In order to guarantee your mission-critical applications and services, you have Service Level Agreements (SLAs) agreed with your Managed Service Provider (MSP)...
Network technology convergence, consolidation and migration exercises face major service providers and enterprises worldwide...
Recent legislation in the United States and Europe has mandated compliance in several key areas of IT...
When intermittent application performance problems start, so does the finger-pointing...
In order to guarantee your mission-critical applications and services, you have Service Level Agreements (SLAs) agreed with your Managed Service Provider (MSP). They may claim to achieve that SLA, but you are not so sure. Anecdotally, performance has been poor of late, and users are complaining of poor application performance.
Lack of proofWithout measuring MSP delivery against SLAs, you have no guarantee that they are being met. Worse, even if they are being breached, you have no way of proving it, and are therefore unable to claim on the penalty clause. In the meanwhile, company performance is suffering, users are unhappy and, locked into a contract, the IT Director is powerless to respond.
Any project to instigate a performance management system may be too costly, too late. What you need is a low-cost, low-risk way of auditing your MSP's performance, particularly against the SLAs they have signed up to.
Perhaps you have SLAs in place with many providers, or you would like to monitor internal, as well as external SLAs.
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Network technology convergence, consolidation and migration exercises face major service providers and enterprises worldwide. Migrating networks manually whilst maintaining quality of service is time consuming and laborious, no matter how skilled the resource. Whether migrating to VoIP (Voice over IP), MPLS (Multi-Protocol Label Switching) or all-IP, you need a migration strategy which guarantees that your customer's Service Level Agreements (SLAs) are met. This requires both automation and experience.
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Recent legislation in the United States and Europe has mandated compliance in several key areas
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When intermittent application performance problems start, so does the finger-pointing. Those responsible for networks, servers and applications each insist the others are to blame. In the meantime, mission-critical business processes are affected, hitting operational efficiencies, employee motivation and the bottom line.
In the worst cases, customer-facing processes are affected and your brand suffers irreparable damage. Though many organisations have network and server capacity management systems in place, few measure the end-to-end performance of business transactions. As a result, IT service managers can be lulled into a false sense of security, and can be genuinely surprised when service performance degrades.
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