Objective 4.2: Given a scenario, apply change management procedures
Cert: CompTIA A+ Core 2 (220-1202) V15 Domain: 4.0 Operational Procedures Weight: Part of the 21% Operational Procedures domain Depth: Given a scenario, apply. The candidate must execute change management: documented processes, rollback/backup plans, sandbox testing, request forms, change types, board approvals, implementation, peer review, acceptance.
What this objective tests
You should know the components of a proper change management process: documenting the proposed change, planning rollback, testing in sandbox, formal request submission, approval workflow, implementation, and post-change validation.
Key facts
Documented business processes:
- Pre-existing documentation of how IT processes work. Reference point for what's normal.
Rollback plan:
- Predefined procedure to undo the change if something goes wrong.
- Examples: snapshot before change, backup file copies, scripted reversal commands.
- Critical for any non-trivial change. If you can't rollback, you can't proceed safely.
Backup plan:
- Confirmed-good backup taken just before the change. Distinct from rollback plan (which is a procedure); backup is the data state.
- Verify the backup is restorable before starting (not just that it ran).
Sandbox testing:
- Test the change in a non-production environment that mirrors production.
- VM with same OS + config, isolated network, fake data.
- Catches problems before they hit users.
Responsible staff members:
- Named owners of the change: who implements, who approves, who's on standby for issues.
Request forms:
- Formal submission documenting the change: purpose, scope, type, schedule, impact, rollback, backup status, approvals.
- Standard for production changes in mid-size+ orgs.
Purpose of the change:
- Why are we doing this? Security patch, feature deployment, infrastructure upgrade, vendor-required change.
Scope of the change:
- What's affected: systems, users, services, integrations. Wider scope = more review.
Change type:
- Categorization that drives approval workflow and risk handling.
Standard change:
- Low-risk, well-understood, pre-approved (e.g., monthly Windows updates, routine cert renewals).
- Streamlined approval.
Normal change:
- Non-emergency, non-standard. Goes through full change management review.
Emergency change:
- Required immediately to prevent or recover from incident (security patch for active exploit, outage fix).
- Streamlined approval but documented after the fact.
Date and time of change:
- When the change will happen. Coordinate with stakeholders to avoid conflicts.
Change freeze:
- Period when changes are not allowed (holiday seasons, year-end financial close, major releases).
- Emergency exceptions still permitted.
Maintenance windows:
- Pre-defined recurring times when changes can happen (e.g., Sundays 2-6 AM).
- Less disruptive than ad-hoc timing.
Affected systems / impact:
- Documented list of systems, services, and users affected.
- Drives communication plan and acceptance testing scope.
Risk analysis:
- Probability and impact of failure scenarios. Risk = likelihood × impact.
Risk level:
- Low, medium, high. Often a matrix combining probability and impact ratings.
- Drives the approval level required.
Change board approvals:
- Change Advisory Board (CAB) reviews higher-risk changes. Members typically include IT leadership, security, ops, sometimes business stakeholders.
- Approve, deny, or request more information.
Implementation:
- Execute the change per the approved plan. Document each step in real time.
Peer review:
- Another tech verifies the change worked. Catches mistakes the implementer might not see.
- Especially valuable for high-risk changes.
End-user acceptance:
- Affected users confirm the change works for them. Closes the change.
Common gotchas
- No rollback plan. Change goes sideways; no clear path back. Drag-out incident.
- Backup "ran" but not verified restorable. Discover during the rollback attempt that the backup is corrupt. Always verify restorability before the change.
- Sandbox doesn't match production. Test passes in sandbox, fails in prod. Sandbox should mirror prod data shape, network, integrations as closely as possible.
- Emergency change skipped documentation. Six months later, no one remembers what was changed. Document after the fact at minimum.
- Change during freeze. Year-end financial close, someone deploys a "tiny patch," breaks reporting. Respect freezes.
- Peer review skipped to save time. Defect that peer review would have caught makes it to production.
- End-user acceptance not collected. "Change is complete" but users don't know how it affects them. Often surfaces as new tickets later.
Real-world context
Standard change workflow for a typical SMB MSP:
- Initiate: Request form filled out (PSA, ServiceNow, or simple email/ticket).
- Plan: Scope, schedule, rollback plan, backup plan, risk assessment documented.
- Test: Sandbox or pilot group verification.
- Approve: Manager or CAB sign-off depending on risk level.
- Communicate: Notify affected users, stakeholders, on-call. Include rollback plan window.
- Execute: Implement per plan. Document each step.
- Verify: Peer review and end-user acceptance.
- Close: Update CMDB, KB articles, runbooks. Mark ticket complete.
For smaller orgs, this scales down to "ticket says what we're doing and why; manager OK'd it; rollback plan in a note; done by Sunday morning." But the discipline of writing it down survives even at small scale.
Sources
- [CompTIA A+ 220-1202 Exam Objectives Version 4.0, Section 4.2](../../../../../../30-RevyTechJourney/CompTIA%20A%2B%20220-1202%20Exam%20Objectives%20%284.0%29.pdf)
- [ITIL: Change Management](https://www.axelos.com/certifications/propath/itil-4-master/itil-4-strategic-leader)
- [Atlassian: Change Management overview](https://www.atlassian.com/itsm/change-management)
- [NIST SP 800-128: Security-Focused Configuration Management](https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/sp/800-128/final)
