Process Targets

A Process Target is a rule that describes the maximum amount of time allowable for a response to a business event. For example, if you report a priority 1 incident during business hours, work should be assigned within 15 minutes and a resolution should occur within an hour. A similar rule would be if you make a self-service request, it should be resolved or linked to an incident record within an hour.

Process Target rules contain the following information. You can use the SLT wizard or type required information directly into the form.

Field Content Comments
Service Level Target ID Numeric value Automatically assigned by Service Level Management.
Agreement ID SLA name Name of an existing SLA. Required.
Name Process Target name Descriptive name for the target. For example, One hour response. Required.
Condition A status or condition value

Service Level Management uses the condition to determine if the SLT applies to the application record. If you use the SLT wizard, choosing filter criteria generates the condition in this field. For example, if the only filtering criteria selected is Severity 1, the SLT applies only to Severity 1 incidents. This expression is the value in the condition field:

severity.code in $L.file="1"

This expression must be written by using RAD. The criteria list changes depending on the application for service desk interactions, change requests, change tasks, incidents, problems, problem tasks, requests or request tasks. Optional.

Owner Process Target owner Name of the Process Target owner
Service Level Category Category of the Process Target The category can be Service Level Agreement, Operational Level Agreement, or Underpinning Contract.
Service Area Application related to the SLT For example, if you want to apply the response SLT to Change Management, choose Change Requests or Change Tasks. Required.
Initial State A status or phase value (depending on module configuration) The initial state when Service Level Management begins measuring the response time. The list changes depending on the application and whether phases are used, such as Request for Change phases. Required.
Final State A status or phase value (depending on module configuration) The final state when Service Level Management stops measuring the response time. The list changes depending on the application and whether phases are used, such as Request for Change phases. Required.
Duration Type "Interval" or "Duration in Record" directly specifies the duration for your SLT. The format is ddd hh:mm:ss. The system automatically completes the duration if you do not specify it in the complete form. For example, you can use 3:00 for 3 hours or 3 for 3 days. Required.
"Calculation" calculates the duration for your SLT based on different conditions. For example, choose End of Business Day, End of Business Week, Work Schedule based Expiration, or Service Catalog Item Expiration. Required.
Schedule Shift information Choose a pre-defined work schedule. If you omit a pre-defined shift, Service Level Management defaults to a 24 x 7 schedule. Optional.
Time Zone

Choose:
Server time zone
Technician time zone
Customer time zone
CI time zone
Specific value
Assignment Group

The process metric depends on the time zone selected. Optional.

Note The Assignment Group option is only available for the OLA or UC service level category.

Alerts Alerts related to the remaining time on the SLT Select the out-of-box alerts for 25%, 50%, 75%, BREACH, or 30 minutes until the SLT expires, or create your own. Optional.
Suspend Processing Suspension states Click Fill on a blank row to view a list of states. The list changes depending on the application and whether phases are used, such as Request for Change phases. Optional.
Duration scope Specifies to which assignment group the calculation applies.

The method that is used to calculate the expiration time of an Operational Level Agreement (OLA) or Underpinning Contract (UC) process target.

This calculation is based on assignment groups.

Note  

  • You can define global alerts for all SLAs, instead of individual SLTs, in the SLA Control record.
  • The Description provides additional information about customer expectations or the internal requirements of an Operational Level Agreement.
  • The History tab for a response SLT record shows the percentage of time that the objective was met and number of breaches on a monthly basis.

Related topics

Service Level Management administration
Defining Service Level Targets
Service Targets
Service Level Target duration types
Define scheduling information for Process Targets

Related topics

Define Service Targets
Define Process Targets
Use the Service Level Target wizard
Add Service Level Targets
Edit Service Level Targets
Delete Service Level Targets