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Taking Service Management Beyond the Help Desk in Education

Lexington County School District One Utilizes BOSSDesk to Extend Service Delivery.


Lexington County School District One is among the fastest–growing school

districts in South Carolina, ranking sixth in total enrollment, with more than

26,800 students from Pre-Kindergarten to Grade 12 and more than 4,500 staff

in 30 schools. The school district is one of the Lexington County’s major

employers.


The school district was looking for a ticketing system that would be able to

support their growing infrastructure needs. They needed to replace a legacy

home grown Help Desk System that was no longer supportable with a robust

system with a simple and easy to use interface. It needed to be intuitive,

scalable as well as support other department needs within the school system.


The school district replaced their legacy system with BOSSDesk and used the

system both to support standard IT Service requests and to support other

departments such as food services and maintenance that were previously not

handled by IT. The new Service Catalog supports their various service

categories and handles over 30,000 service requests. The solution was

deployed very quickly and has been regarded as a great success.


“Teachers and students found BOSSDesk to be very simple and easy to use which resulted in a very successful implementation.”

Ben Sellers, Senior Systems Analyst, Lexington County School District One



View the webinar recording of the implementation to learn how to take ITSM Beyond IT:




Tips for a Successful Implementation

Ben Sellers, Senior Systems Analyst at Lexington County School District One, the person who spearheaded the implementation had some very useful tips on how to win user adoption and also get the buy-in from other departments.


Here are some of his suggestions:

  • Keep it Simple, especially on the “front end” if you want users to adopt the system.

  • Spend time on Routing Rule Configuration - understand where your tickets are going to so that you don’t end up with large number of unassigned tickets.

  • Other groups outside IT may not use the system the way as IT – adapt the system to address their needs and issues.

  • Spend time on Knowledge Base - The more self-service you can provide agents and end users, the better.

  • Do the legwork on service catalog setup.

  • Use the watcher feature on important requests - allows managers to stay in the loop on important ticket requests.

  • Encourage Use. At meetings, make presentations on how easy it is to submit tickets. Place links to Portal in email signatures.

  • Communicate through the ticket, not through email so that users will acclimate to responding through the system.

  • Data can be imported from legacy system for historical reporting.


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