SERVICE TRANSITION MANAGER

IBM

Full Time

Experience: 1 - 7 Years

Location: (GUADELOUPE - FRANCE)

Salary: 110000 - 150000 USD Per Year

Job Description

  • This company is a software-enabled services provider, synonymous with SAP on Cloud, focused on delivering superior, highly automated Managed Services to Enterprise customers.
  • Our customers span multiple verticals and geographies across the Americas, EMEA and APAC. We partner with AWS, SAP, Microsoft and other global technology leaders
  • Many organizations use a multi-leveled team for end-to-end Service Delivery. Each member of the team delivers a small and specific task.

Responsibilities Duties:

Service Design, Implementation & Testing

  • Service Take-On
  • Service Stabilization or Hyper Care
  • Operational Service Management
  • Customer Relationship Management
  • Contract Management
  • AWS Cost Management
  • Service Level Management
  • Service Escalation Management
  • Service Automation
  • Service Improvement
  • DevOps Deployment

Service Take-On

  • Obtain existing Technical Design and Service Documentation, including with regards to any custom and bespoke tooling in use at the customer;
  • Develop Customer Induction Packs to enable on-boarding of resources at the start of the Service and ongoing;

Service Stabilization or Hyper Care

  • Define criteria as a quality gate for transitioning from Project into Stabilization or Hyper Care support;
  • Run Daily and Weekly Stabilization Sessions, ensuring Critical Items are identified and resolved;
  • Define criteria as a quality gate for transitioning from Stabilization into BaU support;
  • Manage to achieve compliance with the Stable State criteria as fast as reasonably feasible;

Operational Service Management

  • Task and Issue Manage your assigned Service Delivery Team;
  • Build an excellent, open, and supportive Team Spirit;
  • Ensure Leadership Principles are adhered to

Key Skills:

  • You are innovative – You are happy to challenge established patterns in the industry if they do not make sense to customers; you are able to put yourself in the shoes of your customers and observe what we do from their perspective; you keep abreast of developments and know when to introduce them to your customers;
  • Command authority naturally – You don’t need borrowed power to enlist the help of others – you just know how to do it – you are optimistic and are viewed in a favorable light and are valued by the organizations you work for;
  • Possess quick sifting abilities, knowing what to note and what to ignore – The latter is more important since there’s almost always too much data, and rarely too little; ignoring the right things is better than trying to master extraneous data;
  • Set, observe, and re-evaluate priorities frequently – You focus and prioritize by ranking what is on your plate constantly and by handling fewer actions, emails, attending fewer meetings, and generally limiting their data input;
  • Ask good questions and listen to stakeholders – Great project managers don’t just go through the motions; they care about communication and the opinions of the parties involved and they are sufficiently self-aware to know how their communication is received by those stakeholders

Experiance Qualifications:

  • Do not use information as a weapon or a means of control – You communicate clearly, completely, and concisely, all the while giving others real information without fear of what they’ll do with it.
  • Possess domain expertise in (agile) project and service management – You will end up not just having generic management skills; you will also have a deep familiarity with the multiple fields that operates in, the tools we operate, and the approaches we deploy that gives you a natural authority and solid strategic insight;
  • Exercise independent and fair consensus-building skills when conflict arises – But you embrace only as much conflict as is absolutely necessary, neither avoiding nor seeking grounds for control of a particular project segment;
  • Cultivate and rely on extensive informal networks inside and outside to solve problems that arise – You identify any critical issues that threaten projects and handle them resolutely (vs. ignoring them);
  • Look forward to going to work – You believe that service delivery management is an exciting challenge that’s critical to our success: you view service delivery management as a career and not a job, and you treat it so by seeking areas for change, improvement, and additional training

Benefits:

  • Benefits: This may include training, health, insurance, commuting support, lunch service etc.