Applying the CSDM guidelines to Service Portfolio Management
Summarize
Summary of Applying the CSDM guidelines to Service Portfolio Management
Service Portfolio Management (SPM) in ServiceNow uses the Common Service Data Model (CSDM) framework to unify service-related data across applications into a single coherent view. Both Service Portfolio Management and Digital Portfolio Management (DPM) align closely with CSDM, enabling consistent terminology and life-cycle management across these products. This integration helps manage the end-to-end life cycle of services and service offerings with standardized fields and definitions.
Show less
Using CSDM Life-Cycle Fields
After installing the CSDM activation plugin (com.snc.cmdb.csdm.activation), ServiceNow customers can leverage CSDM life-cycle fields within the Service Portfolio Management module. These fields provide consistency when managing service stages and statuses, aligning with other ServiceNow applications and supporting lifecycle synchronization from legacy to asset management.
For example, traditional Service Portfolio Management phase and status values map to CSDM life-cycle stages and statuses such as Ideation, Design, Deploy, Operational, and Retired, enabling a modernized and standardized approach to service lifecycle tracking.
Key Terminology and Concepts
Understanding common CSDM terms is essential for effectively using Service Portfolio Management and DPM:
- Portfolio: Grouping of services, products, projects, or applications by business objectives or capabilities.
- Business Capability: High-level organizational abilities to achieve business outcomes.
- Service: Delivery of value to customers without ownership of costs/risks, including Business, Technical, and Application services.
- Business Service: Services published to business users, often orderable via the Service Catalog.
- Technical Service: Services published to service owners underpinning business or application services.
- Application Service: Logical representation of deployed application components.
- Application: Deployed software providing specific functionality, typically discoverable.
- Service Catalog: Consumable view of available services and offerings, facilitating access and ordering.
- Service Offering: Different levels or packaging of a service with distinct capabilities and pricing.
- Service Commitment: Delivery obligations between provider and consumer, often formalized in agreements.
- Configuration Item (CI): Physical or logical infrastructure components under configuration management.
- Asset: Items tracked financially, which may or may not be CIs.
- Operating Model: Visual representation of how an organization delivers value, including strategy and delivery models.
Practical Benefits for ServiceNow Customers
Applying CSDM guidelines within Service Portfolio Management enables ServiceNow customers to:
- Achieve a unified and standardized view of services and their lifecycles.
- Maintain consistent terminology and lifecycle states across ServiceNow applications.
- Align service definitions and offerings for clearer communication and management.
- Facilitate lifecycle synchronization and improved reporting with Performance Analytics indicators.
- Support governance and operational efficiency through structured service management.
This approach helps organizations better manage their services portfolio, improve service delivery, and ensure alignment with business objectives through the structured, CSDM-aligned data model.
Service data relates to each other using different applications in different ways. Service Portfolio Management references the Common Service Data Model (CSDM) framework to bring service-related data together in a single view.
CSDM life-cycle fields for business and technical services
After the CSDM activation plugin is installed [com.snc.cmdb.csdm.activation], you can use the CSDM life-cycle fields in Service Portfolio Management. To see the field names, navigate to , and set the view to Service Portfolio.
The following comparison shows the differences from the traditional Service Portfolio Management phase and status fields to the CSDM life-cycle stage and status fields.
| Service Portfolio Management Phase and Status field names | CSDM life-cycle Stage and life-cycle Status field names |
|---|---|
| Pipeline | Requirements | Ideation | Under evaluation |
| Pipeline | Definition | Ideation | Under evaluation |
| Pipeline | Analysis | Ideation | Under evaluation |
| Pipeline | Approved | Ideation | Under evaluation |
| Pipeline| Chartered | Design | Chartered |
| Catalog| Design | Design | Design |
| Catalog | Development | Design | Design |
| Catalog | Build/Test/Release | Deploy | Test |
| Catalog | Operational | Operational | In-use |
| Catalog | Retiring | Operational | Pending Retirement |
| Retired | Retired | End of life | Retired |
| Retired | Obsolete | End of life | Obsolete |
Common CSDM terms used in Service Portfolio Management and in DPM
| Term | Definition | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Portfolio | Collection of services, products, projects, or applications. | Used to manage like items together for a business. Portfolios may be grouped by objective, capabilities, organization, like projects or services. |
| Business capability | High-level capability that an organization requires to execute its business model or fulfill its mission. | Typically described in the context of performing one or more specific tasks to achieve business outcomes. For example, demand management or financial planning. |
| Service | Means of delivering value to customers by facilitating outcomes customers want to achieve without the ownership of specific costs and risks. | Typically has three aspects:
ServiceNow provides three base service types:
Customers can extend the base types to align with the service types in their organization. |
| Business service | A service type that is published to business users and it typically underpins one or more business capabilities. | Typically orderable by business users. Business users are able to select the desired offering and service commitment levels via the ServiceNow Service Catalog. For example, procurement, shipping, and finance. |
| Technical service | A service type that is published to service owners and typically underpins a business or application service. | Typically orderable by service owners. Service owners are able to select the desired offering and service commitment levels via the Service Catalog. For example, computers, storage, and networks). |
| Application service | A service type that is a logical representation of a deployed application stack. | Examples of application services are hosting, data backup, and recovery. Note: There isn’t a 1-to-1 relationship between application and application services. |
| Application | Any deployed program, module, or group of programs that is designed to provide specific functionality on a computer infrastructure. | Defines behavior and has specific functionality associated with it. Applications are typically discoverable functionality, like Apache Web Server. |
| Business Application | Represents all software and infrastructure environments (dev, test, prod) configured to provide functionality. | Used to increase productivity and perform other business functions accurately. For example, Dell Online. |
| Service catalog | Provides a consumable view of available products, services, service commitment options, and offerings. | Helps manage what services a user may have access to. Also, catalogs are the initiation point for access to available services. For example, the IT services catalog. |
| Service offering | A stratification of a service into capability, availability, pricing, and packaging options. | Different levels of performance and features for a given service can be made available. For example, ITSM Standard and ITSM Pro. |
| Service commitment | Defines service delivery obligations agreed to between the consumer and the provider. | Often manifested in the form of contracts such as service level agreements, operational level agreements, and underpinning contracts. Service commitments include specific performance characteristics that differentiate one offering from another. |
| Configuration item (CI) | Physical and logical components of an infrastructure that are currently or soon will be under configuration management. | A single module such as a server, database, or router or a more complex item, such as a complete system. For example, a web server, database, or infrastructure. |
| Asset | An item whose financial value is tracked. | Many assets are CIs and vice versa, but that's not always the case. Assets have a life cycle with financial considerations, for example Microsoft Office 365. |
| Operating model | An abstract and ideally visual representation (model) of how an organization delivers value to its customers or beneficiaries. | Typically represents the various elements of how an organization operates. It usually incorporates strategy positions such as the innovation model, degree of intelligent automation, industry alignment, provider delivery models, and the business expectations of IT. |