Choosing the right ITSM tool is one of the most consequential decisions an IT team makes, and getting it wrong means years of workarounds, poor adoption, and wasted budget. This guide walks you through every stage of the evaluation process — from defining your requirements to avoiding the vendor traps that catch most buyers — so you can select a service management platform your team will actually use.
Why Most ITSM Tool Evaluations Go Wrong
Most organisations start an ITSM tool evaluation by looking at analyst reports or asking what competitors use. That approach puts vendor marketing ahead of your actual needs, and it is the single biggest reason teams end up with over-engineered platforms they cannot configure without a consultant.
A few common failure patterns:
- Buying for features you will not use in the first two years
- Underestimating total cost of ownership, including implementation, training and ongoing admin
- Letting one stakeholder group — often IT leadership or procurement — dominate the selection without input from service desk agents and end users
- Skipping a proof-of-concept and relying on polished sales demos instead
- Ignoring integration requirements until after the contract is signed
The result is a tool that technically works but never delivers the efficiency gains the business expected. A structured evaluation process prevents this.
Define Your Requirements Before You Look at Any Vendor

The most valuable hour you will spend in any ITSM tool selection is the requirements workshop — before you open a single product website. Bring together service desk managers, IT operations leads, asset managers, and a sample of end users. Ask what is broken today and what good looks like.
Functional requirements to capture
- Core ITSM practices: incident management, service request fulfilment, problem management, change management, and knowledge management
- Asset and configuration management, including CMDB capability and whether it needs to link to automated discovery
- SLA management and escalation rules
- Self-service portal and end-user experience
- Reporting and dashboards for both operational and management audiences
- Workflow automation and approval routing
Non-functional requirements that get overlooked
- Deployment model: cloud-hosted, on-premises, or hybrid
- Data residency and compliance requirements, particularly relevant for regulated industries and public sector
- Integration with your existing directory services, monitoring tools, and endpoint management platforms
- Supported languages and time zones if you run a distributed or global team
- Accessibility standards if your organisation has specific obligations
Document these requirements and weight them. Separate must-haves from nice-to-haves. This document becomes your evaluation scorecard and protects you from scope creep during vendor demos.
How to Build a Realistic Shortlist

Once you have a requirements document, you are ready to shortlist. A practical shortlist has three to five vendors — enough to create genuine competition without exhausting your evaluation team.
Sources for building your shortlist
- Peer recommendations from IT communities and professional networks carry more weight than analyst quadrants for mid-market buyers
- User review platforms where you can filter by company size and industry similar to yours
- Direct searches for alternatives to the platform you are currently using or outgrowing, since those searches surface vendors positioning specifically against your current pain points
When you are evaluating alternatives to established platforms like ServiceNow, ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus, Ivanti or SolarWinds, look specifically at vendors who offer ITIL v4 aligned processes out of the box, transparent pricing, and a realistic implementation timeline. Enterprise platforms built for Fortune 500 complexity often carry overhead that mid-market and growing teams do not need.
Questions to ask every vendor before a demo
- What does a typical implementation look like for an organisation our size, and how long does it take?
- What ongoing admin is required, and does it need specialist skills or certifications?
- How is the product priced — per agent, per user, per module, or flat?
- What is included in standard support versus a premium tier?
- Can we see a live environment used by a customer similar to us, not just a configured demo?
If a vendor cannot answer these questions directly, that is useful information.
Evaluating Platforms: What to Test in a Proof of Concept

A proof of concept, or POC, is the most reliable signal you will get about whether a platform fits your team. Most vendors will offer a trial environment or a structured pilot. Use it deliberately rather than just clicking around.
Scenarios to run in every POC
- Log a major incident, assign it, escalate it, and close it with a post-incident note — measure how many clicks and screens it takes
- Create a service request with a multi-step approval workflow and test it as an end user, not just an admin
- Build a simple change record, attach it to a CI in the CMDB, and run it through an approval process
- Test the self-service portal on a mobile device, since many end users will access it that way
- Generate a report that a service desk manager would actually present to leadership
Time how long each scenario takes. Note where agents get confused or where the interface requires training that would not be intuitive. Your service desk team's feedback here is more valuable than any feature checklist.
Asset management and discovery integration
If your organisation needs hardware and software inventory management alongside ITSM, test how tightly the asset module connects to automated discovery. A CMDB that relies entirely on manual data entry will degrade quickly. Look for platforms that either include endpoint discovery or integrate cleanly with a dedicated discovery tool. Odysseus, the asset discovery solution from IT DEV TECH, is designed specifically to push discovered device data into TIKTING, keeping CMDB records accurate without manual effort.
Total Cost of Ownership: The Number Vendors Do Not Lead With

Licence fees are the visible part of the cost. The full picture looks different.
- Implementation and configuration: complex platforms can require months of professional services work before go-live
- Training: both initial training for agents and ongoing training as staff turn over
- Integration development: connecting the ITSM tool to your monitoring, identity, and endpoint management stack often requires custom work
- Internal admin overhead: how much time will your team spend maintaining workflows, user accounts, and configurations each month
- Upgrade and migration costs: some vendors charge separately for major version upgrades or charge for data exports if you ever want to leave
When comparing platforms, build a three-year cost model that includes all of these categories. A platform with a lower licence fee but high implementation and admin overhead may cost significantly more over its lifetime than a platform priced slightly higher but designed for straightforward deployment.
A Step-by-Step ITSM Tool Selection Checklist

Use this checklist to keep your evaluation on track from start to finish.
- Define and document requirements with input from all stakeholder groups
- Weight requirements into must-have and nice-to-have categories
- Build a shortlist of three to five vendors based on peer input and alternative searches
- Send a structured questionnaire to each vendor before any demo
- Run a proof of concept using real scenarios from your environment
- Involve service desk agents in POC feedback, not just IT management
- Build a three-year total cost of ownership model for each shortlisted vendor
- Check vendor references from organisations similar to yours in size and industry
- Confirm data portability and exit terms before signing any contract
- Pilot with a small team before full rollout and document lessons learned
The teams that follow a process like this consistently report higher satisfaction with their chosen platform and faster time to value after go-live.
Key Takeaways
ITSM tool selection fails when teams skip requirements definition and rely on vendor demos instead of structured pilots. The right process starts with a documented, weighted requirements list, builds a shortlist based on genuine peer input, and tests real workflows in a proof of concept before any commercial decision.
Total cost of ownership matters more than licence price alone. Factor in implementation, training, integration, and ongoing admin before comparing vendors on price.
If you are evaluating alternatives to ServiceNow, ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus, Ivanti or SolarWinds, look for platforms that are ITIL v4 aligned, straightforward to deploy, and transparent about pricing. TIKTING, the enterprise service management platform from IT DEV TECH, is built to ITIL v4 standards and designed for organisations that need a capable, practical platform without the complexity overhead of the largest enterprise vendors. Paired with Odysseus for automated asset discovery, it covers both ITSM and ITAM in a single integrated environment.




















