Can I use Agile for post implementation support?

You absolutely can use Agile for post-implementation support, and in fact, many teams find it very effective for managing ongoing support, enhancement, and optimization after an ERP or software system goes live.

Here is how and why 

Why Agile Works for Post-Implementation Support

After go-live, users often identify:

  • Minor bugs or configuration issues
  • New requirements or enhancement requests
  • Process improvements or training needs

Agile is iterative and flexible approach helps prioritize and deliver these changes quickly in short, controlled cycles (sprints), rather than waiting for a large periodic update.

How to Apply Agile in Support

AreaAgile PracticeExample
Issue IntakeUse a product backlog to track and prioritize tickets (bugs, change requests, improvements).Log tickets in Azure DevOps or Jira, with business impact and priority.
PrioritizationThe Product Owner (or support lead) works with stakeholders to decide what goes into each sprint.Fix critical bugs first, then enhancements.
Work PlanningUse sprints (1–2 weeks) for delivering small batches of fixes or improvements.Sprint 1: Resolve top 5 finance bugs; Sprint 2: Add new approval workflow.
CommunicationConduct daily stand-ups (short check-ins) to monitor progress.“Yesterday I resolved X; today I’m testing Y.”
Continuous ImprovementHold retrospectives after each sprint to identify process improvements.“We need clearer acceptance criteria from users.”

Agile Roles in a Support Context

RoleResponsibility
Product OwnerPrioritizes and defines support items.
Scrum Master / Support LeadFacilitates sprint meetings and removes blockers.
Support Team (Consultants/Developers)Implements fixes and enhancements.
Users / StakeholdersProvide feedback and acceptance testing.

Benefits

Faster turnaround for fixes and improvements

Transparent prioritization and progress tracking

Continuous feedback loop with users

Easier workload management for the support team

When Agile Might Need Adjustment

  • For critical incidents (system down), you’ll still need an incident management process outside of normal sprints.
  • If your organization prefers a ticket-based SLA model, Agile can complement it (e.g., use Kanban for ongoing flow instead of strict sprints).

Tip

Many post-implementation teams use Agile + ITIL hybrid,

  • Agile for continuous improvement and enhancements
  • ITIL (or a helpdesk model) for incident management and SLAs

Which Agile tool should I use for post implementation support?

There are several Agile / ITSM tools that work well for post‐implementation support.

The best choice depends on what you already have in place, your team size, budget, and how much you need to integrate with other systems. 

Key criteria to consider

Before choosing a tool, think through:

FeatureWhy it matters for support / post‐implementation
Ticket / issue tracking + SLAsYou’ll need to manage incidents, prioritize, escalate, and measure response/resolution times.
Backlog / change request trackingNot all tickets are incidents; many are enhancements or bugs  , you’ll want to backlog them, groom & plan them.
Workflow customisationDifferent ticket types (incidents, support request, bug, enhancement) may follow different workflows.
Integration with existing systemsE.g. linking to your development tools, version control, monitoring, possibly ERP or BC (if using Business Central).
Dashboards & reportingTo track metrics (volume, age, types, SLA compliance, velocity of enhancements, etc.).
User access & permissionsSupport teams, developers, business stakeholders, maybe external users.
Ease of use / minimal overheadIn support, you want to be quick; tool complexity slows you down.
Cost & scalabilityNumber of users, users who only view vs. act; cloud vs. on-premise; licensing.

Top tools & how they compare

Here are some of the strong contenders, with what they offer in a post-implementation support use case.

ToolStrengths for support / post-go-liveTrade-offs / Weaknesses
Jira Software + Jira Service Management (Atlassian)Very popular. Powerful backlog, sprints/kanban. Jira SM adds good incident & request management, SLAs, integration with Confluence for KB. Lots of plugins. Good for teams already familiar with Atlassian.Can get expensive with many users or many add-ons. Setup/customization may take time. Over-customizing can lead to complexity.
Azure DevOpsStrong if your dev team is already using Microsoft stack. Integrated code, pipelines, board/backlog. You can track bugs and enhancements well.Less strong on formal SLA/ticketing vs classic ITSM tools. Can require extra work to integrate with a support ticket system. Might not be the best “help desk” experience for non-dev users.
ServiceNowVery strong for enterprise support & ITSM + Agile hybrid. If you need unified backlog across incidents/problems/changes/enhancements, ServiceNow’s Agile / DevOps / Unified Backlog features are good. More costly. More overhead. Steeper learning curve. Heavier config / admin work. If your support volume is modest, may be overkill.
TaigaOpen source, simpler, more lightweight. Good if you want Kanban/sprint boards without heavy cost. Not as feature-rich for enterprise support, or for linking deeply into operations / monitoring / SLAs. Fewer integrations/out-of-the-box enterprise features.
ClickUp / Monday / Trello etc.Very easy to use, good for smaller teams or lighter change/enhancement/backlog management. Visual boards, flexible workflows.Less strong for formal ITSM / SLA / large scale support. Reporting & integration may be weaker. If many concurrent tickets, complexity increases.

