Imagine you’ve just joined a big IT company. You’re feeling like Iron Man with a laptop 💪🧠 … until your manager says:
“Hey, please check the Incident linked to the Problem caused by last week’s Change.”
And you go…
“Wait—what language was that?” 😳
Welcome to the Ticket Multiverse — where every click spawns a new workflow, and every workflow leads to a CAB meeting.
🎟️ Ticket #1: The Incident – “Fire in the System!” 🔥
Every great IT story begins with an Incident Ticket.
Something broke. The app’s down. A VIP user can’t log in.
💬 Example:
“CRM not loading for Sales Team since 10:05 AM.”
Now, the Incident Management team jumps in like firefighters 🚒.
Their mission?
Restore service ASAP.
They don’t care why it broke — that’s tomorrow’s problem.
Today, they just want to stop the burning servers and angry client calls.
🕵️ Ticket #2: The Problem – “Detectives Assemble!” 🧩
Once the fire’s out, the Problem Ticket enters.
Think of it as the Sherlock Holmes of ITSM. 🕵️♀️
💬 Problem says:
“Hey, this Incident wasn’t random. It keeps happening every Friday after deployment. Why?”
Problem Management investigates root causes — sometimes by reading 200 lines of logs, other times by staring blankly at the ceiling at 3 AM, whispering,
“Please, not DNS again.” 😭
The outcome?
A Root Cause Analysis (RCA) — a fancy way of saying,
“Here’s what went wrong and how we’ll stop it from happening again.”
🔄 Ticket #3: The Change – “CAB Approves or CAB Rejects” 🧠⚙️
Once you’ve found the root cause, it’s time for a Change Ticket.
This is where developers say,
“Let’s fix it in production!”
And Change Management says,
“Not so fast, hero.” 😎
Every change — big or small — goes through a CAB (Change Advisory Board).
They check:
✅ Is it tested?
✅ Is rollback ready?
✅ Will this break something else?
Because we’ve all seen that one person who said “It’s just a small patch” — and took down the entire system. 💀
💫 The Circle of Tickets
Incident → Problem → Change → (sometimes another) Incident → repeat ♻️
That’s the Circle of ITSM Life.
Like a never-ending Netflix series, each episode starts with panic and ends with a post-mortem report.
But here’s the beauty:
Each cycle makes the system better, stronger, faster.
That’s continuous improvement — the soul of ISO 20000.
⚙️ ISO 20000 Behind the Scenes
ISO 20000 doesn’t tell you what tools to use.
It just ensures that:
- Your processes are consistent.
- Responsibilities are clear.
- And lessons learned are captured.
So even if your favorite engineer leaves, your service doesn’t fall apart — because the process remains.
That’s what separates chaos from quality.
🧠 Fresher’s Tip
You’ll survive 90% of your first IT job if you master these three lines:
💬 “Is there an Incident for that?”
💬 “Let’s raise a Problem record.”
💬 “Did CAB approve the Change?”
Bonus: Say “RCA pending” during a call, and everyone will nod respectfully. 😌
🎯 Moral of the Story
Incidents are short-term fixes.
Problems are long-term solutions.
Changes are the bridges between the two. 🌉
Together, they form the heartbeat of IT operations.
And every time you close a ticket, you’re not just updating a system —
You’re improving a world that runs on invisible services. 🌐💖
🎬 Coming Up Next
👉 Chapter 10: “The RCA Files – Autopsy of an Outage”
Where we’ll go inside the mind of an outage — from panic to PowerPoint, and how every post-mortem turns chaos into wisdom. 🧠⚡