  • Manage change efficiently
  • Optimize the benefits of change

Features

  • Support for industry best practices, regulatory requirements - Enhance your ability to meet internal IT controls, industry best practices and regulatory guidelines.
  • Automated workflow - Save time and resources by automatically assigning incoming changes with a priority and category based on user-defined rules and workflows.
  • Dynamic approvals - Simplify the approval process for reviewers by allowing managers to submit approvals through the Change Management module or via email.
  • 360-degree view of change impact - Discover how each change will affect the organization by viewing exactly what IT components will be altered and which users will be affected.
  • Extends the value of HEAT - Build out your service desk while increasing technicians’ productivity and improving customer support. HEAT customers wanting to integrate ITIL best practices into their processes can easily add Change Management to enhance their service desk solution.
  • Modular architecture - Use Change Management on its own or expand its power by easily integrating it with any other FrontRange modules, as well as with third-party applications. All FrontRange solutions share a common reporting engine, business processing engine, data structure and integration platform.

 

To request more information, click here.

Print    Bookmark


Top of Page
See ITSM In Action:

Related Solutions

IT Service Management

IT Service Management is one of the most challenging jobs in every company. In many organizations, employee IT systems are virtually mission-critical; productivity – and user satisfaction – suffer quickly if problems arise. Yet when IT budgets are dispersed, new applications typically get the largest share of resources, while IT services teams are often asked to do more with less.

More.