Ivanti Service Manager favicon

Ivanti Service Manager

Also analyzed in: 3 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
2
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
61
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Ivanti Service Manager without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
5
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Ivanti Service Manager from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
61/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.66
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.64
Top associations for Ivanti Service Manager
workflow automation 7 strong workflow automation 5 ITIL-style processes 3 steep learning curve 3 change and asset management 2 IT service management 2 asset management capabilities 2 ITIL-aligned processes 2 limited reporting and analytics 2 mid-sized to large organizations 2 mid-sized to large IT teams 2 strong workflow automation 2 hard to configure 2 slow performance 2 incident and change workflows 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
greater control 2 high customization 2 installed on company servers 2 full control over data 1 higher operational overhead 1 tighter security compliance 1 strong customization options 1 full infrastructure control 1 keeps data in-house 1 tightly managed workflows 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Ivanti Service Manager is firmly in the model's "on-premise ticketing system" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Ivanti Service Manager known for?
Ivanti Service Manager is known for IT service management (ITSM) and help desk workflow automation—typically used for incident, problem, change, request, and asset management in enterprise IT.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Ivanti Service Manager known for?
Ivanti Service Manager is known for IT service management (ITSM) and enterprise service management—helping organizations manage service desks, incident/request tracking, problem and change management, asset tracking, and workflow automation.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for a hospital IT team? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which self-hosted ticketing system is best for a university help desk? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What on-premise help desk software works well for manufacturing companies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ticketing systems for internal IT support on-premise? #4 not mentioned
discovery Which self-hosted service desk tools are good for regulated industries? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for government agencies? #4 not mentioned
discovery What self-hosted customer support platforms are best for large teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which on-premise case management software is best for shared service teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best self-hosted ticketing systems with workflow automation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which on-premise help desk tools are best for multi-department support? #5 not mentioned
discovery What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for a private data center? #5 not mentioned
discovery Which self-hosted support desk platforms offer strong reporting? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for ITIL workflows? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which on-premise ticketing software is easiest to customize? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best self-hosted ticketing systems for enterprise security? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to cloud help desk software for self-hosted deployment? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to web-based ticketing platforms if I need on-premise hosting? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which on-premise ticketing systems are better than open-source options for enterprise use? #6 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to hosted service desk software for internal support teams? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which self-hosted help desk platforms are better than lightweight ticket trackers? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What on-premise ticketing systems are better than SaaS help desks for compliance? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which local deployment ticketing systems are better for customization than standard cloud tools? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to outsourced support desk software for in-house teams? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which self-hosted case management platforms are better than generic issue trackers? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to managed ticketing platforms when we need full infrastructure control? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I set up an on-premise ticketing system for internal IT requests? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep support ticket data inside our own infrastructure? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I build a self-hosted help desk for my company? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I manage IT support requests without using a cloud platform? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I add custom workflows to an on-premise ticketing system? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I integrate an on-premise ticketing system with LDAP? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get better audit logs from a self-hosted service desk? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I migrate tickets from a cloud help desk to on-premise software? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I secure a self-hosted ticketing system for sensitive data? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I support multiple departments in one on-premise ticketing platform? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does an on-premise ticketing system cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the pricing for self-hosted help desk software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there free on-premise ticketing systems? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest self-hosted ticketing system for small teams? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do on-premise service desk tools usually cost per year? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do self-hosted ticketing systems have free trials? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are affordable on-premise help desk options for startups? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the pricing model for on-premise case management software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does it cost to license a self-hosted support desk platform? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there low-cost on-premise ticketing systems for enterprise use? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best ticketing systems for internal IT support on-premise? · discovery · recall mode
Best on-premise ticketing systems for internal IT support: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best overall for most IT teams - Strong incident, request, asset, and change management - Good AD integration, SLAs, and self-service portal - Widely used, practical pricing 2. **Atlassian Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if you already use Jira/Confluence - Excellent for IT + dev collaboration - Good workflows and automation - On-prem via Data Center edition 3. **TOPdesk On-Premises** - Very good for internal service desks - Clean UI, easy for agents and end users - Strong knowledge base and SLA handling - Popular in education, government, and enterprise 4. **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options depend on version)** - Better for larger, more mature ITIL environments - Broad ITSM capabilities - Strong workflow and asset management - Usually more complex to deploy 5. **GLPI** - Best open-source on-prem option - Good for ticketing, inventory, and asset tracking - Flexible and cost-effective - Great if you want control and lower licensing costs 6. **HEAT Software / Ivanti Neurons legacy environments** - Still seen in existing on-prem installations - Solid ITSM depth - Often chosen by organizations with long-lived deployments ### My short recommendation - **Best overall:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best budget/open-source:** **GLPI** - **Best simple service desk:** **TOPdesk** If you want, I can also give you: - a **feature-by-feature comparison table** - the **best choice by company size** - or **the cheapest solid on-prem options**.
Prompt: What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for government agencies? · discovery · recall mode
Best on-prem options for government agencies: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — strong value, easy to deploy, good ITIL/workflow support. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian; scalable and self-managed. - **BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem / self-managed deployments)** — best for large, complex enterprise environments. - **Ivanti Service Manager** — solid for regulated orgs with workflow-heavy needs. - **TOPdesk On-Premises** — simpler, user-friendly service desk for mid-sized agencies. **If I recommend a hard top choice:** - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Best for large/complex government:** BMC Helix ITSM - **Best if you’re Atlassian-based:** Jira Service Management Data Center If you want, I can also compare for **FedRAMP/CJIS/air-gapped environments**, pricing, or deployment requirements.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
5/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for customer support teams? 0 0/5
What are the top on-premise ticketing system brands? 0 1/5 4
Which on-premise ticketing system options are most recommended? 0 0/5
What are the most popular on-premise ticketing systems? 0 1/5 4
What is the best self-hosted ticketing system for IT support? 0 0/5
Which on-premise help desk software should I look at? 50 0/5
What are the best self-hosted help desk tools for businesses? 0 0/5
Which on-premise customer support ticketing platforms are worth considering? 0 0/5
What are the leading on-premise service desk systems? 0 0/5
What are the best on-premise IT ticketing systems for enterprises? 0 4/5 4, 3, 5, 3
Which self-hosted case management systems are best for internal support? 0 0/5
What are the best on-premise ticketing solutions for data control? 0 0/5
Which ticketing systems can be installed on our own servers? 0 0/5
What are the best on-premise support desk software options? 0 0/5
What are the best locally hosted ticketing systems for small teams? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the top on-premise ticketing system brands? (no web search)
Top on-premise / self-hosted ticketing system brands include: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very popular on-prem ITSM/help desk - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s self-managed enterprise option - **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem legacy deployments)** — large enterprise standard - **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (self-hosted options depending on edition)** — strong ITSM suite - **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** — classic on-prem ticketing/help desk - **OTRS** — well-known open-source/enterprise ticketing platform - **Zammad** — modern open-source, self-hostable support desk - **GLPI** — popular open-source ITSM/help desk with asset management - **Request Tracker (RT)** — longtime open-source ticketing system - **osTicket** — simple, widely used self-hosted ticketing tool If you want, I can also rank these by **best for enterprise**, **best open-source**, or **best for small teams**.
Iteration: 3 of 5
Prompt: What are the most popular on-premise ticketing systems? (no web search)
If you mean **on-premise IT/helpdesk ticketing systems**, the most popular ones are: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very common in SMB/mid-market; solid on-prem option. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — popular for teams already using Atlassian. - **TOPdesk** — widely used in enterprise and higher ed. - **Ivanti Service Manager** — strong ITSM / ITIL-focused on-prem deployment. - **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (legacy on-prem installs)** — common in large enterprises. - **GLPI** — popular open-source, self-hosted choice. - **OTRS / OTOBO** — popular self-hosted ticketing/helpdesk platforms. - **Zendesk** — mostly cloud now, so not a fit if you specifically need on-prem. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 by company size**, or 2. a **comparison table** with pricing, features, and deployment options.
Iteration: 3 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Ivanti Service Manager

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
45 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 8:56 PM

All 200 AI responses for Ivanti Service Manager

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 200 total responses across 67 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Ivanti Service Manager" in the on-premise ticketing system category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know Ivanti Service Manager as Ivanti's ITSM/ticketing product and am broadly familiar with its positioning, but I do not have deep, detailed knowledge of its current feature set or pricing." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":7,"justification":"I know Ivanti Service Manager well enough to recognize it as an ITSM/ticketing product in the Ivanti portfolio and understand its general capabilities and positioning, though not in deep pricing or implementation detail."}
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Ivanti Service Manager as an IT service management/on-premise ticketing product and am familiar with its core positioning, though not with detailed pricing or the latest feature set." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I’m familiar with Ivanti Service Manager as part of Ivanti’s ITSM/IT service management offerings, but I don’t know its detailed current feature set or pricing deeply."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know Ivanti Service Manager as part of Ivanti’s ITSM/service desk portfolio and its general role in ticketing and workflow management, but I’m not confident on finer product details or current positioning." }
What is Ivanti Service Manager known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is known for IT service management (ITSM) and help desk workflow automation—typically used for incident, problem, change, request, and asset management in enterprise IT.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is known for IT service management (ITSM) and enterprise service management—helping organizations manage service desks, incident/request tracking, problem and change management, asset tracking, and workflow automation.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is known as an IT service management (ITSM) platform for handling service desk workflows, incident and request management, asset and change management, and automating support processes to improve employee and IT service delivery.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is known for IT service management (ITSM) and enterprise service management, helping organizations handle service requests, incidents, problems, assets, and workflows in one platform.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is known as an IT service management (ITSM) platform for handling help desk/ticketing, incident and request management, knowledge base, change management, and workflow automation, often used to streamline internal support and service delivery.
What are Ivanti Service Manager's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager’s main strengths are its solid ITSM/ITIL coverage, flexible workflow automation, good self-service and knowledge management, and strong integration options within the broader Ivanti ecosystem. It’s often appreciated for configurability, reporting, and helping standardize service desk processes. Main weaknesses: the interface and administration can feel complex, implementation/tuning can take time, and some users find customization and upgrades more cumbersome than expected. It may also feel less modern or intuitive than newer SaaS-first competitors, and licensing/total cost can be a concern for smaller teams.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager’s main strengths are its ITSM breadth, flexible workflow/automation, and strong self-service/knowledge features. It’s also known for being customizable, with good support for incident, problem, change, asset, and service request management in one platform. Main weaknesses: the UI can feel dated or less intuitive than newer competitors, implementation/admin complexity can be high, and reporting/analytics may require extra effort to get right. Some users also note that customization and upgrades can become cumbersome, especially in larger or highly tailored environments.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager’s main strengths are its broad ITSM feature set, strong workflow/automation capabilities, good self-service and knowledge management options, and solid integration with other Ivanti products and common enterprise systems. It’s also often appreciated for being flexible and configurable for mid-to-large IT organizations. Main weaknesses: it can feel complex to implement and administer, the UI/UX is sometimes seen as less modern or less intuitive than newer rivals, reporting/analytics can be limited without extra effort, and some users find customization and upgrades more involved than expected. It may be overkill for smaller teams.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager (ITSM) is generally seen as strong in workflow automation, configurable service processes, and IT service/asset management integration. Main strengths: - Flexible workflows and automation - Strong ITSM features (incident, request, change, asset) - Good configurability without always needing heavy custom code - Self-service portal and knowledge management support - Fits organizations that want an ITIL-style process model Main weaknesses: - Can feel complex to set up and administer - User interface and usability are often described as average rather than best-in-class - Reporting/analytics can be less intuitive than some competitors - Customization and upgrades may require careful planning - Performance and integration experience can vary by deployment and environment In short: it’s powerful and configurable, but not usually praised for simplicity or polish.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager (ITSM) is generally seen as strong in: - IT service management breadth: incident, request, problem, change, asset, and knowledge workflows. - Automation and workflow customization: good process design without heavy coding. - Self-service and portal capabilities: users can submit requests and find answers more easily. - Integration options: connects with other IT tools and Ivanti products. - ITIL-aligned features: suitable for organizations wanting standard ITSM practices. Main weaknesses: - Usability can feel dated or less intuitive than newer SaaS competitors. - Setup and administration can be complex, especially for advanced customization. - Reporting/analytics may be less strong than best-in-class platforms. - Performance and upgrade experience can vary depending on deployment and configuration. - It may be more than needed for smaller teams looking for a simple, lightweight tool. Overall, it’s a solid mid-to-enterprise ITSM platform with strong workflow capabilities, but it can require more effort to implement and manage than some modern alternatives.
Who should use Ivanti Service Manager? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is best for mid-sized to large organizations that need a structured ITSM platform for incident, request, change, problem, and asset management—especially teams that want workflow automation, self-service, and ITIL-style processes. It also fits companies already using Ivanti products or those with a dedicated IT service desk and admin resources. It’s less ideal for very small teams, businesses that want a simple out-of-the-box help desk with minimal setup, or organizations that don’t need much process customization. If you need something ultra-lightweight, very cheap, or quick to deploy with almost no configuration, look elsewhere.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is best for mid-sized to large IT teams that want a configurable ITSM/help desk platform with incident, request, problem, change, asset, and workflow management. It suits organizations already invested in ITIL-style processes, needing self-service, automation, and integrated service management. Avoid it if you want a very simple, low-cost ticketing tool, have a tiny team with minimal workflow needs, or prefer a product that is extremely easy to set up with little administration. It may also be a poor fit if you need a lightweight startup-style support app rather than a full ITSM suite.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is best for mid-sized to large organizations that need a structured IT service management platform—especially IT teams running incident, change, problem, asset, and service-request workflows, and companies that want ITIL-style processes, customization, and enterprise governance. It should be avoided by very small teams, startups, or organizations that want a lightweight, quick-to-deploy, low-maintenance help desk. It may also be a poor fit for teams that need a highly modern/simple user experience, have limited admin resources, or don’t need the platform’s broader enterprise-level complexity.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is best for mid-size to large IT teams and service desks that need ITIL-style incident, request, problem, change, and asset management in one platform—especially organizations already using Ivanti products or wanting strong workflow automation and self-service. It may be a poor fit for very small teams, companies wanting a simple lightweight help desk, or organizations that need highly specialized/custom software-development-oriented ITSM without much configuration effort. It can also be overkill if you only need basic ticketing.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is best for mid-sized to large IT teams and enterprises that need IT service management, asset management, incident/request tracking, workflow automation, and self-service portals. It also fits organizations already using Ivanti products or wanting strong ITIL-aligned processes and customization. It may be a poor fit for very small teams, startups, or organizations that want a very lightweight, low-cost, quick-to-deploy help desk with minimal configuration. It can also be less suitable for teams that do not want a more complex enterprise ITSM platform or that prefer simpler tools with less setup and admin overhead.
How does Ivanti Service Manager compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is generally seen as a mid-market ITSM/ITIL platform with strong workflow automation, asset management, and service desk features, but it usually trails the biggest leaders in breadth and ecosystem. Compared with main competitors: - ServiceNow: ServiceNow is the market leader with the deepest enterprise capabilities, customization, and integrations. Ivanti is typically cheaper and simpler, but less powerful at scale. - BMC Helix: BMC is also strong for large enterprises and complex IT operations. Ivanti is often easier to deploy and more cost-effective, but BMC is stronger for advanced enterprise service management. - Jira Service Management: Jira is popular for IT + DevOps teams and issue tracking integration. Ivanti is better for traditional ITSM and asset management, while Jira is often better for software-centric teams. - Freshservice: Freshservice is usually easier to use and faster to adopt. Ivanti tends to offer more depth in ITSM/asset control, but Freshservice is often viewed as more modern and user-friendly. - ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus: ManageEngine is a strong value competitor. Ivanti is comparable on core ITSM, but ManageEngine is often cheaper and simpler, while Ivanti can be stronger in workflow and endpoint/asset-related capabilities. Bottom line: Ivanti Service Manager is a solid choice if you want enterprise-grade ITSM without ServiceNow-level cost/complexity, but it is usually not the top pick for best-in-class scale, UX, or ecosystem.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is generally positioned as a mid-market to enterprise ITSM/ESM platform. Compared with its main competitors: - ServiceNow: ServiceNow is usually stronger on breadth, ecosystem, customization, and large-enterprise scale. Ivanti Service Manager is typically simpler and less expensive to adopt, but not as extensive. - Jira Service Management: Jira is often better for DevOps/engineering-centric teams and easier if you already use Atlassian. Ivanti is usually stronger for traditional ITSM processes, asset/service workflows, and broader enterprise service management. - BMC Helix: BMC is strong in large, complex IT organizations with deep ITIL capabilities. Ivanti is often viewed as more straightforward to deploy and manage, though less feature-rich overall. - Freshservice: Freshservice is typically more modern and easier to use for smaller teams. Ivanti tends to fit organizations that want more enterprise controls and deeper workflow/process options. - ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus: ManageEngine is usually more budget-friendly and appealing for smaller IT teams. Ivanti is generally more enterprise-oriented and scalable. Overall: Ivanti Service Manager is a solid choice if you want a capable ITSM/ESM platform with enterprise features but without the complexity and cost of ServiceNow or BMC. It’s less dominant in innovation and ecosystem depth than ServiceNow, but often stronger than lightweight tools for structured IT service operations.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager (ITSM) is generally positioned as a mid-market to enterprise service desk / ITSM platform with strong workflow automation and integration with Ivanti’s broader endpoint/security portfolio. Compared with main competitors: - ServiceNow: ServiceNow is usually the market leader and stronger for large, complex enterprises, deep configurability, and broad ecosystem. Ivanti Service Manager is typically simpler and often more cost-effective, but less expansive. - BMC Helix: BMC is strong in enterprise IT operations and complex environments. Ivanti is often viewed as easier to adopt and manage, though BMC may have more depth in advanced ITOM scenarios. - Freshservice: Freshservice is often easier to use and faster to deploy for SMB/mid-market teams. Ivanti Service Manager usually offers more traditional enterprise ITSM capabilities and more flexibility for complex workflows. - Jira Service Management: Jira is attractive for DevOps/engineering-heavy organizations and Atlassian users. Ivanti is usually better for classic ITSM and service desk processes, while Jira can be stronger for development collaboration. - ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus: ManageEngine is often cheaper and well-suited to smaller IT teams. Ivanti tends to be stronger for larger deployments, automation, and enterprise governance. Overall: Ivanti Service Manager is a solid choice if you want enterprise-grade ITSM with good automation and integration, but it is usually not as dominant as ServiceNow in breadth or as lightweight as Freshservice in simplicity.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is generally positioned as a solid ITSM/ESM platform for mid-market and enterprise teams that want good workflow automation, configurable service catalog, asset management, and ITIL-aligned processes without the same level of complexity as some larger suites. Compared with competitors: - ServiceNow: ServiceNow is usually the market leader and is stronger for very large, complex enterprises, breadth of apps, and ecosystem depth. Ivanti is typically simpler and often more cost-effective, but not as expansive. - BMC Helix: BMC is strong in large-enterprise IT operations and service management. Ivanti tends to be easier to administer, while BMC is often seen as more heavyweight. - Freshservice: Freshservice is often easier to adopt and more modern for smaller teams. Ivanti usually offers deeper ITSM/asset capabilities and more enterprise configurability. - Jira Service Management: Jira excels for DevOps/engineering-aligned teams and tight integration with Atlassian tools. Ivanti is usually better for traditional ITSM and asset-centric service processes. - ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus: ManageEngine is competitive on price and good for ITSM basics. Ivanti is generally stronger in enterprise workflow, automation, and broader service management use cases. Overall: Ivanti Service Manager is best viewed as a balanced, enterprise-capable alternative to the biggest players—often stronger than budget tools, but not as large or ecosystem-rich as ServiceNow.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Ivanti Service Manager is generally positioned as a mid-market ITSM/ITAM platform that’s strongest in workflow automation, asset/service desk integration, and cross-IT operations management. Compared with key competitors: - ServiceNow: Ivanti is usually simpler and cheaper to deploy, but ServiceNow is broader, more scalable, and the market leader for large enterprises. - BMC Helix: Ivanti is often easier for smaller teams and faster to implement; BMC tends to be stronger in very large, complex enterprise environments. - Freshservice: Ivanti offers deeper IT asset and endpoint/process integration; Freshservice is typically more modern and easier to use. - Jira Service Management: Ivanti is better for traditional ITSM and asset-heavy workflows; Jira is usually preferred in DevOps/engineering-centric organizations. - ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus: Ivanti is comparable on price and mid-market fit, but Ivanti often has stronger enterprise workflow and endpoint-management ties. Overall: choose Ivanti if you want a practical, integrated ITSM platform with solid automation and asset management. Choose ServiceNow or BMC for large-scale enterprise depth, Freshservice for usability, or Jira Service Management for Atlassian-centric teams.
What do people typically complain about with Ivanti Service Manager?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Ivanti Service Manager is clunky to use, has a dated UI, and can be hard to configure and maintain. Other frequent complaints are slow performance, weak or awkward reporting, limited customization without expertise, and integration/setup complexity. Some users also mention inconsistent support and a steep learning curve.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Ivanti Service Manager being clunky and dated to use, with a steep learning curve. Common gripes include weak or inflexible reporting, difficult customization/workflows, mediocre search and filtering, slow performance at times, and integration/upgrade headaches. Some also mention that support and licensing can feel expensive or cumbersome.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Ivanti Service Manager can be clunky and hard to configure, with a steep learning curve. Other frequent complaints include slow performance, an outdated or unintuitive UI, reporting/dashboard limitations, workflow customization complexity, and occasional integration or upgrade issues. Some users also mention that support and documentation can be inconsistent.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Ivanti Service Manager being a bit clunky and hard to learn, with an outdated UI, slow performance at times, and reporting/analytics that can feel limited or awkward to configure. Others mention that setup and customization can be more complex than expected, and integrations/workflows may require extra effort. Support and documentation are also sometimes cited as inconsistent.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Ivanti Service Manager being: - Hard to configure/customize without expert admin knowledge - Clunky or outdated in the UI/UX compared with newer ITSM tools - Slow or buggy at times, especially with larger environments - Weak or awkward reporting/analytics - Having a steeper learning curve and sometimes inconsistent documentation/support - More difficult integrations and upgrades than expected A lot of criticism is less about core ITSM features and more about usability, flexibility, and admin overhead.
What is a typical on-premise ticketing system known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
An on-premise ticketing system is typically known for being installed and run on the organization’s own servers, giving greater control, customization, and data security.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical on-premise ticketing system is known for being installed on a company’s own servers, giving it strong control over data, higher customization, and tighter security/compliance options.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical on-premise ticketing system is known for giving organizations full control over data, customization, and integrations because it’s hosted on their own servers rather than in the cloud. It’s often used for security, compliance, and tightly managed internal workflows.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical on-premise ticketing system is known for keeping data and control inside your own infrastructure, with strong customization, tighter security/compliance, and integration with internal systems.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical on-premise ticketing system is known for being installed and run on a company’s own servers, giving greater control, customization, and data security, often at the cost of more IT maintenance.

Authority — LLM Authority (45 prompts)

What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for a hospital IT team? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For a hospital IT team, the best **on-premise** ticketing systems are usually: ### Top picks 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best all-around choice for hospitals - Strong ITIL, asset management, approvals, SLAs, and reporting - Good value and easier to administer than larger enterprise suites 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your team already uses Atlassian tools - Strong workflow automation and dev/ops integration - Good for large internal IT teams, but less “out-of-the-box” than ServiceDesk Plus 3. **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options vary by version)** - Best for enterprise service management and complex environments - Strong workflow, asset, and security-oriented features - More expensive and heavier to implement 4. **BMC Remedy ITSM / BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem legacy deployments)** - Best for very large hospitals or health systems - Deep ITSM functionality and scalability - Usually requires more admin effort and consulting 5. **TOPdesk On-Premises** - Best for service desk simplicity and fast adoption - Good self-service portal and incident management - Easier to roll out than BMC/Ivanti ### Good lower-cost / open-source options - **GLPI** - **Znuny** (OTRS fork) - **OTRS Community/Enterprise** depending on version availability ### What I’d choose - **Most hospitals:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **Atlassian shop:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Large multi-campus health system:** **BMC Remedy ITSM** or **Ivanti** ### Hospital-specific features to prioritize - SSO/AD integration - Audit logs and role-based access - HIPAA-friendly access controls - Asset/CMDB tracking for medical devices and endpoints - On-prem database and backups - SLA/escalation workflows - Email-to-ticket and self-service portal If you want, I can give you a **ranked shortlist by budget, team size, and compliance needs**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For a **hospital IT team**, the strongest on-prem/self-hosted ticketing picks are usually: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premise)** — best all-around choice for enterprise ITSM, with self-service portal, workflows, asset/CMDB-style capabilities, and broad customization. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **GLPI (Self-hosted)** — best open-source option if you want strong ticketing plus asset/inventory management and ITIL-style incident/problem/change support. GLPI explicitly supports self-hosted deployments and has a self-service interface. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/faq/glpi/cloud_vs_self-hosted?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SysAid On-Premises** — good for teams that want a customizable ITSM platform installed on local servers, with self-service and automation. ([sysaid.com](https://www.sysaid.com/plans/on-premises?utm_source=openai)) 4. **OTRS (On-premise)** — solid if you want a flexible, highly configurable service desk with strong ticketing, workflows, and knowledge base/self-service. ([otrs.com](https://otrs.com/fr/cas-dusages/help-desk/solution-help-desk/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if your org already lives in Atlassian; note that Atlassian’s current on-prem-style option is Data Center, not the older Server model. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/service-management/features/itsm?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation for hospitals:** - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best open-source:** GLPI - **Best if you need deep customization:** OTRS or SysAid - **Best Atlassian shop:** Jira Service Management Data Center ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) For a hospital, I’d prioritize: **SSO/AD integration, audit trails, role-based access, HIPAA/security controls, asset tracking, SLA workflows, and downtime/outage notices**. Those are the areas where these platforms differentiate most. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/self-service/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **3-vendor shortlist with pros/cons and a hospital-specific scoring matrix**.
Which self-hosted ticketing system is best for a university help desk? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
**Best overall: Zammad** For a university help desk, **Zammad** is usually the best self-hosted choice because it has: - clean, modern UI for students and staff - strong email-to-ticket handling - good SLA, routing, and automation - knowledge base + multi-channel support - easy agent workflow for a busy service desk **If you need more IT asset management**, consider **GLPI** instead. It’s better for: - inventory / CMDB - software and hardware tracking - ITIL-style service management **Other solid options:** - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, easy to run - **Znuny** — powerful, but older/more complex - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very reliable, but less friendly UI **My recommendation:** - **Zammad** for most university help desks - **GLPI** if you want ticketing + asset management in one system If you want, I can also give you a **“best by feature” shortlist** for universities.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall for a university help desk: _GLPI_** if you need both ticketing **and** asset management/CMDB for laptops, software, printers, and inventory tied to tickets. GLPI is explicitly positioned as open-source IT asset management + helpdesk, and its features include linking assets to tickets, incidents/requests, SLAs, forms, problems, changes, and reporting. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation/readme-1?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you want the smoothest modern help desk UX: _Zammad_**. It’s open source, self-hostable, and built around omnichannel ticket handling, automation, APIs, multilingual support, and self-service. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you want the simplest classic ticketing system: _osTicket_**. It’s self-hosted, widely used, and covers the basics well: custom fields, queues, SLAs, customer portal, knowledge base, and tasks. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick for a university:** - **GLPI** = best fit for most universities - **Zammad** = best UI/workflow - **osTicket** = simplest to run ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/features/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **GLPI vs Zammad vs osTicket** comparison specifically for **student support, staff IT, and onboarding**.
