Book Image

ServiceNow: Building Powerful Workflows

By : Tim Woodruff, Martin Wood, Ashish Rudra Srivastava
Book Image

ServiceNow: Building Powerful Workflows

By: Tim Woodruff, Martin Wood, Ashish Rudra Srivastava

Overview of this book

ServiceNow is a SaaS application that provides workflow form-based applications. It is an ideal platform for creating enterprise-level applications, giving requesters and fulfillers improved visibility and access to a process. ServiceNow-based applications often replace email by providing a better way to get work done. This course will show you how to put important ServiceNow features to work in the real world. We will introduce key concepts and examples on managing and automating IT services, and help you build a solid foundation towards this new approach. You will then learn more about the power of tasks, events, and notifications. We’ll then focus on using web services and other mechanisms to integrate ServiceNow with other systems. Further on, you’ll learn how to secure applications and data, and understand how ServiceNow performs logging and error reporting. At the end of this course, you will acquire immediately applicable skills to rectify everyday problems encountered on the ServiceNow platform. The course provides you with highly practical content explaining ServiceNow from the following Packt books: 1. Learning ServiceNow 2. ServiceNow Cookbook 3. Mastering ServiceNow, Second Edition
Table of Contents (39 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Module 1
36
Bibliography

Introducing tasks


ServiceNow is a forms-based workflow platform. The majority of applications running on ServiceNow can be reduced to a single, simple concept: the management of tasks.

A task in ServiceNow is work that is assigned to someone. You may ask your colleague to make you a cup of tea, or you may need to fix a leaking tap in a hotel guest's bedroom. Both of these are tasks. There are several parts to each of these tasks:

  • A requester is someone who specifies the work. This could be a guest or even yourself.
  • A fulfiller is someone who completes the work. This may, less frequently, be the same person as the requester.
  • The fulfiller is often part of a group of people. Perhaps someone among them could work on the task.
  • Information about the task itself is included-perhaps a description or a priority, indicating how important the task is.
  • The status of the task-is it complete? Or is the fulfiller still working on it?
  • There is a place to store notes to record what has happened.
  • An identifier is...