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Paperback Running an Effective Help Desk Book

ISBN: 0471248169

ISBN13: 9780471248163

Running an Effective Help Desk

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Helpdesk Management in Ihrer Firma - im Zeitalter der Intranets noch telefonbasiert? Wie Sie auf dem Gebiet der technischen Unterst tzung der Angestellten auf die enormen Ressourcen des Web zur ckgreifen k nnen, zeigt Ihnen die Autorin dieses jetzt umfassend aktualisierten Klassikers. Mit vielen anwendungsbereiten Word- und HTML-Templates. (04/98)

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

nice

This book is a must-own. You need to be able actually get out there and find these positions and books simply can't do that for you. Newspaper classifieds are OK, but in larger cities you need more up to date information than they can provide. It's usually best to get job postings directly from a businesses website. Or better yet, use some sort of portal service (there's a few out there, but in my experience the best is HelpdeskCrossing [[..] because of the sheer quantity of jobs they post, and the obvious focus on this field). All that said, once again, this book is great for what it is and I'm happy I bought it.

The one to get!!!

The reason I purchased this book was that I found myself creating a helpdesk from scratch. If you are looking for a how to book that will guide on the path of creating a very effective IT helpdesk, this is it. It will show you not only the right way to do things, but also alert you of possible pitfalls. It will teach you how to do things that not really come to mind right away, like how to hire the right people for the job, increasing your budget (to get more helpdesk techs!), the scope of your duties, etc. I keep it in my desk for quick reference.

Covers every detail, including some missed in other books

This thorough book provides a clear roadmap to designing, implementing and operating a help desk. The author leaves no key process out and completely covers everything from initial concept to measuring support effectiveness and process improvement.Ms. Czgel starts with an initial strategy that is focused on planning help desk services that are completely aligned to requirements and are based on a mission statement. This business-oriented approach is refreshing and will keep IT grounded in the real reasons for a help desk. More importantly, in my opinion, is the process that she proposes for careful selection of services to provide. My experience has shown that an overly ambitious set of service goals will kill a help desk implementation early in its life by offering a too much before there is a stable help desk process in place. As such, Ms. Czgel's approach is realistic and lays the foundation for a success implementation. I especially liked the use of customer profiles and the emphasis on roles and responsibilities early in the planning process. The section on the actual design of the help desk structure provides insights and information that can be applied to a large number of solutions. Since help desks will be organized in accordance with requirements and unique mission statements, this section of the book is like a catalog of patterns. I liked the excellent tips on how to best structure the help desk to meet requirements and mission. The information on accurately estimating staffing requirements is consistent with industry best practices and something that, believe it or not, is often overlooked when help desks are established. I also found the chapter on consolidating help desks valuable because this is a common project that many companies face. The advice given is sound and well thought out. Since my job is service delivery consulting this entire section was particularly valuable. Part three of the book gets into the meat by thoroughly covering the processes that are essential to running a help desk. Most of this material is not new or much different from what other help desk books provide, but there were a few topics that stood out as both unique [to books of this genre] and reflect best practices by the best-run help desks. Examples are change control, disaster recovery and vendor management. These topics show that the author not only considers business alignment, but also cross-functional alignment within IT. Professional resources and underlying technology are provided in part four. In the first chapters the author points out sources of standards, best practices and other support, such as the Help Desk Institute, Software Support Professionals Association, etc. In the final chapters she provides a clear explanation of how technologies such as ACDs (automatic call distributors) and IVRs (interactive voice response) equipment work and how they can provide additional efficiencies to a well-run help desk operation. The

Practical and current - good value

This is the best how-to book on this subject. The author has real-world experience and it shows in the organization of the book. It contains practical insight on managing the outsourcing of help desk services. It seeems to be generic by design. If you have industry-, company- or culture-specific issues, you may have to do some more research. Great starting point for new help desk managers.

ALL YOU NEED TO SETUP A HELPDESK

This book is execelent, it contains all you need to stablisk a vere effective help desk, it's full of very good examples, practice suggestions, and it covers all from how to designing it to how to implement it on a web server
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