What on-premise help desk software works well for manufacturing companies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For manufacturing companies, the best **on-premise** help desk options are usually the ones that handle **IT + maintenance + asset tracking + approvals** well. ### Good on-premise choices - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** Strong all-around choice for manufacturers. Good asset management, CMDB, workflows, and maintenance-style ticketing. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** Best if your teams already use Atlassian tools. Scales well and works for internal support, though it’s more IT-focused than plant/facilities-focused. - **Freshservice is not on-premise** So skip this if you need fully local hosting. - **TOPdesk** Good for internal service desks, facilities, and maintenance teams. Easy to use and solid for multi-department support. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem / self-hosted options depending on setup)** Better for larger enterprises with more complex workflows, compliance needs, and integrations. - **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** Strong enterprise option, but usually heavier and more expensive than most manufacturers need. ### Best fit by use case - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for enterprise scale:** Ivanti or BMC - **Best for mixed IT + facilities:** TOPdesk - **Best if you’re already on Atlassian:** Jira Service Management Data Center ### What to look for in manufacturing - Asset tracking for PCs, scanners, printers, PLC-related endpoints - SLA/escalation support for production-impacting issues - Maintenance request workflows - Role-based access and audit logs - Integration with ERP/CMMS if needed If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 for a plant with 100, 500, or 1,000+ employees**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For manufacturing, I’d shortlist these on-prem options: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — best all-around pick for manufacturers because it explicitly supports manufacturing use cases like asset tracking, preventive maintenance tickets, compliance, and multi-site reporting. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-premise)** — strong if you need flexible deployment, asset visibility, workflows, and a more enterprise-style service desk that can run on-prem or hybrid. ([ivanti.com](https://www.ivanti.com/products/service-desk?utm_source=openai)) - **InvGate Service Desk (on-premises)** — a good fit for companies that want a modern service desk with on-prem deployment and broad industry use, including manufacturing. ([info.invgate.com](https://info.invgate.com/hubfs/01%20MKT%20-%20General%20Institutional/01%20MKT%20-%20Certifications/Invgate%20%7C%20SOC%202%20Type%202%20%28EN%29.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI Network (on-premise)** — worth considering if you want a cost-conscious, open ecosystem with help desk + CMDB/ITSM capabilities and partner support for on-prem deployments. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/partners/?utm_source=openai)) - **BMC Helix / FootPrints** — better for larger enterprises with more complex ITSM needs; BMC also has on-premise options in its service-desk family. ([bmc.com](https://www.bmc.com/it-solutions/service-desk-software.html?utm_source=openai)) **My practical ranking for manufacturing:** 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** 2. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** 3. **InvGate Service Desk** 4. **GLPI Network** If you tell me your company size, whether you need **OT/plant-floor asset tracking**, and your budget, I can narrow this to 1–2 best choices.
What are the best ticketing systems for internal IT support on-premise? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best on-premise ticketing systems for internal IT support: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best overall for most IT teams - Strong incident, request, asset, and change management - Good AD integration, SLAs, and self-service portal - Widely used, practical pricing 2. **Atlassian Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if you already use Jira/Confluence - Excellent for IT + dev collaboration - Good workflows and automation - On-prem via Data Center edition 3. **TOPdesk On-Premises** - Very good for internal service desks - Clean UI, easy for agents and end users - Strong knowledge base and SLA handling - Popular in education, government, and enterprise 4. **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options depend on version)** - Better for larger, more mature ITIL environments - Broad ITSM capabilities - Strong workflow and asset management - Usually more complex to deploy 5. **GLPI** - Best open-source on-prem option - Good for ticketing, inventory, and asset tracking - Flexible and cost-effective - Great if you want control and lower licensing costs 6. **HEAT Software / Ivanti Neurons legacy environments** - Still seen in existing on-prem installations - Solid ITSM depth - Often chosen by organizations with long-lived deployments ### My short recommendation - **Best overall:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best budget/open-source:** **GLPI** - **Best simple service desk:** **TOPdesk** If you want, I can also give you: - a **feature-by-feature comparison table** - the **best choice by company size** - or **the cheapest solid on-prem options**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **on-prem internal IT support**, my top picks are: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premise)** — probably the best all-around choice for most IT teams: mature ITSM features, self-service portal, SLA management, automation, asset/knowledge base, and explicitly offered as on-premise. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/help-desk-software/it-help-desk-software.html?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if your org already uses Atlassian tools and wants a self-managed option; Atlassian says Data Center is self-managed and can be deployed on your own physical hardware or VMs. Note: Atlassian also says Data Center products will become read-only on **March 28, 2029**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/licensing/jira-service-management-data-center?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Matrix42 IT Service Management** — strong enterprise option for organizations that need cloud/private cloud/on-prem flexibility and care about compliance/data sovereignty. ([matrix42.com](https://www.matrix42.com/en/itsm?utm_source=openai)) 4. **GLPI** — best open-source/on-prem choice if you want lower license cost and are okay with a more hands-on setup; GLPI says it can be installed on-premises and has a dedicated on-prem support offering. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/faq/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Request Tracker (RT)** — best for teams that want a lightweight, flexible open-source ticketing/workflow system and don’t mind more admin effort. ([rt-wiki.bestpractical.com](https://rt-wiki.bestpractical.com/wiki/HomePage?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Most companies:** ServiceDesk Plus - **Atlassian stack:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Strict sovereignty/compliance:** Matrix42 - **Budget/open-source:** GLPI - **Simple, engineer-friendly workflows:** RT If you want, I can narrow this to **best for small IT teams**, **best for enterprise**, or **best open-source only**.
Which self-hosted service desk tools are good for regulated industries? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good self-hosted service desk options for regulated industries: - **GLPI** — strong asset + ITSM combo, good auditability, RBAC, LDAP/SSO, and on-prem control. Popular in gov/education/healthcare. - **Znuny** (OTRS Community Fork) — very solid for ticketing, workflows, queues, and compliance-heavy environments. Good choice if you want mature, fully self-hosted support. - **OTRS** (commercial) — enterprise-grade, strong process controls, reporting, and security features. Common in regulated orgs. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian. On-prem, good workflow/customization, access controls, approvals, and audit logs. - **iTop** — ITSM-focused, self-hosted, good CMDB, change management, and traceability. Often used in controlled environments. - **Request Tracker (RT) by Best Practical** — very stable, highly scriptable, and trusted by universities and enterprises with strict requirements. - **osTicket** — simpler than the others, but fine for smaller regulated teams that need basic on-prem ticketing and control. For regulated industries, I’d prioritize: 1. **Znuny/OTRS** 2. **GLPI** 3. **Jira Service Management Data Center** 4. **iTop** If you tell me your industry (healthcare, finance, public sector, etc.) and team size, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good self-hosted picks for regulated industries: - **Znuny** — strong fit if you want **tight roles/permissions** and a mature OTRS-derived help desk. Their docs emphasize a thorough rights/roles model, and current LTS releases include security fixes. ([znuny.org](https://www.znuny.org/en/features/security-permissions?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** — good if you want a modern UI plus **self-hosted deployment** and privacy tooling. The docs cover on-prem docs, TLS/webserver setup, and GDPR-style deletion of ticket/user data. ([docs.zammad.org](https://docs.zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — solid, simpler option with **roles, visibility permissions, MFA, ACLs, and optional SSO**. That makes it a practical choice for controlled environments. ([docs.osticket.com](https://docs.osticket.com/en/latest/Admin/Agents/Roles.html?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — best if you want service desk plus asset/ITSM features, with **on-premise docs** and SSO/provisioning plugins like SAML/SCIM. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **FreeScout** — lightweight self-hosted option, especially if you want a **self-service help center/knowledge base** and a small footprint. It also publishes security advisories. ([freescout.net](https://freescout.net/module/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - **Best overall for regulated orgs:** **Znuny** - **Best modern UX:** **Zammad** - **Best simplest/admin-light:** **osTicket** - **Best ITSM + inventory:** **GLPI** If you want, I can narrow this to **HIPAA, SOC 2, ISO 27001, or FedRAMP-style** requirements.
What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for government agencies? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best on-prem options for government agencies: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — strong value, easy to deploy, good ITIL/workflow support. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian; scalable and self-managed. - **BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem / self-managed deployments)** — best for large, complex enterprise environments. - **Ivanti Service Manager** — solid for regulated orgs with workflow-heavy needs. - **TOPdesk On-Premises** — simpler, user-friendly service desk for mid-sized agencies. **If I recommend a hard top choice:** - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Best for large/complex government:** BMC Helix ITSM - **Best if you’re Atlassian-based:** Jira Service Management Data Center If you want, I can also compare for **FedRAMP/CJIS/air-gapped environments**, pricing, or deployment requirements.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most government agencies that need **true on-prem/self-hosted ticketing**, I’d shortlist these: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — strong all-around choice for IT help desk + ITSM, with self-service portal, automation, reporting, asset management, and explicit on-prem deployment. ManageEngine also markets it for government use. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if your agency wants a self-managed platform with strong workflow customization, asset/configuration management, and enterprise scaling. Atlassian describes Data Center as its self-managed offering, and it includes ITSM capabilities for request, incident, problem, change, and knowledge management. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center/jira/service-management?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** — a solid on-prem ticketing system if your priority is straightforward ticket routing, categorization, lifecycle tracking, and technician assignment. ([solarwinds.com](https://www.solarwinds.com/web-help-desk/use-cases/help-desk-ticketing-software?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Serviceaide ChangeGear** — worth a look for agencies with heavier compliance/audit needs; Serviceaide says it can be deployed on-premises and supports ITIL, HIPAA, GDPR, ISO, SOC 2, NERC, and FERC requirements. ([serviceaide.com](https://www.serviceaide.com/products/changegear?utm_source=openai)) 5. **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM on-premises** — best for larger, more complex environments that want a mature enterprise ITSM stack; BMC’s docs still describe on-premises ITSM deployment and migration paths. ([docs.bmc.com](https://docs.bmc.com/xwiki/bin/view/Service-Management/IT-Service-Management/Remedy-with-Smart-IT/smartit2002/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best for heavier compliance:** ChangeGear - **Best for legacy enterprise ITSM:** BMC Remedy/BMC Helix on-prem If you want, I can narrow this to a **top 3 for federal/state/local agencies** based on your budget, user count, and security constraints.
What self-hosted customer support platforms are best for large teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **large teams**, the best self-hosted customer support platforms are usually: 1. **Zammad** - Best overall balance of usability + enterprise features - Strong ticketing, SLAs, omnichannel support, API, reporting - Good for teams that want a modern UI and fast adoption 2. **Znuny** (the open-source successor to OTRS Community Edition) - Best for very large, process-heavy support orgs - Strong workflow/customization depth - Great if you need complex queues, permissions, and ITSM-style ticketing 3. **UVdesk** - Good for e-commerce and multi-channel support - Solid automation, knowledge base, and integrations - Works well for growing teams that want a friendlier setup than legacy systems 4. **osTicket** - Best simple, reliable, lightweight choice - Less polished, but proven and easy to run - Good if you want straightforward ticket handling without lots of complexity 5. **FreeScout** - Best for smaller-to-mid large teams that want a shared inbox feel - Clean and simple, but not as robust as Zammad or Znuny for enterprise workflows ### My quick recommendation - **Best overall:** **Zammad** - **Best for enterprise complexity:** **Znuny** - **Best for e-commerce/support ops teams:** **UVdesk** If you want, I can also give you a **feature-by-feature comparison** (SLAs, roles, automation, knowledge base, reporting, multi-brand support).
retrieval Not mentioned
If you’re optimizing for **large teams**, my short list is: 1. **Deskpro** — best “enterprise-grade” self-hosted pick. It offers an on-premise/self-hosted version, supports large-team tiering (Enterprise starts at 25 agents, with up to 1,000 lite agents), and includes things like SSO/permissions, audit trails, and self-hosted deployment options. ([support.deskpro.com](https://support.deskpro.com/en-GB/kb/articles/pdf/what-is-deskpro-on-premise)) 2. **Zammad** — best open-source choice for bigger support orgs that want strong workflow controls. It supports team-specific overviews, permissions, multitasking, multilingual UI, duplicate detection, and SSO options; Zammad also explicitly offers self-hosting. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/company/open-source?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Chatwoot** — best for omnichannel support teams. It self-hosts, brings website chat/email/social/messaging into one inbox, and its enterprise plan adds roles, permissions, audit logs, and SLA policies. ([chatwoot.com](https://www.chatwoot.com/)) 4. **FreeScout** — best if your team is heavily email/shared-inbox driven and you want a lightweight self-hosted system. It supports unlimited agents/mailboxes, teams, a global mailbox, and LDAP/SSO-style integration via modules. ([freescout.net](https://freescout.net/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **UVdesk** — best if you need ecommerce/multichannel support with teams/groups and workflow routing. Its docs say it can scale with countless agents, teams, and groups, and it supports Dockerized deployment. ([docs.uvdesk.com](https://docs.uvdesk.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick by scenario** - **Best overall for large teams:** Deskpro. ([support.deskpro.com](https://support.deskpro.com/en-GB/kb/articles/pdf/what-is-deskpro-on-premise)) - **Best open source at scale:** Zammad. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/company/open-source?utm_source=openai)) - **Best omnichannel:** Chatwoot. ([chatwoot.com](https://www.chatwoot.com/)) - **Best simple/shared mailbox:** FreeScout. ([freescout.net](https://freescout.net/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best for 50+ agents / 200+ agents / enterprise compliance”** ranking.
Which on-premise case management software is best for shared service teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **shared service teams**, the best **on-premise** case management platform is usually **Pega Platform**. **Why Pega:** - Strong **case management + workflow orchestration** - Good for **HR, finance, IT, customer service** shared services - Powerful **rules, routing, SLAs, and automation** - Can be deployed **on-premises / self-managed** **Best alternatives:** 1. **IBM Business Automation Workflow (BAW)** - Best if you want a more traditional **enterprise workflow/case** stack - Solid for complex, process-heavy shared services 2. **OpenText AppWorks** - Good for **case-centric operations** and enterprise forms/workflows - Often chosen when you already use OpenText products 3. **NewgenONE** - Strong for **enterprise case management** and document-heavy processes - Good fit for regulated environments **Simple pick:** - **Best overall:** **Pega Platform** - **Best IBM shop choice:** **IBM Business Automation Workflow** - **Best document-heavy choice:** **NewgenONE** If you want, I can narrow this to the **best option by budget, IT complexity, or department**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you need one **best overall on-premise option for shared-service teams**, I’d pick **IBM Case Manager / IBM Business Automation Workflow**. It’s built for advanced case management, supports on-prem deployment, and is designed to unify information, people, processes, content, rules, collaboration, and analytics. ([ibm.com](https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/SSCTJ4_5.3.1/com.ibm.casemgmt.installing.doc/acmpi003.htm?utm_source=openai)) **Why this one:** - Strong fit for **shared services** because it handles long-running, multi-party cases and centralized workflows. ([docs.oracle.com](https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/saas/fusion-service/facqa/what-s-a-case.html?utm_source=openai)) - Mature **on-prem architecture** with enterprise content and process integration. ([ibm.com](https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/SSCTJ4_5.3.1/com.ibm.casemgmt.installing.doc/acmpi003.htm?utm_source=openai)) - Good if you need **auditability, migration between environments, and analytics**. ([ibm.com](https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/SSCTJ4_5.3.1/com.ibm.casemgmt.installing.doc/acmpi003.htm?utm_source=openai)) **Best alternatives by use case:** - **Tyler Enterprise Case Manager** — best for **government / courts / justice** shared-service operations, and it has supported on-prem deployments. ([empower.tylertech.com](https://empower.tylertech.com/rs/015-NUU-525/images/Enterprise%20Case%20Manager%20Application%20Brochure.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Oracle JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Case Management** — best if you’re already on **Oracle JD Edwards** and want customer-service case handling inside that stack. ([docs.oracle.com](https://docs.oracle.com/en/applications/jd-edwards/asset-lifecycle/9.2/eoaca/jd-edwards-enterpriseone-case-management.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **top 5 on-prem shortlist** for your exact shared-service type (HR, IT, finance, legal, or government).
What are the best self-hosted ticketing systems with workflow automation? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best **self-hosted ticketing systems with workflow automation**: 1. **Zammad** - Best overall for modern self-hosted helpdesk - Strong automation: triggers, macros, time-based rules, SLAs - Good email, web, chat, and API support - Clean UI, easy to use 2. **OTRS / Znuny** - Best for enterprise-style workflow depth - Very powerful queues, escalations, dynamic fields, rules, approvals - Znuny is the popular open-source continuation of OTRS - Great if you need complex process handling 3. **GLPI** - Best for ITSM + asset management - Ticket workflows, SLA rules, categories, approvals, change/problem management - Strong if you want tickets tied to inventory and CMDB 4. **FreeScout** - Best lightweight self-hosted shared inbox/helpdesk - Automation via rules, filters, workflow add-ons, and APIs - Simpler than Zammad/OTRS, but very practical 5. **osTicket** - Best simple, mature, low-overhead option - Basic automation: ticket rules, auto-assign, SLAs, canned responses - Good if you want straightforward ticketing without complexity 6. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Best for highly customizable workflow-heavy ticketing - Extremely flexible, but older UI and steeper learning curve - Strong for internal operations and custom processes ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Best for complex enterprise workflows:** Znuny - **Best ITSM:** GLPI - **Best lightweight inbox-style helpdesk:** FreeScout - **Best simple classic ticketing:** osTicket If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of deployment**, **automation power**, or **best Docker/self-hosted setup**.
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If you want **self-hosted + real workflow automation**, my short list is: 1. **Zammad** — best overall for modern helpdesk automation. It has **triggers**, **macros**, **scheduler jobs**, dynamic **core workflows**, and API/webhook-friendly automation; Zammad also highlights native integration with n8n. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product/features/core-workflows?utm_source=openai)) 2. **GLPI** — best if you also want **ITSM/asset management** plus ticket automation. GLPI supports **automatic actions/crontasks** and has an official **n8n integration** for external workflow automation. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation/modules/configuration/crontasks?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Request Tracker / RTIR** — best for **highly customizable, process-heavy workflows** and incident response. RT supports very configurable **scrips** and custom conditions/actions, and RTIR is built around incident workflows with multiple ticket types. ([docs.bestpractical.com](https://docs.bestpractical.com/rt/6.0.2/customizing/scrip_conditions_and_action.html?utm_source=openai)) 4. **osTicket** — best if you want something simpler and proven. Its **ticket filters** can route tickets, assign agents/departments, and trigger canned responses, but it’s less workflow-rich than Zammad or GLPI. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Zammad** if you want the best balance of usability + automation. - **GLPI** if you need IT asset inventory and support workflows together. - **RT/RTIR** if your processes are complex and rule-driven. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product/features/core-workflows?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **top 5 with pros/cons**, or a **recommendation by use case** (IT helpdesk, MSP, internal support, security incidents, etc.).
Which on-premise help desk tools are best for multi-department support? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best on-premise help desk tools for **multi-department support**: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Strong choice for IT + HR + Facilities + Finance in one system - Good for separate portals, categories, approvals, SLAs, and automation - Easy to deploy and popular with mid-market orgs 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your teams already use Atlassian tools - Great for cross-department workflows, internal request portals, and custom queues - Strong for technical teams; less “out of the box” for non-IT departments 3. **InvGate Service Desk (on-prem)** - Very good for enterprise multi-department service management - Clean interface, strong workflow automation, asset management, and reporting - Good balance of usability and depth 4. **TOPdesk** - Excellent for shared services across many departments - Good self-service portal, knowledge base, and SLA handling - Often favored in education, government, and large internal service teams 5. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM / Ivanti Service Manager** - Strong enterprise option for complex organizations - Good for workflow-heavy environments and broad service desk needs - More powerful, but usually more complex to implement 6. **Zammad** - Good lightweight open-source option for smaller teams - Supports multiple departments with groups, tags, and roles - Simpler than the enterprise tools above ### Best picks by size - **Small/mid-size:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Tech-heavy orgs:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Large enterprise:** InvGate Service Desk or Ivanti - **Public sector/education:** TOPdesk If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use, pricing, or best for HR/Facilities/IT split**.
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Best on-premise picks for multi-department support: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — strongest all-around choice for larger orgs. It supports “independent service desks for teams” and cross-functional workflows, but its own FAQ says it **does not natively support multiple department help desks**; the workaround is group-based segmentation. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **InvGate Service Management (On-premise)** — very good for true multi-department / enterprise service management. It supports **separate service desks**, department-specific workflows, permissions, dashboards, and is available as an **on-premise or SaaS** product. ([invgate.com](https://invgate.com/service-management/multiple-departments?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** — solid if you want classic IT/help-desk routing with multiple departments. SolarWinds says it can **route tickets across multiple departments**, and it also supports multiple companies/departments/projects. ([solarwinds.com](https://www.solarwinds.com/web-help-desk/use-cases/help-desk-ticketing-software?utm_source=openai)) 4. **GLPI (on-premise)** — best open-source option for cost-conscious teams. GLPI offers on-premise helpdesk/service management and supports workflows, forms, SLAs, and multi-entity-style organization. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **osTicket** — best lightweight/self-hosted option. It’s open-source, self-hosted, and includes departments, ticket routing, and department-based visibility permissions. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** InvGate - **Best for enterprise IT + assets:** ServiceDesk Plus - **Best open-source:** GLPI - **Best simple/self-hosted:** osTicket - **Best traditional help desk:** SolarWinds Web Help Desk If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked shortlist by budget, ease of setup, or HR/Facilities/IT use case**.
What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for a private data center? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For a private data center, the best **on-premise ticketing systems** are usually the ones that handle **ITSM, asset/change tracking, LDAP/AD, and self-hosting** well. ### Top picks 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best overall for most private data centers - Strong ITIL/ITSM features, CMDB, change management, SLA workflows - Good AD/LDAP integration and reporting 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your team already uses Atlassian tools - Great for dev/ops workflows, queues, automation, and integrations - Works well in high-availability private environments 3. **Freshservice doesn’t fit here** - Great product, but it’s primarily cloud-based, not true on-prem 4. **GLPI** - Best open-source option - Good for ticketing, asset management, and plugins - Lower cost, but usually needs more admin effort 5. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM / Ivanti Service Manager** - Strong enterprise choice - Good for larger regulated environments - More complex and usually pricier 6. **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** - Best for very large enterprises - Powerful, but heavy and expensive ### Best choice by use case - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source:** GLPI - **Best enterprise-heavy workflows:** Ivanti or BMC ### What to look for in a private data center deployment - **True on-prem / self-hosted** - **Active Directory / LDAP** - **High availability support** - **Audit logs and role-based access** - **API + webhook support** - **Asset/CMDB integration** - **SLA and escalation workflows** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by budget** or a **comparison table** of these systems.
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If you need **on-prem/self-hosted ticketing in a private data center**, my short list is: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — best all-around for ITSM, asset/CMDB, workflows, and enterprise controls. It’s explicitly available on-premises. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — best open-source choice if you also want strong asset management/CMDB alongside helpdesk. GLPI positions itself as open source and on-premise/supportable. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** — best modern self-hosted helpdesk UI for teams that want a clean ticketing system and knowledge base on their own servers. Zammad’s community edition is downloadable for self-hosting, and its knowledge base feature is available on self-hosted instances. ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — best simple, proven, low-friction ticketing system if you mainly need email/web-form/API ticket intake and a straightforward support portal. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **OTRS On-Premise** — good for organizations that want a more formal service-management platform with strong internal control and professional support. OTRS explicitly offers on-premise deployment. ([otrs.com](https://otrs.com/de/otrs-software-loesungen/otrs/otrs-on-premise-managed/?utm_source=openai)) - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if your org is already deep in Atlassian, but note Atlassian says Data Center is self-managed and that impacted Data Center products reach end of life on **March 28, 2029**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/licensing/jira-service-management-data-center?utm_source=openai)) **My pick by scenario:** - **Enterprise ITSM:** ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/?utm_source=openai)) - **Open source + asset management:** GLPI. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Modern self-hosted helpdesk:** Zammad. ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Basic, dependable ticketing:** osTicket. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked comparison table** for your environment (air-gapped, Windows/Linux, ITIL needs, AD/LDAP, SSO, CMDB, budget).
Which self-hosted support desk platforms offer strong reporting? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good self-hosted support desk options with **strong reporting**: - **Zammad** — Best all-around. Good built-in dashboards, SLA/agent stats, tag analysis, ticket volume trends, exportable reports. - **UVdesk** — Strong reporting and analytics, especially for support teams that want ecommerce-style workflows and metrics. - **osTicket** — Solid basic reporting, ticket queues, SLA, and agent performance; not as polished as Zammad. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — Very powerful and customizable reporting, especially if you don’t mind a more technical setup. - **FreeScout** — Lightweight and self-hosted; reporting is decent, but weaker than Zammad/UVdesk unless you add modules. If you want the **best reporting out of the box**, I’d start with **Zammad**. If you want **more advanced/custom reporting**, look at **Request Tracker**.
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If **strong reporting** is a priority, my short list of self-hosted support desks is: - **Zammad** — strong built-in reporting, plus integrations with **Grafana** and **Kibana** for deeper analytics. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/reporting?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — probably the most reporting-heavy option here; it has built-in **statistics, dashboards, and reports**, and can connect to external tools like **Metabase**. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation/modules/assistance/statistics?utm_source=openai)) - **Request Tracker (RT)** — solid if you like configurable dashboards and scheduled report-style views built from saved searches and charts. ([docs.bestpractical.com](https://docs.bestpractical.com/rt/6.0.2/dashboards.html?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — has basic dashboard reports, but its native reporting is comparatively limited. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Best overall reporting:** **GLPI** - **Best balance of helpdesk UX + reporting:** **Zammad** - **Best for highly customizable, admin-driven reporting:** **RT** If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of self-hosting**, **UI quality**, or **best open-source only**.
What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for ITIL workflows? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **on-premise ITIL ticketing / ITSM**, the strongest options are: 1. **BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem/private cloud legacy deployments)** - Best for: large enterprises, mature ITIL processes, change/problem/asset management - Strengths: very deep ITIL alignment, strong CMDB, workflow automation 2. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem / hybrid options)** - Best for: mid-to-large orgs wanting ITIL plus endpoint/asset integration - Strengths: incident, change, request, knowledge, self-service, good automation 3. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (Enterprise on-prem)** - Best for: SMB to mid-market, fastest value, lower cost - Strengths: solid ITIL coverage, easy deployment, asset management, change/problem modules 4. **TOPdesk On-Premises** - Best for: service desks in education, government, and midsize enterprises - Strengths: clean UI, strong incident/request management, good ITIL basics 5. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best for: teams already in Atlassian ecosystem - Strengths: flexible workflows, good DevOps/IT ops integration - Note: ITIL support is good, but it’s usually less “ITIL-heavy” than BMC/Ivanti 6. **SolarWinds Service Desk** - Usually cloud-first, so only consider if you’re okay with non-on-prem options. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall ITIL depth:** **BMC Helix ITSM** - **Best mid-market value:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best enterprise hybrid option:** **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** - **Best Atlassian-native choice:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best simple on-prem UX:** **TOPdesk** If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by company size**, **pricing tier**, or **feature comparison table**.
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If you need **on-prem / self-managed ITIL ticketing**, my short list would be: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — best overall for most teams. It’s explicitly on-prem, supports incident/problem/change/request workflows, and ManageEngine says it’s ITIL-certified for 14 ITSM practices. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if your org already lives in Atlassian. It’s Atlassian’s self-managed offering and includes ITIL-certified capabilities for request, incident, problem, change, and knowledge management. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center/jira/service-management?utm_source=openai)) 3. **IBM Maximo IT** — best for large enterprises that want ITSM plus strong asset/configuration depth on-premises. IBM says it supports on-prem deployments and includes incident, problem, change, release, service catalog, and CMDB-style capabilities. ([ibm.com](https://www.ibm.com/products/maximo/it-asset-management.html?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM / Ivanti Service Desk** — good for hybrid/on-prem shops needing workflow automation. Ivanti states it can deploy in the cloud, on-premises, or hybrid, and its Service Desk docs emphasize ITIL-verified processes. ([ivanti.com](https://www.ivanti.com/products/service-desk?utm_source=openai)) 5. **BMC FootPrints** — solid legacy option if you want a customizable on-prem service desk with ITIL-style templates, but it feels more old-school than the others. BMC documentation says its IT Service Management template provides ITIL 3 compatibility and includes service desk, problem, change/release, and service portfolio workspaces. ([docs.bmc.com](https://docs.bmc.com/xwiki/bin/view/More-Products/Footprints/FootPrints-Service-Core-Online-Help/Ftprnts116olh/Chapter-12-Sample-Workspace-Templates/IT-service-management/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Most organizations:** ServiceDesk Plus - **Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Big enterprise / asset-heavy:** IBM Maximo IT If you want, I can also give you a **feature-by-feature comparison table** (ITIL coverage, CMDB, change control, asset mgmt, SSO, reporting, pricing style).
