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When thinking about the skillsets that IT service desk agents and managers need in the context of introducing artificial intelligence (AI)-based capabilities, there’s likely a focus on the new skills these roles require. However, it’s important to appreciate that the necessary skills for the IT service desk agent and IT service desk manager roles are extended by the introduction of AI-enabled capabilities rather than the new skills replacing old ones.
This blog looks at the spectrum of required skills, starting with what has traditionally been needed before considering how the introduction of AI-enabled capabilities affects them.
The skills required of people working in IT service desk agent roles have always been varied. This reflects the balance the role has between the soft skills of “customer” engagement and the hard skills related to the involved technology. While the hard skills might vary across organizations and resolution groups, the soft skills are usually more consistent.
In terms of the required technical skills, there’s likely a need for a basic knowledge of network configurations, servers, and IT infrastructure components. Plus, troubleshooting capabilities, i.e. the ability to diagnose and resolve technology-related issues.
However, the required soft skills are increasingly important as IT service desks focus more on end-user experiences. These soft skills include:
It’s important to remember that these skills are still required with the addition of AI-enabled capabilities.
As the job title implies, IT service desk managers are managers (and ideally leaders). So, the required skills for the role reflect this.
A certain degree of technical competence is needed, likely related to previous technical support expertise and an understanding of common technical issues, troubleshooting methodologies, and IT infrastructure components. Familiarity with ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library) service management best practices might also be a prerequisite for the IT service desk manager role.
Much of what’s needed for the IT service desk manager role is managerial, though, including:
Again, these skills are still required with the addition of AI-enabled capabilities.
For the IT service desk agent role, the introduction of AI-enabled capabilities requires new or extended skills, including:
The last is a great example of how IT service desk agents must work differently. While many people will talk about the uplift of IT service desk agents to higher-value-add work because of AI handling repetitive tasks (which might require new problem-solving skills and deeper technological knowledge), there’s also the need to seamlessly “catch” AI IT support engagements that aren’t working for the end-user. Realizing that the end-user experience will be poor if they need to “retread” what they’ve already covered with the virtual agent.
For the IT service desk manager role, the introduction of AI-enabled capabilities also requires new or extended skills (some of which are similar), including:
In terms of the latter, introducing AI-enabled capabilities will affect individual and team performance targets because the simpler and routine tickets are removed from the plates of IT service desk agents. As a result, IT service desk agents will handle more complicated tickets in their “ticket mix,” which will take longer. Hence, their ticket volumes will drop, and their average handling time will increase. The first-contact resolution (FCR) level will also drop thanks to the AI-enabled capabilities removing the more straightforward tickets from the IT service desk.
However, this issue isn’t the application of AI to people management. There are many opportunities for AI to help with people management, but IT service desk managers must be wary of the risks involved (especially with performance management):
IT service desk managers need to understand these opportunities and apply them appropriately and with sufficient oversight to ensure the AI-enabled capabilities are improving rather than degrading their people management capabilities.
Here are some more resources we think you might be interested in:
Blog Post: A New Era of Service Desk Operations
Blog Post: AI Driven ITSM: Pioneering Workload Management for the Future
Blog Post: Microsoft Copilot: The AI and Automation Opportunity for ITSM
Blog Post: AI’s Potential Role in IT Service Management
Whitepaper: Cloud Lighthouse Crafting Your Future-Ready Enterprise AI Strategy
Stephen Mann is Principal Analyst and Content Director at the ITSM-focused industry analyst firm ITSM.tools. Also an independent IT and IT service management marketing content creator, and a frequent blogger, writer, and presenter on the challenges and opportunities for IT service management professionals.
Other posts by Stephen Mann include:
Why and Where ITSM Needs ITAM and The Evolution and Benefits of ITSM Tools
and Why and How Your ITSM Capabilities Need to Change
Provance® sponsored the publication of this blog post to help inform and educate you about ITSM.
Provance empowers organizations with—AI-infused—Microsoft-centric IT Service and Asset Management products. Our ServiceTeam® ITSM and ServiceTeam® ITAM Power Apps, built on the Power Platform, maximize investments in Microsoft technologies. Leveraging the Azure, Dynamics 365, and Microsoft 365 clouds, Provance Power Apps posses the same digital DNA as the Microsoft platform and products ecosystem that drives your success. ServiceTeam ITSM ensures secure, scalable, and flexible IT service management, while ServiceTeam ITAM lets you proactively plan and manage IT assets cost-effectively. Achieve “best-of-platform” benefits along with service management excellence with ServiceTeam.
At Provance, we go out of our way to bring you great service. That’s in our digital DNA. Your IT success is our success.