Enterprise IT change governance has an incumbent — ServiceNow — and a chronic complaint: the governance lives in one system while the engineering happens in another, and the gap between them is bridged by connectors, conventions, and audit-season reconciliation. LoopIQ Pro is the compliance-first alternative for organizations that want the governance in the delivery workspace: CAB-grade change control, policy-enforced approvals, and release evidence automation on the same data model the work runs on.
Traditional change governance assumes a separation: work happens in delivery tools, control happens in the ITSM platform, and someone keeps them aligned. At software velocity the alignment fails predictably — changes ship that the ITSM layer never saw, approvals attach to tickets that describe stale scope, and test evidence lives in pipelines whose logs rotate quarterly. Auditors and examiners find the gaps at sampling time; engineering pays for them in reconciliation and re-work. The root cause isn't tooling quality on either side — it's the seam itself, and no connector fully closes it.
Change control on the work's data model. Every production change is a structured change request natively linked to the work items, tests, and release it belongs to — risk-classified, system-scoped, and created in the flow of delivery rather than as parallel paperwork.
CAB-grade approval without the CAB queue. Approval policies execute the authorization matrix: which roles approve which risk classes, in what order, with identity, role, and timestamp recorded per artifact. Standard changes auto-route under automation rules; emergency paths compress the timeline while keeping the trail; the synchronous board convenes only for changes that genuinely need a room.
Evidence automation. Test executions and CI/CD and observability integrations bind validation and deployment events to the change automatically, in durable storage sized to examination lookback — the FFIEC-, SOX-, and ISO-shaped retention problem, solved structurally.
Governed go-lives. Release certifications gate launches on configured criteria with attributed sign-off, and the Release Compliance Dossier assembles each release's full chain — the artifact auditors sample, generated instead of curated. Compliance objectives keep control coverage continuously visible for the governance function.
The under-appreciated governance metric is route-around rate: how much change ships outside the governed path. LoopIQ Pro's answer is architectural — the governed path is the delivery path, so compliance costs engineers nothing extra. Jira import brings existing backlogs and history along, and role-based permissions give governance teams their oversight without giving auditors a reason to doubt the population. When deploy logs and change records reconcile by construction, the hardest examiner question answers itself.
Organizations with broad ServiceNow estates typically run scope-based coexistence: engineering-owned systems on LoopIQ Pro, corporate and vendor-managed ITSM staying put. Each system of record stays complete for its scope — which is what examinations actually require — and the enterprise avoids betting a re-platforming program on day one. Engineering-led organizations without deep Now investment simply skip the seam entirely.
Enterprise change governance fails at the seam between control and delivery. LoopIQ Pro removes the seam: risk-classified changes, policy-executed approvals, automated evidence, and certified releases on one data model — governance that examiners can sample in minutes and engineers barely notice. That combination, not either half alone, is what modern change control looks like.
The seam: governance in one system, engineering in another, reconciled by connectors and audit-season effort. LoopIQ Pro puts change control on the same data model as the work, so populations reconcile by construction.
Yes — risk-classified change types, approval policies executing the authorization matrix with recorded identity and role, governed emergency paths, and automation rules for pre-authorized standard changes. The synchronous board convenes only for changes that need a room.
Release certifications gate go-lives on configured criteria — approvals present, tests green, findings dispositioned — with attributed sign-off, and the Release Compliance Dossier assembles the full evidence chain per release for audit sampling.
Yes — the common pattern is scope-based: engineering-owned systems run on LoopIQ Pro while corporate and vendor-managed ITSM stays on ServiceNow, each system of record complete for its scope.