Create a Ticket Manually

ITSMOPENFRAMEPSATICKETINGTUTORIAL

Phase 6 — Tickets & PSA Workflow · Step 2

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June 23, 2026

Published

Vladislav Marchenko

Vladislav Marchenko

Head Of Marketing

Create a Ticket Manually

Phase 6 — Tickets & PSA Workflow · OpenFrame Onboarding

Plenty of tickets get created automatically — from an alert, from a client conversation, from your PSA. But sometimes you just need to open one yourself: a client emails, a tech spots something, a job needs tracking. Here's the new-ticket form, field by field.


Open the form

On the Tickets board, click New Ticket (top right). You'll get the New Ticket page with a Save Ticket button.


Fill it in

  1. Title — a clear, scannable summary, e.g. Outlook won't open after update.
  2. Customer — pick the client this ticket belongs to. This drives everything below it.
  3. Device — the affected machine. The picker says "Select Customer first" because it filters to that customer's devices — so choose the customer, then the device. Linking a device is what unlocks the device actions (Remote, Run Script, logs) later from the ticket.
  4. Assigned — the technician who owns it. Leave it unassigned if you're triaging and will route it later.
  5. Status — which column it lands in. You can drop it straight into one of your custom statuses (e.g. On Hold) or a system one — whatever matches where the work actually is.
  6. Tagsselect or create tags to group and filter tickets (by issue type, site, priority — however you slice your queue).
  7. Upload Files — click or drag-and-drop screenshots, logs, or anything that helps. Attachments live on the ticket.
  8. Ticket Description — a full rich-text editor (headings, lists, code blocks, links, tables). Put the detail here: what's happening, what you've tried, what "done" looks like.

Then click Save Ticket.


After you save

The ticket appears on the board in the status you chose, linked to its customer and device. From there it behaves like any other ticket — you can work it in the Technician Chat with Mingo, move it through your stages, and resolve it (covered in Ticket Lifecycle — From Open to Resolved).

Tip — link the device every time. A ticket with a device attached lets you jump straight to Device Details, Device Logs, or Run Script from the ticket's "…" menu, and gives Mingo the context to actually help. A ticket with no device is just a note.


Quick checklist

  • Gave it a clear Title
  • Picked the Customer, then the Device
  • Set an Assignee (or left it for triage)
  • Chose the right Status column
  • Added Tags, attachments, and a real Description
  • Saved and confirmed it's on the board

What's next

With a ticket open, learn how it moves: Ticket Lifecycle — From Open to Resolved covers stage transitions, the chat lanes, and closing it out. To put the AI to work on it, see Using Mingo AI in a Ticket Chat.


Based on OpenFrame v0.9.19. Form fields and available statuses depend on your configuration — what's in your console wins.

Vladislav Marchenko

Head Of Marketing

Hi all! My name is Vlad and I’ve been brought on to head the marketing team at Flamingo. Thankfully, this isn’t the first time I will be building a marketing department from scratch, so the experience should come in handy. Now it’s time to dive into the world of MSPs and find myself in this new world.

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Yes. In production MSP shops today, 10% to 25% of tickets close before a human opens them. Thread alone has processed 173 million tickets across 750-plus MSP partners at 96% triage accuracy, handing back 490,000-plus technician hours. Agents own the low-risk, high-volume work (password resets, MFA enrollment, known installs, onboarding and offboarding) and flag anything that touches production data or needs judgment for a human to take.
On a five-person desk, reported deployments show $78,000 to $130,000 in annual direct labor savings, roughly 30% fewer escalations, and 15% to 20% better SLA compliance. Broader MSP adoption data adds ticket handling time cut by 45% and five to 12 points of margin, all from reclaimed capacity rather than headcount cuts.
ConnectWise AI is the umbrella for ConnectWise's AI features on the Asio platform: the Sidekick GenAI assistant and ConnectWise RPA. It handles ticket triage, sentiment analysis, AI-assisted scripting, and natural-language automation across PSA and RMM, delivered through the ConnectWise Pro package.

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Most MSPs start with AI features inside their existing PSA, RMM, and ticketing systems rather than standalone products. Common categories include AI ticket triage, alert correlation, scripting assistants, and AI-native all-in-one platforms like OpenFrame that run intelligence across the whole stack.

ServiceNow

Yes, but budget 2–4 weeks. Most alternatives can import tickets, users, and basic configuration. Custom workflows and integrations need to be rebuilt from scratch. The longer you've been on ServiceNow, the more customization debt you're carrying – and the more painful the move.

About OpenFrame

OpenFrame isn't built to plug into your stack. It replaces it. Instead of duct-taping a dozen tools together (RMM, MDM, SIEM, patching, remote access, each its own login and bill), we bundle it into one unified platform: RMM, MDM, monitoring, automation, remote access, patch management, security monitoring, and ticketing, plus built-in AI copilots. So "does it integrate with X?" usually means: you won't need X anymore.
Most platforms give you one piece and expect you to bolt the rest on. OpenFrame unifies the whole stack in one place, with AI copilots built in. Fewer logins, fewer bills, less duct tape.

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Zammad works well as an MSP helpdesk for teams that route tickets across multiple channels. It handles ticketing, automation, and a knowledge base, but it is not a PSA, so billing, contracts, and asset management still live elsewhere.

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FreeITSM is a free, open-source IT service management (ITSM) platform with twenty modules, including ticketing, a CMDB, a knowledge base, business-process mapping, and an AI integration. It was built by Ed Mozley, an IT manager at a London law firm.

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