Which on-premise ticketing software is easiest to customize? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **on-premise ticketing software that’s easiest to customize**, I’d usually point to **osTicket** first. ### Best easy-to-customize picks - **osTicket** — very easy to tweak workflows, fields, forms, email piping, departments, and templates. Best if you want simple self-hosted customization without heavy development. - **GLPI** — highly customizable, especially for ITSM/asset management, but a bit more complex than osTicket. - **OTRS / ((OTRS)) Community**-style setups — powerful and flexible, but customization is more involved. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-premise)** — lots of configuration options, but less “open” than open-source tools. ### Quick recommendation - **Small/medium team, want easiest setup + customization:** **osTicket** - **ITSM-heavy and need deeper customization:** **GLPI** - **Enterprise workflow customization:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of customization, UI, pricing, and self-hosting effort**.
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**Easiest overall:** **osTicket**. It’s the most straightforward if you want to customize ticket fields/forms from the admin UI without much technical overhead. You can add custom forms/fields, attach them to specific help topics, and edit built-in forms/templates. ([docs.osticket.com](https://docs.osticket.com/en/latest/Admin/Manage/Forms.html?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you want deeper customization:** **Znuny**. It’s very flexible and explicitly positions itself as highly customizable, with custom ticket fields, templates, workflows, and automation rules. ([znuny.com](https://www.znuny.com/product?utm_source=openai)) **Best enterprise on-prem option:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise**. It has strong workflow/custom-function features, but it’s typically more complex than osTicket. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) **Short answer:** - **Simplest to customize:** **osTicket** - **Most flexible:** **Znuny** - **Most powerful enterprise tooling:** **ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise** If you want, I can give you a **ranked list by ease of customization** based on whether you need **forms, workflows, branding, or code-level extensions**.
What are the best self-hosted ticketing systems for enterprise security? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **enterprise security + self-hosting**, the strongest options are usually: 1. **Jira Service Management Data Center (Atlassian)** - Best if you need **enterprise-grade controls**, **SSO/SAML**, **RBAC**, **audit logs**, **LDAP/AD**, and mature ecosystem. - Strong choice for regulated orgs, but can be heavier to administer. 2. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Solid for **ITSM + security**, with **on-prem deployment**, **role-based access**, **workflow approvals**, **asset management**, **audit trails**, and **AD/LDAP integration**. - Good fit for enterprises wanting a more traditional ITSM suite. 3. **GLPI (with GLPI Network or self-hosted open source)** - Good self-hosted option with **asset + ticketing**, **LDAP/AD**, **granular permissions**, and a strong admin model. - Often chosen by security-conscious teams that want full control and lower licensing cost. 4. **Zammad (self-hosted)** - Easier to use than many legacy systems, with **SSO/SAML**, **LDAP/AD**, **2FA**, **audit history**, and modern UI. - Great if you want a modern helpdesk with decent security and simpler ops. 5. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Very mature, highly flexible, and widely used in security-sensitive environments. - Strong for **email-centric workflows**, **fine-grained permissions**, and **on-prem control**. - UI is dated, but it’s reliable and proven. **Best overall for enterprise security:** - **Jira Service Management Data Center** if you want the most enterprise-ready platform. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** if you want a full ITSM suite. - **GLPI** if you want open-source + strong self-hosting control. If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by security features** (SSO, audit logging, MFA, LDAP/AD, encryption, compliance).
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For **enterprise security**, my top self-hosted ticketing picks are: 1. **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you want a very mature enterprise stack, scale, and Atlassian’s Data Center security guidance/compliance posture. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center/jira/service-management?utm_source=openai)) 2. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — strong if you want on-prem data control, SSO, and a product explicitly positioned for local-data/security needs. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Zammad** — strong open-source choice with SSO (SAML/OIDC/Shibboleth), access tokens, permissions, S/MIME, and active security releases. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product/features/security?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Request Tracker (RT)** — best for security-conscious teams that value openness, granular rights, and external authentication / SSO integration. ([docs.bestpractical.com](https://docs.bestpractical.com/rt/6.0.0/README.html?utm_source=openai)) 5. **GLPI** — a solid self-hosted ITSM/helpdesk option with helpdesk, CMDB, access controls, and asset management; good when ticketing must sit alongside inventory. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/wp-content/uploads/GLPI-quick-guide.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **Avoid** the old **OTRS Community Edition** for enterprise security: OTRS says it stopped supporting CE at the end of 2020 and it has not received security updates since. ([otrs.com](https://otrs.com/blog/otrs-community-edition/security/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **shortlist by company size** (e.g. 200 users vs 20,000) or by **must-have security features** like **SAML, SCIM, audit logs, encryption, and air-gapped deployment**.
What are the best alternatives to cloud help desk software for self-hosted deployment? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **self-hosted help desk software** instead of a cloud SaaS tool, these are the strongest options: ### Best overall - **Zammad** — Modern UI, email/ticketing/chat, good automation, easy to self-host via Docker. - **Znuny** (OTRS community fork) — Very powerful and mature, great for larger IT support teams. - **osTicket** — Simple, reliable, lightweight, widely used. ### Best for ITSM / enterprise - **GLPI** — Help desk plus asset management and ITSM features; strong if you need inventory too. - **iTop** — Good for service management, CMDB, and structured IT processes. - **Znuny** — Best if you need deep workflow customization and enterprise-style ticket handling. ### Best open-source “all-around” alternatives - **FreeScout** — Lightweight, modern, email-focused help desk; easy to self-host. - **UVdesk Community Edition** — Flexible, good for support teams and e-commerce use cases. - **Helpy** — Simpler support portal with tickets and knowledge base. ### Best for knowledge base + support portal - **Flarum + helpdesk plugin** or **Discourse** — Not classic help desk tools, but good if community support is a big part of your workflow. ### Quick picks - **Most polished:** Zammad - **Most powerful:** Znuny - **Simplest:** osTicket - **Best ITSM bundle:** GLPI - **Best lightweight Gmail-like support:** FreeScout If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **feature comparison table**, or 2. the **best self-hosted option for your team size**.
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If you want **self-hosted** help desk software, the strongest alternatives are usually: 1. **Zammad** — best all-around modern choice for most teams; open source, self-hostable, strong UI, omnichannel support, and a built-in self-service experience. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/company/open-source?utm_source=openai)) 2. **GLPI** — best if you want help desk **plus IT asset/ITSM** capabilities; it supports a self-hosted model and has a dedicated self-hosted offering. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/faq/glpi/cloud_vs_self-hosted?utm_source=openai)) 3. **osTicket** — best simple, proven ticketing system; open source, widely used, and easy to install on your own server. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Znuny** — best if you want a mature, highly customizable service desk with self-service and FAQ features; it explicitly supports running on your own servers. ([znuny.com](https://www.znuny.com/en?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Request Tracker (RT)** — best for powerful workflow-heavy ticket handling, though it’s more of an issue-tracking platform than a polished “modern” help desk. ([rt-wiki.bestpractical.com](https://rt-wiki.bestpractical.com/wiki/Main_Page?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Hesk** — best lightweight option for small teams that want something simple to self-host quickly. ([hesk.com](https://www.hesk.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Zammad ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/company/open-source?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for IT departments:** GLPI ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/faq/glpi/cloud_vs_self-hosted?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for simplicity:** osTicket or Hesk ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for deep workflow customization:** Znuny or RT ([znuny.com](https://www.znuny.com/en?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by team size**, e.g. *5 users / 50 users / enterprise*.
What are the best alternatives to web-based ticketing platforms if I need on-premise hosting? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you need **on-premise ticketing**, the strongest alternatives are usually **self-hosted ITSM/helpdesk systems**: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — very popular, solid ITSM, asset + ticketing, good for internal support teams. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian tools; scalable and enterprise-friendly. - **Zendesk** doesn’t really do on-prem, so skip it if hosting is mandatory. - **Freshservice** is cloud-only, also not a fit. - **OTRS** / **Znuny** — classic open-source ticketing with on-prem deployment; good for budget-conscious teams. - **GLPI** — open-source ITSM/helpdesk plus asset management; strong self-hosted option. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — mature, lightweight, very flexible, but less polished UI. - **iTop** — good for CMDB + service management in on-prem environments. - **Spiceworks Help Desk Server** — older option; not ideal for new deployments, but historically used on-prem. **Best picks by use case:** - **Enterprise ITSM:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus or Jira Service Management Data Center - **Open-source / low cost:** GLPI or Znuny - **Technical teams needing flexibility:** Request Tracker If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by team size, budget, and Windows/Linux hosting**.
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If you need **on-premise/self-hosted** ticketing, the strongest options are usually: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you want enterprise ITSM and already live in the Atlassian stack. Atlassian says Data Center is their self-managed offering and can run on your own physical hardware or VMs; note that Data Center products are scheduled to go read-only on **March 28, 2029**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/licensing/jira-service-management-data-center?utm_source=openai)) - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — a solid all-round IT help desk with on-prem deployment explicitly supported. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/help-desk-software/it-help-desk-software.html?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — good open-source choice for IT asset + help desk workflows; its docs include a self-hosted option with dedicated resources and VPN access. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/faq/glpi/cloud_vs_self-hosted?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** — a modern open-source help desk that supports self-hosted deployments and is commonly used as an on-prem alternative. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — lightweight, widely used open-source ticketing that you install on your own server. ([github.com](https://github.com/osTicket/osTicket?utm_source=openai)) - **Request Tracker (RT)** — strong for workflow-heavy teams that want a highly configurable on-prem ticket system. Best Practical’s docs and release notes show RT as a self-managed platform with on-prem/hosted options. ([docs.bestpractical.com](https://docs.bestpractical.com/rt/6.0.0/README.html?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Enterprise ITSM:** Jira Service Management Data Center or ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/licensing/jira-service-management-data-center?utm_source=openai)) - **Open-source + flexible:** Zammad or GLPI. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product?utm_source=openai)) - **Simple, low-overhead:** osTicket. ([github.com](https://github.com/osTicket/osTicket?utm_source=openai)) - **Complex workflows / power users:** Request Tracker. ([docs.bestpractical.com](https://docs.bestpractical.com/rt/6.0.0/README.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your use case** (IT help desk, customer support, government/compliance, or small team).
Which on-premise ticketing systems are better than open-source options for enterprise use? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For enterprise **on-premise** ticketing/ITSM, the usual step up from open-source tools like osTicket, Zammad, or GLPI is: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong for large teams, workflows, integrations, and Atlassian ecosystem. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — very popular mid-market/enterprise choice; broad ITIL features, asset + change management. - **BMC Remedy ITSM** — classic enterprise heavyweight; best for complex, regulated environments. - **TOPdesk (On-premises)** — solid usability, good service desk + self-service portal. - **Matrix42 Unified Endpoint & Service Management** — good for enterprise service management and endpoint-heavy orgs. - **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — enterprise-grade, especially if you also want asset/endpoint workflows. If you want the safest “better than open-source” picks by category: - **Best overall enterprise on-prem:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best value:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for very large/regulated orgs:** BMC Remedy ITSM - **Best usability:** TOPdesk If you want, I can narrow this to **best for healthcare**, **government**, **manufacturing**, or **100% air-gapped environments**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **enterprise-grade, on-prem / self-managed ticketing**, these are usually stronger than most open-source options: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — best all-around value for enterprise ITSM, with ESM, workflows, asset/CMDB, and compliance features. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) - **BMC Helix ITSM** — strongest for large, complex enterprises; BMC says it’s available in **cloud, hybrid, or on-premise** and is built for complex environments. ([docs.bmc.com](https://docs.bmc.com/docs/servicedesk233/service-desk-overview-1236603267.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — good if you want a self-managed Atlassian stack with strong ITSM + DevOps collaboration; it’s Atlassian’s **self-managed** option, but note Atlassian says Data Center reaches **end of life on March 28, 2029**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/licensing/jira-service-management-data-center?utm_source=openai)) - **Matrix42 Enterprise Service Management** — a solid choice for organizations that want flexible service desk + workflows + ESM, especially in Europe. ([docs.matrix42.com](https://docs.matrix42.com/3512402_service-management-overview?utm_source=openai)) **My short pick:** - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for very large/complex ITSM:** BMC Helix ITSM - **Best if you’re already deep in Atlassian:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best if you want a broader ESM platform:** Matrix42 If you want, I can narrow this to **best for 500+ users**, **best for regulated industries**, or **best replacement for GLPI/osTicket/RT**.
What are the best alternatives to hosted service desk software for internal support teams? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives depend on how “service desk” you want to go: - **Self-hosted / on-prem ITSM** - **GLPI** – strong all-in-one internal support, assets, CMDB, tickets. - **Zammad** – modern, easy-to-use help desk with good email and chat support. - **osTicket** – simple, lightweight, very popular for basic ticketing. - **Request Tracker (RT)** – powerful, highly configurable, more technical. - **Open-source + workflow stack** - **Freshservice alternatives built from open tools**: **GitLab Issues**, **Jira Service Management (self-managed)**, **Mattermost** or **Slack** + **Forms** + **Trello/Linear**. - Good if you want flexible internal support without a full ITSM suite. - **Microsoft 365-based internal support** - **Microsoft Teams + Power Automate + Microsoft Forms + SharePoint** - Best for orgs already deep in Microsoft. Cheap, familiar, but less robust than real ticketing tools. - **Google Workspace-based internal support** - **Google Forms + Gmail + Sheets + AppSheet** - Fine for small teams; quick to set up, limited automation/reporting. - **Internal request portals / low-code** - **Jira Service Management** - **ServiceNow** (enterprise) - **Airtable** or **Monday.com** - Good when you need approvals, SLAs, and dashboards but don’t want classic help desk software. - **Chat-first support** - **Slack** or **Microsoft Teams** with ticket capture via bots/integrations like **Halp** (now Atlassian), **Workativ**, or **Jira/ServiceNow integrations**. - Best when most requests come through chat. **Best picks by scenario** - **Small team, low budget:** osTicket or Zammad - **IT-heavy org:** GLPI - **Microsoft shop:** Teams + Power Automate + Forms - **Enterprise governance:** ServiceNow or Jira Service Management - **Chat-centric internal support:** Slack/Teams + Jira/ServiceNow integration If you want, I can narrow this to **open-source only**, **self-hosted only**, or **best for 10/100/1000 employees**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want to avoid hosted service desk software, the best alternatives are usually **self-hosted/open-source** tools or a **shared inbox + workflow** setup. **Best picks:** - **Zammad** — best all-around self-hosted service desk/IT support platform; supports internal support, self-hosting, and data control. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — best for ITSM + asset management; good if your internal support team also tracks devices, inventory, and CMDB data. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — best lightweight, classic ticketing system; simple, free, and easy to run yourself. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **FreeScout** — best if you want a self-hosted shared mailbox/help desk rather than a heavy ITSM suite. ([github.com](https://github.com/freescout-help-desk/freescout?utm_source=openai)) - **Request Tracker (RT)** — best for highly configurable internal workflows and incident management; commercially supported if needed. ([rt-wiki.bestpractical.com](https://rt-wiki.bestpractical.com/wiki/Main_Page?utm_source=openai)) - **iTop** — best if you want ITSM with CMDB/service catalog features in one platform. ([itophub.io](https://www.itophub.io/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Need simple tickets?** osTicket or FreeScout. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Need full ITSM?** Zammad, GLPI, or iTop. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Need maximum workflow control?** RT. ([rt-wiki.bestpractical.com](https://rt-wiki.bestpractical.com/wiki/Main_Page?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for small teams**, **best for enterprise IT**, or **best open-source only**.
Which self-hosted help desk platforms are better than lightweight ticket trackers? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want something more capable than a lightweight ticket tracker, these self-hosted help desk platforms are strong upgrades: - **Zammad** — modern UI, email + web tickets, SLAs, automation, knowledge base, good for small to mid-size teams. - **UVdesk** — solid open-source help desk built for support teams; good email handling, ticket workflows, and ecommerce integrations. - **FreeScout** — very lightweight but still a real help desk; great if you want a simple shared inbox that’s easier than full enterprise tools. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — older, but extremely powerful and flexible; best if you want deep workflow control. - **osTicket** — classic self-hosted help desk; reliable, simple, and much more featureful than basic trackers. - **Faveo Helpdesk** — more polished, with SLA, automation, and multi-channel support; good mid-market option. - **GLPI** — best if you want help desk plus IT asset management / ITSM features. - **OTRS / Znuny** — enterprise-style ticketing with advanced workflow and queue management. Best picks by use case: - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Best simple shared inbox:** FreeScout - **Best ITSM/asset management:** GLPI - **Best classic open-source ticketing:** osTicket - **Best heavy workflow control:** Request Tracker If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for **small business**, **IT support**, or **customer support**.
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If you want **more than a lightweight ticket tracker**, these are the strongest self-hosted options: - **Zammad** — best if you want a modern, all-in-one help desk with omnichannel support, automation, customer portal, and knowledge base. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — best for IT teams that also need **asset/CMDB + help desk** in one system. It includes tickets, SLAs, forms, knowledge base, and inventory/CMDB features. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **SupportPal** — good if you want self-hosted help desk software with a shared inbox, self-service area, automation, multi-brand support, and a REST API. ([supportpal.com](https://www.supportpal.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — a solid step up from a basic tracker if you want email/web/API intake, SLAs, custom forms, knowledge base, and tasks without a lot of complexity. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Request Tracker (RT)** — best when you need deep workflow control and customization; it supports self-service and has a major 6.0 release with a refreshed UI, customization, search, and admin improvements. ([rt-wiki.bestpractical.com](https://rt-wiki.bestpractical.com/wiki/SelfService?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Modern UI + automation:** Zammad - **ITSM + asset management:** GLPI - **Simple but capable:** osTicket - **Multi-brand / commercial-grade self-hosted:** SupportPal - **Power-user customization:** Request Tracker If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of setup**, **best for small teams**, or **best open-source choice**.
What on-premise ticketing systems are better than SaaS help desks for compliance? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If compliance is the priority, the better **on-prem / self-hosted** ticketing systems are usually: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-premise)** — strong choice for **ITIL, audit trails, role-based access, change management**, and data residency control. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you want **Atlassian ecosystem** plus self-hosting for stricter compliance needs. - **BMC Helix Remedyforce / Remedy ITSM (on-prem / private deployment options)** — very strong for **large enterprises, governance, and regulated industries**. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem/private deployment options)** — good for **security controls, asset management, and policy enforcement**. - **Cherwell Service Management (now Ivanti-owned, legacy on-prem deployments)** — still seen in compliance-heavy environments, though new buys are less common. - **OTRS / Znuny (self-hosted)** — good for **simple, controllable ticketing** with full data ownership, but less enterprise-polished. - **GLPi (self-hosted)** — popular for **asset + ticketing** in public sector and compliance-sensitive orgs. - **SolarWinds Service Desk?** Not ideal here—it’s SaaS, so I’d skip it if you need true on-prem control. ### Best picks by compliance need - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best enterprise-grade:** BMC Remedy / Helix - **Best if you already use Atlassian:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best lightweight open-source:** GLPi or Znuny ### Why on-prem beats SaaS for compliance - Full **data residency/control** - Easier **audit evidence** and log retention - Better for **air-gapped / restricted networks** - More control over **encryption, access, backups, and integrations** If you tell me your compliance target (e.g. **HIPAA, SOC 2, ISO 27001, FedRAMP, PCI-DSS**) and company size, I can narrow this to the best 2–3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
If your main requirement is **tight control over where ticket data lives**, **who can access it**, and whether you can run it **inside your own network / even air-gapped**, then **self-hosted or self-managed** ticketing systems are usually better than SaaS help desks for compliance. Examples: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — explicitly says it keeps data within your network and is meant to help with regulations like **GDPR, HIPAA, and POPIA**. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s **self-managed** option; Atlassian says it helps teams meet security and compliance needs, and you can host Jira Data Center on your own hardware or IaaS. Note: Atlassian has announced Data Center end-of-life on **March 28, 2029**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center/jira/service-management?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI (self-hosted)** — open-source helpdesk/ITSM with a self-hosted option and controls like **VPN tunnel**, **read-only DB**, and **IP filtering** in its self-hosted vs cloud comparison, which can be useful for regulated environments. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/fr/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — open-source and installable on your own infrastructure; good when you need full internal control over data and config. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick by compliance need:** - **Most regulated / strictest control:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises or GLPI self-hosted. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/on-premises/?utm_source=openai)) - **Enterprise ITSM with self-managed deployment:** Jira Service Management Data Center. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center/jira/service-management?utm_source=openai)) - **Lower-cost, simpler self-hosted ticketing:** osTicket or GLPI. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **compliance-first shortlist by framework** (HIPAA, PCI, SOC 2, ISO 27001, FedRAMP, GDPR).
Which local deployment ticketing systems are better for customization than standard cloud tools? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **more customization than typical cloud ticketing tools**, look at **self-hosted/on-prem** systems. The best options are usually: ### Best for customization - **GLPI** — very flexible ITSM/helpdesk, strong plugin ecosystem, good asset management. - **Zammad** — modern UI, easy to customize workflows, fields, roles, and integrations. - **osTicket** — lightweight, simple, highly tweakable for forms, routing, and departments. - **UVdesk Self-Hosted** — good for support desks, customizable workflows and email handling. - **OTOBO** (fork of OTRS) — powerful for enterprise workflows and deep process customization. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — extremely configurable, especially for complex ticket routing and automation. ### Best choices by use case - **IT service desk / internal support:** **GLPI**, **OTOBO** - **Modern UI + easier admin:** **Zammad** - **Simple, low-cost, self-hosted helpdesk:** **osTicket** - **Very advanced workflow control:** **Request Tracker** ### Why they beat cloud tools on customization - Full access to **code, database, and server config** - Easier **custom fields, states, rules, and automation** - Can build **bespoke integrations** - Better for **data control/compliance** ### Avoid if you need deep customization Most standard cloud tools like **Freshdesk**, **Zendesk**, and **Jira Service Management Cloud** are good, but they’re more limited by platform rules and pricing tiers. If you want, I can rank these by **ease of setup**, **enterprise power**, or **best open-source choice**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **local/self-hosted ticketing with more customization than typical cloud tools**, the strongest picks are usually: - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very flexible for custom ticket lifecycles, workflows, permissions, and custom fields. It also supports on-prem/self-hosted deployment. ([requesttracker.com](https://requesttracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad (on-premise)** — strong for custom fields, dynamic ticket screens, group-specific workflows, and custom CSS for self-hosted installs. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product/features/individual-fields?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — especially good if you want plugin-based customization; its FormCreator and Fields plugins add custom forms and custom fields. ([glpi-project.org](https://www.glpi-project.org/en/formcreator-plugin-version-2-7-0-for-glpi/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — simpler than RT/Zammad, but still very customizable with custom fields, forms, help topics, queues, and on-box installation. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Most customizable overall:** RT - **Best balance of modern UI + customization:** Zammad - **Best if you want plugins and IT asset management too:** GLPI - **Best lightweight/self-hosted option:** osTicket ([requesttracker.com](https://requesttracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for IT help desk**, **best for customer support**, or **best for heavy workflow automation**.
What are the best alternatives to outsourced support desk software for in-house teams? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For in-house teams, the best alternatives to outsourced support desk software are usually **ITSM/help desk platforms** that keep ticketing, SLAs, knowledge base, and automation in your own team. ### Best picks - **Jira Service Management** — best if you already use Atlassian; strong for IT + internal requests. - **Freshservice** — easiest all-around option for mid-sized in-house support teams. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — great value, especially for IT-focused internal support. - **HaloITSM** — strong workflow/customization for growing teams. - **SysAid** — solid for IT help desks with automation and asset management. - **ServiceNow** — best for large enterprises with complex processes. - **Zendesk** — good if you want a simple, polished support experience for employees. ### If you want the shortest recommendation - **Best overall:** Freshservice - **Best for Atlassian users:** Jira Service Management - **Best budget/value:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best enterprise:** ServiceNow ### What to look for - Ticket routing and SLAs - Internal knowledge base - Self-service portal - Automation/workflows - Asset management - Reporting and CSAT - SSO / Microsoft 365 / Google Workspace integration If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison by price, ease of use, and features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For in-house teams, the best alternatives are usually **internal service desk / employee service management tools** rather than outsourced support software. Top picks: - **Jira Service Management** — best if your internal support needs to work closely with IT and engineering, with queues, requests, knowledge base, reports, and Slack/Teams workflows. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/templates/general-service-management?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk for Employee Experience / IT** — best if you want a simpler, fast-to-launch internal help desk with AI, automations, self-service, and HR/IT workflows. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/employee-experience/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshservice** — best for IT teams that want a more ITSM-oriented help desk with ticketing, asset/CMDB/knowledge base features, and SLA automation. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshservice/it-helpdesk-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **ServiceNow** — best for larger enterprises that need broader employee service management, ITSM, HR service delivery, and strong self-service/automation. ([servicenow.com](https://www.servicenow.com/products/employee-center.html%252525252525252525252520.html?utm_source=openai)) - **HappyFox** — best for teams that want an easy-to-run internal help desk with omnichannel intake, automation, and internal knowledge base support. ([happyfox.com](https://www.happyfox.com/web-based-help-desk-software/?utm_source=openai)) Quick rule of thumb: - **Small/mid-market:** Zendesk or Freshservice. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/employee-experience/?utm_source=openai)) - **Dev/IT-heavy orgs:** Jira Service Management. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/templates/general-service-management?utm_source=openai)) - **Enterprise-wide service management:** ServiceNow. ([servicenow.com](https://www.servicenow.com/products/employee-center.html%252525252525252525252520.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Simplicity-first:** HappyFox. ([happyfox.com](https://www.happyfox.com/web-based-help-desk-software/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **side-by-side comparison table** for your team size, budget, and use case.
Which self-hosted case management platforms are better than generic issue trackers? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **true case management** (intake, assignment, SLAs, audit trail, customer portal) rather than a generic issue tracker, these self-hosted platforms are usually better: ### Best picks - **Znuny** — the best open-source option if you want a full **helpdesk / case management** system. Strong ticket workflows, queues, SLAs, and customer portals. - **OTRS** — the classic enterprise-grade case/ticket platform. Great for structured service desks, but licensing can be a factor. - **GLPI** — best if you need **cases + asset management + ITSM** in one self-hosted stack. - **iTop** — strong for **ITSM / service management** with CMDB-style case handling. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-premise)** — polished commercial option for IT/service case management. ### Good if you need more workflow than tickets - **Airtable-style alternatives don’t count** here, but: - **ProcessMaker** — better for **case workflows** than for support tickets. - **Camunda** — powerful for custom case/workflow orchestration, but you build more yourself. ### If you want “case management” in the legal / social services sense - **Casebox** — designed more like a real case management system than an issue tracker. - **CiviCRM** — good for constituent/case tracking in nonprofits. ### Short recommendation - **IT support / service desk:** **Znuny** or **GLPI** - **Enterprise helpdesk:** **OTRS** - **ITSM with CMDB:** **iTop** - **Custom workflow-heavy cases:** **ProcessMaker** If you tell me your use case—**IT helpdesk, legal, customer support, government, nonprofit, or internal ops**—I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—if you mean **real case workflows** rather than software bugs, these are usually better fits than a generic issue tracker: - **ArkCase** — best for formal case management, especially compliance/government/legal-style workflows. Its site describes it as a platform-agnostic case management solution, and the open-source edition is meant for local/on-prem hosting. ([arkcase.com](https://www.arkcase.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **SuiteCRM** — strong if your “cases” are customer support/service cases. SuiteCRM’s Cases module is built to track customer interactions, assign/close cases, audit changes, and work with a customer portal for self-service. ([8-x.docs.suitecrm.com](https://8-x.docs.suitecrm.com/user/core-modules/cases/?utm_source=openai)) - **Catalyst** — best for incident-response cases (security/ops). It’s a self-hosted open-source incident response platform and ticket system focused on alert handling and investigation workflow. ([github.com](https://github.com/SecurityBrewery/catalyst?utm_source=openai)) - **OpenProject** — not case-management-specific, but better than a generic issue tracker when you need structured workflows, permissions, boards, reporting, and on-prem deployment. ([openproject.org](https://www.openproject.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **OpenCase** — niche but directly case-management-focused for small altruistic organizations; it supports configurable person types, case types, activity types, search, basic reporting, and roles. ([github.com](https://github.com/hoegrammer/opencase?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Customer support:** SuiteCRM - **Compliance/legal/public-sector:** ArkCase - **Security incidents:** Catalyst - **General workflow-heavy operations:** OpenProject If you want, I can narrow this down by use case (legal aid, nonprofit intake, HR complaints, compliance, security, etc.).
