2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 8091-8102
Author(s):  
Rasbihari Dayal ◽  
V. Vijayakumar ◽  
Rahul Chandra Kushwaha ◽  
Abhishek Kumar ◽  
V. D. Ambeth Kumar ◽  
...  

This research paper presents a cognitive model which manages to minimize the issues of the Information Technology Infrastructure by incorporation of service management practices. The importance of this research is that this model can be replicated in other companies for the distribution of products that wish to implement improvements in their management process technological services. This work introduces the use of Information Technology Infrastructure Library or ITIL as best practice, essential methodologies for IT Management, historical evolution, methodology, service life cycle, and ITIL certifications. Service automation is widely regarded as the usefulness and improves service guarantee. One of the most useful features of automation services is that the process will run the same way every time. Such precision in the execution of repetitive executions is virtually impossible when it comes to human labor. Therefore, the automation is the best way to improve the efficiency of the service provider and the next steps of the process.


Author(s):  
T. Hung Nguyen ◽  
Stuart Berstein ◽  
Charles McIntyre ◽  
Gary R. Smith

Author(s):  
Shelbee Eigenbrode ◽  
Suheil Nassar

This chapter examines the importance of including value-add service management practices early in the Continuous Integration/Continuous Delivery (CI/CD) pipeline. The authors will also address the importance of establishing a balance between the development and delivery of features with the development and delivery of practices that support overall infrastructure and service management capabilities. Without fully encompassing all of these practices, the DevOps benefits of reducing time-to-market for a set of features can be negated by a potential increase in security exposures as well as overall quality issues. Within this chapter, several key service management practices are identified as well as the importance of fully incorporating those practices into a DevOps adoption.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 288
Author(s):  
Tri Wahyu NUGROHO ◽  
Nuhfil HANANI ◽  
Hery TOIBA ◽  
SUJARWO SUJARWO ◽  
Mangku PURNOMO

Although it is still debatable, rural tourism is deemed to provide economic and social benefits without damaging natural resources and therefore, it is still an important sector for developing country. Indonesia will allocate IDR 72 trillion village fund in 2021 for rural development program in which rural tourism is the main sector after infrastructure, education, and health sectors. Using social representation theory approach, we analysed social representation of rural tourism among visitors and whether the representation was perceived as important or not by rural tourism managers. Survey of 700 tourists and 70 village tourism managers found that words of “tourism attraction”, “economic activities” and “curiosity” attracted attention of tourists, while rural tourism managers only considered “tourism attraction” as focus of the management strategies. There was a knowledge gap between visitors and tourism managers as tourists preferred to see "authenticity" while managers wanted to build an "artificial" attraction. In terms of management practices, the shift in social representation will largely determine their standard of hospitality; it is no longer based on the comfort of the "standard" as we understand, but instead the fulfilment of the social representation of the visitors. This finding has verified the hypothesis of post-tourism theory, which believes that visitors have more attention to get “experience” in their journey rather than to follow traditional view of “attraction”. At the practical level, rural tourism managers can consider the findings to develop their service management to be more in accordance with visitor’s representation rather than their common-sense.


Technology driven organisations are investing hugely in training and knowledge enrichment of their employees. This is due to the fact that knowledge is now considered as an asset by organisations. Additionally, with emerging technologies, organisations are also spending heavily in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) to enhance their internal operations and processes. Among the various internal processes, Knowledge Management is an area which has been there since many years but when it is about the application of latest technology and innovations for Knowledge Management practices, there are huge opportunities. This paper presents an analysis of various KM frameworks available for different domains and based on current state and limitation identified, it proposes a Semantic Web Ontology based Knowledge Management System for IT Service Industry


2013 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thommie Allan Burström ◽  
Mattias Jacobsson ◽  
Timothy L. Wilson

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to describe and analyze service management practices within a project management context. Design/methodology/approach – This research supporting conceptual developments was both exploratory and qualitative in nature and utilized an in-depth case study of a major product development project. Findings – The conceptual framework developed is applied to empirical observations of product development project. Because there is an adequate fit with observations, elements of a service management approach appear to be viable in the description, managing, and control of projects. Research limitations/implications – Because the research was built on a case study, one has the limitations common with that approach. Conversely, case studies are acknowledged as useful in the identification of important variables in situations in which there is little control over events in a real-world context. Practical implications – Customer satisfaction is a requirement of project organizations, which is an inherent requisite of any service organization. Consequently, one turns to those elements in the practice of service management that lead to best management practices. Originality/value – This paper contributes with a practice-based understanding of how project management is based on integrated service practice.


2017 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 1282-1304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Golubovskaya ◽  
Richard N.S. Robinson ◽  
David Solnet

Purpose This paper explores how hospitality frontline employees understand, interpret and practice “hospitality” in a hotel industry context. Design/methodology/approach Framed by interpretivist and phenomenological approaches a dual-stage semi-structured interview study design was conducted. A sample was drawn from hotel employees in Australia. Findings Findings support the proposition that the hospitality workforce tends to favor service management and service processes as the guiding paradigm. The essence of what it means to be hospitable, and the host-guest model, appears to be largely absent in practice. Research limitations/implications This paper contributes to a scarcity of literature exploring the understanding of hospitality, and how this understanding can translate into hospitable behavior, from the employee perspective. Our main implication is that service management terminology colonizes hospitality within a commercial context, while the essence of hospitality and the “hospitality” lexicon is concomitantly diminishing. The authors advocate for developing an inter-paradigmatic view of hospitality management. Practical implications While the study revealed that the majority of frontline hotel employees struggle with grasping and verbalizing their understandings and perceptions of the hospitality construct, although some acknowledged the importance of hospitality as being an integral component to service delivery. We identified consistent organizational practices and intrinsic employee traits that either enabled or obstructed hospitable behavior in hotel settings. Originality/value The study reveals tensions between the hospitality and service paradigms in hospitality literature and practice. We uncover hotel management practices that may help to conserve and foster the essence of hospitality in hospitality organizations.


2007 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 36-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian v. Wangenheim ◽  
Tomás Bayón

As a consequence of implementing revenue management systems, many service firms (e.g., airlines, hotels, car rentals) systematically overbook capacity, thus striving to maximize the revenue at one particular point in time (i.e., one flight, one night, and one day). The academic literature has not addressed how customers behaviorally respond to overbooking experiences, such as downgrading, denied service, or upgrading. In this article, the authors use the econometric technique of conditional difference-in-differences analysis to study the effect of such incidences on customer usage patterns in an airline context. They find that customers who experience negative consequences of revenue management significantly reduce the amount of their transactions with the airline, whereas upgraded customers exhibit only weak positive responses. The effects of the negative events are stronger for high-value customer groups, whereas significant effects of positive events can be found only for a low-value customer group. The results suggest the need for a stronger focus on customer reactions to revenue management practices. On a more general level, the study contributes to a more interdisciplinary view of service management by demonstrating the need for a closer interaction between management functions (e.g., marketing and operations) in developing and managing concepts of companywide importance.


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