The incident manager: key player in continuity and recovery
During an IT outage, every minute matters. The incident manager leads the incident bridge call, where recovery decisions are made, brings the right specialists together, manages escalations, and provides timely updates to stakeholders.
After service is restored, the incident manager works closely with problem and change management to determine root cause, identify actions to prevent recurrence, and improve capabilities such as monitoring, runbooks, and service level agreement (SLA) commitments. This approach helps the organization move from reacting to incidents to reducing their frequency and impact.
Skills that make an incident manager successful
Effective incident managers are recognized for staying calm under pressure, making timely decisions, and communicating with clarity. Key competencies include:
- Incident coordination: Leads the incident bridge call to keep actions, ownership, and timelines aligned and progressing toward service restoration.
- Decisive leadership: Sets priorities and makes clear calls in uncertain situations to keep recovery efforts focused.
- Stakeholder communication: Provides clear updates on status, business impact, and expected restoration timelines using plain language.
- Escalation management: Engages the right experts at the right time, escalates appropriately, and ensures responsibilities are understood and met.
- Analytical ability: Connects timelines, logs, and operational signals to build an accurate picture of what happened and support both recovery and learning.
- Cross‑functional collaboration: Ensures incidents are closed only after follow‑up actions are defined and handed off through problem management and change management to address root causes and prevent recurrence.
With this combination of leadership, analysis, and communication, organizations can protect service continuity and manage incidents effectively, even during high‑impact disruptions.
Essential expertise for an incident manager
An incident manager cannot rely on improvisation alone. Leading incidents effectively requires structured, in‑depth expertise that goes beyond quick fixes and enables consistent, high‑quality outcomes.
- Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) incident management: Applies the ITIL incident lifecycle from detection through closure, using priorities, SLAs, and major incident processes to drive coordinated response and meet agreed restoration targets.
- Service value and operations: Understands services through configuration items (CIs), dependencies, and service chains to pinpoint likely failure points quickly and reduce time to restore critical services.
- Monitoring and observability: Uses alerts, logs, metrics, and traces to validate impact quickly, support decision‑making, and accelerate coordinated recovery efforts.
- Post‑incident review: Conducts effective analysis to separate symptoms from root causes and ensures corrective actions are defined, tracked, and implemented.
- Collaboration with problem and change management: Identifies when deeper investigation or controlled change is needed, reduces risk during remediation, and ensures lessons learned are captured and shared.
- Supplier management: Aligns multiple providers on a single recovery plan by clarifying responsibilities, coordinating actions, and maintaining accountability across teams.
With this expertise, the incident manager moves beyond response coordination to consistent orchestration that improves availability, reduces risk, and strengthens service quality.
Must-have training programs for an incident manager (according to Capgemini)
A strong foundation in service management supports better decisions under pressure. ITIL® 4 Foundation is essential training for professionals responsible for coordinating incident response and restoring IT services quickly and effectively.
In this program, participants learn how ITIL practices support structured incident handling, including how to log incidents, assess impact, set priorities, and drive resolution. The course also explains how incident management connects to the broader service lifecycle, from detection and initial analysis through post‑incident improvement. This training builds a reliable baseline for professional, future‑ready incident management, with a strong emphasis on collaboration, clear communication, and continuous process improvement.
Explore incident manager training programs at Capgemini Academy
After completing ITIL® 4 Foundation, incident managers can further strengthen service restoration and operational management skills. Capgemini Academy offers programs that build deeper incident management capability and support more consistent, reliable service delivery. Key programs include:
- Create, Deliver and Support (ITIL® 4 Specialist): Expands operational and support knowledge by covering practices, workflows, and tools that speed recovery, improve service stability, and help reduce recurring incidents.
- High‑Velocity IT (ITIL® 4 Specialist): Develops skills in digital speed, automation, and modern ways of working to improve detection, response coordination, and restoration performance in fast‑changing environments.
Capgemini Academy also offers complementary training to strengthen leadership, coordination, and continuous improvement.
- Direct, Plan and Improve (ITIL® 4 Strategist): Provides practical methods for governance, metrics, and continuous improvement to address repeat incidents and improve service performance over time.
- SIAM™ Foundation: Builds the ability to coordinate multiple suppliers effectively, clarify responsibilities, and maintain control during complex incidents and major incident bridge calls.
Beyond subject‑matter expertise, incident managers benefit from strong leadership and communication skills. In high‑pressure situations, focus, calm, and trust help teams align quickly, set clear priorities, and maintain consistent communication. Capgemini Academy offers programs that strengthen these qualities.
Must-have personal skills training programs
These programs are essential for incident managers who need to stay effective in demanding and high‑pressure situations.
- Stress management: Recognizes and manages stress to maintain focus and make clear decisions under pressure.
- Time management: Sets priorities and manages workload to balance urgency with quality during incidents.
- Trusted advisor: Builds credibility and influence with leaders, customers, and IT teams through clear communication and professional presence.
Should-have personal skills training programs
For additional depth in leadership and communication, these programs strengthen influence and team performance.
- Realistic influence: Builds alignment in challenging situations by combining facts, empathy, and credibility.
- Pyramid principle: Structures complex updates clearly and persuasively for incident communications and post‑incident reviews.
- Coaching leadership: Encourages ownership and accountability to support faster, more coordinated recovery.
Together, these programs strengthen communication and leadership while building the resilience and composure expected of effective incident managers. They also support growth from day‑to‑day coordination to trusted advisory and strategic partnership within incident management.
GenAI: Practical support that enhances your work
GenAI is a powerful opportunity to make your work smarter, more creative, and more effective. Accelerate your expertise: reach insights faster, discover new ideas, and create space by simplifying recurring tasks. Real value emerges when people and technology work together. You bring the expertise, experience, and nuance: GenAI gives you the boost to make an even bigger impact. Discover how to use GenAI responsibly and with purpose in your daily practice. Compact, practical, and directly applicable. Exactly what you need to make a difference starting today.
Your springboard to success: Capgemini Academy
- Part of one of the largest, most innovative IT service providers in the world.
- A large range of training course offerings: available both fully online and in the classroom.
- Most training courses include certification and exams.
- Trainers with passion, didactic skills and practical experience.
- Average rating by course participants: 8.8.
If you have questions about the incident manager role or need help choosing the right training program, feel free to contact us. We are glad to assist with personal development or a tailored learning path for your team.