What are the best alternatives to managed ticketing platforms when we need full infrastructure control? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you need **full infrastructure control**, the best alternatives to managed ticketing platforms are usually **self-hosted/open-source ticketing systems** or a **custom stack**. ### Best self-hosted options - **Pretix** — best overall open-source event ticketing platform; strong API, plugins, self-hostable. - **Attendize** — good self-hosted event ticketing and registration; simpler than Pretix. - **Odoo Events** — good if you already use Odoo ERP; more of a business suite than a pure ticketing tool. - **Open Event Manager (FOSSASIA)** — open-source, flexible, but more developer-heavy. ### If you want maximum control Build your own stack with: - **Backend:** Django, Laravel, or Node.js - **Payments:** **Stripe**, **Adyen**, or **PayPal** - **QR/check-in:** custom app or **Barcode Scanner** apps - **Hosting:** **Kubernetes**, **Docker Compose**, or bare metal on **AWS EC2**, **DigitalOcean**, or **on-prem servers** - **Database:** **PostgreSQL** - **Email:** **SendGrid**, **Postmark**, or self-hosted **Mailcow** ### Best picks by need - **Fastest self-hosted setup:** **Pretix** - **Simplest self-hosted option:** **Attendize** - **Enterprise/internal workflow:** **Odoo Events** - **Absolute control/customization:** build your own stack If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by event type** (conference, concerts, internal training, etc.).
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If you need **full infrastructure control**, the best alternatives are usually **self-hosted / open-source** helpdesk platforms: - **GLPI** — best if you want **helpdesk + IT asset management / CMDB** in one stack. It’s built for tickets, SLAs, forms, and infrastructure-linked service management. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — best **simple, mature ticketing** option; widely used, open source, and self-hostable. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **FreeScout** — best for a **lightweight shared inbox / Zendesk-style** setup with low overhead. It’s self-hosted and open source. ([freescout.net](https://www.freescout.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Frappe Helpdesk** — best if you want a **modern UI, workflows, SLAs, and extensibility** on a fully open-source stack. ([frappe.io](https://frappe.io/helpdesk?utm_source=openai)) - **Faveo Helpdesk** — good if you want **self-hosted control plus more ITSM-style features** and paid support options. ([faveohelpdesk.com](https://www.faveohelpdesk.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **IT ops / enterprise service management:** GLPI - **Lean customer support:** FreeScout or osTicket - **Modern customizable platform:** Frappe Helpdesk - **Need vendor-backed self-hosting:** Faveo If you want, I can rank these for your exact case: **customer support, internal IT helpdesk, or multi-tenant SaaS support**.
How do I set up an on-premise ticketing system for internal IT requests? problem
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A solid on-prem setup usually looks like this: ## 1) Pick the platform Good on-prem options for internal IT: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — strong ITIL features, easy to run - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — great if you already use Atlassian - **GLPI** — open-source, very popular for internal IT + asset management - **osTicket** — simpler, lightweight, easy to self-host - **Zammad** — modern UI, self-hosted, good ticket workflows If you want the safest “IT department standard” choice, I’d pick **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** or **Jira Service Management Data Center**. If you want open-source and low license cost, **GLPI** is a strong choice. ## 2) Prepare the server Use a dedicated VM or server: - **4–8 vCPU** - **16–32 GB RAM** - **100+ GB SSD** - Linux or Windows depending on product Also set up: - Internal DNS name, e.g. `helpdesk.company.local` - TLS cert (internal CA or public cert) - Database (PostgreSQL/MySQL depending on product) ## 3) Install the ticketing system Typical install path: - Install app - Connect database - Configure web server/reverse proxy - Apply SSL - Create admin account - Send/receive mail setup ## 4) Set up email intake This is critical. Let users email tickets in. Configure: - `ithelp@company.com` - IMAP/POP3 mailbox polling or SMTP forwarding - Auto-create tickets from incoming mail - Auto-reply with ticket number ## 5) Define your workflow Create simple categories: - Password/reset access - Hardware request - Software request - Network/VPN issue - Printer issue - General IT help Set: - Priority levels: Low / Medium / High / Critical - Assignment groups: Service Desk, Endpoint, Network, Apps - Statuses: New, In Progress, Waiting on User, Resolved, Closed ## 6) Build the portal Make the self-service portal easy: - “Submit a request” - Knowledge base articles - Common request forms - FAQs Good first forms: - New laptop request - Software install - Access request - VPN access - Account unlock ## 7) Add automation Useful rules: - Auto-assign by category - Escalate overdue tickets - Notify users on status changes - Auto-close after X days - Route VIP or critical requests to a senior queue ## 8) Integrate with identity Connect to: - **Active Directory** or **Azure AD** for login - SSO if supported - Group-based permissions This lets users sign in with their normal company account. ## 9) Set permissions and roles Create roles like: - End user - Agent - Supervisor - Admin Limit who can see sensitive queues. ## 10) Add asset management If supported, track: - PCs, laptops, monitors - Serial numbers - Assigned user - Installed software - Warranty dates **GLPI** and **ServiceDesk Plus** are especially good here. ## 11) Test before launch Test: - Ticket submission - Email-to-ticket - Notifications - Permissions - SLA timers - Backup/restore ## 12) Train users and go live Keep launch simple: - One email address - One portal link - One short “how to request help” page ## Recommended starting stack If you want a straightforward internal IT deployment: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **PostgreSQL or bundled DB** - **Nginx or Apache reverse proxy** - **Active Directory integration** - **Shared mailbox for ticket intake** If you want, I can give you: 1. a **small business on-prem setup**, 2. an **enterprise setup**, or 3. a **step-by-step install guide for GLPI or ServiceDesk Plus**.
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A solid on-prem ticketing setup usually looks like this: 1. **Pick the platform** - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise** if you want a mainstream ITSM suite with self-service portal, knowledge base, and asset management. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/help-desk-software/it-help-desk-software.html?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** if you want open-source + on-prem, with a documented installation path and plugin ecosystem. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** if you want a self-hosted helpdesk with strong automation, APIs, and good admin docs. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Provision the stack** - Use a dedicated Linux VM or pair of VMs for app + database. - Put it behind an internal DNS name and HTTPS. - Add SMTP for outbound notifications and an inbound mailbox for ticket creation. 3. **Configure core workflows** - Create request categories like hardware, software, access, and network. - Set SLAs by priority. - Define assignment groups and escalation rules. - Turn on the self-service portal so users submit and track tickets themselves. ServiceDesk Plus explicitly supports this model. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/help-desk-software/it-help-desk-software.html?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Integrate with identity** - Connect to AD/LDAP/SSO so users log in with company accounts. - Map departments and groups to ticket queues. 5. **Set up knowledge + automation** - Add a knowledge base for common fixes. - Create templates, auto-acknowledgements, and rules for routing and closure. - If you use Zammad or GLPI, both support extensibility/integrations/plugins. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/product/features/rest-api?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Migrate and test** - Import old email threads if needed. - Test: ticket creation, notifications, approvals, escalation, reporting. - Run a pilot with IT first, then roll out to employees. **Best default choice:** - **Enterprise / easiest ITSM:** ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/help-desk-software/it-help-desk-software.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Open-source / flexible:** GLPI. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **Modern self-hosted helpdesk:** Zammad. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step deployment plan for one specific product** (for example: GLPI on Ubuntu with PostgreSQL, or ServiceDesk Plus on Windows/Linux).
How do I keep support ticket data inside our own infrastructure? problem
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Use a self-hosted support platform and keep storage in your own DB/storage. Good options: - **Zammad** — strong open-source help desk, can run on your own servers/Kubernetes. - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, fully self-hostable. - **FreeScout** — self-hosted, email-based support inbox, easy to deploy. - **Rocket.Chat** + support workflow if you want chat + tickets. - **Freshdesk/Freshservice** only if you’re okay with SaaS; not for keeping data fully in-house. How to keep data inside your infra: 1. **Self-host the app** on your own VM, bare metal, or Kubernetes. 2. **Use your own database** (PostgreSQL/MySQL) inside your network. 3. **Store attachments locally or in your private object store** like: - **MinIO** - **Ceph** - **AWS S3-compatible private bucket on your own cloud** 4. **Disable external integrations** that send ticket content out: - analytics - cloud backups - AI features - hosted email parsing services 5. **Use your own email stack**: - **Microsoft Exchange / Exchange Online with compliance controls** - **Google Workspace** only if acceptable - best for strict control: **Postfix + Dovecot + your own MX** 6. **Encrypt at rest**: - disk encryption - database encryption - separate key management with **HashiCorp Vault** or your HSM 7. **Control access** with SSO: - **Okta** - **Azure AD / Entra ID** - **Keycloak** for fully self-hosted identity 8. **Keep backups on-prem** and test restore procedures. If your goal is “no customer data leaves our network,” the usual best stack is: **Zammad + PostgreSQL + MinIO + Keycloak**, all self-hosted. If you want, I can recommend the best setup for: - **small team** - **enterprise/compliance** - **air-gapped environment**
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Use a **self-hosted / on-prem helpdesk** setup and keep the data path entirely inside your network. **Practical approach:** - **Pick a self-hosted ticketing system**: e.g. **Zammad**, **osTicket**, **GLPI**, or **Request Tracker**. - **Host it in your own infra**: - on your own servers / VMs - or in your private cloud account/VPC - **Use your own database and file storage**: - Postgres/MySQL on your infrastructure - attachments stored in your object store or disk - **Run your own email intake**: - IMAP/SMTP through mail servers you control - avoid routing ticket content through third-party inbox processors - **Disable external integrations** that export ticket content: - chat widgets, analytics, AI assistants, CRM sync, crash reporting - **Lock down access**: - SSO/LDAP/SAML - network segmentation - encryption at rest + in transit - audit logs - **Backups stay internal**: - encrypt backups - keep backup storage under your control **If you need stronger data residency/privacy guarantees:** - choose software that supports **self-hosting with no vendor cloud dependency** - get a contract that says the vendor won’t access ticket contents - if using any hosted component, make sure it’s only metadata or zero-content **Rule of thumb:** If the ticket data ever goes to a vendor’s SaaS database, support tooling, or AI processor, it’s no longer fully inside your infrastructure. If you want, I can suggest a **specific stack** for small, medium, or enterprise teams.
How do I build a self-hosted help desk for my company? problem
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A solid self-hosted help desk is usually: **Users → email/web portal → ticketing app → database/files → auth/monitoring/backups** ## Best self-hosted options - **Zammad** — best all-around for modern UI, email piping, automation, and knowledge base. - **osTicket** — simpler, lighter, good if you want basic ticketing. - **GLPI** — best if you also want asset management / ITSM. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — powerful, but less friendly to set up. If you want the easiest “company-ready” choice: **Zammad**. ## Recommended stack - **App:** Zammad - **Database:** PostgreSQL - **Reverse proxy:** Nginx or Traefik - **TLS:** Let’s Encrypt - **Auth:** Microsoft Entra ID (Azure AD), Okta, or LDAP/AD - **Mail:** Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, or Postfix + IMAP/SMTP - **Backups:** BorgBackup or Restic - **Monitoring:** Uptime Kuma + Prometheus/Grafana if needed - **Containerization:** Docker Compose or Kubernetes if you already run it ## Build steps 1. **Pick your ticketing platform** - Choose **Zammad** for most teams. - Choose **GLPI** if you need inventory/CMDB. 2. **Provision a server** - Start with 2–4 vCPU, 8–16 GB RAM, SSD storage. - Use Ubuntu Server LTS or Debian 12. 3. **Install via Docker** - Docker Compose is the fastest way to deploy and upgrade. - Put the app behind **Nginx** or **Traefik**. 4. **Set up email integration** - Create `support@company.com`. - Configure inbound IMAP or mail piping. - Configure outbound SMTP for replies/notifications. - Test reply threading carefully. 5. **Enable single sign-on** - Integrate with **Entra ID** or **Okta**. - Restrict agent/admin access with MFA. 6. **Define ticket workflows** - Queues by department: IT, HR, Finance, Facilities. - Priority rules: Low / Medium / High / Critical. - Statuses: New, Open, Pending, Resolved, Closed. - Auto-assign by category, keyword, or requester group. 7. **Create service standards** - Response SLA: e.g. 15 min / 1 hr / 1 business day. - Escalation rules. - Business hours and holiday calendar. 8. **Add self-service** - Build a knowledge base. - Add FAQ articles for common requests. - Let users search before opening tickets. 9. **Secure it** - HTTPS only. - MFA for agents/admins. - Role-based access control. - Regular patching. - Limit admin access by IP if possible. 10. **Back it up** - Daily DB backups. - File attachment backups. - Offsite copy to S3-compatible storage like **Backblaze B2** or **AWS S3**. - Test restores monthly. ## Practical deployment suggestion For a small/medium company: - **Zammad + PostgreSQL + Docker Compose + Nginx + Let’s Encrypt** - Mail via **Microsoft 365** - SSO via **Entra ID** - Backups via **Restic to Backblaze B2** ## Common mistakes - Not testing inbound/outbound email - No SPF/DKIM/DMARC on the support domain - No backup restore tests - Too many custom fields/workflows too early - No SLA/escalation process If you want, I can give you a **copy-paste Docker Compose setup for Zammad** or recommend the best setup for your size/company stack.
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A practical self-hosted help desk usually looks like this: 1. **Pick the app** - **Zammad**: modern ticketing system; official Docker Compose install; docs say at least **4 GB RAM** for containers. ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket**: classic, lightweight; official installer; requires **PHP 8.2–8.4** and **MySQL 5.5+**. ([docs.osticket.com](https://docs.osticket.com/en/latest/Getting%20Started/Installation.html?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI**: better if you want help desk + asset/inventory/ITSM; official docs cover install, updates, plugins, SSO, and inventory. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **FreeScout**: simpler shared-inbox style help desk; official site describes it as a self-hosted PHP/MySQL app. ([freescout.net](https://www.freescout.net/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Recommended stack** - App server on Linux - Database: MariaDB/MySQL - Reverse proxy: Nginx or Apache - TLS: Let’s Encrypt - Mail: dedicated support inbox like `support@yourcompany.com` - Backups: database + app files + uploads/attachments 3. **Build steps** - Install the app with Docker or packages. Zammad officially supports Docker Compose; GLPI and osTicket have official install docs. ([docs.zammad.org](https://docs.zammad.org/en/latest/install/docker-compose.html?utm_source=openai)) - Connect your support email so inbound mail creates tickets and outbound mail sends replies. - Set up roles: agents, admins, self-service users. - Enable SSO if you want internal staff logins; GLPI documents OAuth SSO and SAML plugins. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/doc-plugins/oauthsso?utm_source=openai)) - Add knowledge base / FAQ articles for deflection. - Configure backups, monitoring, and an update process. 4. **If you want the easiest path** - Use **Zammad + Docker Compose** if you want a polished modern UI. ([docs.zammad.org](https://docs.zammad.org/en/latest/install/docker-compose.html?utm_source=openai)) - Use **osTicket** if you want something simpler and very straightforward. ([docs.osticket.com](https://docs.osticket.com/en/latest/Getting%20Started/Installation.html?utm_source=openai)) - Use **GLPI** if you also need asset management and inventory. ([help.glpi-project.org](https://help.glpi-project.org/doc-plugins/plugins-glpi/glpi-inventory?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **concrete deployment plan** for one of these, e.g. **“Zammad on Ubuntu with Docker + Nginx + Let’s Encrypt”**.
How do I manage IT support requests without using a cloud platform? problem
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Use an **on‑premise help desk/ticketing system** instead of a cloud one. ### Good on-prem options - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise** - **GLPI** (open source) - **Jira Service Management Data Center** (self-hosted) - **OTRS / Znuny** (self-hosted) - **Spiceworks Help Desk** (older, but still used in some small setups) ### Simple setup 1. **Install the ticketing server on your own VM or local server** 2. **Set up a support email** like `helpdesk@yourcompany.com` 3. **Create request categories**: hardware, software, access, network, etc. 4. **Assign tickets automatically** by team or priority 5. **Use SLAs** for response and resolution targets 6. **Track status**: New → In Progress → Waiting → Resolved → Closed 7. **Build a small knowledge base** so users can self-serve common issues ### If you want no ticketing software at all You can run support with: - a shared mailbox in **Microsoft Outlook/Exchange** or **Mutt/Dovecot** on-prem - a spreadsheet or database for tracking - a rules-based triage process But that gets messy fast; a self-hosted ticket system is much better. ### Best choice by size - **Small team:** GLPI - **Mid-size IT:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise - **Enterprise:** Jira Service Management Data Center If you want, I can suggest the **best option based on your team size, budget, and server environment**.
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Use a **self-hosted ticketing system** or a **shared inbox + workflow** on your own server. Options: - **Self-hosted help desk software**: e.g. **GLPI**, **Zammad**, **osTicket**, **Request Tracker** - **Shared email + spreadsheet**: simplest low-cost setup - **Local database + web form**: custom but flexible - **Internal chat + intake form**: for small teams Basic setup: 1. Create one intake channel: email, form, or phone. 2. Assign each request a **ticket number**. 3. Track status: **New / In progress / Waiting / Closed**. 4. Set priorities: **Low / Medium / High / Critical**. 5. Log owner, timestamps, and notes. 6. Keep an internal FAQ/knowledge base. 7. Review unresolved tickets daily. If you want, I can recommend the **best offline/self-hosted tool** for: - a small business, - a school, - or an enterprise team.
How do I add custom workflows to an on-premise ticketing system? problem
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Start by checking whether your ticketing system supports **native workflow customization** or **API/webhook extensions**. Then: - **Define the process**: statuses, transitions, approvals, SLA timers, notifications. - **Map it to the platform**: - built-in workflow designer if available - custom plugin/module if the vendor supports it - external automation service via API/webhooks if not - **Implement rules**: who can move tickets, required fields, conditional branches. - **Test in staging** before deploying on-prem. Choose the right approach by platform: - **ServiceNow**: Flow Designer / Workflow Editor - **Jira Service Management**: workflow schemes + automation - **Zendesk**: triggers + automations + custom apps - **Freshservice**: workflow automation - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus**: workflow rules and custom scripts If you need to build it yourself, common stack is: - **Node.js** or **Python** - REST API integration - a small rule engine/state machine - queue/job runner for escalations If you tell me the exact ticketing system, I’ll make a workflow-branching template for its UI/API.
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Add custom workflows by treating them as a **state machine + event handlers + UI rules**. ### Practical approach 1. **Define the workflow** - States: `New -> Triaged -> In Progress -> Waiting on Customer -> Resolved -> Closed` - Transitions: who can move between states, under what conditions - Rules: required fields, approvals, SLAs, escalations 2. **Extend your ticket schema** - Add fields like: - `workflow_id` - `status` - `current_step` - `assigned_role` - `workflow_metadata` (JSON) - Keep workflow config separate from ticket data. 3. **Store workflows as config, not code** - Use JSON/YAML/database tables for: - states - transitions - permissions - validators - automation triggers 4. **Build a workflow engine** - On ticket update: - validate transition - run business rules - update state - emit events - This can be a simple rules engine or a dedicated workflow module. 5. **Hook into events** - Trigger actions on events like: - ticket created - status changed - assignment changed - SLA breached - Actions: - notify users - create subtasks - escalate - auto-close 6. **Expose an admin UI** - Let admins: - create/edit workflows - map roles to transitions - set required fields - define automation rules 7. **Add API endpoints** - Examples: - `POST /workflows` - `PUT /workflows/{id}` - `POST /tickets/{id}/transition` - Include audit logging for every change. 8. **Test and version workflows** - Version workflows so old tickets keep old logic. - Test: - invalid transitions - permission failures - edge cases - rollback behavior ### Recommended pattern If your system is older or monolithic, use: - **database-driven workflow definitions** - **server-side validation** - **event queue for automation** - **plugin/module architecture** for custom logic If you want, I can sketch: - a **database schema** - a **sample JSON workflow definition** - or **example code** in your stack (Java, .NET, Python, Node).
How do I integrate an on-premise ticketing system with LDAP? problem
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Use LDAP for **authentication** and optionally **user/group lookup**. ### Typical setup 1. **Confirm your directory** - Microsoft **Active Directory** or **OpenLDAP** - Prefer **LDAPS** (`636`) or StartTLS, not plain LDAP. 2. **Create a service/bind account** - Read-only access to users/groups. - Example: `svc_ticketing_ldap`. 3. **Configure the ticketing app’s LDAP settings** - LDAP server URL - Base DN - Bind DN + password - User search filter, e.g.: - AD: `(sAMAccountName={username})` - OpenLDAP: `(uid={username})` - Group filter if you want role mapping. 4. **Map LDAP groups to ticketing roles** - Example: - `Helpdesk-Agents` → Agent/Admin - `Employees` → End user - This is usually the key step for permissions. 5. **Test login and sync** - Test a few users. - Enable scheduled sync if the product supports it. 6. **Decide on password behavior** - Usually the ticketing system does **not** store passwords. - Users authenticate against LDAP directly. ### Common ticketing systems that support LDAP well - **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **GLPI** - **Znuny** (OTRS fork) - **osTicket** - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** (more enterprise) ### Helpful tools - **Apache Directory Studio** for browsing/testing LDAP - **Microsoft Active Directory Users and Computers** for AD - **phpLDAPadmin** for OpenLDAP management ### Security tips - Use **LDAPS** - Restrict the bind account to read-only - Limit searches to specific OUs - Log failed logins - Plan for MFA separately if needed; LDAP alone usually won’t provide it If you tell me which ticketing system you’re using, I can give you the exact LDAP fields and example filters.
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Integrating an on-prem ticketing system with LDAP usually means using LDAP for: - **authentication** (log in with directory credentials) - **user lookup** (auto-fill name, email, department) - **group-based authorization** (agents/admins) - sometimes **sync/import** of users into the ticketing app ### Typical approach 1. **Confirm LDAP support** in the ticketing system. 2. **Collect LDAP details**: - LDAP/LDAPS host and port - Base DN - Bind DN + bind password - User search filter - Group search filter 3. **Map fields**: - `uid` / `sAMAccountName` / `userPrincipalName` → login - `mail` → email - `givenName`, `sn` → display name 4. **Configure auth flow**: - App binds to LDAP - User enters credentials - App verifies password against LDAP 5. **Set role mapping**: - LDAP group “Helpdesk-Agents” → ticket agent role - LDAP group “Helpdesk-Admins” → admin role 6. **Test with a non-admin account** 7. **Enable LDAPS or StartTLS** to secure traffic ### Common LDAP settings - **Base DN**: `dc=company,dc=com` - **User filter**: - Active Directory: `(sAMAccountName={username})` - Generic LDAP: `(uid={username})` - **Group filter**: - AD often uses `memberOf` - Example: `(&(objectClass=group)(cn=Helpdesk-Agents))` ### Good architecture - **Direct LDAP auth** for small/simple setups - **LDAP + local fallback admin account** so you don’t lock yourself out - **Separate service account** for directory queries - **Read-only LDAP bind account** with minimal permissions ### Security tips - Use **LDAPS (636)** or **StartTLS** - Store bind credentials in a secrets vault if possible - Restrict LDAP access by firewall/IP - Log auth failures, but don’t log passwords - Plan for **account lockout** behavior and MFA if your directory/app supports it ### Watch-outs - **Usernames don’t match** between app and directory - **Nested groups** may not resolve automatically - **Case sensitivity** in usernames - **Duplicate emails** or missing attributes - **Timezone/locale** issues in user data sync ### If the system supports SSO If your ticketing system supports **SAML/OIDC**, that’s often better for login, while LDAP can still be used for directory sync. If you want, I can give you: - a **generic LDAP configuration template** - an **Active Directory-specific setup** - or steps for a specific ticketing system like **Jira Service Management, Zendesk, Freshservice, GLPI, osTicket, or ServiceNow**.
How do I get better audit logs from a self-hosted service desk? problem
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To get better audit logs from a self-hosted service desk, do 5 things: 1. **Turn on every native audit feature** - Enable **ticket history**, **field change history**, **admin activity logs**, **login/logout logs**, and **API access logs**. - If your product supports it, log **who changed what, when, from where, and before/after values**. - Examples: - **Zammad**: use its object/history tracking and integrate with system logs. - **GLPI**: enable **history** and **logs**. - **osTicket**: use plugin/logging plus web server logs. - **Znuny/OTRS**: strong built-in history and audit capabilities. 2. **Log at the layers around the app** - **Reverse proxy**: Nginx or **Traefik** access logs. - **Web server**: Apache/Nginx request logs. - **App server**: application debug/audit logs. - **Database**: PostgreSQL or MySQL/MariaDB query/audit logs for admin changes. - **Auth**: LDAP/AD/Keycloak/SSO logs. 3. **Centralize logs** - Ship logs to a central system so they can’t be easily altered on the app host. - Good options: - **Wazuh** (easy security monitoring + alerting) - **Grafana Loki** + Promtail - **Elastic Stack** / **OpenSearch** - **Splunk** if you want a commercial option 4. **Make logs tamper-resistant** - Send logs to **append-only storage** or a separate log server. - Use **immutable backups** or **WORM storage** if compliance matters. - Restrict admin access to logs and keep retention policies. 5. **Add correlation and context** - Log a **request ID / ticket ID / user ID / IP / session ID** on every request. - This makes it much easier to reconstruct who did what. - If your service desk can’t do this well, add it through middleware or reverse proxy headers. **Best practical stack** - **Zammad or Znuny** - **Nginx** - **PostgreSQL** - **Wazuh** or **Grafana Loki** - **Keycloak** for SSO - **rsyslog** or **Fluent Bit** for shipping If you tell me which service desk you’re running (for example, **GLPI, Zammad, osTicket, Znuny, Request Tracker**), I can give exact settings and log locations.
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To get better audit logs from a self-hosted service desk: - **Log every security-relevant action**: login/logout, ticket create/update/delete, comments, status changes, assignments, permission changes, export actions, API calls. - **Capture who / what / when / where**: - user ID - action - object ID (ticket, user, org, etc.) - timestamp in UTC - source IP / user agent - before/after values for changed fields - **Make logs immutable**: write-once storage, append-only tables, or ship to a separate log system so admins can’t quietly edit history. - **Separate audit logs from app logs**: keep them in their own stream/index/table with stricter access controls. - **Centralize and retain**: forward to something like **ELK/OpenSearch**, **Graylog**, **Splunk**, or **Loki** plus object storage for long-term retention. - **Add correlation IDs**: link one request across web app, API, background jobs, and DB events. - **Normalize event types**: use consistent event names like `ticket.updated`, `user.role_changed`, `attachment.downloaded`. - **Include diff details**: for updates, log field-level changes, not just “ticket modified.” - **Protect sensitive data**: redact passwords, tokens, and personal data; log hashes or metadata instead. - **Alert on critical events**: privilege escalation, mass export, failed logins, disabled MFA, deleted tickets, config changes. - **Test audit completeness**: create a checklist of actions and verify each one appears in logs. If you want, I can give you: 1. a **sample audit log schema**, or 2. a **checklist for self-hosted systems** like Zendesk-like apps, GLPI, Jira Service Management, or Request Tracker.
