Article: Opsramp.com
ITOM Software: SaaS and Cloud-Native Vendors Take a Leading Role In the digital age, every organization needs the best capabilities for IT monitoring. There’s simply too much at stake without having advanced tools for ensuring that user performance and SLAs are maintained, and applications are available and reliable, from any location. Yet IT monitoring is just part of the picture. The category of software called IT operations management (ITOM) entails the more comprehensive practice of managing an organization’s business-critical applications and underlying IT infrastructure. According to Gartner’s report, “Market Share: IT Operations Management, Worldwide, 2019,” the ITOM software sector includes: ● Delivery automation. ● Experience management: IT service management (ITSM). ● Experience management: Software asset management (SAM), IT asset management (ITAM) and IT financial management (ITFM). ● ITOM mainframe tools. ● Other ITOM. ● Performance analysis: Algorithmic IT operations (AIOps), IT infrastructure monitoring (ITIM) and other monitoring tools. ● Performance analysis: Application performance monitoring (APM). ● Performance analysis: Network performance monitoring and diagnostics (NPMD) With the advent of cloud computing, much has changed over the years in terms of ITOM’s core requirements. Enterprise IT infrastructure today can include virtual infrastructure such as VMware, private clouds, on-premises data centers as well as single cloud and multi-cloud environments. This makes for a busy tangle of alerts and incident data which IT employees must navigate to resolve issues before they become real business problems. Individuals who work in IT operations management teams, such as NOC engineers, site reliability engineers, and IT administrators, are expected to align with business units and business priorities more than ever before. Their job is to excel at multi-cloud and hybrid IT monitoring to maintain service uptime, availability, and performance for digital services. They must understand the importance of one business service over another, and how to flexibly adapt infrastructure to meet changing needs such as new business offerings or customer segments.