Which dimension is concerned with management of relationships with external organizations?
Options:
A.
Partners and suppliers
B.
Information and technology
C.
Organizations and people
D.
Value streams and processes
Answer:
A
Explanation:
The correct answer is partners and suppliers because this ITIL dimension focuses on an organization’s relationships with external parties involved in creating, delivering, supporting, or improving products and services. These may include suppliers, strategic partners, outsourced providers, and other contributors in the wider service ecosystem. ITIL emphasizes that no organization operates alone, so managing agreements, dependencies, expectations, and collaboration with third parties is essential. This dimension also considers sourcing strategies, levels of integration, risk, capability availability, and service coordination across networks. The other dimensions focus on different areas: organizations and people addresses structure, culture, and competencies; information and technology addresses data and enabling technologies; and value streams and processes addresses workflows and how work is organized to create value. Therefore, external relationship management sits within partners and suppliers.
Question 18
What is a digital service?
Options:
A.
A service that fully or largely relies on digital products.
B.
A combination of technology resources designed for consumers
C.
The transfer of goods from provider to consumer
D.
A catalogue of services for consumers
Answer:
A
Explanation:
A digital service is a service that fully or largely relies on digital products, which makes option A correct. ITIL distinguishes between digital products and digital services while showing that they are closely connected. The digital product is the combination of digital resources designed to offer value. The digital service is the means by which value is co-created with consumers using those products. Option B is closer to the definition of a digital product. Option C describes one type of service interaction, not the general definition of a digital service. Option D refers to a catalogue or representation of available services rather than the service itself. The digital service concept reflects ITIL’s focus on technology-enabled value creation through outcomes, service relationships, and managed access to capabilities.
Question 19
What is a problem?
Options:
A.
An unplanned service interruption
B.
Root cause of one or more incidents
C.
A service access request from users
D.
An incident that impacts critical services
Answer:
B
Explanation:
A problem is the cause, or potential cause, of one or more incidents, which makes option B correct. ITIL clearly distinguishes problem management from incident management. Incident management focuses on restoring service quickly after an interruption or degradation. Problem management looks more deeply at why incidents happened and how similar incidents can be prevented in the future. This is why the root cause idea is central to the definition of a problem. An unplanned interruption is an incident, not a problem. A user request is a service request. A critical incident is still an incident, even if its impact is high. By separating incidents from problems, ITIL enables organizations to both restore service rapidly and reduce repeat disruption through analysis, learning, and long-term corrective actions.
Question 20
How should the ITIL Guiding Principle ' optimize and automate ' be applied?
Options:
A.
By replacing people with technology across all functions
B.
By optimizing processes before automating them
C.
By automating all activities immediately
D.
By automating processes before optimizing them
Answer:
B
Explanation:
The guiding principle “optimize and automate” should be applied by optimizing processes before automating them, so option B is correct. ITIL warns against automating poor or unnecessary activities because automation can make waste faster and more expensive instead of improving value. Organizations should first understand the workflow, remove unnecessary complexity, simplify where possible, and confirm that the process supports desired outcomes. Only then should they automate appropriate parts of the work. Automation should complement human capabilities, not blindly replace people in every function. Some activities still require judgment, empathy, creativity, and contextual understanding. This principle reflects ITIL’s broader emphasis on practicality, value, and continual improvement. Optimization ensures the work is worth doing, and automation then helps deliver it more efficiently, consistently, and at scale.