How do I migrate tickets from a cloud help desk to on-premise software? problem
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Use a staged export → transform → import process. 1. **Pick the target on-prem system** - Common choices: **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises**, **Jira Service Management Data Center**, **SysAid On-Premises**. 2. **Inventory what must move** - Tickets, comments, attachments, users, organizations, statuses, priorities, tags, custom fields, SLAs, and audit history. 3. **Export from the cloud help desk** - Use the vendor’s API or CSV export. - Examples: - **Zendesk API** - **Freshdesk API** - **Intercom Export/API** - For attachments, export file URLs or download them separately. 4. **Map fields to the on-prem schema** - Example mappings: - requester email → requester - ticket type/category → category - ticket status → status - timestamps → created/updated dates - Build a transformation script if formats differ. 5. **Import into the on-prem system** - Use the product’s import/API tools. - Examples: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** import/API - **Jira Service Management** REST API / CSV import - Import in this order: users/orgs → tickets → comments → attachments → custom fields. 6. **Do a test migration first** - Move 50–100 tickets. - Check timestamps, attachments, threading, and assignment history. 7. **Run a cutover plan** - Freeze changes in the cloud system. - Perform final delta export. - Import deltas into on-prem. - Switch agents and customers to the new system. 8. **Validate** - Count tickets before/after. - Spot-check old, new, closed, and high-priority tickets. - Confirm search, reports, and SLAs work. If you want, I can give you a migration plan for a specific pair, like **Zendesk → ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** or **Freshdesk → Jira Service Management Data Center**.
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Here’s a practical migration approach: 1. **Inventory both systems** - Source help desk: tickets, users, groups, SLAs, categories, attachments, custom fields, notes, audit logs. - Target on-prem software: what it can import and in what format. 2. **Map fields** - Match status, priority, requester, assignee, timestamps, tags, custom fields. - Decide how to handle unmapped data. 3. **Clean the data** - Remove duplicates, normalize user names/emails, fix broken attachments, close/archive old junk tickets. 4. **Export from cloud** - Prefer CSV, JSON, API export, or native backup tools. - Export related objects too: users, organizations, comments, attachments. 5. **Transform for the new system** - Convert IDs, date formats, status values, and user references. - Rebuild parent/child ticket links if needed. 6. **Test import in a staging environment** - Do a small batch first. - Verify ticket history, timestamps, comments, attachments, and permissions. 7. **Plan the cutover** - Freeze ticket creation in the old system during final sync. - Migrate delta changes since the test run. - Switch mail routing, web forms, and API integrations to the on-prem system. 8. **Validate** - Spot-check tickets across statuses and departments. - Confirm searches, reporting, SLAs, and notifications work. 9. **Keep the old system read-only** - Retain it for audit/history until you’re sure everything is stable. **Tip:** If the systems have APIs, build an import script instead of relying only on CSV. That usually preserves more history and reduces manual cleanup. If you want, I can give you: - a **cloud-to-on-prem migration checklist**, - a **field-mapping template**, or - a **sample migration script/workflow**.
How do I secure a self-hosted ticketing system for sensitive data? problem
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To secure a self-hosted ticketing system for sensitive data, treat it like a small internal SaaS: - **Pick a solid platform**: - **Zammad** (good security features, SSO support) - **GLPI** (good for ITSM + access control) - **osTicket** (simple, but you’ll add more hardening yourself) - **Put it behind strong auth**: - Use **Keycloak** or **Azure AD / Okta** for SSO + MFA - Disable local passwords where possible - Require MFA for admins and agents - **Encrypt everything**: - TLS via **Let’s Encrypt** or your internal PKI - Encrypt disks with **LUKS** or cloud volume encryption - Encrypt backups too - **Lock down network access**: - Only expose HTTPS on 443 - Put it behind **Cloudflare Zero Trust**, **Tailscale**, or a VPN - Restrict admin panels to internal IPs - **Harden the server**: - Use **Ubuntu LTS** or **Debian** minimal install - Run in containers with **Docker** or **Podman** - Keep the OS and app patched automatically - Use **Fail2ban** and a firewall like **UFW** or **nftables** - **Protect data at rest and in logs**: - Limit who can view tickets, attachments, and exports - Redact secrets/PII from notifications and logs - Set attachment restrictions and scanning - **Store secrets properly**: - Use **HashiCorp Vault** or at least encrypted env vars/files - Never hardcode DB passwords or API keys - **Back up safely**: - Use **restic** or **borgbackup** - Encrypt and test restores regularly - Keep offline/immutable copies - **Monitor and audit**: - Turn on audit logs for login, ticket access, exports, role changes - Forward logs to **Graylog**, **ELK/OpenSearch**, or **Splunk** - Alert on unusual access - **Minimize data exposure**: - Use least-privilege roles - Separate departments/queues - Auto-delete old attachments/tickets if policy allows If you want, I can give you a **secure reference architecture** for **Zammad**, **GLPI**, or **osTicket** specifically.
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Treat it like a mini internal app handling regulated data: - **Minimize data**: don’t store sensitive data in tickets if you can avoid it; use references/tokens instead. - **Strong auth**: SSO + MFA, RBAC/least privilege, separate admin accounts. - **Network controls**: put it behind VPN, private subnet, or zero-trust access; restrict by IP where possible. - **Encrypt everything**: TLS in transit, full-disk/db encryption at rest, encrypted backups. - **Harden the server**: timely patching, disable unused services, firewall, secure SSH, container isolation if possible. - **Audit logging**: log logins, ticket access, exports, admin actions, and changes; forward logs to a separate system. - **Secrets management**: keep API keys, DB creds, and signing keys out of code and env files. - **Backups + DR**: immutable/offline backups, restore testing, documented recovery steps. - **Data governance**: retention rules, auto-redaction, field-level access controls, attachment scanning. - **App security**: CSRF/XSS protection, secure session cookies, upload restrictions, rate limiting, dependency scanning. - **Monitoring**: alerts for unusual access, mass exports, failed logins, privilege changes. - **Physical/ops**: dedicated host or VM, least-privileged DB user, separate staging and prod. If you want, I can turn this into a **hardening checklist** for a specific stack (e.g. Zammad, FreeScout, osTicket, Jira Service Management, or a custom app).
How do I support multiple departments in one on-premise ticketing platform? problem
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Use a **single on-prem platform** with **separate queues, forms, SLAs, and permissions** per department. ### What to set up - **Department-specific queues/inboxes** Example: IT, Facilities, HR, Finance. - **Custom ticket forms and fields** Different intake forms for each team. - **Routing rules / automations** Auto-assign by category, keywords, requester, or location. - **Role-based access control** Limit who can see which department’s tickets. - **Separate SLAs and priorities** Different response/resolve targets per department. - **Shared knowledge base + department articles** One portal, multiple article categories. - **Reporting by department** Track volume, backlog, SLA compliance, and agent workload. ### Good on-prem products to look at - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong workflows and routing - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premise** — good multi-department support out of the box - **Freshservice** isn’t on-prem, so skip if you need fully local hosting - **GLPI** — open-source, flexible, good for smaller IT/service teams - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — enterprise-grade, more complex - **TOPdesk** — strong for multi-department service desks ### Best-practice structure - **One platform** - **One portal** - **Multiple departments as queues** - **One admin team** - **Department-specific workflows and permissions** If you want, I can sketch a **sample on-prem setup for IT + HR + Facilities**.
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Use **one platform, many queues**. A practical setup: - **Single intake portal** for all users - **Separate departments/queues**: IT, HR, Facilities, Finance, etc. - **Routing rules** based on category, requester, keywords, location, or form - **Role-based access** so each team only sees their own tickets - **Shared SLA policies** with department-specific targets - **Custom fields/forms** per department - **Knowledge base** that can be shared or restricted by department - **Reporting** split by team, priority, and resolution time Good on-prem patterns: 1. **One database, multiple service queues** - easiest to manage - good for small/mid-size orgs 2. **One instance, department-separated permissions** - each department gets its own views, forms, and workflows - still centralized admin 3. **Shared core + department plugins/workflows** - useful when HR/Facilities/IT have very different processes Key design rules: - Don’t use one giant “open” queue - Standardize ticket statuses across departments - Keep department-specific fields optional unless required - Define clear escalation paths and ownership - Set audit logs and permission boundaries from day one If you want, I can sketch: - a **sample architecture** - a **ticket routing workflow** - or a **field/queue structure** for 3–5 departments.
How much does an on-premise ticketing system cost? transactional
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An on-premise ticketing system usually costs: - **Open source / self-hosted:** **$0–$5,000** upfront - Examples: **osTicket**, **Zammad** - You still pay for server, setup, and admin time - **Small-to-mid commercial on-prem:** **$5,000–$30,000** upfront - Examples: **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - Ongoing support/maintenance often **15%–25% per year** - **Enterprise on-prem:** **$30,000–$250,000+** - Examples: **Jira Service Management Data Center**, **BMC Helix ITSM**, **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** - Cost depends on users, modules, HA, integrations, and deployment complexity Typical extra costs: - **Servers/VMs:** $1,000–$10,000+ - **Implementation/services:** $3,000–$50,000+ - **Annual support:** 15%–25% of license cost If you want, I can give you a **cost estimate for a specific system** like **osTicket**, **ManageEngine**, or **Jira Service Management Data Center**.
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An on-premise ticketing system typically costs: - **Small team:** roughly **$1,000–$5,000 upfront** for software, plus **15%–25% yearly maintenance/support**. On-prem software usually uses a **one-time license** model, and implementation/setup may add more. ([admin.softwareadvice.com](https://admin.softwareadvice.com/software-selection-center/Pricing/Understanding%20and%20Comparing%20Software%20Price%20Quotes.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Mid-market / IT help desk:** many vendors price by technician, e.g. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** starts at about **$13/technician/month** for on-prem Standard, **$27** for Professional, and **$67** for Enterprise. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/pricing.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Larger deployments/custom installs:** costs can rise to **tens of thousands** once you include implementation, integrations, training, and server infrastructure. ([admin.softwareadvice.com](https://admin.softwareadvice.com/software-selection-center/Pricing/Understanding%20and%20Comparing%20Software%20Price%20Quotes.pdf?utm_source=openai)) A practical rule of thumb: **first-year total = software license + implementation + hardware + maintenance**, and implementation alone can be a major share of the software cost. ([admin.softwareadvice.com](https://admin.softwareadvice.com/software-selection-center/Pricing/Understanding%20and%20Comparing%20Software%20Price%20Quotes.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can estimate cost for your exact size (e.g. **5 agents, 25 agents, 100 agents**).
What is the pricing for self-hosted help desk software? transactional
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Self-hosted help desk pricing usually falls into 3 buckets: - **Free/open-source**: software is free, but you pay for hosting and support - **One-time license**: roughly **$50–$500+** - **Enterprise/on-prem subscription**: often **$20–$100+ per agent/month** or custom Examples: - **osTicket** — **free** (open source); you pay for hosting/support - **FreeScout** — **free core**; optional paid modules - **Zammad** — **free self-hosted**; paid support/enterprise options available - **Hesk** — typically **one-time license** around the **$50–$100** range - **UVdesk** — self-hosted/community option available; paid plans/add-ons for enterprise - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — priced for larger teams; usually **custom/enterprise** pricing, not cheap SMB software Typical total cost: - **Small team**: about **$10–$50/month** for VPS/hosting + optional support - **Growing team**: **$100–$500/month** if you add paid modules, email/SMS integrations, or support - **Enterprise**: **thousands per year** depending on agents and SLA If you want, I can give you a **short list by budget** (free, under $100, enterprise) with the best option in each.
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Self-hosted help desk software is usually priced in **3 buckets**: - **Free/open-source license, but you pay infra + your time**: **osTicket** is “100% free open source,” and Zammad says self-hosting on your own servers can be done at no cost for the software itself. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/faq/?utm_source=openai)) - **Paid self-hosted support / subscription**: **Zammad** self-hosted starts at **€7/agent/month billed annually** (or **€9/agent/month billed monthly**) for the Starter plan; Professional is **€16/€18** and Plus is **€25/€27**. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/pricing/table)) **GLPI** self-hosted/on-prem is **€21 per IT agent/month** for the Private Cloud/self-hosted offer, with a **25-agent minimum** for that tier. ([glpi-project.org](https://www.glpi-project.org/en/pricing/)) **Jitbit** sells a self-hosted perpetual license; the page says you get the app forever plus one year of upgrades, and its SaaS is **$24/month**. ([jitbit.com](https://www.jitbit.com/helpdesk/purchase/)) - **Support/implementation add-ons**: For **osTicket**, official commercial support is **$12,500/year** (Business) or **$25,000/year** (Enterprise), and onboarding/training is **$999** for a 4-hour session. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/commercial-support/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - **$0 software** if you self-host open source - **~$7–$25/agent/month** for vendor-backed self-hosted plans - **Thousands/year** if you want vendor support, onboarding, or managed help. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/pricing/table)) If you want, I can give you a **short list of the cheapest self-hosted options** for a small team.
Are there free on-premise ticketing systems? transactional
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Yes — there are free **on-premise / self-hosted** ticketing systems. Good options: - **GLPI** — open source ITSM/help desk, strong for asset management too. - **Zammad** — modern self-hosted help desk with email, web forms, and chat. - **osTicket** — simple, popular, and free to self-host on your own server. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — powerful, older-style but very capable for ticket workflows. - **UVdesk Open Source** — free community edition you can host yourself. - **FreeScout** — lightweight self-hosted support inbox/ticket system. A few notes: - “Free” usually means **software is free**, but you still pay for **your server, setup, and maintenance**. - Some products are **open source**, while others may have **paid cloud/enterprise versions** but a free self-hosted edition. If you want, I can narrow it down by use case: - **IT help desk** - **customer support** - **small team** - **Windows/Linux server** - **best simple option**
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Yes — if you mean **helpdesk / support ticketing**, there are free self-hosted/on-prem options. Common ones include **osTicket**, **Znuny**, **Zammad**, and **OpenSupports**. They’re all open source and can be run on your own servers. ([github.com](https://github.com/osTicket/osTicket?utm_source=openai)) Quick take: - **osTicket** — simple, popular, “completely free” open-source helpdesk. ([github.com](https://github.com/osTicket/osTicket?utm_source=openai)) - **Znuny** — open-source, self-hosted, positioned for service desk/ITSM. ([znuny.org](https://www.znuny.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** — open-source and free for self-hosting; paid support is optional. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/company/press/zammad-4-0?utm_source=openai)) - **OpenSupports** — free and open-source, can be hosted on your own servers. ([github.com](https://github.com/opensupports/opensupports?utm_source=openai)) If you meant **event ticketing** instead of support tickets, say so — the best free on-prem options are different.
What is the cheapest self-hosted ticketing system for small teams? transactional
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The cheapest self-hosted ticketing system for a small team is usually **osTicket**. ### Best cheap options 1. **osTicket** — **free, open-source** - Very low running cost - Good basic ticketing, email piping, canned responses, SLAs - Best if you want “just works” and minimal spending 2. **FreeScout** — **free core, self-hosted** - More modern UI than osTicket - Great if you also want shared inbox/helpdesk-style workflow - Some useful add-ons cost extra 3. **Request Tracker (RT)** — **free, open-source** - Powerful, but more technical and less beginner-friendly ### My pick - **Cheapest overall:** **osTicket** - **Best cheap modern option:** **FreeScout** If you want, I can also give you the **cheapest hosting setup** for these (e.g., $5–10/month VPS) or recommend the best one for **email support, internal IT, or customer support**.
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If you mean **lowest cash cost**, the cheapest self-hosted ticketing systems are the **free/open-source** ones: **osTicket**, **Zammad Community**, **OpenSupports**, and **GLPI Community**. They’re all free to run on your own server, so your real cost is hosting and maintenance. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick for small teams:** **osTicket** — it’s free, widely used, and pretty simple. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want the most polished free self-hosted option:** **Zammad Community** — free on your own servers, with no agent-count limit in community/on-prem use. ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want more IT/helpdesk depth:** **GLPI Community** — also free/open source, but heavier than osTicket. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/?utm_source=openai)) **Bottom line:** - **Cheapest:** osTicket or Zammad Community (both free). ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Simplest for a tiny team:** osTicket. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best UX among free options:** Zammad. ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **top 3 ranked by ease of setup** or **by lowest server requirements**.
How much do on-premise service desk tools usually cost per year? transactional
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On-premise service desk tools usually cost **about $500 to $2,500 per agent per year**. Typical pricing: - **Entry-level/on-prem:** around **$300–$800/agent/year** - **Mid-market:** around **$800–$1,500/agent/year** - **Enterprise:** around **$1,500–$3,000+/agent/year** Examples: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus**: often starts around **$110–$600 per technician/year** depending on edition - **Jira Service Management Data Center**: usually priced by tier, effectively **more for larger teams** - **BMC Helix ITSM** / **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM**: commonly **enterprise pricing**, often **thousands per agent per year** Also budget for: - **Implementation/services**: often **$5k–$50k+ one-time** - **Maintenance/support**: usually **15–25% of license cost/year** - **Servers/DB/admin overhead** if self-hosted If you want, I can give you a **cost comparison for 5–10 popular on-prem tools**.
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Usually, **on-prem / self-managed service desk tools are sold as annual subscriptions or annual maintenance**, and pricing is typically tied to **technician/agent count** plus add-ons like asset management or change management. For example, ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus bills by technicians and IT assets, offers yearly subscriptions, and charges **$35 per technician annually** for support on its free edition; Atlassian’s self-managed Jira Service Management (Data Center) is also an annual, self-managed offering. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/pricing.html)) **Rule of thumb:** a small team often lands in the **low thousands of dollars per year**, while mid-size/enterprise deployments can move into the **tens of thousands+ per year**. That’s an inference from vendor pricing models, not a universal list price. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/pricing.html)) If you want, I can give you a **ballpark by team size** (e.g., 5, 20, 100 agents).
Do self-hosted ticketing systems have free trials? transactional
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Yes—some do, but it depends on the product. - **Cloud-hosted “self-service” trials:** Many vendors offer a **free trial** of their ticketing/help desk software, even if you can later self-host it or migrate. - **True self-hosted products:** Often **open-source** or **community edition** versions are free to use indefinitely, so there’s usually no “trial” in the classic sense. Examples: - **osTicket** — free, self-hosted open source - **Zammad** — free open-source edition; paid hosted options also available - **UVdesk** — community edition is free/self-hosted - **GLPI** — free self-hosted IT/ticketing system - **Freshdesk** / **Zendesk** — typically offer free trials, but these are mainly cloud SaaS, not self-hosted If you want, I can list the best self-hosted ticketing systems with trials vs fully free options.
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Yes—sometimes, but it depends on the product. Many **self-hosted** ticketing systems are **open-source/free to install** rather than offering a timed trial, while others offer a **30-day trial** for the self-hosted edition. For example, Zammad says you can download and install it on your own servers for free, and osTicket says its core features are free and its installer is for self-hosted use. ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) Examples of trial-style offers include **Jira Service Management Data Center**, which has a **30-day free trial**. osTicket also offers a **30-day free trial** for its cloud-hosted version, though that’s not self-hosted. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/service-management/download/data-center?utm_source=openai)) So the short answer is: **yes, some do—but many self-hosted systems are “free to self-host” instead of “free trial.”** ([zammad.org](https://zammad.org/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can list the best **self-hosted ticketing systems with no-cost trials/free editions**.
What are affordable on-premise help desk options for startups? transactional
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Affordable on-premise help desk options for startups: - **osTicket** — very budget-friendly, open source, self-hosted. Good for email ticketing, simple workflows, and a basic portal. - **Zammad** — modern UI, open source, self-hosted. Strong for email, chat, knowledge base, and automation. - **FreeScout** — lightweight, self-hosted, and inexpensive. Great if you want a shared inbox plus ticketing with low overhead. - **GLPI** — open source ITSM/help desk with asset management. Best if you also want inventory/CMDB features. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — paid, but one of the better-value on-prem options for startups. More polished and scalable than most open-source tools. - **OTRS / ((OTRS Community))** — self-hosted help desk platform, good for workflow-heavy teams, though setup can be heavier. - **Jitbit Helpdesk** — affordable commercial self-hosted help desk with a simpler setup and smaller footprint. Best picks: - **Lowest cost:** osTicket or FreeScout - **Best modern open source:** Zammad - **Best all-in-one IT help desk:** GLPI - **Best paid on-prem value:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size**, **budget**, and whether you need **IT asset management** or just **customer support tickets**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For startups wanting **affordable on-prem/self-hosted help desk software**, these are strong picks: - **FreeScout** — probably the cheapest to run: open source, self-hosted, and designed to work even on shared hosting. Good if you want a lightweight shared inbox/ticket system. ([freescout.net](https://www.freescout.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **osTicket** — mature open-source ticketing system with a cloud option if you ever change your mind. Best for simple, traditional support workflows. ([osticket.com](https://osticket.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** — more polished modern UI; self-hosted is available, and its published self-hosted pricing starts at **€7/agent/month** on the Starter plan. ([zammad.com](https://zammad.com/en/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — best if you also need asset/IT management. Self-hosted paid support starts at **€100/month** for up to 10 IT agents, with a free open-source core available. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/prices/?utm_source=openai)) - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very capable open-source ticketing system; software is open source, and Best Practical sells hosting/support/services separately. ([docs.bestpractical.com](https://docs.bestpractical.com/rt/6.0.0/README.html?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Cheapest:** FreeScout - **Best balance of modern UX + self-hosted:** Zammad - **Best for IT/service desk + inventory:** GLPI - **Most basic/legacy-friendly:** osTicket If you want, I can narrow this to **“best under $0 software cost”** or **“best for 5–20 agents”**.
What is the pricing model for on-premise case management software? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
On-premise case management software is usually priced as one or more of these: - **Perpetual license**: one-time software fee, then you own/use it indefinitely. - **Per-user license**: cost based on named users or concurrent users. - **Module/add-on pricing**: base platform fee plus extra for reporting, workflow, AI, integrations, etc. - **Implementation/services fee**: separate charge for setup, migration, customization, and training. - **Annual maintenance/support**: typically **15–25% of license cost per year** for updates and support. - **Infrastructure cost**: servers, databases, backups, and IT admin are on you. Common pricing examples: - **Microsoft Dynamics 365 Customer Service (on-prem options via legacy/partner deployments)**: user-based plus implementation. - **OpenText Case360**: enterprise perpetual/subscription-style enterprise deals, usually quote-based. - **IBM Case Manager / IBM Cloud Pak for Business Automation**: quote-based, often capacity/user and support driven. - **Oracle Siebel CRM Case Management**: enterprise quote-based, license + maintenance. - **Laserfiche**: often user-based licensing with support and implementation. In practice, most on-prem deals are **custom quoted** rather than published list pricing. If you want, I can also break down **typical total cost for 10, 50, or 200 users**.
retrieval Not mentioned
On-premise case management software is usually priced as one or more of these: - **Perpetual license**: one-time upfront fee to own the software license. - **Subscription / annual maintenance**: recurring fee for support, updates, and upgrades. - **Per-user pricing**: cost based on number of named or concurrent users. - **Module-based pricing**: extra charges for features like workflow, analytics, or document management. - **Implementation/services fees**: separate costs for installation, configuration, migration, training, and integration. - **Infrastructure costs**: you also pay for servers, storage, backups, security, and IT staff if you host it yourself. Commonly, the total cost is: **license + maintenance + deployment/services + internal IT costs**. If you want, I can also give you a **sample cost breakdown** for a small, mid-size, or enterprise deployment.
How much does it cost to license a self-hosted support desk platform? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
It depends a lot, but for **self-hosted support desk software** you’re usually looking at: - **Free / open source:** **$0 license cost** - Examples: **Zammad**, **osTicket**, **GLPI**, **Faveo Helpdesk Community** - **Paid self-hosted (commercial):** typically **$10–$100+ per agent/month** or a **one-time license + annual maintenance** - Examples: **Help Scout doesn’t offer true self-hosting**, but self-hosted options like **Faveo Helpdesk**, **Helpy**, **Kayako (older self-hosted offerings vary)**, **UVdesk Pro** are often priced by agents/users or edition. - **Enterprise self-hosted:** often **custom quote**, commonly **$5,000–$50,000+ per year** depending on agent count, SSO, SLA, and support. ### Common pricing models 1. **Open-source license**: free, but you pay for hosting, setup, and support. 2. **Per-agent subscription**: e.g. **$15–$50/agent/month**. 3. **Perpetual license**: one-time fee, often **$500–$5,000+**, plus annual support/updates. 4. **Enterprise quote**: custom pricing. ### Real-world total cost Even with “free” software, expect: - **Small setup:** about **$20–$200/month** for hosting and email - **With paid support/implementation:** **$1,000–$10,000+** upfront If you want, I can give you a **price comparison of Zammad vs osTicket vs UVdesk vs Faveo**.
retrieval Not mentioned
It varies a lot, but **self-hosted support desk licensing is usually either**: - **Free/open-source**: software license is $0, but you pay for hosting/admin/support. - **Perpetual one-time license**: often **~$2,000–$6,500** for a small-to-enterprise package. For example, Jitbit’s self-hosted pricing is **$2,199 (Small)**, **$3,799 (Company)**, and **$6,499 (Enterprise)**, all with 1 year of upgrades/support included. ([jitbit.com](https://www.jitbit.com/helpdesk/purchase/)) - **Per-seat annual licensing**: some vendors charge by seat, e.g. Helpy’s self-hosted plan is **$40/month per seat** with an annual contract. ([helpy.io](https://helpy.io/pricing/)) - **Paid support/maintenance on open source**: e.g. SafariDesk offers free community support, or paid support at **$999/year** or **$2,500/year**. ([safaridesk.io](https://safaridesk.io/en-US/open-source)) Also, many major help desks **don’t offer self-hosting at all**; Zendesk says it only provides products through its own servers. ([support.zendesk.com](https://support.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/4408823719578-Does-Zendesk-offer-self-hosting-options)) If you want, I can give you a **short list of self-hosted options by budget**.
