How ITIL® Differentiates Problems and Incidents (2024)

It’s a question we still get asked all the time:

How do you differentiate between incidents and problems?

To address this issue and offer clarification, this article will identify the differences between incidents and problems, how they are related, and why it matters.

What is an incident?

According to ITIL 4, an incident is an unplanned interruption to a service, or reduction in the quality of a service.What often determines the classification of something as an incident is whether or not the service level agreement (SLA) was breached.However, ITIL allows for raising an incident (or for that matter, a problem) even before an SLA or targets have been breached in order to limit or prevent impact. For example, automated system monitoring may notice a degradation in response time or other error before an SLA is breached or a customer even notices. In layman’s terms, an incident is the representation of an outage.

What is a problem?

According to ITIL 4, a problem is a cause, or potential cause, of one or more incidents. Problems can be raised in response to a single significant incident or multiple similar incidents. They can even be raised without the existence of a corresponding incident. For example, monitoring may reveal an issue that has not yet resulted in an incident but if left unchecked it may cause more issues.In layman’s terms, a problem is the representation of the cause or potential cause of one or more outages.

Why does best practice distinguish between incidents and problems?

The point of distinguishing between incidents and problems is the same as separating cause and effect.Problems are the cause, and incidents are the effect.

ITIL 4 encourages organizations to distinguish between the two because they are often treated and resolved differently.Addressing an incident simply means that whatever service was impacted has been “temporarily” restored. It does not mean that the incident will not recur at some time in the future. When we say “temporarily,” keep in mind that could mean one minute or 10 years. The point is that a resolution to an incident is not always permanent.

Problems, however, are the cause of incidents. We might use different techniques to identify the underlying causes of a problem, potential workarounds and ultimately a structural resolution to the problem.

Effective incident management ensures that as a service provider you are able to keep the promises you made in your SLAs by providing a mechanism to quickly restore service when it’s necessary.Problem management ensures that as a service provider you are able to reactively respond to incidents so that they don’t recur and proactively prevent incidents from happening.

These are separate practices in ITIL 4 because they often require different skill sets and activities. Incident management wants to quickly restore service in line with any SLAs that are in place whereas problem management wants to eliminate the underlying causes of incidents.

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How ITIL® Differentiates Problems and Incidents (2024)

FAQs

How ITIL® Differentiates Problems and Incidents? ›

What is a problem and how does it differ from an incident? As ITIL defines it, a problem is “a cause or potential cause of one or more incidents.” And an incident is a single unplanned event that causes a service disruption.

What is the difference between incident and problem in ITIL? ›

The point of distinguishing between incidents and problems is the same as separating cause and effect. Problems are the cause, and incidents are the effect. ITIL 4 encourages organizations to distinguish between the two because they are often treated and resolved differently.

What is the difference between an issue and an incident? ›

Issues/incidents are risks that have materialised and are affecting us now. An issue can be viewed as an ongoing problem while an incident is a defined event.

Why should problems be distinguished separately from incidents? ›

The point of distinguishing between incidents and problems is the same as separating cause and effect. Problems are the cause, and incidents are the effect. ITIL 4 encourages organizations to distinguish between the two because they are often treated and resolved differently.

What is the difference between defect and incident in ITIL? ›

Defects are often associated with problems with existing software. Incidents are generic 'break/fix' - could be software, could be hardware. Enhancements - ideas or updates to existing software solutions. Incident : An interruption to an IT Service or reduction in the quality of an IT service.

At what point does an incident turn into a problem? ›

If incidents keep happening repeatedly, if there are multiple incidents that seem connected, or if the business is being significantly affected, it may indicate a deeper underlying issue that needs to be identified and resolved.

Can a problem record be raised without an incident? ›

Problem Management Expert

There are many reasons to raise a problem record, apart from the obvious situation where a major incident has occurred and you need to investigate causes or implement a permanent solution.

What is incident and problem management in ITIL 4? ›

ITIL 4 therefore refers to Incident Management as a service management practice, describing the key activities, inputs, outputs and roles. Based on this guidance, organizations are advised to design a process for managing Incidents in line with their specific requirements.

What is the difference between incident and problem and service request? ›

Incidents and problems deal with needs. Something is broken and needs to be fixed. Service requests deal with wants. Someone wants a service that's advertised in the Service Catalog, and they submit a Service Desk request to get it.

What is the relationship between incident change and problem? ›

Incident management and change management

Typically, IT changes are initiated after the IT problem management processes to fix the identified IT problem, to replace a faulty asset that leads to repeat incidents, or as a part of the resolution to a major incident.

What are the 4 main stages of a major incident in ITIL? ›

What Are the 4 Main Stages of a Major Incident in ITIL? The four main stages are identification, logging, categorization, and resolution. Major incidents require a coordinated response to minimize their impact.

How do you categorize incidents in ITIL? ›

According to ITIL, the goal of Incident classification and Initial support is to:
  1. Specify the service with which the Incident is related.
  2. Associate the incident with a Service Level Agreement (SLA )
  3. Identify the priority based upon the business impact.
  4. Define what questions should be asked or information checked.

How many types of incidents are there in ITIL? ›

What are the 3 types of incidents? The three common types of incidents that occur in IT environments are Major Incidents, Repetitive Incidents, and Complex Incidents. Major incidents: These are incidents that heavily impact the business.

What is the difference between incident problem and change? ›

Problem – The cause of one or more incidents. The cause is not usually known when a problem record is created, and the problem management process is responsible for further investigation. Change – the addition, modification or removal of anything that could affect IT services.

What is a problem ticket ITIL? ›

Problem management is all about identifying the root cause of incidents and developing a plan to prevent them from happening again. Problem ticket ITIL helps you track and analyze incidents so you can make informed decisions about how to address them.

What is the difference between incident problem and known error? ›

An incident is an event that's not part of the standard operation. A problem is an as yet unknown cause of a conflict or series of incidents, whereas a known error is a problem that's been successfully diagnosed, and a workaround or permanent alternative has been created.

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