Suggested tools based on common scenarios

Here are my suggestions depending on your context:

ScenarioTool I’d Recommend
You’re a mid-to-large org, already using Atlassian products, want robust support + enhancements + KB + good metricsJira + Jira Service Management
You’re using Microsoft stack (Azure DevOps, .NET, maybe Office / Azure), want dev/support integration, want minimal tool proliferationAzure DevOps + possibly augment with a light help desk or integrate with ticketing tool for incidents
You need enterprise ITSM, lots of integrations, large support load, want unified management of incidents, changes, enhancements, maybe compliance, etc.ServiceNow
You’re a small team, lower budget, want simple backlog + ticket tracking, want quick winsClickUp or Trello or Taiga
Hybrid: you need ITSM for incidents/SLA + Agile for enhancements; maybe mix of tools or integrated suiteEvaluate Jira + JSM, or ServiceNow Agile + ServiceNow ITSM so you can get both in one system

Can you compare three tools side-by-side with cost estimates for a  team of 10 people?

Here is a side-by-side comparison of Jira Service Management (JSM) vs Azure DevOps vs ServiceNow for a scenario of ~10‐user support / post-implementation team. 

Tools compared

ToolBest suited forKey features helpful in post-implementation support
Jira + Jira Service ManagementWhen your team wants a strong help-desk + request/incidents + change management + backlog + you prefer Atlassian ecosystem.SLA management, portals, incident/problem/change tracking, workflow automation, dashboards.
Azure DevOpsIf your development team already uses Microsoft tools, want tight integration of support tickets/bugs with backlog and dev work. Less of a traditional ticketing/help desk portal.Boards, repos, pipelines, work items, ability to link fixes/enhancements directly with code, test plans.
ServiceNowLarge scale, multiple modules, enterprise features, complex workflows, many integrations, possibly strong compliance/regulatory requirements.Full ITSM suite, ITOM, advanced analytics, large-scale automation, enterprise SLAs, CMDB etc.

Cost comparison for ~10-user scenario

Here are estimates for a small post-implementation setup with ~10 active users (these would be the people acting on tickets / fulfilling / dev/support roles). Note: requester users (people only submitting tickets) often are free or low-cost in many tools; I’m focusing on “active agents/fulfillers”.

ToolLicense / Subscription CostSetup / Implementation / One-Time CostsLikely Ongoing & Hidden Costs
Jira Service Management– Standard plan: ~$19.04 per agent/month.    For 10 agents: ~ $190-200/month.  Premium is ~$47.82 per agent/month.    Free plan exists (up to 3 agents) but too limited for 10. Implementation cost is generally modest compared to ServiceNow. Might include setup of request types/portals, workflows, integration with other tools, perhaps training. Could be $5,000-$20,000 depending on scope.Add-on costs (e.g. assets, configuration management), storage, premium support, possible cost of apps/plugins, training. Also account for scaling: price per agent stays same but total cost grows. Maintenance of processes & workflows can add admin overhead.
Azure DevOps– Basic users: first 5 free, then $6/user/month for more.    For 10 users: you’d pay for 5 extra beyond free, so ~$30/month just for basic access.  If you need test management, Basic + Test Plans is $52/user/month. Implementation cost could be low if you’re mostly using out-of-box; configuring Boards, linking bug/increment workflows, setting up pipelines etc. Perhaps $3,000-$15,000, depending on integrations and customizations.If you need more parallel pipelines, more build agents, more storage/artifacts use, more advanced test planning, those add costs. Also, integration with help-desk if you want a portal vs dev ticket workflow. Support costs if you need premium support.
ServiceNowSubscription/licensing is much higher. Rough benchmark for ITSM fulfiller user is ~$90-$150 per user/month depending on contract, module, size.    For 10 users: expect $900-$1,500+/month just for licensing (for basic ITSM) without advanced modules.Setup/implementation tends to be substantial: tooling, workflows, training, maybe data migration, setting up CMDB, integrations. For SMBs: $20,000-$50,000+ often. For larger or complex needs, much more. Modules cost extra (if you want change-management, operations, ITOM etc.). High admin overhead. Customization, integrations, training, support services can add significantly. Also possibly minimum spend contracts. Hidden user types/licensing roles may complicate cost.

Example: 3 Scenarios & Estimated Total Cost (1st Year)

To help you see the big picture, here are 3 possible small team scenarios (10 users) and rough 1st-year cost (licensing + setup + some cushion for hidden items). 

These are estimates; your actual will vary.