Are there low-cost on-premise ticketing systems for enterprise use? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — but **true enterprise on-prem ticketing** is usually either **open-source/self-hosted** or priced by **server/agent** rather than cheap SaaS-style per-user. Good low-cost options: - **GLPI** — strong enterprise ITSM/helpdesk, on-prem, open-source. Good for asset management too. - **Zammad** — modern UI, self-hosted/on-prem, good ticketing + omnichannel. - **osTicket** — very low-cost/self-hosted, simple and reliable, but less “enterprise ITSM.” - **OTRS Community / Znuny** — enterprise-style workflow/ticketing, on-prem, widely used in larger orgs. - **FreeScout** — lightweight, on-prem, affordable, but more support desk than full ITSM. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — not “cheap,” but a common enterprise on-prem choice if you already use Atlassian. If you want the **best low-cost enterprise-like on-prem picks**, I’d shortlist: 1. **GLPI** 2. **Znuny** 3. **Zammad** If you tell me your **team size, required features** (SLA, asset management, LDAP/SSO, email, approval workflows), and **budget**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. Good low-cost on-prem options for enterprise use include: - **Znuny** — open source and free to run on your own servers; paid support starts at **$4,499/year**. ([znuny.com](https://www.znuny.com/product?utm_source=openai)) - **Zammad** — open source for self-hosting with **no license fee**; on-prem support packages start at **€2,499/year**. ([support.zammad.com](https://support.zammad.com/help/en-us/59-license/35-is-there-a-license-fee-for-using-zammad?utm_source=openai)) - **GLPI** — on-prem subscriptions start at **€100/month** for up to 10 agents, with higher tiers for larger teams. ([glpi-project.org](https://glpi-project.org/prices/?utm_source=openai)) - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — on-prem pricing starts at **US$13/technician/month**, and there’s also a **free Standard edition** for small deployments. ([manageengine.com](https://www.manageengine.com/products/service-desk/pricing.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow these down by **agent count, required features, and budget**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for customer support teams?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **on-premise / self-hosted ticketing systems** for customer support teams: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Strong all-around IT/help desk platform - Good ticket workflows, SLA management, asset integration - Best for teams that want an enterprise-friendly on-prem option 2. **Jira Service Management (Data Center)** - Great if you already use Atlassian tools - Strong for internal support, approvals, and workflow automation - Best for tech-savvy teams and IT/service desks 3. **Zendesk Suite (on-prem is not available)** - Worth noting because it’s popular, but it’s cloud-only - If on-prem is mandatory, skip it 4. **OTRS / Znuny** - Classic open-source ticketing stack - Highly customizable, good for email-based support and workflows - Best for teams wanting open-source and self-hosting 5. **Freshdesk on-premise alternatives: osTicket** - Simple, lightweight, widely used open-source help desk - Easy to deploy and maintain - Best for smaller teams with basic ticketing needs 6. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Very mature, very flexible, very technical - Strong for email-driven support and complex routing - Best for teams with admin/dev resources 7. **UVdesk Community Edition** - Open-source help desk with decent multichannel support - Good balance of features and self-hosting - Best for SMBs wanting a modern UI ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall enterprise on-prem:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best open-source:** **Znuny** or **OTRS** - **Best simple self-hosted option:** **osTicket** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by company size** or **compare pricing/licensing**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **on-premise/self-hosted ticketing systems** for customer support teams: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Strong all-around choice for support + IT teams - Good automation, SLA management, asset management, and reporting - Best if you want a mature, polished product 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center (Atlassian)** - Excellent for teams already using Jira/Confluence - Great workflows, integrations, and scalability - Best for technical support teams or mixed support/engineering orgs 3. **OTRS / Znuny** - Open-source-friendly and highly customizable - Good for email-based ticketing and workflow automation - Best if you want flexibility and lower licensing cost 4. **SysAid On-Premises** - Solid help desk/ITSM platform with self-service, automation, and asset tracking - Good UI and decent out-of-the-box features - Best for mid-sized support teams 5. **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** - Simple, straightforward ticketing for small to mid-sized teams - Easy to deploy and manage on-prem - Best if you want something lightweight 6. **HelpSpot** - Self-hosted and focused on customer support ticketing - Clean interface, email-based workflow, knowledge base support - Best for customer service teams, not heavy ITSM ### Best overall picks - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for technical teams:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source option:** Znuny - **Best simple self-hosted support desk:** HelpSpot If you want, I can also give you a **feature comparison table** (pricing, ease of use, automation, reporting, and deployment complexity).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best on-premise ticketing systems for customer support teams: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Strong all-around IT/help desk + customer support ticketing - Good automation, SLA tracking, knowledge base - Easy to deploy on-prem and widely used 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your team already uses Atlassian tools - Great for workflows, approvals, and integrations - More technical, but very flexible 3. **OTRS Community Edition / OTRS Business Solution** - Longtime enterprise-grade ticketing platform - Good for multi-department support and complex queues - Solid on-prem option with strong customization 4. **Zammad** - Modern interface, email/web/chat ticketing - Open source and self-hostable - Easier to use than many legacy on-prem systems 5. **GLPI** - Strong ITSM + ticketing, asset management included - Good for teams that want tickets tied to inventory/devices - Popular open-source on-prem choice 6. **Freshdesk Omnichannel via private/on-prem-style deployment?** - Freshdesk itself is primarily cloud, so not ideal if you need true on-prem - I’d skip it for strict on-prem requirements ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source modern UI:** Zammad - **Best for ITSM + assets:** GLPI If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by company size** or **compare licensing/pricing** for these.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest **on-premise / self-hosted ticketing systems** for customer support teams: ### Best overall **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best for: teams that want a full-featured, polished help desk - Why: strong ticketing, SLAs, automation, knowledge base, approvals, reporting, and asset management - Good fit if you want an enterprise-ready system without needing a dev-heavy setup ### Best for technical teams **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best for: support teams working closely with engineering/IT - Why: excellent workflow automation, escalation, and tight integration with Jira/Confluence - Good fit if your support process is tied to software delivery ### Best open-source option **Zammad** - Best for: teams wanting a modern, self-hosted support desk - Why: clean UI, email/web/social channel support, macros, tags, API, and good usability - Good fit if you want something simpler than enterprise ITSM tools ### Best budget/simple choice **osTicket** - Best for: small-to-mid support teams - Why: lightweight, easy to deploy, email piping, custom fields, basic automation - Good fit if you want straightforward ticketing with low overhead ### Best for IT + support + assets **GLPI** - Best for: teams that need ticketing plus IT asset management - Why: combines help desk, inventory, CMDB-style features, and workflow control - Good fit if support also handles hardware/software tracking ### Best for complex customization **Request Tracker (RT)** - Best for: organizations with very specific workflow needs - Why: extremely flexible, stable, powerful ticket routing and permissions - Good fit if you have admin/dev resources and want deep control ### Best modern self-hosted alternative **OTOBO** - Best for: teams that want a more modern fork of OTRS-style ticketing - Why: strong queue management, automation, and service desk features - Good fit for larger support operations ## Quick picks - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Best for engineering-linked support:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source:** Zammad - **Best simple/cheap:** osTicket If you want, I can also narrow this down by **team size**, **budget**, or **whether you need email-only vs omnichannel support**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best **on-premise / self-hosted ticketing systems** for customer support teams: ### 1) **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** Best overall if you want a polished, enterprise-ready help desk. - Strong ticketing, SLAs, automations, knowledge base - Good for support + IT + internal service workflows - Mature reporting and integrations - Best fit for teams that want a full-featured, supported product ### 2) **OTRS / Znuny** Best for teams that want a flexible, classic enterprise ticketing platform. - Very capable workflow engine - Good email-to-ticket handling and queues - **Znuny** is the popular open-source continuation of OTRS - Best if you need deep customization and self-hosting control ### 3) **Jira Service Management Data Center** Best for teams already in the Atlassian ecosystem. - Excellent if your support team works closely with engineering - Strong workflow automation and integrations with Jira/Confluence - On-prem/self-managed via Data Center - Less “customer support-first” than others, but very powerful ### 4) **osTicket** Best lightweight option for smaller teams. - Simple, open-source, easy to deploy - Core ticketing features done well - Good for email-based support - Limited compared with enterprise tools, but reliable and popular ### 5) **GLPI** Best if you want ticketing plus asset management in one system. - Open-source and self-hosted - Support tickets, knowledge base, inventory/asset tracking - Great for mixed support/operations teams - UI and UX are less modern than top commercial tools ### 6) **Request Tracker (RT)** Best for highly technical teams that value robustness over polish. - Extremely stable and mature - Powerful email-driven workflows - Highly customizable - Interface feels more utilitarian than modern SaaS tools ## My short recommendation - **Best overall:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **Best open-source:** **Znuny** or **osTicket** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best for IT + support + inventory:** **GLPI** If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 comparison table**, or 2. recommendations based on your team size and budget.
What are the top on-premise ticketing system brands?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise ticketing/help desk brands include: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very popular on-prem ITSM/ticketing suite - **Atlassian Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong for teams already using Jira - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** (on-prem deployments available) — enterprise IT service management - **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM** — classic enterprise ticketing platform - **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** — simpler on-prem help desk/ticketing - **OTRS** / **Znuny** — open-source-friendly, self-hosted service desk options - **GLPI** — open-source ITSM/ticketing with asset management - **Kayako Classic** (legacy/on-prem in some setups) — less common now If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small business, mid-market, or enterprise**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Top **on-premise ticketing system** brands/products include: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — popular on-prem ITSM/help desk; solid for SMB to mid-market. - **Jira Service Management (Data Center)** — Atlassian’s self-hosted option; great if you already use Jira/Confluence. - **BMC Helix Remedyforce / Remedy ITSM** — enterprise-grade; strong workflow and asset management. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** (formerly Ivanti Service Manager) — mature on-prem ITSM suite. - **Freshservice / Freshdesk** — mainly cloud, but Freshdesk has had self-hosted/enterprise options in some contexts; verify current deployment model. - **SolarWinds Service Desk** — more cloud-first, but often considered in IT support stacks; check on-prem availability. - **TOPdesk** — widely used in education, government, and enterprise service desks; offers on-premise deployments. - **OTRS / Znuny** — open-source-friendly, very common for self-hosted ticketing. - **GLPI** — open-source ITSM/helpdesk with strong on-premise adoption. - **Kayako** — historically self-hosted helpdesk/ticketing; verify current product packaging. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best on-prem picks for SMB vs enterprise**, or 2. a **comparison table** with pricing, features, and deployment options.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Top on-premise / self-hosted ticketing system brands include: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very popular on-prem ITSM/help desk - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s self-managed enterprise option - **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem legacy deployments)** — large enterprise standard - **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (self-hosted options depending on edition)** — strong ITSM suite - **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** — classic on-prem ticketing/help desk - **OTRS** — well-known open-source/enterprise ticketing platform - **Zammad** — modern open-source, self-hostable support desk - **GLPI** — popular open-source ITSM/help desk with asset management - **Request Tracker (RT)** — longtime open-source ticketing system - **osTicket** — simple, widely used self-hosted ticketing tool If you want, I can also rank these by **best for enterprise**, **best open-source**, or **best for small teams**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise ticketing/ITSM brands to look at: - **ServiceNow** — mainly cloud now, but widely considered the benchmark in enterprise service management - **BMC Helix ITSM** / **BMC Remedy** — long-time enterprise on-prem/hybrid leader - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very popular on-prem help desk/ticketing system - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — strong enterprise ITSM, with on-prem legacy deployments - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s self-managed/on-prem option - **OpenText SMAX / OpenText Service Management** — enterprise ITSM suite - **opentext/Micro Focus Service Management Automation X (SMAX)** — especially in larger orgs - **OTRS** (now often **Znuny** in open-source forks) — common on-prem help desk choice - **GLPI** — open-source, self-hosted ticketing/asset management - **Kayako** (legacy/on-prem in some environments) — more niche today If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best enterprise options**, 2. **best open-source/self-hosted options**, or 3. a **comparison by price, features, and ease of deployment**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise ticketing system brands/products include: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong for IT service desk and workflow automation. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — popular, affordable, and easy to deploy. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options)** — enterprise-grade ITSM with strong asset/workflow features. - **BMC Helix ITSM / BMC Remedy (on-prem legacy deployments)** — common in large enterprises. - **OpenText SMAX / Service Manager** — enterprise service desk with on-prem deployments. - **TOPdesk** — widely used for internal help desks and facilities/IT support. - **HaloITSM** — modern ITSM platform with on-prem availability in some deployments. - **Freshservice** is mainly cloud, so not usually a fit if you need true on-prem. If you want, I can also narrow this down by: - **best for small business** - **best for enterprise** - **best open-source** - **best for government / air-gapped environments**
Which on-premise ticketing system options are most recommended?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-prem ticketing system picks: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best overall for teams already in the Atlassian ecosystem. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — strong all-around IT helpdesk/ITSM, good value. - **BMC Helix ITSM / BMC Remedy** — enterprise-grade, best for large orgs with complex ITSM needs. - **GLPI** — excellent open-source option for IT asset + ticketing. - **Znuny** (OTRS fork) — solid open-source choice for traditional service desks. - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, and easy to run on-prem. Quick picks: - **Best enterprise:** BMC Helix ITSM - **Best mid-market:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best Atlassian shop:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open source:** GLPI or Znuny - **Best simple helpdesk:** osTicket If you want, I can narrow this to **Windows-only**, **Linux/on-prem**, **open-source only**, or **best for 50/500/5000 users**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise ticketing/help desk systems I’d recommend: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best all-around choice for many IT teams - Good UI, ITIL features, asset management, easy deployment - Strong value for SMB to mid-market 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your org already uses Atlassian - Strong for dev/IT workflows, approvals, automation - More powerful, but can be heavier to manage 3. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (On-Premises / legacy on-prem deployments)** - Best for larger enterprise ITSM - Deep incident/problem/change management - More complex and typically pricier 4. **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem or private cloud depending edition)** - Best for large enterprises with strict process requirements - Very robust, but usually expensive and admin-heavy 5. **GLPI** - Best open-source-style on-prem option - Great if you want ticketing + asset management at low cost - Very popular in public sector and smaller IT teams 6. **Znuny (fork of OTRS)** - Best lightweight open-source ticketing system - Solid for email-based support desks - Less polished than paid enterprise tools ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best budget/open source:** GLPI - **Best enterprise:** BMC Helix ITSM or Ivanti If you want, I can also narrow this down by **company size, budget, and whether you need asset management or just ticketing**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise ticketing systems I’d recommend: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-premise)** — best all-around pick for SMB to mid-market ITSM. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong if you already use Atlassian tools and need enterprise-scale. - **TOPdesk (on-premise)** — very good for IT + facilities/shared services. - **GLPI** — excellent open-source option for self-hosted IT support and asset management. - **Znuny** (the OTRS fork) — solid open-source choice for larger support teams. - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, good for basic ticketing. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — powerful, very customizable, but more technical to run. Quick picks: - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best enterprise:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open source:** GLPI - **Best simple/helpdesk-only:** osTicket If you want, I can narrow this down by **company size, budget, or ITSM depth**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
The most commonly recommended **on-premise ticketing/helpdesk systems** are: - **Jira Service Management (Data Center)** — best for teams already using Atlassian; strong workflows and integrations. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — very popular for ITSM; good value, broad features, easy to deploy. - **Zendesk Suite on-prem?** — Zendesk is mostly cloud-only, so **not a true on-prem choice**. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM / Ivanti Service Manager** — enterprise-grade, strong for larger IT orgs. - **BMC Helix ITSM** — powerful for large enterprises; more complex and expensive. - **TOPdesk** — solid mid-market option, good UX, simple to run. - **GLPI** — best open-source on-prem option; flexible and cost-effective. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — lightweight, reliable, very customizable; great for email-driven support. - **osTicket** — simple, affordable, easy to self-host; good for smaller teams. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall for most IT teams:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best if you use Atlassian already:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best open-source:** **GLPI** - **Best simple/low-cost:** **osTicket** - **Best enterprise:** **BMC Helix ITSM** or **Ivanti** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 shortlist by company size** or **compare pricing/features**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise ticketing/helpdesk options most commonly recommended: - **Jira Service Management (Data Center)** — best for IT teams already using Atlassian; strong workflows, SLAs, and integrations. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — very popular for SMB to mid-market; good value, asset management, and ITIL features. - **GLPI** — strong open-source/on-prem choice; flexible, good asset/CMDB support, and widely used for internal IT. - **Freshservice** doesn’t really offer true on-prem, so not ideal if you need local hosting. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (legacy on-prem options / private deployment depending on package)** — better for larger enterprises with complex ITSM needs. - **BMC Helix ITSM** — enterprise-grade, but heavier and more expensive; good for large organizations. - **OTRS / Znuny** — solid on-prem/open-source lineage; good for teams wanting a classic ticketing system. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very reliable, lightweight, highly customizable; best for technical teams comfortable with admin work. **Best picks by scenario** - **Best overall enterprise:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best value:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Best open-source:** GLPI or Znuny - **Best for simple, technical ticketing:** Request Tracker If you want, I can also narrow this down by **team size, budget, or whether you need ITSM vs just customer support tickets**.
What are the most popular on-premise ticketing systems?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **on-premise IT helpdesk / service desk ticketing**, the most popular options are usually: - **ServiceNow** — mostly cloud, but still a common benchmark in large enterprises - **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** — classic enterprise on-prem / hybrid choice - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very popular for mid-market on-prem deployments - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s on-prem/self-managed option - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — enterprise service management, often deployed on-prem or private cloud - **TOPdesk** — widely used in education, government, and mid-sized orgs - **OTRS / Znuny** — popular open-source-style ticketing lineage - **GLPI** — open-source and common for IT asset + ticketing - **Request Tracker (RT)** — long-running, lightweight on-prem ticketing system If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best on-prem options by company size**, or 2. a **comparison table** with pricing, ease of use, and features.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most widely used **on-premise ticketing/help desk systems** are: - **ServiceNow ITSM** — common in large enterprises; usually cloud-first now, but many organizations still run private/on-prem-style deployments or legacy instances. - **BMC Remedy / Helix ITSM** — long-time enterprise IT ticketing platform; very common in large orgs. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — popular with SMBs and mid-market; has strong on-premise options. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — formerly HEAT; often used on-premise in enterprise environments. - **Freshservice** — mostly cloud, so not truly on-premise; mentioning only because it’s often compared, but it’s not the right pick if you need local hosting. - **OTRS / Znuny** — open-source/help desk style ticketing; popular for organizations wanting self-hosted control. - **GLPI** — open-source, self-hosted ITSM/ticketing with asset management; very popular in IT departments. - **Jira Service Management** — formerly had server/on-prem; Atlassian Server is discontinued, so it’s no longer a current on-prem choice for new deployments. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best on-prem options for SMBs**, 2. **best enterprise on-prem ITSM systems**, or 3. a **feature comparison table**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean **on-premise IT/helpdesk ticketing systems**, the most popular ones are: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very common in SMB/mid-market; solid on-prem option. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — popular for teams already using Atlassian. - **TOPdesk** — widely used in enterprise and higher ed. - **Ivanti Service Manager** — strong ITSM / ITIL-focused on-prem deployment. - **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (legacy on-prem installs)** — common in large enterprises. - **GLPI** — popular open-source, self-hosted choice. - **OTRS / OTOBO** — popular self-hosted ticketing/helpdesk platforms. - **Zendesk** — mostly cloud now, so not a fit if you specifically need on-prem. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 by company size**, or 2. a **comparison table** with pricing, features, and deployment options.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **on-premise IT/help desk ticketing systems**, the most popular ones are: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — very common in larger orgs that want Atlassian/on-prem control. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — one of the most widely used on-prem ITSM tools. - **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** — enterprise heavyweight, often used in large IT shops. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** (on-prem/private deployments) — popular in enterprise environments. - **OTRS / OTRS Community Edition** — long-standing ticketing platform, especially in service desks. - **GLPI** — popular open-source choice for IT support and asset management. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — mature, flexible, still used a lot in technical teams. - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, very common for smaller teams. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best on-prem options by company size**, or 2. **event ticketing systems** instead of help desk systems.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **on-premise IT/service desk ticketing systems**, the most commonly used are: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — very popular in larger teams already using Atlassian - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — one of the best-known true on-prem options - **GLPI** — popular open-source ITSM/ticketing platform - **osTicket** — widely used, simple, lightweight open-source helpdesk - **OTRS / Znuny** — classic enterprise ticketing system, still common on-prem - **Request Tracker (RT)** — mature, flexible, often used in technical environments - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — enterprise ITSM, often deployed on-prem or private cloud - **BMC Remedy / Helix ITSM** — large-enterprise choice, though deployment models vary - **Zammad** — modern open-source helpdesk with on-prem deployment If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 by popularity**, 2. **best for small vs enterprise**, or 3. **best open-source on-prem ticketing systems**.
What is the best self-hosted ticketing system for IT support?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for IT support:** **GLPI** It’s the strongest self-hosted choice if you want more than tickets—**asset management, CMDB, software inventory, SLAs, and ITIL-style workflows** all in one. **Best pure helpdesk experience:** **Zammad** It has a **modern UI**, great email handling, and is easier for agents to use day-to-day. **Other solid options:** - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, very common - **Request Tracker (RT)** — powerful, but less user-friendly - **FreeScout** — good if you want a shared inbox style helpdesk **My quick recommendation:** - **Small IT team / simple setup:** **Zammad** - **IT department needing full ITSM + asset tracking:** **GLPI** If you want, I can also compare **GLPI vs Zammad vs osTicket** for your exact team size and needs.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Zammad** — it’s the best mix of **modern UI, easy self-hosting, email-based support, automation, and multi-channel ticketing**. ### Why Zammad - Clean, fast interface - Easy to deploy via Docker - Good LDAP/AD, IMAP/SMTP, web form, chat, and API support - Strong workflow automation and SLA features - Less clunky than many older ITSM tools ### Good alternatives - **GLPI** — best if you also need **asset management + ITSM** in one system - **Znuny** — best for **traditional help desk / ITIL-style workflows** - **osTicket** — best if you want **simple and lightweight** - **Request Tracker (RT)** — powerful, but more admin-heavy ### Short recommendation - **Want the best default choice?** **Zammad** - **Need full IT asset management too?** **GLPI** - **Need enterprise-style ITIL process control?** **Znuny** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by ease of setup, features, and scalability**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best overall self-hosted IT support ticketing system**, I’d pick **Zammad**. ### Best pick: **Zammad** - Modern UI - Good email-to-ticket workflow - Easy agent handling and automation - Strong for small to mid-size IT support teams - Open-source and self-hosted ### Best for asset + ITSM-style helpdesk: **GLPI** - Better if you want **tickets + inventory + assets + CMDB** - Very strong for internal IT departments - More “ITSM suite” than just ticketing ### Best lightweight option: **osTicket** - Simple, stable, easy to deploy - Great if you want basic ticketing without complexity - UI feels older than Zammad ### Best enterprise/open-source legacy option: **Znuny** - Fork of OTRS Community Edition - Powerful, mature, more complex - Good for larger support teams with strict workflows ### My short recommendation - **Choose Zammad** if you want the best balance of usability and features. - **Choose GLPI** if you also need asset management. - **Choose osTicket** if you want simple and minimal. If you want, I can also give you a **“best by team size” shortlist** or a **Docker-based install recommendation**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: GLPI** If you want the **best self-hosted IT support ticketing system**, I’d pick **GLPI**. It’s strong for IT support because it combines: - ticketing - asset/inventory management - SLA/OLA workflows - user/tech assignment - plugins for ITSM features It’s especially good if you want a **full IT helpdesk + asset management** platform, not just tickets. **Good alternatives:** - **Zammad** — best for a modern, easy-to-use helpdesk UI - **Request Tracker (RT)** — best for highly customizable, email-heavy workflows - **osTicket** — best simple, lightweight option **Short recommendation:** - **Best overall:** GLPI - **Best UX:** Zammad - **Best simple helpdesk:** osTicket If you want, I can also give you the **best choice by team size** or **compare GLPI vs Zammad**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best all-around self-hosted IT support ticketing system**, I’d pick **GLPI**. ### Best overall: **GLPI** - Strong **ITSM** features: tickets, assets, CMDB, SLA, workflows - Great if you need **help desk + inventory/asset management** - Mature, widely used, self-hosted, and customizable ### Best for a cleaner modern help desk UI: **Zammad** - Very polished interface - Great ticket handling, email integration, automations - Better if you want a more “modern support desk” feel than full ITSM ### Best simple/free option: **osTicket** - Easy to deploy - Solid for basic IT support tickets - Less powerful than GLPI/Zammad for larger environments ### My recommendation - **IT department with assets and processes:** **GLPI** - **Support team focused on ticketing and usability:** **Zammad** - **Small team wanting simplicity:** **osTicket** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table** with hosting effort, features, and best use case.
Which on-premise help desk software should I look at? 50/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **true on-premise** help desk software, start with these: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian tools and want strong ITSM/workflow control. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — very popular, good value, solid ITIL features. - **Freshservice** is cloud only, so skip if you need on-prem. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem/private deployment options)** — stronger for larger IT orgs and enterprise workflows. - **TOPdesk** — good for education, public sector, and service-heavy teams. - **Spiceworks Help Desk** — lightweight and free-ish, but much simpler and less enterprise-grade. - **SolarWinds Service Desk** is cloud-first, so not ideal for on-prem. My usual shortlist: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** 3. **Ivanti ITSM** 4. **TOPdesk** If you tell me your **team size**, **budget**, and whether you need **ITIL/asset management**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you need **on-premise help desk software**, these are the main ones worth looking at: ### Best-known options - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — strong all-around IT/help desk platform, good value, popular for on-prem deployments. - **Jitbit Helpdesk** — simpler, lighter-weight, easier to set up and run on your own server. - **Kayako** — more customer support–oriented, but has self-hosted/on-prem options in some deployments. - **Spiceworks Help Desk** — free and easy to start with, though more limited and less “enterprise” than the others. - **osTicket** — open-source, very common, flexible, and inexpensive if you have technical staff. - **OTRS / Znuny** — good for larger orgs needing workflow-heavy ticketing; **Znuny** is the open-source continuation many people use now. ### If you want enterprise ITSM - **ServiceDesk Plus** - **OTRS/Znuny** - **SolarWinds Service Desk** is worth a look, but note it’s primarily cloud now rather than true on-prem. ### If you want simple and low-cost - **Jitbit Helpdesk** - **osTicket** - **Spiceworks Help Desk** ### My quick shortlist - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best lightweight on-prem:** Jitbit Helpdesk - **Best open-source:** osTicket - **Best for complex workflows:** Znuny If you tell me your **team size, budget, and whether you need ITIL/asset management**, I can narrow it to 2–3 best fits.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **true on-premise help desk software**, these are the main ones worth looking at: ### Best overall - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Strong ITSM/ITIL features, CMDB, asset management, approvals, SLAs - Good fit for SMB to mid-enterprise - Available as **on-prem** and mature ### Best for simplicity - **Jitbit Helpdesk** - Lightweight, easy to deploy, Windows/IIS-friendly - Great for small IT teams that want ticketing without a lot of complexity ### Best open-source - **GLPI** - Full on-prem open-source option - Strong asset/inventory + help desk - Best if you want flexibility and don’t mind a bit more setup ### Best budget ticketing - **osTicket** - Simple, reliable, inexpensive - Good for basic ticket workflows, email piping, and queues - Less ideal if you need deep ITSM features ### Best if you’re already in Atlassian - **Jira Service Management Data Center** - On-prem/self-managed - Best for teams already using Jira/Confluence - More expensive and heavier to run ### Best mid-market enterprise option - **TOPdesk** - Solid UX, IT service management workflows, good for internal support desks - Often used in education, government, and enterprise environments ### Enterprise-heavy option - **BMC FootPrints** - Strong for larger orgs with complex support processes - More enterprise-oriented, usually pricier ## Quick recommendation - **Most companies:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Small team:** Jitbit or osTicket - **Open-source:** GLPI - **Atlassian shop:** Jira Service Management Data Center If you want, I can narrow this down by **company size, budget, Windows/Linux preference, and whether you need asset management or just ticketing**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Good on-prem help desk options to look at: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very common on-prem IT help desk; solid ITIL features, asset management, workflows. - **Freshservice?** — mostly cloud, so **not** a fit if you need true on-prem. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian; on-prem/data-center deployment. - **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** — enterprise-grade, powerful, but heavier and pricier. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options)** — good for larger IT environments and endpoint-heavy orgs. - **TOPdesk** — strong in education, government, and mid-market service desks; offers on-prem deployments. - **GLPI** — open-source, lightweight, great value if you have technical admin support. - **OTRS / Znuny** — ticketing-focused, open-source lineage, flexible for custom workflows. - **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** — simpler help desk/ticketing; good for smaller IT teams. If you want a short list: - **Best overall mid-market:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best if you’re Atlassian-based:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source:** GLPI - **Best enterprise:** BMC Helix ITSM or Ivanti If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you need asset management/ITIL, I can narrow it to 3 picks.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **on-premise help desk software**, these are the main ones worth looking at: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — probably the strongest all-around on-prem option; ITIL-friendly, good asset management, popular for internal IT teams. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if your team already uses Atlassian; strong workflow automation and dev/ops integration. - **Freshservice** is **not** on-prem, so skip it if you need true local hosting. - **BMC Helix ITSM** — enterprise-grade, very powerful, but usually expensive and heavier to implement. - **SolarWinds Service Desk** — check carefully, because this is mainly cloud; not the right fit for strict on-prem needs. - **InvGate Service Management** — solid modern alternative, and they offer on-prem deployments. - **Kayako** — simpler help desk option; good for support teams, but less ITSM-heavy. - **OTRS** / **Znuny** — good if you want a more open-source/self-hosted path, with Znuny being the more active fork. If you want the shortest shortlist: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** 3. **InvGate Service Management** 4. **BMC Helix ITSM** if you’re enterprise If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you need **ITSM / asset management / email-only ticketing**, I can narrow it to 2–3 best fits.
