University of Tasmania Users Self-Serve with Service Portal Implemented by DXC ServiceNow Practice
Customer:
University of TasmaniaChallenge:
- To speed up the process and improve responsiveness to IT issues and requests
- A need for users to log a help desk ticket and track the progress of their issue
- To provide a service catalogue describing the services offered
Solution:
- A service portal, based on ServiceNow, which enables users to self-service
- A knowledge base which enables users to solve their own issues
- A service catalogue which enables users to find out what services are available and log a request
Results:
- Service portal is now the most popular channel for communicating with the IT department
- With fewer phone calls and emails, the IT team are freed up to add more value
- Enabled the development of a service delivery strategy to improve the customer experience and the use of existing resources
The University of Tasmania (UTAS) is Australia’s fourth-oldest university, established in 1890. It has won more teaching awards than any other Australian university, and ranks in the top two per cent of universities worldwide. This recognition emphasises the high calibre of education offered across numerous academic disciplines at UTAS.
The university has more than 33,000 local, national, and international students and 2,600 academic and administrative staff across four campuses.
Challenge
With tens of thousands of IT users, UTAS needed to improve its responsiveness to IT issues and requests. The university had no easy way to let people know what services the IT team offered, nor how to access those services. The help desk was managed manually; staff and students called, emailed, or simply walked into the IT department to ask for help.
This made it difficult for staff and students to work effectively, since IT issues disrupted their ability to access networks and drives. The average help desk ticket closure time was five days.
Nathan Tenaglia, Manager of Enterprise Services and Networks, University of Tasmania, said, “UTAS needed to introduce a capability for users to log a help desk ticket and then track the progress of their issue.
Ideally, we also wanted a knowledge base so that people could try to resolve their own issues before logging a help desk ticket. And, we wanted a service catalogue that would describe the services we offer and let people request those services.
“Importantly, we needed to address the time it took to resolve issues. Response time was too slow so we needed a solution to help speed up the process.”
Solution
The UTAS IT team conducted exhaustive investigation into what was possible in terms of help desk solutions. It was apparent early on that a portal would be the best way to enable user self-service and the team was reluctant to add complexity into the existing system.
Nathan Tenaglia said, “I began looking at the capabilities of ServiceNow and was pointed towards Ohio State University in the US, which is one of the leading ServiceNow users. I spoke with the Ohio State project manager about their implementation and his experience was so positive that we decided to engage with ServiceNow to design the portal. They recommended we approach one of their partners, so we put out a request for a proposal (RFP).”
DXC responded to the RFP, outlining the way the team could work with UTAS to achieve the university’s objectives.
Nathan Tenaglia said, “It was clear from DXC’s response to the RFP that it had the experience necessary to successfully deliver the self-service portal we needed. Discussions with DXC's professional referees confirmed that the company was the right choice for UTAS. Even talking to the DXC team before we started the work gave us a sense that we would work well together. The team was friendly and professional, with the skills and know-how we needed.”
DXC implemented the UTAS Service Portal, based on ServiceNow. It has 40,000 active staff and student accounts with access. The knowledge base lets them solve their own issues, and the service catalogue lets them find out what services are available and log requests accordingly.
Users can track the status of their jobs easily and can add notes and comments for the IT team while the ticket is open. Users can also see notes added by the IT team, so communication remains open and consistent throughout the resolution process.
Benefits
Since implementing the portal, it has overtaken email as the most popular channel for communicating with the IT department, which was considered a significant win for UTAS.
In fact, on average 350 tickets are logged via the portal each week, which makes up about 40 per cent of total tickets logged. There are on average 1,800 active user per week using the Service Portal.
Nathan Tenaglia said, “There are fewer phone calls and emails to the service desk as most people are using the Service Portal. More people are becoming comfortable with the self-service option, so the IT team doesn’t have to do as many basic tasks, freeing them up to add more value.
“The Service Portal has changed the way we work. Users are trying to self-help first. If that doesn’t work, they provide feedback through the portal so we can see where the knowledge base may need to be updated to make them easier to follow.
“We expect to see this figure improve as we release some new enhancements to the portal, which will also result in the closure of our service desk email as a contact channel.”
The Service Portal has given users increased visibility into the services available to them, which has increased uptake. This was an important result for the IT team.
Nathan Tenaglia said, “We wanted people to take more advantage of the services on offer. Previously we had many ways to communicate these services, but the information was not all in one place and, sometimes, the information in one place contradicted information in another place. Now we have a single pane of glass. People can see not just what services are available but also the status of their current requests.
“For example, all staff and students are provisioned with Microsoft Office 365, which entitles them to download the latest version of Office onto up to 10 devices of any kind. Most staff and students weren’t aware of this, so we weren’t getting the full value of these licences. Since the Service Portal was implemented, utilisation of this service has increased remarkably, demonstrating both the value of the service itself, and of the Service Portal.”
The Service Portal has also lessened the burden of IT issues on users. Previously, a user would be bombarded with emails after logging a ticket. This was especially true if the IT team needed the user to do something specific. It was difficult to extract the necessary information from the standard emails that were sent.
As a result, the IT team often had to telephone individual users to ask them to complete certain tasks to help with their issue resolution. Now, users visit the portal to find out the status of their ticket and get instructions from the IT team.
Nathan Tenaglia said, “The Service Portal delivered by DXC has let us develop a service delivery strategy that lets us improve the customer experience and the use of our existing resources.”
Click here to read the full case study.