The global skills and competency framework for the digital world

SFIA 9 - Service design

Analysis of service design-related skills in SFIA

Service design has evolved significantly since its initial inclusion in SFIA.

Our comprehensive review has established:

  • The historical alignment with ITIL framework (Availability, Capacity, and Service Level Management) no longer fully represents the breadth of modern service design
  • Service design now encompasses a broader methodology that spans multiple disciplines and requires diverse skill sets
  • The framework recognises service design as both a strategic approach and a practical discipline that includes user experience, customer experience, patient experience, and employee experience
  • Service design skills are distributed throughout SFIA - from initial concept and analysis through to development, implementation, and continuous improvement
  • SFIA 9 provides guidance to help organisations and practitioners identify and apply the relevant skills needed for their specific service design initiatives

This positions SFIA 9 as a practical tool for organisations to identify and develop the complete range of skills needed for modern service design, while acknowledging its evolution as a multifaceted discipline.

Get in touch if you have comments, ideas - we would love to hear from anyone interested in this area

Current position following consultation and review

  • For SFIA 8 - service design was reviewed
    • In SFIA 7 and previous versions of SFIA there had been a sub-category of skills called 'Service design'
    • This was aligned to the ITIL framework - it had 2 to 3 SFIA skills: Availability management, Capacity management, Service level management
  • For SFIA 8 - the sub category was removed as it was mis-leading as it did not contain the full range of service design-related skills available in SFIA
    • Guidance notes were published to help employers and service designers locate potential SFIA skills
  • For SFIA 9 - interest in service design is still strong and growing in some areas, but like many emerging disciplines it is not easy or desirable for SFIA to suggest there is a single, settled position e.g.
    • service design needed a suite of role/jobs
    • service design as a methodology or as a mind-set
    • service design used interchangeably with other terminology
    • the range of 'experience' related concepts, such as, user experience, customer experience, patient experience, employee experience
    • the relationship between skills needed to create the service "design" and other skills needed for analysis, development, implementation and operation of a service - e.g. if service design is an iterative approach which requires continuous monitoring and improvement - then there are scores of SFIA skills which fit under the service design umbrella
    • it seems more important for SFIA 9 to help employers and service designers navigate their way to a position on skills rather than aim for a finalised, 'settled' position.

SFIA as an evolving framework

With its flexible, reflective, and regularly updated approach, the SFIA framework is robust and proven approach that supports the diverse needs of employers while remaining adaptable to future industry changes and advancements.