Exin Exams
Exam | Title | Files |
---|---|---|
CLOUDF | EXIN Cloud Computing Foundation (EX0-116) | 4 |
EX0-001 | ITIL Foundation (syllabus 2011) | 11 |
EX0-101 | ITIL Foundation v.3 & ITIL Foundation | 74 |
EX0-114 | IT Service Mgmt Foundation Bridge based on ISO/IEC 20000 | 3 |
ITIL | ITIL V3 Foundation | 14 |
ITILF | ITIL Foundation | 8 |
PR2F | PRINCE2 Foundation | 4 |
EXIN and EXIN Certifications
As a company, EXIN strives to be the leading provider of independent information management certification and accreditation. Over the years, EXIN has developed an impressive range of certificates. It has close professional ties with reputable partners around the globe, which allows for cooperation in training, course development and exam process management.
EXIN is ISO-certified (ISO 9001:2008). It operates according to ISO 17024, ISO 27001 and EN 45011 standards. Thanks to the high standards it adheres to, the organization has been able to operate successfully for over 2 decades.
For utmost objectivity during certification exams, EXIN does not provide the training, which can be acquired from other organizations.
ITIL is one of the most popular EXIN’s certification areas. Standing for Information Technology Infrastructure Library, ITIL is a collection of practices designed to help organizations identify areas that need improvement. These are vendor- and industry-neutral guidelines that help companies optimize and streamline their processes, maximize the efficiency and reduce costs.
But what is ITIL? In 1980s, the UK Government’s Central Computer and Telecommunications Agency (CCTA) developed a set of recommendations to respond to the growing dependence on the information technology. CCTA recognized that without standard practices, government agencies and private sector contracts were forced to come up with their own IT management practices.
As a result, IT Infrastructure Library came along as a collection of books, each covering a specific practice within IT service management. ITIL was built around a process-model based view of controlling and managing operations. The initial publication (ITIL v1) covered 7 years from 1989-1996 and included over 30 volumes.
In 2001, ITIL v2 was released. It consolidated the publications into nine logical sets, making the library more accessible (and affordable). The edition grouped related process guidelines to match different aspects of IT management, services and solutions. Although ITIL version 2 has been amended since 2001, it remains the current version today.