What are the best self-hosted help desk tools for businesses?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best self-hosted help desk tools for businesses: 1. **Zammad** - Best overall for modern UI, multi-channel support, and automation - Strong email, chat, phone, and ticket workflows - Good choice for SMBs and mid-market teams 2. **FreeScout** - Best lightweight option, often called a self-hosted alternative to Front/Help Scout - Simple to deploy, fast, and easy for small teams - Great if you want shared inbox + basic ticketing 3. **osTicket** - Best for classic ticketing on a budget - Mature, reliable, and widely used - Good if you mainly need email-to-ticket and simple workflows 4. **UVdesk** - Best for businesses that want e-commerce integrations - Strong on Shopify, Magento, WooCommerce, and multichannel support - Good fit for online stores and customer service teams 5. **HESK** - Best very simple help desk for small businesses - Easy to set up, minimal learning curve - Lighter feature set, but solid for basic support 6. **GLPI** - Best for IT support / internal service desk - Includes asset management, inventory, and ITSM-style features - Ideal for internal IT teams more than customer support **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Best simple inbox:** FreeScout - **Best budget ticketing:** osTicket - **Best for IT teams:** GLPI - **Best for e-commerce:** UVdesk If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of installation**, **features**, or **best Docker deployments**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **self-hosted help desk tools** for businesses: ### Top picks - **Zammad** — Modern UI, email/ticket/chat/social channel support, great for teams that want a polished experience. - **osTicket** — Simple, popular, reliable, and easy to self-host. Best for straightforward ticketing. - **FreeScout** — Lightweight, clean shared inbox/help desk, good for small to mid-sized teams. - **Znuny** — Enterprise-grade, very powerful, and flexible. Best if you need complex workflows. - **GLPI** — Best if you want **help desk + IT asset management** in one system. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — Very mature and highly configurable, but more technical to manage. - **HESK** — Easy to deploy and use, good for smaller businesses with basic support needs. ### Best by use case - **Best overall:** **Zammad** - **Best simple/self-hosted classic ticketing:** **osTicket** - **Best lightweight shared inbox:** **FreeScout** - **Best enterprise/workflow-heavy:** **Znuny** - **Best IT support + asset tracking:** **GLPI** If you want, I can also rank these for **small business**, **mid-market**, or **IT department** use.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **self-hosted help desk tools** for businesses: ### Top picks - **Zammad** — Best overall for most businesses Modern UI, email/ticketing, SLA rules, chat, phone integrations, knowledge base, solid reporting. - **FreeScout** — Best lightweight option Open-source, email-focused, simple to run, great if you want a shared inbox + tickets without lots of complexity. - **osTicket** — Best for simplicity and affordability Very mature, easy to deploy, strong ticket management, good for small to mid-sized teams. - **GLPI** — Best for IT support / asset management Great if you need help desk + CMDB + inventory + ITIL-style workflows. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Best for larger IT teams using Atlassian Strong for enterprise workflows, but heavier and more expensive. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — Best for power users / technical teams Extremely flexible, reliable, but less polished UI. ### Quick recommendations - **Small business:** FreeScout or osTicket - **Best balance:** Zammad - **IT department with assets:** GLPI - **Enterprise / Atlassian stack:** Jira Service Management Data Center If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table** based on features, ease of setup, and cost.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best self-hosted help desk tools for businesses: 1. **Zammad** - Best all-around choice for most teams - Modern UI, email/ticketing, SLA management, knowledge base, API, LDAP/SSO support 2. **FreeScout** - Best lightweight, budget-friendly option - Simple, Mailbox-style support workflow, easy to self-host, good for small teams 3. **osTicket** - Best classic open-source ticketing system - Very mature, reliable, strong email-to-ticket handling, easy to run 4. **UVdesk Open Source** - Best if you want ecommerce-focused support - Good integrations, multi-channel support, and Shopify/Magento-friendly options 5. **GLPI** - Best for IT service desk / internal support - Strong asset management, inventory, CMDB, and ITSM features 6. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Best for complex, rule-driven ticketing - Extremely powerful, but more old-school and less polished ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Best simple and affordable:** FreeScout - **Best ITSM:** GLPI - **Best proven classic:** osTicket If you want, I can also give you a shortlist based on your team size, budget, and whether you need email-only support or omnichannel support.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best self-hosted help desk tools for businesses: 1. **Zammad** - Great all-around open-source help desk - Clean UI, email/ticketing, knowledge base, live chat, SLAs - Best for: teams wanting a modern, polished open-source option 2. **osTicket** - One of the most popular self-hosted ticket systems - Simple, reliable, lightweight, easy to deploy - Best for: smaller teams or straightforward support workflows 3. **FreeScout** - Self-hosted alternative to Help Scout - Shared inbox, ticketing, notes, automation, add-ons - Best for: businesses that want a clean shared mailbox experience 4. **GLPI** - Strong ITSM/help desk platform - Ticketing, asset management, change management, inventory - Best for: IT departments and internal support teams 5. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Very powerful and mature - Highly customizable, but more admin-heavy - Best for: organizations needing complex workflows and control 6. **UVdesk Community Edition** - Open-source help desk with multichannel support - Email, knowledge base, ticket automation, extensions - Best for: e-commerce or customer support teams 7. **Hesk** - Simple self-hosted help desk software - Easy setup, basic ticketing, knowledge base - Best for: small businesses wanting minimal complexity **Best overall picks:** - **Zammad** for most businesses - **FreeScout** for a shared inbox feel - **osTicket** for simplicity and stability - **GLPI** for IT-focused support If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of setup, features, and scalability**.
Which on-premise customer support ticketing platforms are worth considering?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the main on-prem / self-hosted customer support ticketing platforms worth a look: - **Jira Service Management (Data Center)** — strong if you already use Atlassian; good IT/service workflows, automation, and integrations. - **OTRS / Znuny** — classic help desk/ticketing with solid on-prem deployment options; **Znuny** is the popular open-source fork if you want more control. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** — very practical for IT/help desk teams; broad feature set, asset management, and decent reporting. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options / legacy on-prem deployments)** — better for larger enterprises with more complex service management needs. - **SolarWinds Service Desk** — mostly cloud today, so not a top on-prem pick, but worth noting only if hybrid deployment is possible in your environment. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — mature open-source ticketing system; not flashy, but reliable and highly customizable. - **osTicket** — lightweight open-source option; simple to deploy and good for smaller teams. - **GLPI** — open-source ITSM/help desk with ticketing plus inventory/asset features; strong choice if you want more than just tickets. - **Kayako (legacy on-prem versions)** — historically solid, but check current product availability carefully before planning around it. If you want the safest short list: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** 3. **Znuny / OTRS** 4. **GLPI** 5. **osTicket** for simple needs If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you need email-only support vs full ITSM, I can narrow this to 3 best fits.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the main **on-premise / self-hosted customer support ticketing platforms** worth looking at: ### Strong options - **Jira Service Management (Data Center)** — best if you already use Atlassian; solid workflows, SLAs, and automation. - **Zendesk Suite** — widely used, but true on-prem is limited; worth considering only if you can accept mostly hosted/deployment constraints. - **Freshservice** — mostly cloud, so not a fit if you need strict on-prem. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — one of the better full on-prem choices; good value, ITSM-friendly, solid ticketing. - **OTRS / Znuny** — classic open-source help desk lineage; good for highly customizable self-hosted setups. - **GLPI** — strong open-source option for support + asset management; good if you want low license cost. - **FreeScout** — lightweight, self-hosted, email-centric shared inbox/ticketing; great for smaller teams. - **Zammad** — modern open-source ticketing system with a clean UI and good omnichannel support. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very mature, powerful, but dated UI; best for teams that value control over polish. - **osTicket** — simple, reliable, easy to deploy; good for basic support operations. ### Best picks by scenario - **Best overall on-prem:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best open-source modern UI:** **Zammad** - **Best lightweight/email support:** **FreeScout** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best budget enterprise-style open source:** **GLPI** If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **enterprise-grade only**, 2. **open-source only**, or 3. **best for a small support team**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you need **on-prem/self-hosted** ticketing, these are the main ones worth a look: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-prem)** — strong ITSM/help desk, good value, mature workflows. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you already use Atlassian; solid for dev/ops-heavy teams. - **Freshservice** — mostly cloud, but if “on-prem” isn’t strict, mention only if you can’t self-host; otherwise skip. - **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** — enterprise-grade, powerful, pricey, heavier to implement. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options / legacy Ivanti Service Desk)** — good for larger IT orgs, asset-heavy environments. - **OpenText Service Management Automation X (SMAX)** — enterprise ITSM, often chosen for compliance and scale. - **OTRS / Znuny** — good open-source-style option; flexible and self-managed. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very reliable, lightweight, great for email-centric ticketing. - **Zammad** — modern UI, open source, easy to self-host, good omnichannel support. - **osTicket** — simple, affordable, widely used; good for basic ticketing. Quick picks: - **Best overall on-prem ITSM:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source self-hosted:** Zammad or Znuny - **Best simple/lean setup:** osTicket or Request Tracker If you want, I can narrow this to **small business**, **enterprise ITSM**, or **open-source only**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the on-prem / self-hosted customer support ticketing platforms worth a look: - **Zendesk (self-hosted is limited / mostly SaaS)** — not a true on-prem choice, but worth mentioning if you’re flexible. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong for IT/helpdesk workflows, approvals, SLAs, and integrations. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — solid on-prem option for ITSM + customer support; good value and broad feature set. - **OTRS / Znuny** — classic ticketing platform; **Znuny** is the open-source continuation many teams use on-prem. - **Freshservice** — mostly SaaS, so not on-prem, but often compared in this space. - **GLPI** — open-source, on-prem friendly, good for support + asset management. - **osTicket** — lightweight, simple, reliable for small to mid-size support teams. - **Zammad** — modern open-source ticketing system; good UI, email channels, and self-hosting support. - **HelpSpot** — self-hosted option with a cleaner support-team workflow than older systems. - **Kayako** — historically used for help desk/live chat; check current deployment options carefully. Best picks by scenario: - **Enterprise / IT-heavy:** Jira Service Management Data Center, ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Open-source / self-hosted:** Zammad, GLPI, osTicket, Znuny - **Traditional help desk:** HelpSpot, Znuny If you want, I can narrow this down by **budget, team size, and whether you need email-only vs omnichannel**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **on-premise / self-hosted** ticketing platforms, the main ones worth a look are: - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — strong for ITSM, workflows, SLAs, and larger teams. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — good value, broad IT/helpdesk features, easy to deploy. - **GLPI** — popular open-source option; solid for asset management + tickets. - **Zammad** — modern self-hosted helpdesk with a clean UI and good omni-channel support. - **UVdesk Self-Hosted** — solid for customer support and e-commerce use cases. - **HelpDeskZ** — lightweight open-source ticketing, simpler than the others. - **Kayako** — check carefully for current deployment model, but historically used in self-hosted setups. - **osTicket** — very common open-source ticketing system; simple and proven. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — extremely flexible, best if you’re comfortable with a more technical setup. - **OTOBO / OTRS** — enterprise-grade service desk style platforms, good for complex workflows. **Best picks by scenario:** - **Enterprise ITSM:** Jira Service Management Data Center, ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Open-source / budget:** GLPI, osTicket, Zammad - **Complex workflow / customization:** Request Tracker, OTOBO If you tell me your team size and whether you need **email-to-ticket, live chat, SLA rules, asset management, or omnichannel**, I can narrow this to 3 best options.
What are the leading on-premise service desk systems?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Leading on-premise service desk systems include: - **BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem/private cloud options)** — strong enterprise ITSM, change/problem/incident management - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM / Ivanti Service Manager** — popular for on-prem deployments and endpoint-heavy environments - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** — widely used, cost-effective, good for SMB to mid-market - **Freshservice** is cloud-first, so not on-prem; skip if you need true self-hosted - **TOPdesk** — solid on-prem option, especially in education and public sector - **Matrix42 Service Management** — good on-prem/self-hosted choice, especially in Europe - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s on-prem-ish enterprise option for self-managed deployments - **OpenText SMAX / OpenText Service Management** — enterprise service desk with on-prem/private deployment options - **EasyVista EV Service Manager** — available for controlled/private deployments, enterprise ITSM - **Hornbill** is mostly SaaS, so generally not the go-to for on-prem If you want the **most common picks by segment**: - **Best enterprise:** BMC Helix ITSM, Ivanti, OpenText - **Best mid-market:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus, TOPdesk, Matrix42 - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked by features, cost, or ease of deployment**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise service desk systems include: - **BMC Remedy ITSM / Helix ITSM (on-prem options)** — strong enterprise ITSM, incident/change/problem workflows. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem / private deployment options)** — good for service desk, asset management, and automation. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-prem)** — popular mid-market choice; easy to deploy, solid value. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best if you want Atlassian integration and an on-prem clusterable setup. - **Micro Focus / OpenText Service Management Automation X (SMAX)** — enterprise-grade ITSM with on-prem/private deployment. - **TOPdesk** — widely used in education, government, and mid-market service desks; offers on-premise installations. - **SolarWinds Service Desk** is mostly cloud, so not a fit if you need true on-prem. - **Freshservice** is cloud-only. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for enterprise**, **best value**, or **best for government/regulated environments**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean **self-hosted / on-prem IT service desk (ITSM)**, the leading options are: - **ServiceNow IT Service Management** — mostly cloud now, but often the benchmark to compare against. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s self-managed option; strong for teams already using Jira. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — very popular on-prem choice; good value and broad ITSM features. - **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** — long-time enterprise standard; strong in large, complex environments. - **TOPdesk** — solid on-prem ITSM/service desk, especially in education and public sector. - **Ivanti (Neurons / Ivanti Service Manager)** — enterprise ITSM with on-prem/self-hosted options depending on edition. - **Matrix42** — common in Europe; good on-prem service management suite. - **Cherwell Service Management** — legacy but still seen in on-prem installs. - **GLPI** — widely used open-source option; good for lower-cost deployments. - **iTop** — open-source, CMDB/ITSM-focused, often used on-prem. - **OTRS / Znuny** — ticketing-heavy, open-source/self-hosted service desk. - **Alemba vFire** — enterprise ITSM, typically on-prem. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **best-by-budget list**, 2. a **best-for-enterprise list**, or 3. a **shortlist for 100% on-prem only**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Leading on-premise service desk systems include: - **BMC Helix ITSM / BMC Remedy** — long-time enterprise standard for large IT environments. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (formerly Ivanti Service Manager / HEAT)** — strong on-prem and hybrid support. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — popular mid-market choice; available in on-prem editions. - **OpenText SMAX / OpenText Service Management** — enterprise service management with on-prem options. - **OpenText Asset Management / Micro Focus Service Management Automation (SMA)** — common in larger legacy IT shops. - **TOPdesk** — well-liked in education, government, and mid-sized enterprises; offers on-prem. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s self-managed option for teams already using Jira/Confluence. - **Freshservice** is mostly cloud, so not usually counted as on-prem. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **best-for-enterprise** shortlist, or 2. a **compare-by-price/features** table.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Leading on-premise service desk systems include: - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — strong SMB/mid-market choice, widely used on-prem. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best for Atlassian shops that want self-managed deployment. - **BMC Helix ITSM / BMC Remedy** — enterprise-grade, very mature ITSM suite. - **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** — formerly HEAT; solid on-prem/service management option. - **TOPdesk** — popular in education, public sector, and mid-market environments. - **OpenText Service Management Automation X (SMAX)** — enterprise ITSM with on-prem/self-hosted options. - **SysAid** — simpler deployment, good for smaller IT teams. - **ALVAO Service Desk** — good Microsoft-centric on-prem choice. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small business, enterprise, or lowest cost**.
What are the best on-premise IT ticketing systems for enterprises?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
If you need **enterprise-grade, on-premise** IT ticketing/ITSM, the best-known options are: ### Top picks 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best overall for many enterprises - Strong ITIL features, asset management, workflow automation, approvals, reporting - Good value vs. larger suites 2. **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (on-prem / private deployment options, depending on version)** - Best for very large enterprises - Deep ITSM capability, complex workflows, strong CMDB - Heavier to implement/administer 3. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your org already uses Atlassian - Excellent for DevOps/engineering-heavy environments - Flexible, scalable, good integration with Jira/Confluence 4. **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (legacy on-prem options)** - Strong enterprise ITSM and service automation - Good for endpoint/asset-heavy environments - Worth checking current deployment model carefully 5. **OpenText SMAX / OpenText Service Management Automation** - Best for organizations that want broader enterprise service management - More complex, but powerful for large deployments ### Good lower-cost / open-source options 6. **GLPI** - Solid on-prem open-source choice - Good asset + ticketing + inventory - Enterprise support available via partners 7. **Znuny** (OTRS fork) - Reliable, lightweight on-prem helpdesk/ticketing - Strong workflow/ticket handling - Less “enterprise suite” than the big platforms ### My quick recommendation - **Best balance of power + cost:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best for very large, complex enterprises:** **BMC Remedy / Helix ITSM** - **Best open-source option:** **GLPI** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by company size**, or compare them on **pricing, CMDB, asset management, SLA handling, and reporting**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
If you need **true on-premises IT ticketing** for enterprise use, these are the strongest options: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - Best all-around value - Strong ITIL/ITSM features, CMDB, asset management, approvals - Easier to deploy/admin than many enterprise suites 2. **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM (customer-managed options vary)** - Best for large, complex enterprise environments - Very deep ITSM workflow and change/problem management - Best if you already have a big BMC footprint 3. **Ivanti Service Manager / Ivanti Neurons for ITSM** - Good enterprise-grade workflow automation - Solid for multi-department service management - Often chosen for larger internal IT teams 4. **TOPdesk (on-prem / self-hosted where available)** - Best for ease of use and service desk adoption - Clean UI, good for incident/request management - Popular in universities, government, and mid-to-large enterprises 5. **OTRS / OTRS Business Solution** - Best for straightforward, highly customizable ticketing - Good if you want flexibility and lower complexity - Common in regulated or security-sensitive environments 6. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your org already uses Atlassian tools - Strong for IT + engineering workflows - Not a classic ITSM suite like ServiceNow, but very effective on-prem ### Best picks by scenario - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Best large enterprise:** BMC Remedy / Helix ITSM - **Best Atlassian shop:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best simple/self-hosted:** OTRS If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by company size, budget, or compliance needs**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you need **true on-prem / self-hosted IT ticketing for enterprise**, these are the strongest options: ### Best overall 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (on-premises)** - Strong ITIL/ITSM coverage - Good enterprise features, CMDB, approvals, workflows - Often the best value for on-prem deployments 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if your org already uses Atlassian - Scales well, flexible workflows, strong integrations - Great for internal IT + DevOps-heavy enterprises 3. **BMC Helix ITSM / BMC Remedy (self-managed legacy deployments)** - Deep enterprise ITSM heritage - Strong for complex, large organizations - Best for heavyweight ITIL processes and customization ### Also worth considering 4. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (self-hosted / on-prem options depending on edition)** - Good endpoint + service management combination - Solid for organizations already using Ivanti 5. **TOPdesk (on-prem available in some deployments)** - Clean UI, easy adoption - Good for mid-to-large enterprises with simpler needs 6. **SysAid (on-prem version available in some environments)** - Fast to deploy, strong automation - Better for mid-market than very large global enterprises ### Quick recommendation - **Best value:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best at scale with Atlassian stack:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best for strict enterprise ITIL:** **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM** If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by company size** or a **feature comparison table**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
For **enterprise on-prem IT ticketing**, the strongest picks are usually: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** Best all-around value. Strong ITIL/process support, asset management, approvals, workflows, good enterprise features. 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** Best if your org already uses Atlassian. Great for dev/IT collaboration, scalable, and fully self-managed. 3. **BMC Remedy ITSM** Best for very large, complex enterprises. Deep ITSM/ITIL depth, strong change/problem management, but heavier to implement. 4. **TOPdesk (On-premises)** Best for straightforward service desk operations with solid usability and good enterprise workflow support. 5. **Ivanti Service Manager / legacy Cherwell deployments** Good enterprise ITSM choice if you need flexible workflows and integration-heavy environments. 6. **GLPI** Best open-source on-prem option. Good for asset + ticketing, but less polished than the big commercial suites. 7. **OTRS / Znuny** Strong for customizable, self-hosted ticketing. Better for teams that want control and don’t mind more admin work. ### My quick recommendations - **Best overall:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best for huge enterprises:** **BMC Remedy ITSM** - **Best open-source:** **GLPI** If you want, I can also give you a **top-5 comparison by price, scalability, and ITIL depth**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Top on-prem enterprise IT ticketing systems: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** - Best value for large IT teams - Strong incident/problem/change management, CMDB, self-service portal 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center (Atlassian)** - Best if you already use Jira/Confluence - Great for DevOps + ITSM workflows, scalable on-prem cluster option 3. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM / Ivanti Service Manager (on-prem editions)** - Best for complex enterprise workflow automation - Strong asset, endpoint, and service management 4. **OpenText Service Management (formerly Micro Focus Service Manager)** - Best for very large, traditional enterprise environments - Deep ITIL support, highly configurable, proven at scale 5. **BMC Remedy ITSM** - Best for mature ITSM programs in large enterprises - Very robust, but usually heavier to implement/administer 6. **TOPdesk On-Premises** - Best for straightforward service desk operations - Easier to deploy/use than some heavier enterprise suites ### Quick picks - **Best overall on-prem**: **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best for Atlassian shops**: **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best for large legacy enterprise ITSM**: **BMC Remedy ITSM** or **OpenText Service Management** If you want, I can also rank these by **security, scalability, or total cost of ownership**.
Which self-hosted case management systems are best for internal support?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **internal support** (IT, HR, facilities, ops), the best self-hosted case management systems are usually: ### Top picks - **GLPI** — Best all-around for internal IT/support, asset management, and workflow. - **Zammad** — Best modern UI and easy agent experience; solid for internal helpdesk. - **FreeScout** — Best lightweight, self-hosted, and simple to run. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — Best if you want a more full ITSM-style platform. - **osTicket** — Best simple, proven, low-cost ticketing. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — Best for complex workflows and power users. ### Quick recommendations - **Need IT asset + ticketing in one?** → **GLPI** - **Want the best user experience?** → **Zammad** - **Want something lightweight and fast to deploy?** → **FreeScout** - **Need formal ITSM / approvals / SLAs?** → **ServiceDesk Plus** - **Want straightforward, mature ticketing?** → **osTicket** ### Notes - **GLPI** is especially strong for internal support because it handles **tickets, CMDB/assets, permissions, and SLAs** well. - **Zammad** is great if your team values **clean UI, email integration, and automation**. - **ServiceDesk Plus** is often the most complete, but heavier and more enterprise-oriented. If you want, I can rank these by **ease of self-hosting**, **features**, or **best for small vs large teams**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best self-hosted, open-source options for internal support: - **Zammad** — best overall for a modern internal help desk; great UI, email-to-ticket, SLA, knowledge base. - **GLPI** — best if you also need asset management, ITSM, and change/request workflows. - **osTicket** — best simple, lightweight ticketing system. - **FreeScout** — best for email-based support with a clean inbox-style interface. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — best for very flexible, power-user workflows. - **iTop** — best for ITSM + CMDB-heavy internal support. **Important**: If this is for IT/internal service desk, I’d shortlist **Zammad** and **GLPI** first. **Recommended brand mix for your stack**: - **Zammad** + **PostgreSQL** + **Docker** - **GLPI** + **MariaDB** + **Docker** - **FreeScout** if you want the simplest setup 5 out of 10 times, **Zammad** is the nicest balance of ease and capability. If you want the least admin overhead: **Zammad** If you want full ITSM: **GLPI**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For internal support, the best self-hosted case management systems are usually: 1. **Zammad** - Best all-around for internal helpdesk/support - Clean UI, email-to-ticket, SLAs, tags, automation, API - Good for IT, ops, HR, facilities 2. **UVdesk Open Source** - Good if you want a polished support desk with multi-channel intake - Strong for ticket workflows, knowledge base, and customer/internal support - Easier to brand and extend than many OSS tools 3. **GLPI** - Best if you want IT asset management + ticketing together - Strong for internal IT support, inventory, CMDB, and change tracking - Very common in corporate environments 4. **FreeScout** - Lightweight and simple - Great for small teams that want shared inbox + basic ticketing - Easier to self-host than heavier ITSM suites 5. **OTOBO** - Best for enterprise-style service desk workflows - Highly configurable, strong queue/routing/process features - Good when you need complex internal case handling 6. **osTicket** - Reliable, mature, and straightforward - Best for simple internal support with minimal setup - Not as modern, but very proven ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Best for IT support + assets:** GLPI - **Best lightweight option:** FreeScout - **Best for complex workflows:** OTOBO If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your team size, LDAP/SSO needs, and whether you need asset management**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For **self-hosted internal support**, the best picks are: ### Best overall **Zammad** - Modern UI, easy for agents - Good ticketing, SLAs, automation, email integration - Strong for internal IT/service desk use - Open source, self-hosted ### Best lightweight/simple **FreeScout** - Very easy to set up - Great if you want a clean shared inbox + ticketing - Less heavy than full ITSM tools - Good for small support teams ### Best traditional ticketing **osTicket** - Mature, reliable, widely used - Good basic case/ticket workflow - Simpler than enterprise ITSM suites - Best if you want straightforward support handling ### Best for IT service management **GLPI** - Strong asset + ticket + ITSM features - Good for internal helpdesk tied to devices/users - Better if you need inventory and service catalog features ### Best for complex enterprise workflows **Znuny** (community fork of OTRS) - Powerful workflow/routing - Good for larger internal support teams - More complex to administer ### If you want developer/team service management **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Self-hosted enterprise option - Strong if you already use Jira/Atlassian - Best for structured internal request handling, but pricier ## Quick recommendation - **Most teams:** Zammad - **Small/simple internal support:** FreeScout - **IT department + inventory:** GLPI - **Enterprise workflow-heavy:** Znuny If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size**, **budget**, or whether you need **ITSM, approvals, SLAs, and asset tracking**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For **internal support** (IT/helpdesk, facilities, HR requests), the best self-hosted options are usually: ### Best overall **1) GLPI** - Strong all-in-one IT support + asset management - Good for internal service desks, ticketing, SLAs, CMDB, inventory - Best if you want **support + hardware/software tracking** **2) Zammad** - Modern UI, fast setup, great email ticketing - Good automations, groups, tags, macros - Best if you want a **clean, friendly helpdesk** experience ### Best for smaller teams **3) FreeScout** - Lightweight, self-hosted, Mailchimp-like simplicity - Great for shared inbox-style support - Best if you want **simple and low-overhead** ### Best for advanced workflows **4) Znuny** (open-source fork of OTRS) - Very powerful workflow engine - Strong for structured internal service processes - Best if you need **complex queues, approvals, and SLA logic** ### Best for technical teams **5) Request Tracker (RT)** - Very mature, highly reliable, extremely flexible - UI is older, but ticket handling is excellent - Best if your team values **control and depth over polish** --- ## Quick picks - **IT department + assets:** GLPI - **Best modern helpdesk:** Zammad - **Simple shared inbox:** FreeScout - **Complex enterprise workflows:** Znuny - **Power user / admin-heavy teams:** Request Tracker If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your team size and whether you need asset management, SSO, or on-prem Docker deployment**.
