ITIL® Foundation Level

Understand and implement ITIL® core concepts

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TOPIC INFORMATION

ITIL® Foundation Level Courses are designed, for delegates, to develop an understanding of key concepts and terminology in the ITIL® Service Lifecycle and further implement these concepts into your business.

ITIL® Foundation course is an entry level workshop, providing you with the knowledge required to obtain the internationally recognised best practice terminology, key concepts, structure, and core principles of ITIL®. It helps you to prepare for the ITIL® Foundation Examination. The course includes all of the expert training, course material, and exams required to become ITIL® Foundation certified. 

ITIL® Practitioner course is the next stage that includes implementation of basic concepts and terminologies used in ITIL® Service Lifecycle. It provides guidance on “how to” so that you may proceed in applying ITIL® best practices within the organisation.

What are the benefits of taking this courses?

Enhance organisational productivity and user experience by implementing IT Service Management within the organisation. Implementing ITIL® within the organisation helps service providers to:

  • Improve the business outcome for better user experience
  • Enable business change to adopt the latest technology in the industry
  • Optimise user experience to make them permanent customers
  • Slow value for money of customer or business
  • Improve service quality continues to lead the market

Why choose us?

Become ITIL® certified with our customary ITIL® training program to understand and implement key concepts for enhancing the productivity of the organisation. Our well trained and certified instructors will help you to pass the exam in the first attempt. Our ITIL® courses are accredited by PeopleCert. Our courses can be delivered in variety of options such as in a classroom, online, or onsite.

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Reach us at +44 20 3608 9989 or enquire@itil.org.uk for more information.

About Liverpool

Liverpool is a town in North West England, with a predictable populace of 478,580 in 2015. With its nearby regions, it is the fifth-largest urban area in the UK, with over 2.24 million people in 2011. The local power is Liverpool City Assembly, the most populated local administration area within the metropolitan area of Merseyside and the main within the Liverpool City Region.

Liverpool is located on the eastern side of the Mersey Estuary and accurately lay within the first hundreds of West Derby in the south-west of the area of Lancashire. It established an area in 1207 and a city in 1880. In 1889, it settled a county region self-governing of Lancashire. Its growth as a major port was paralleled by the development of the city through the Industrial Revolt. Along with treatment overall cargo, freight, raw materials such as coal and cotton, the city traders were complicated in the Atlantic slave occupation. In the 19th period, it was the main port of partying for Irish and English expatriates to the United States.

 

Government

Liverpool has various levels of administration; the Mayor and Local Council, who are also investors in the Liverpool City Area Combined Authority, the National Government and the European Parliament.

Liverpool is officially governed by a Unitary Authority, as when Merseyside County Council was scattered public functions were paid to a region borough level. However, some services such as the Police and Fire and Rescue Service, endure being run at a county-wide level.

During the most recent local votes, detained in May 2011, the Labour Party combined its control of Liverpool City Council, subsequent on from retrieval power for the first time in 12 years, during the earlier votes in May 2010. The Labour Party expanded 11 seats during the election, taking their total to 62 seats, associated with the 22 detained by the Liberal Democrats. Of the remaining seats, the Liberal Party won three, and the Green Party requested two. The Conventional Party, one of the three major political parties in the UK had no representation on Liverpool City Council.

In February 2008, Liverpool City Council was exposed to be the worst-performing council in the country, getting just a one-star rating. The chief reason for the poor rating was accredited to the council's poor management of taxpayer money, with the accretion of a £20m shortfall on Capital of Culture funding.

 

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