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This section focuses on incidents as processed by agents. The following diagram shows the incident state model.

Role required: incident_manager.

Infrastructure incidents cannot have the Rejected by User state.

State Flow and Waiting states

The states of incident processing can be divided into: 

  • Incident Processing. When an incident is in the State Flow state, such as In ProgressSLA indicators count down the time related to the incident processing until the SLA is breached.
  • Incident ProcessingWhen an incident is moved to the Waiting state, such as Information Needed, all SLA indicators related to the incident stop the countdown.

State Flow


The State Flow group includes the following procedures and states.

Procedure

State

Description

Available Transitions
LoggingRegisteredThe incident is recorded (via phone/email/Self-Service Portal) but not yet categorized.
  • Assigned
  • In Progress
CategorizationAssignedThe incident is categorized and assigned to a relevant person or group.
  • In Progress
  • Information Needed
  • Completed
ResolutionIn Progress

Someone started working on the issue.

  • Assigned
  • Postponed
  • Information Needed
  • External Processing
  • Completed
ClosureCompleted

An incident is resolved when the agent provides temporary workarounds or permanent solutions. The agent changes the state to Completed, so that the caller could assess the results. 

The caller receives a notification asking to evaluate the agent's job and the service level. 

If the user is satisfied with the solution, the incident is marked as Closed; otherwise, it is Rejected by User.

  • Assigned
  • In Progress
  • Rejected by User
  • Closed
Closed

The Agent Satisfaction and Service Satisfaction fields are present on the form to evaluate the agent performance. Both fields have the following values: 

  • Below Expectations
  • Meets Expectations
  • Above Expectations

On the Self-Service Portal, the caller can assess the results. The values of these evaluations are connected with the values of choice options.

  • Below Expectations = Disappointed
  • Meets Expectations = Satisfied
  • Above Expectations = Very Pleased

If the incident has not been closed after it was marked as Completed, it will be closed automatically over an adjustable time frame as set in system properties.



Only the incident caller has the right to close the incident. However, in SimpleOne, this rule does not affect infrastructure incidents. The incidents of this type can be closed only by the responsible person after examination.

Waiting


The Waiting group includes the following procedures and states.

Procedure

State

Description

Available Transitions

Investigation and diagnosisInformation NeededIf the issue description is not clear enough, the agent can request additional information by changing the incident state to Information Needed. Once the information is received, the agent should change the state to the previous one.
  • Assigned

  • In Progress
  • Postponed
  • External Processing
ResolutionPostponed

The incident can be marked Postponed if the resolving incident should be postponed for a known period. If the incident moves to this state, the agent should specify the resolving date in the Resumption of work field. But if the incident affects business functions, it should have at least a temporary workaround.

  • In Progress
  • Information Needed
  • External Processing
Functional escalationExternal ProcessingIf the incident solving requires to involve a third party, then, after reassignment, the incident state should be changed to External Processing. After the third party involvement is over, the agent should change the incident state and the assigned user to the previous ones.
  • In Progress
  • Postponed
  • Information Needed
  • Completed
ResolutionRejected by UserIf the caller is not satisfied with the agent's work on the incident, they can change the state to Rejected by User to further address the defects.
  • Assigned
  • In Progress
  • Completed

Incidents prioritization


The incident priority can be figured out based on the incident impact and urgency using the priority matrix.

The impact of an incident indicates the damage that may be caused to the business user. In SimpleOne, the impact can be categorized as:

  1. Low
  2. Medium
  3. High
  4. Very High

The urgency of an incident indicates the measure of time until an incident impacts on the business. In SimpleOne, the urgency can be categorized as:

  1. Low
  2. Medium
  3. High
  4. Very High

Based on the priority, incidents can be categorized as:

  1. Low
  2. Moderate
  3. High
  4. Critical


The priority matrix

Impact / UrgencyLowMediumHighVery High
LowLowLowModerateHigh
MediumLowModerateModerateHigh
HighModerateModerateHighCritical
Very HighHighHighCriticalCritical


Assign and update incidents


Once the incident is registered, it should be assigned to a responsible person or group for further processing. To assign an incident, complete the following steps:

  1. Navigate to Incident Management All Incidents and open the incident you want to work on.
  2. Find the Assignment User field, click the magnifier icon to select a user to assign the incident to.
  3. (Optional) Complete the same step for the Assigned Group field.

To make any updates to the incident, complete the following steps:

  1. Open the incident you want to work on.
  2. Change the desirable fields.
  3. Click Save or Save and Exit to apply the changes.

Your changes will be displayed in the Activity Feed, in history.

The following information is displayed:

  1. Who initiated the update
  2. Updated field
  3. New field value
  4. Previous field value

Activity view 

Escalation rules


There are two possible types of escalations: 

  • Functional. When the 1st level service agents cannot solve an incident for some reason (lack of authority or competence), they escalate it to the 2nd level service agents.

  • Hierarchical. This escalation is typically required when an incident is of a serious nature, or a set of incidents may take a lot of time. An issue can be escalated up to the management.

Closure information


Based on the SimpleOne state model, when an incident is resolved, it should be marked as Completed, which denotes the incident closure. Also, the agent should provide the following details:

  • Closure Code
  • Closure Notes

Closure Notes

In the Closure Notes field, add information on the work performed and other information related to this incident. 

Closure Code

This code specifies an option for the closure. 

Option

Description

Solved 1st level

Service agents of the 1st level solved the incident without functional escalation.

Solved 2nd level

Service agents of the 2nd level solved the incident (service agents of the 1st level were unable to solve it).

Not Solved (Refused)

Agents could not reproduce the incident and did not find any disfunction.

Not Solved (Dropped)

This closure code is chosen when the request is not an incident, but, for example, a change request.

Not Solved (No User Reaction)

This closure code is chosen when the user did not provide additional information during the Information Needed phase.

Not Solved (Other)

This closure code is for all other reasons.

Not Solved (Workaround)

This closure code means that the incident has no permanent solution but has a temporary workaround related to a known error.

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