What are the best on-premise ticketing solutions for data control?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If **data control / self-hosting** is the priority, the best on-prem ticketing options are usually: ### Top picks - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — best for larger IT teams needing strong workflows, approvals, SLAs, and auditability. - **Zendesk alternative?** Not really on-prem; skip if data control matters. - **OTRS** — mature, enterprise-grade, good for regulated environments and customization. - **Zammad** — modern UI, easy self-hosting, good all-around helpdesk/ticketing. - **GLPI** — strong if you want **ticketing + asset management + CMDB** in one system. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very flexible, highly reliable, but less polished UI. - **osTicket** — simple, lightweight, easy to run on your own infrastructure. ### Best by use case - **Enterprise / complex ITSM:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Regulated / compliance-heavy:** **OTRS** or **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best open-source balance:** **Zammad** - **Best for IT asset + ticketing:** **GLPI** - **Simple, low-cost support desk:** **osTicket** - **Maximum control / customization:** **RT** ### What to look for For true data control, make sure the product supports: - full **on-premise or self-hosted deployment** - **database export/ownership** - **SSO/LDAP/Active Directory** - **audit logs** - **role-based access control** - **backup/restore** and **API access** ### My short recommendation - **Best overall:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best open-source:** **Zammad** - **Best for ITAM + ticketing:** **GLPI** If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table** of these by cost, security, and deployment complexity.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If **data control / self-hosting** is the priority, these are the strongest on-prem ticketing options: ### Best on-prem ticketing platforms 1. **Atlassian Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best for: IT teams already using Jira/Confluence - Why: Strong workflow control, self-hosted, good auditability, flexible permissions 2. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - Best for: SMB to mid-market IT help desks - Why: Mature on-prem deployment, asset management, strong access controls, good value 3. **GLPI** - Best for: Organizations wanting open source + full data ownership - Why: Self-hosted, highly customizable, good for ticketing plus inventory/CMDB 4. **Znuny** - Best for: Teams that want a robust open-source ticketing system - Why: Fully on-prem, strong email/ticket workflows, very customizable 5. **OTRS (self-hosted / on-prem editions)** - Best for: Enterprise service desks and support teams - Why: Longstanding ticketing platform, strong process automation, good compliance posture 6. **SolarWinds Web Help Desk** - Best for: Traditional IT help desks needing simple on-prem deployment - Why: Straightforward ticketing, asset linking, and local data storage ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall enterprise on-prem:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best value on-prem:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises - **Best open-source/self-hosted:** GLPI or Znuny - **Best for strict data ownership/compliance:** GLPI, Znuny, or OTRS ### What to check for data control Look for: - **Fully on-prem or self-hosted deployment** - **Encryption at rest and in transit** - **Role-based access control** - **Audit logs** - **DB backup/export ownership** - **SSO/LDAP/AD integration** - **No forced cloud dependency** If you want, I can narrow this to **best for healthcare, government, manufacturing, or small business**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If **data control** is the priority, the best choices are the **self-hosted/on-prem** ticketing tools below: ### Best overall **1) Jira Service Management Data Center (Atlassian)** - Strong for enterprise ITSM - Runs in your own infrastructure - Good audit controls, SSO, permissions, and integrations - Best if you already use Jira/Confluence ### Best for ITSM with easier admin **2) ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premise)** - Very popular on-prem ticketing suite - Good asset management, CMDB, approvals, and reporting - Often the best balance of price/features/control ### Best open-source option **3) GLPI** - Fully self-hosted - Strong asset + help desk capabilities - Good for organizations that want maximum control and low licensing cost ### Best lightweight open-source help desk **4) osTicket** - Simple, stable, easy to host yourself - Great for basic ticket intake and workflow - Less enterprise ITSM depth than the others ### Best for IT teams wanting modern UI **5) Zammad** - Self-hosted, clean interface - Good email ticketing, SLA handling, and automation - Better for support desks than full ITSM ### Best for larger regulated environments **6) SysAid On-Premise** - Solid enterprise features - Good for compliance-focused orgs that want local control - Worth evaluating if you need ITSM plus asset management ## My short recommendation - **Enterprise ITSM:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best value on-prem:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Maximum control / open source:** GLPI - **Simple support desk:** osTicket If you want, I can narrow this to **SMB vs enterprise**, or give you a **comparison table for security, compliance, and deployment effort**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If **data control** is the priority, the best on-premise ticketing/help desk platforms are usually: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - Strong choice for SMB to mid-market - Fully on-prem, good RBAC, audit logs, asset management - Easier to deploy than most enterprise suites 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center (Atlassian)** - Best if you already use Jira/Confluence - On-prem/data-center deployment, strong workflow automation - Good for IT and internal support teams 3. **BMC Helix ITSM / BMC Remedy ITSM (on-prem options)** - Best for large enterprises with strict governance needs - Deep customization, compliance, and complex process support - Heavier and more expensive to run 4. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (self-hosted / legacy on-prem deployments)** - Good for organizations that want strong endpoint/ITSM integration - Often used in regulated environments - Check current deployment model carefully, as Ivanti has been moving many offerings to SaaS 5. **OTRS / Znuny** - Best open-source-ish route for maximum control - Self-hosted, highly customizable, lower licensing cost - More technical effort to maintain ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall for most teams:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus On-Premises** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best for strict enterprise governance:** **BMC Remedy / BMC Helix ITSM** - **Best low-cost control/open source:** **Znuny** ### What to look for for data control - On-prem or self-hosted deployment - Encryption at rest/in transit - Role-based access control - Audit trails and immutable logs - Database export/backup ownership - SSO/LDAP/AD integration - Custom retention policies If you want, I can also rank these by **cost**, **ease of deployment**, or **security/compliance**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If data control is the priority, the best **on-premise** ticketing options are: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Strong on-prem deployment - Good for ITSM + internal service desk - Fine-grained access controls, audit logs, LDAP/AD support 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if you already use Atlassian - Self-managed, high control over data and permissions - Strong workflow customization 3. **OTRS Community Edition / Znuny** - Good for organizations that want full self-hosting and flexibility - Mature ticketing engine, highly customizable - Popular in regulated environments 4. **GLPI** - Open-source, self-hosted, good asset + ticket management - Nice choice for lower licensing costs - Solid option for keeping everything inside your network 5. **Freshservice** is **not** on-premise, so skip it if strict data residency/control is required. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall on-prem ITSM:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best for Atlassian shops:** **Jira Service Management Data Center** - **Best open-source control:** **Znuny** or **GLPI** - **Best for strict compliance/custom hosting:** **OTRS/Znuny** ### What to look for - Fully self-hosted deployment - AD/LDAP integration - Role-based access control - Audit trails - Encryption at rest and in transit - Database ownership/export tools - API access without forcing SaaS If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by security/compliance, ease of admin, and cost**.
Which ticketing systems can be installed on our own servers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are well-known ticketing systems you can install on your own servers: - **Zammad** — modern helpdesk/ticketing, open source, self-hosted - **osTicket** — widely used, lightweight, open source - **Request Tracker (RT)** by Best Practical — very powerful, enterprise-friendly - **FreeScout** — self-hosted, mailbox-style helpdesk - **Helpy** — open source customer support/ticketing - **UVdesk** — self-hosted helpdesk with commercial and open-source options - **GLPI** — ITSM/helpdesk plus asset management - **HESK** — simple, self-hosted support desk - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — on-prem version available - **Jitbit Helpdesk** — offers on-prem/self-hosted edition - **Freshservice/Freshdesk** — generally SaaS, not typical self-hosted If you want, I can narrow this down by: - **open source only** - **best for IT support** - **best for email-based tickets** - **best for enterprise/on-prem**
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes — several ticketing systems can be self-hosted on your own servers: - **Zendesk for service + on-prem?** Not really; Zendesk is mainly cloud-hosted. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — Atlassian’s self-hosted option. - **OTRS / Znuny** — Znuny is a popular open-source fork of OTRS. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — mature open-source help desk/ticketing system. - **osTicket** — lightweight, open-source, easy to self-host. - **GLPI** — ITSM/help desk with asset management, self-hostable. - **Zammad** — modern open-source support/ticketing platform. - **Freshdesk** — generally cloud only, not self-hosted. - **iTop** — ITSM tool with ticketing, self-hostable. If you want, I can narrow this down by: 1. **open-source only** 2. **best for IT help desk** 3. **best for customer support** 4. **best for small team vs enterprise**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—several solid ticketing/helpdesk systems can be self-hosted on your own servers: - **osTicket** — popular, lightweight, easy to run on Linux + Apache/Nginx + MySQL. - **Zammad** — modern UI, good email integration, runs on Docker or Linux. - **Request Tracker (RT)** — very mature, powerful, best for complex workflows. - **GLPI** — ticketing plus IT asset management; good for IT teams. - **FreeScout** — simpler “shared inbox” style helpdesk, self-hostable. - **UVdesk Community Edition** — PHP-based, self-hosted helpdesk. - **HESK** — simple, fast, low-overhead support desk. - **Faveo Helpdesk** — self-hosted option with more enterprise-style features. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — on-premises edition available; heavier but feature-rich. - **Zendesk / Freshdesk** — generally cloud-first, so not the best fit if you need true self-hosting. If you want the shortest shortlist: - **Best modern all-around:** **Zammad** - **Best simple/easy:** **osTicket** - **Best for IT service management:** **GLPI** - **Best for advanced workflows:** **Request Tracker** If you tell me your stack (Linux/Windows, Docker or not, user count, email-only vs omnichannel), I can narrow it to 2–3 best picks.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—quite a few ticketing systems can be installed on your own servers (self-hosted / on-prem). Common options: - **osTicket** — popular open-source help desk/ticketing system - **Zammad** — modern open-source support/ticketing platform - **UVdesk** — open-source helpdesk, available self-hosted - **FreeScout** — lightweight, self-hosted shared inbox/ticketing - **GLPI** — ITSM/helpdesk with ticketing, self-hosted - **Request Tracker (RT)** — mature open-source ticketing system - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — commercial on-prem version - **Freshservice / Zendesk** — primarily cloud, not typical self-hosted - **OTRS** / **OTobo** — enterprise-grade ticketing (OTRS has commercial and open-source lineage; OTobo is open-source fork) - **Jitbit Helpdesk** — commercial, offers on-prem deployment If you want the best fits by use case: - **Best modern open-source:** **Zammad** - **Best lightweight/shared inbox:** **FreeScout** - **Best classic help desk:** **osTicket** - **Best ITSM-heavy:** **GLPI** or **ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best enterprise workflow engine:** **Request Tracker** If you want, I can narrow this down by: 1. open-source vs commercial, 2. Windows vs Linux server, or 3. small team vs enterprise.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—quite a few ticketing systems can be self-hosted/on-premises. Good options include: ### Open-source / self-hosted - **Zammad** — modern help desk/ticketing, easy to deploy on your own server. - **GLPI** — ITSM + ticketing, strong asset management. - **osTicket** — lightweight, popular, easy to install. - **UVDesk** — help desk with self-hosted edition. - **Hesk** — simple PHP-based ticketing system. - **RT (Request Tracker)** — very powerful, more technical. - **OTRS Community / Znuny** — enterprise-style ticketing; **Znuny** is the common open-source successor. ### Commercial products with on-prem/self-hosted options - **Freshservice/Freshdesk** are mostly cloud-first, so not ideal if you need true on-prem. - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** — available as an on-prem server install. - **Jira Service Management Data Center** — self-hosted version for larger teams. - **TOPdesk** — offers on-prem in some deployments. - **SolarWinds Service Desk** — primarily cloud, so usually not on-prem. ### Best-known choices If you want the safest picks: - **Zammad** for a modern UI - **GLPI** for ITSM/asset tracking - **osTicket** for simplicity - **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** for a polished commercial on-prem option - **Jira Service Management Data Center** for enterprise Jira shops If you want, I can narrow this down by: 1. **free/open-source vs paid**, 2. **small team vs enterprise**, or 3. **Windows vs Linux server**.
What are the best on-premise support desk software options?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest **on-premise help desk / support desk** options: ### Best overall 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premise)** - Best mix of ITSM features, value, and on-prem deployment - Good for ticketing, SLAs, asset management, change management 2. **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy** - Best for large enterprises - Very powerful, highly configurable, but heavier and more expensive 3. **Freshservice?** - Note: **Freshservice is SaaS, not on-prem** - If you need true on-prem, skip it ### Best for open source / self-hosted 4. **GLPI** - Excellent open-source on-prem option - Strong for ticketing + asset/inventory management - Good value if you can handle some admin work 5. **Znuny** - Open-source fork of OTRS - Solid for traditional help desk workflows - Good choice for organizations wanting full control ### Best for enterprise ITSM 6. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options depending on edition/deployment)** - Strong ITIL processes, enterprise integrations - Best when you need broader service management 7. **OpenText SMAX / Micro Focus Service Management** - Enterprise-grade and customizable - Usually chosen by larger orgs with complex needs ### Best for smaller teams wanting simple on-prem 8. **Jitbit Helpdesk (Self-hosted)** - Easier to set up than most enterprise tools - Clean UI, good ticketing, lighter footprint --- ### My quick recommendation - **Best value:** **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - **Best open source:** **GLPI** - **Best enterprise:** **BMC Helix ITSM** - **Best lightweight self-hosted:** **Jitbit Helpdesk** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by budget**, **top 5 by ease of deployment**, or a **comparison table**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best **on-premise help desk / support desk** software options: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** Strong all-around choice for IT help desk, asset management, and workflows. Good value. 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** Best if you already use Atlassian tools. Powerful for ITSM and dev/ops integration. 3. **Freshservice** Note: mainly cloud, so **not** a true on-prem option. If you need on-prem, skip this one. 4. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem / self-hosted legacy options)** Enterprise-grade service management with deep ITSM features. Best for larger orgs. 5. **BMC Helix ITSM / Remedy (self-hosted legacy deployments)** Very robust, very enterprise-focused, but heavier to implement/administer. 6. **GLPI** Open-source, flexible, and popular for on-prem use. Great if you want lower cost and can handle more setup. 7. **osTicket** Simple, lightweight, and easy to self-host. Best for basic ticketing needs. 8. **Zammad** Modern UI, good email ticketing, knowledge base, and omnichannel support. Solid open-source option. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source:** Zammad or GLPI - **Best simple/basic:** osTicket - **Best enterprise ITSM:** Ivanti or BMC If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by price, features, or ease of deployment**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best on-premise / self-hosted support desk options: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus (On-Premises)** Best overall for IT help desk + ITSM. Strong asset management, workflows, SLAs, and reporting. 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** Best for teams already using Atlassian. Great for dev/IT workflows, automation, and integrations. 3. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem/private deployment options)** Best for larger enterprises needing deep ITSM, change management, and customization. 4. **BMC Helix ITSM** Best for complex enterprise environments. Very powerful, but heavier to deploy and administer. 5. **HaloITSM** Best mid-market choice with a modern UI and solid ITIL features. Check deployment model carefully based on your hosting needs. 6. **osTicket** Best lightweight open-source option. Simple, reliable, and inexpensive to run on your own server. 7. **Zammad** Best open-source modern help desk. Good email/ticketing workflow, clean UI, and omnichannel support. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source:** Zammad - **Best simple/self-hosted:** osTicket If you want, I can narrow this down by **company size, budget, or ITIL features**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **on-premise / self-hosted support desk** options: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Strong all-around IT/help desk platform - Good ticketing, SLA, asset management, CMDB - Popular for SMB to enterprise - Available as an on-prem edition 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best if you already use Atlassian tools - Great for ITSM, workflows, approvals, and dev-to-support handoff - More technical to set up, but very powerful - Fully self-managed via Data Center 3. **GLPI** - Open-source and on-prem - Solid ticketing + asset/inventory management - Good value if you want flexibility and lower licensing cost - Often paired with OCS Inventory / FusionInventory 4. **Spiceworks Help Desk** - Free and simple - Good for smaller teams wanting basic on-prem help desk - Limited compared with enterprise tools 5. **OTRS** - Mature enterprise service desk platform - Strong workflow and ticketing capabilities - Good for organizations needing a traditional self-hosted system 6. **Ivanti Neurons for ITSM (on-prem options depending on deployment)** - Strong enterprise ITSM capabilities - Better suited for larger orgs with complex processes - Typically more expensive and heavier to implement ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open-source:** GLPI - **Best free/basic:** Spiceworks Help Desk - **Best enterprise traditional:** OTRS If you want, I can also narrow these down by **company size, budget, or feature needs**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top on-premise support desk options: 1. **ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus** - Best all-around on-prem help desk - Strong ticketing, ITSM, asset management, CMDB - Good for mid-size to enterprise teams 2. **Jira Service Management Data Center** - Best for teams already using Atlassian - Great for IT + DevOps workflows, SLAs, automation - More technical, but very flexible 3. **Freshservice?** - Note: Freshservice is mainly cloud, not true on-prem. - If you need self-hosted, skip it. 4. **OTRS / Znuny** - Best open-source-ish option - Very customizable, mature, good for email-heavy support - Znuny is the more active community-driven fork 5. **SolarWinds Service Desk?** - Mostly cloud now, so not ideal for on-prem needs 6. **iTop** - Best if you want ITSM + CMDB in one platform - Strong in enterprise environments, more technical setup 7. **GLPI** - Best open-source choice for IT support + asset tracking - Popular for internal IT desks - Good plugin ecosystem 8. **BMC Helix ITSM** - Best for large enterprises - Powerful, but expensive and heavier to deploy ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Jira Service Management Data Center - **Best open source:** GLPI or Znuny - **Best enterprise heavy-duty:** BMC Helix ITSM If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by company size** or **a comparison table with pricing, ease of use, and features**.
What are the best locally hosted ticketing systems for small teams?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For small teams, the best **locally hosted / self-hosted** ticketing systems are usually: ### 1. **Zammad** - **Best overall** for small teams - Clean UI, email-to-ticket, web forms, knowledge base, SLAs - Good for IT/helpdesk and internal support - Easier to use than most open-source options ### 2. **osTicket** - **Best simple, lightweight option** - Very mature, easy to self-host, low overhead - Great if you want email ticketing + basic workflows - UI is older, but it works well ### 3. **FreeScout** - **Best if you want a Zendesk-like mailbox UI** - Lightweight, very easy for small support teams - Good for shared inbox + ticketing - Less “ITIL/helpdesk” heavy than Zammad ### 4. **Znuny** - **Best for more advanced IT support workflows** - Open-source fork of OTRS - Strong for queues, roles, escalation, and structured service desks - Heavier and less friendly than Zammad ### 5. **GLPI** - **Best if you also need asset / IT management** - Ticketing + CMDB + inventory + helpdesk - Strong for internal IT teams - More complex than the others ### 6. **Jitbit Helpdesk (self-hosted)** - **Best commercial self-hosted choice** - Polished, fast to deploy, good automations - Paid, but simpler than many enterprise systems ## Quick picks - **Small non-technical team:** **FreeScout** - **Best all-around:** **Zammad** - **Simplest self-hosted:** **osTicket** - **IT department with more process:** **Znuny** or **GLPI** If you want, I can narrow this down by: - team size - email-only vs full helpdesk - Linux/Docker friendliness - open-source only vs paid allowed
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For small teams, the best **locally hosted / self-hosted ticketing systems** are usually: 1. **Zammad** - Best overall for most small teams - Modern UI, email-to-ticket, knowledge base, automation, API - Easy to self-host with Docker - Good choice if you want something polished without enterprise bloat 2. **UVdesk Community Edition** - Strong open-source helpdesk with decent workflow features - Good if you want a more “support desk” style system - Works well for email support and basic omnichannel use 3. **FreeScout** - Best lightweight option - Simple, fast, and close to Help Scout’s style - Great for small teams that mainly need shared inbox + tickets - Very easy to run locally 4. **osTicket** - Best classic, no-frills ticketing system - Mature, stable, widely used - Good for basic ticket intake, SLA rules, and email piping - UI feels older, but it’s reliable 5. **Hesk** - Very simple and small-team friendly - Easy to deploy and maintain - Good if you want minimal complexity and basic ticketing only ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Best lightweight:** FreeScout - **Best traditional/helpdesk:** osTicket - **Best for simple support workflows:** UVdesk - **Best ultra-basic option:** Hesk ### If you want my short recommendation - **Choose Zammad** if you want the best balance of features and usability. - **Choose FreeScout** if you want something small, fast, and easy to self-host. If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 ranked by ease of setup**, or a **comparison table with Docker install difficulty, features, and resource usage**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For small teams, the best **locally hosted / self-hosted ticketing systems** are usually: 1. **Zammad** - Best overall for most small teams - Modern UI, email-to-ticket, knowledge base, automation, good API - Easy to self-host with Docker 2. **OTOBO** (successor to OTRS Community Edition) - Best if you want a more traditional ITSM/helpdesk setup - Strong workflow, SLA, queue, and agent management - Good for support teams that need structure 3. **FreeScout** - Best lightweight option - Very simple, fast, email-focused shared inbox/ticketing - Great for tiny teams that don’t need a lot of ITSM features 4. **osTicket** - Best budget-friendly classic helpdesk - Mature, stable, widely used, easy to understand - Less polished than Zammad, but reliable 5. **GLPI** - Best if you also need asset management / IT inventory - Tickets + CMDB + hardware/software tracking - More “IT department” than pure support desk 6. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Best for teams that want maximum flexibility and don’t mind a steeper learning curve - Very powerful, but dated UI ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Zammad - **Simplest:** FreeScout - **Best IT-focused:** GLPI or OTOBO - **Most established classic helpdesk:** osTicket If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of setup**, **features**, and **resource usage** for a small team.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For small teams, the best locally hosted ticketing systems are usually: 1. **Zammad** - Best overall for ease of use - Modern UI, good email/web ticket handling, knowledge base, SLA support - Great if you want something polished without heavy setup 2. **osTicket** - Best lightweight option - Very simple, proven, easy to self-host - Good for basic support desks and small teams on a budget 3. **FreeScout** - Best for shared inbox-style support - Feels like a self-hosted Help Scout - Great if most of your workflow is email-based 4. **GLPI** - Best if you also need asset management / ITSM - Strong for internal IT teams - More complex than Zammad or osTicket, but very capable 5. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Best for power users and reliability - Very robust, highly configurable - Older UI, but excellent for serious ticket workflows 6. **UVdesk Community Edition** - Good all-around self-hosted helpdesk - Decent feature set and Magento/commerce integrations - Worth considering if you want something between osTicket and Zammad ### Quick picks - **Simplest:** osTicket - **Best user experience:** Zammad - **Best shared inbox:** FreeScout - **Best IT-focused:** GLPI - **Best advanced workflow:** RT If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 based on your stack** (Linux/Docker, Windows, email volume, IT vs customer support).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For small teams, the best **locally hosted / self-hosted** ticketing systems are usually: 1. **osTicket** - Best for: simple help desk support - Why: easy to deploy, lightweight, mature, good email-to-ticket workflow - Good if you want: a straightforward, no-frills system 2. **Zammad** - Best for: modern UI and shared inbox-style support - Why: polished interface, strong automation, multiple channels, good for small support teams - Good if you want: something nicer than older help desk tools 3. **GLPI** - Best for: IT teams that also need asset/inventory management - Why: ticketing plus ITSM features, CMDB/assets, plugins, on-prem friendly - Good if you want: tickets tied to devices, users, and IT operations 4. **Request Tracker (RT)** - Best for: powerful workflow-heavy environments - Why: very flexible, stable, long-standing, strong customization - Good if you want: control over complex ticket routing and queues 5. **FreeScout** - Best for: small teams wanting a shared inbox/help desk - Why: lightweight, self-hosted, easy to use, very affordable - Good if you want: something simpler than full ITSM suites ### Quick pick - **Simplest:** osTicket - **Best modern UI:** Zammad - **Best IT-focused:** GLPI - **Best lightweight shared inbox:** FreeScout If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 ranked by ease of setup**, or recommend the best option for **IT support vs customer support vs internal requests**.

All 67 prompts run for Ivanti Service Manager

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Ivanti Service Manager known for?
  • 2 What are Ivanti Service Manager's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Ivanti Service Manager? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Ivanti Service Manager compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Ivanti Service Manager?
  • 6 What is a typical on-premise ticketing system known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (45)

  • 1 What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for a hospital IT team? discovery
  • 2 Which self-hosted ticketing system is best for a university help desk? discovery
  • 3 What on-premise help desk software works well for manufacturing companies? discovery
  • 4 What are the best ticketing systems for internal IT support on-premise? discovery
  • 5 Which self-hosted service desk tools are good for regulated industries? discovery
  • 6 What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for government agencies? discovery
  • 7 What self-hosted customer support platforms are best for large teams? discovery
  • 8 Which on-premise case management software is best for shared service teams? discovery
  • 9 What are the best self-hosted ticketing systems with workflow automation? discovery
  • 10 Which on-premise help desk tools are best for multi-department support? discovery
  • 11 What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for a private data center? discovery
  • 12 Which self-hosted support desk platforms offer strong reporting? discovery
  • 13 What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for ITIL workflows? discovery
  • 14 Which on-premise ticketing software is easiest to customize? discovery
  • 15 What are the best self-hosted ticketing systems for enterprise security? discovery
  • 16 What are the best alternatives to cloud help desk software for self-hosted deployment? comparison
  • 17 What are the best alternatives to web-based ticketing platforms if I need on-premise hosting? comparison
  • 18 Which on-premise ticketing systems are better than open-source options for enterprise use? comparison
  • 19 What are the best alternatives to hosted service desk software for internal support teams? comparison
  • 20 Which self-hosted help desk platforms are better than lightweight ticket trackers? comparison
  • 21 What on-premise ticketing systems are better than SaaS help desks for compliance? comparison
  • 22 Which local deployment ticketing systems are better for customization than standard cloud tools? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to outsourced support desk software for in-house teams? comparison
  • 24 Which self-hosted case management platforms are better than generic issue trackers? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to managed ticketing platforms when we need full infrastructure control? comparison
  • 26 How do I set up an on-premise ticketing system for internal IT requests? problem
  • 27 How do I keep support ticket data inside our own infrastructure? problem
  • 28 How do I build a self-hosted help desk for my company? problem
  • 29 How do I manage IT support requests without using a cloud platform? problem
  • 30 How do I add custom workflows to an on-premise ticketing system? problem
  • 31 How do I integrate an on-premise ticketing system with LDAP? problem
  • 32 How do I get better audit logs from a self-hosted service desk? problem
  • 33 How do I migrate tickets from a cloud help desk to on-premise software? problem
  • 34 How do I secure a self-hosted ticketing system for sensitive data? problem
  • 35 How do I support multiple departments in one on-premise ticketing platform? problem
  • 36 How much does an on-premise ticketing system cost? transactional
  • 37 What is the pricing for self-hosted help desk software? transactional
  • 38 Are there free on-premise ticketing systems? transactional
  • 39 What is the cheapest self-hosted ticketing system for small teams? transactional
  • 40 How much do on-premise service desk tools usually cost per year? transactional
  • 41 Do self-hosted ticketing systems have free trials? transactional
  • 42 What are affordable on-premise help desk options for startups? transactional
  • 43 What is the pricing model for on-premise case management software? transactional
  • 44 How much does it cost to license a self-hosted support desk platform? transactional
  • 45 Are there low-cost on-premise ticketing systems for enterprise use? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best on-premise ticketing systems for customer support teams?
  • 2 What are the top on-premise ticketing system brands?
  • 3 Which on-premise ticketing system options are most recommended?
  • 4 What are the most popular on-premise ticketing systems?
  • 5 What is the best self-hosted ticketing system for IT support?
  • 6 Which on-premise help desk software should I look at? 50/mo
  • 7 What are the best self-hosted help desk tools for businesses?
  • 8 Which on-premise customer support ticketing platforms are worth considering?
  • 9 What are the leading on-premise service desk systems?
  • 10 What are the best on-premise IT ticketing systems for enterprises?
  • 11 Which self-hosted case management systems are best for internal support?
  • 12 What are the best on-premise ticketing solutions for data control?
  • 13 Which ticketing systems can be installed on our own servers?
  • 14 What are the best on-premise support desk software options?
  • 15 What are the best locally hosted ticketing systems for small teams?