Compste Provide Ltd

Compste Provide Ltd Compste Provide Ltd is a Training and service provision company registered in Kenya. The company began its operations in 2005 as the Mentor Group of Consul

Compste Provide Ltd is a training and service provision company registered in Kenya. The company began its operations in 2005 as a computer training company and later re-branded to Compste Provide Limited. This was to enable a widening of scope of service.

Register today for IT Service Management(ITSM/ITIL) Training on 8th-10th July 2016. Call us on 0722 710 833/ 0732 710 83...
25/06/2016

Register today for IT Service Management(ITSM/ITIL) Training on 8th-10th July 2016. Call us on 0722 710 833/ 0732 710 833.

Are you keen to build a career in IT Service Management or do you or aspire to work in the IT department or in an IT service provision company? Then this tr

IT Service Management(ITSM/ITIL) Training on 8th-10th July 2016Are you keen to build a career in IT Service Management o...
23/06/2016

IT Service Management(ITSM/ITIL) Training on 8th-10th July 2016
Are you keen to build a career in IT Service Management or do you or aspire to work in the IT department or in an IT service provision company? Then this training is for you. Compste Provide, an Accredited Training Organization (ATO) and an affiliate to ICT Mentors invites you for a 3-day hands-on and practical training on ITIL, the Global Best Practice for managing IT Services.
What is ITIL?
ITIL is the most widely accepted approach to IT service management in the world. ITIL can help individuals and organizations use IT to realize business change, transformation and growth.
Upon successful completion of this training, participants will be able to gain knowledge and understanding in the following
Service Management as a practice (Comprehension)
Service Lifecycle (Comprehension)
Key Principles and Models (Comprehension)
Generic Concepts (Awareness)
Selected Processes (Awareness)
Selected Roles (Awareness)
Selected Functions (Awareness)
ITIL Qualification scheme (Awareness)

Who is ITIL intended for?
Individuals who require a basic understanding of the ITIL framework and how it may be used to enhance the quality of IT service management within an organization.
IT professionals that are working within an organization that has adopted and adapted ITIL who need to be informed about and thereafter contribute to an ongoing service improvement programme.
This may include but is not limited to, IT professionals, business managers and business process owners.

What are the goals of ITIL?
Ensure that IT services are aligned to the needs of customers and users and hence increased user and customer satisfaction with IT services
Improved service availability, directly leading to increased business profits and revenue
Financial savings from reduced rework, lost time, improved resource management and usage
Improve communication within IT and with users
Improve efficiency of internal processes
Improved decision making and optimized risk.
Training will be held at the Compste Provide training facility located within the ICT Mentors offices in Parklands, behind Mayfair suites next to MP Shah hospital.
The cost of the training will be Kes 30,000.00 (excludes VAT and online exams). Early Registration before 1st July 2016 will attract a 10% discount.
Book your slot early call us on 0722 710 833/ 0732 710 833.

One of the biggest challenges in business today is turning visions, strategies and ideas into a tangible reality that pr...
04/08/2015

One of the biggest challenges in business today is turning visions, strategies and ideas into a tangible reality that produces actual results. Many times people cannot effectively bridge the gap between what they desire and what is possible because those people perceive the gap to be too large. Oftentimes this statement is heard as people discuss moving into the future: “Theory is fine for tomorrow, but what about today or right now?!” This statement presents itself quite often during the implementation of the Service Management disciplines within an IT department. Service Management best practices have been captured in a framework and a library of books (the Information Technology Infrastructure Library-ITIL). On the surface, the framework and library provide the guidance needed to effectively, efficiently and economically manage an IT department. However, a deeper look reveals that the framework and library provide more than guidance, but the actual steps needed to bridge the gap between “theory” and “reality”.

THE PROBLEM

“If we don’t change the direction we’re going, we’re going to end up where we’re headed.” –Chinese Proverb

“The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short; but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark.” –Michelangelo

These quotes, although written hundreds or thousands of years ago reflect a problem that continues to plague the modern world and the IT industry in particular.

How does IT turn theory and vision into reality?
How does IT provide better quality, higher levels of service and become a profit center instead of a cost center?
How does IT set about achieving the “higher mark” referred to by Michelangelo?
IT professionals look at these questions and declare there is no answer. Critics of theory say it is too “pie in the sky” and that IT must concentrate on “the real world” and “tangible results.” Unfortunately this view has become a crutch and a mantra when the real answer to those questions becomes too expensive, time-consuming or painful.

History has shown that what is needed to turn theory into reality is “action”. Shortly after World War II, W. Edwards Deming, Joseph Juran and a number of other proponents of quality systems traveled to Japan as part of the rebuilding effort. Their theories and ideas had met indifference and even outright resistance in the United States. The Japanese, however, embraced their ideas. The business leaders became “students”, attending lectures, seminars and learning the theories proposed by Deming and Juran. Within four years, without any hard proof that the theories actually worked, those same “students” implemented the ideas of Total Quality Management. The Japanese were able to do this because they took action on the theories. They viewed Deming’s theories as the basis for moving their economy forward. The Japanese realized it would not be perfect and would require adjustment. But the key was that they did not wait until quality came to them, they took the first step and went about obtaining what it would take to implement quality.

The key barrier to IT turning theory into reality is a willingness to do whatever it takes (no matter how complex, painful, expensive, time consuming or different) to make the theory real. Albert Einstein once said: “If the facts do not fit the theory, change the facts”. The Japanese demonstrated this by embracing Total Quality Management theory and adjusting their economy to the theory. If IT departments truly desire to achieve a higher standard, they must be willing to “change the facts” to move towards more effective, efficient and economical management of people, processes, and technology. Changing the facts will require doing things differently, applying resources more in some areas and less in others, and moving away from the status quo and standard operating procedures of the last thirty years.

…and the journey continues

04/08/2015

We will begin by looking at the bloom’s taxonomy and why it is important to us as we begin the journey of IT service management. Benjamin Bloom (1913 – 1999)

Address

Mayfair Suites, Parklands Gardens, Nairobi
Nairobi
00200

Opening Hours

Monday 08:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 08:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 17:00
Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
Friday 08:00 - 17:00
Saturday 08:00 - 17:00

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