ScenarioToolYear-1 Estimated CostBreak-down
Low complexity / lightweight supportAzure DevOps~$6/user × (10-5 free users) = ~$30/mo → $360/year + maybe $5,000 for setup/integrations/training & some buffer → **$6,000-$8,000**You keep things simple: basic work item tracking, perhaps a simple portal or incoming email mapping, no heavy modules.
Moderate complexity, need full help-desk + SLA + workflowsJira Service Management Standard10 agents × $19.04/mo ≈ $2,300/year + setup cost say $10,000 + plugins/training/support buffer (say $2,000) → **$14,000-$20,000/year**Enough to support a decent support process; some custom workflows, maybe knowledge base, maybe asset management.
High complexity, enterprise gradeServiceNowLicensing 10 users at $100/month = $12,000/year + setup/integration/customization $30,000-$50,000 + annual training/support etc (say $5-10,000) → ~$50,000-$75,000+ for year-1Good if you’re expecting growth, needing enterprise features, lots of integrations, etc.

What to watch out for / what influences cost most

  • User roles/types: Active agents (fulfillers) cost more; people who only view or approve may be cheaper or even free, depending on the tool. Choosing the right types matters.
  • Modules / functional scope: e.g. change management, asset management, monitoring, knowledge base, integrations, test plans, etc. The more you add, the more complexity and cost.
  • Integrations: If you need to tie into monitoring tools, ERP, IAM, email systems, etc., that can add implementation time and possibly licensing.
  • Storage & data volume: If ticket history, attachments, logs grow, you may need more storage or pay for add-ons.
  • Support & SLA requirements: If you need 24/7, faster response times, or enterprise support, expect higher subscription fees.
  • Customization & administration: Who will maintain workflows, update the system, train new users? If this is done by an external partner, it costs; if in-house, you still need staff time.
  • Minimum contract sizes / annual commitments: Tools like ServiceNow often expect minimum spends. Discounts are often negotiated.

Can you create a sample Agile support framework tailored specifically for Dynamics 365 Business Central post-implementation support.

Here is a sample Agile support framework tailored specifically for Dynamics 365 Business Central post-implementation support.

Agile Support Framework Overview

After go-live, your goal is to manage:

  • Incidents (bugs, errors, data issues)
  • Service Requests (user access, configuration help)
  • Enhancements (new fields, reports, or process improvements)

An Agile framework organizes all this into manageable sprints, ensuring continuous improvement without disrupting daily operations.

1. Structure of the Support Model

LayerDescriptionAgile Tool Element
Ticket IntakeUsers log issues or requests via a portal or email.Jira Service Management / Azure DevOps Work Items
Triage & PrioritizationSupport lead classifies (Incident, Service Request, Enhancement) and prioritizes by impact.Backlog Grooming
Sprint PlanningEvery 2–3 weeks, the team reviews the backlog and selects top-priority items for the sprint.Sprint Planning Meeting
ExecutionThe team works on fixes/enhancements during the sprint. Urgent issues may bypass the sprint via a “Hotfix lane.”Active Sprint Board
Testing & ReviewFixes go to a sandbox/UAT for user sign-off.Definition of Done (DoD) Checklist
DeploymentApproved changes deployed to production following change management controls.Change Request Workflow
RetrospectiveTeam reflects on what went well, what didn’t, and improves processes.Sprint Retrospective

2. Sample Sprint Board Setup

ColumnDescription
BacklogAll new issues and requests (unprioritized).
Selected for SprintItems chosen for the current sprint.
In ProgressAssigned and actively being worked on.
In TestingAwaiting or undergoing UAT validation.
Ready for DeploymentPassed testing; queued for release.
DoneDeployed and validated in production.

(You can use Kanban instead of Scrum if you have continuous incoming tickets.)

3. Example Roles

RoleResponsibilities
Product Owner / Support LeadPrioritizes tickets, communicates with stakeholders, approves sprint content.
Scrum Master / Support CoordinatorFacilitates sprints, removes blockers, ensures Agile discipline.
Support Consultants / DevelopersAnalyze, configure, test, and deploy fixes/enhancements.
Key Users / Business SMEsValidate fixes, provide feedback, and define acceptance criteria.

4. Example Sprint Metrics

MetricPurpose
Ticket Resolution TimeMeasure responsiveness and efficiency.
Customer Satisfaction (CSAT)Gather user feedback post-resolution.
Velocity (Story Points Completed)Track team throughput over time.
Defect Reopen RateMonitor quality of fixes and user acceptance.

Tip: Combine Agile + ITIL

For Business Central support, the most effective setup is Agile + ITIL Hybrid:

  • ITIL processes for incidents, SLAs, and change control
  • Agile sprints for enhancements and process improvements

That balance keeps governance intact while staying flexible and fast-moving.

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