Service Value Chain =================== Slide 1: Service Value Chain Narration Anna: Imagine the service value chain as a relay race. Each runner hands the baton to the next, from planning to improving, so customers receive consistent results. Greg: ITIL lays out six activities—plan, improve, engage, design and transition, obtain and build, and deliver and support. They aren't a strict sequence but rather a set of interlocking moves that keep services humming. On-screen text Service Value Chain How ITIL links activities to deliver value Slide 2: The Service Value Chain Narration Anna: The Service Value Chain focuses attention on a concrete part of the work. Service Value Chain with Continual Improvement. Greg: In practice, ask who owns the work, what evidence proves it happened, and what handoff comes next. On-screen text The Service Value Chain Image: Service Value Chain with Continual Improvement Service Value Chain with Continual Improvement Slide 3: Why continual improvement matters Narration Greg: Continual improvement is the glue holding those activities together. After each handoff, teams look back on what worked, gather metrics and brainstorm tweaks. Anna: It's like tuning a recipe. You keep tasting and adjusting the flavours so the next batch turns out even better. Without that feedback loop, the chain would stall. On-screen text Why continual improvement matters - Builds quality into every step - Encourages feedback loops - Keeps services aligned with business goals Slide 4: Putting it into practice Narration Anna: In many organisations, teams visualise the value chain on a Kanban board. They track where work items sit in the flow and highlight delays. Greg: When a step lags, it's a signal to review the process. Maybe a handover checklist is missing or a tool doesn't integrate well. Adjustments keep the chain responsive. On-screen text Putting it into practice - Map each activity from plan to improve - Measure outcomes and refine the approach - Share lessons learned across teams Slide 5: Key takeaway Narration Greg: The value chain only shines when everyone embraces small, steady improvements. It's a mindset as much as a method. Anna: Keep asking "how can we do this better?" and you'll help your team deliver reliable services that evolve with customer needs. On-screen text Key takeaway Continuous improvement makes the value chain resilient and responsive.