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thoughts on business, service and technology operations and management in the digital transformation era

Yesudas Jayson Kurisinkal posted today over on his Infosys Service Matters! ITSM & IT Management blog with commentary on the industry’s attempts at making their software or technology more consumable. He notes that this isn’t a new concept with many vendors offering “express” type products. These are often crippled down versions of their more powerful parents with the attempt at offering smaller clients an entry point with the option of easy migration or upgrade in the future to the full blown versions. Some vendors go to market with the full product and mere licensing restrictions on what can or can not be done leaving the complexity of the product.

My question to you is this. Would a Business Service Management (BSM) Appliance, Software as a Service (SaaS) or Platform as a Service (PaaS) be a means to achieve BSM Lite or BSM in general? Would you be willing to open access into your most trusted IT and business data stores to a trusted company that would help you along the path towards BSM from the technology perspective? (people, process, organization silos/politics aside) Would you consider a private, internal SaaS/PaaS delivered as an appliance a viable alternative to the “cloud”. (private cloud)

A “BSM Manager of Managers” in the “cloud” would be an interesting concept to virtually sit atop the end-to-end business and orchestrate alignment, impact, monitoring and management of the key BSM Value Proposition components?

What are the benefits, tradeoffs, risks?

Is your company considering emerging SaaS offerings such as Service-Now.com or any of the business intelligence (BI) or simple monitoring services? Do you already use vendors such as Keynote or Gomez?

Does name brand matter? Does it make it “easier” or just give you a warm and fuzzy feeling?

What value add would you expect compared to deploying your own inside the firewall? Is the cost savings approach good enough justification?

What role should the SaaS/PaaS provider play above providing the core capability? How involved should they be in helping a client get started?

What should the level of effort be for the client to design, develop and implement their specific solution on the SaaS/PaaS platform? Should this be significantly easier? Does the client need a big time SME or just a trained administrator?

What are the core features, functions, capabilities that a SaaS/PaaS provider must have to be able to deliver on a widely agreed upon vision for BSM?

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February 2009 ANSMTUG Meeting

in ANSMTUG, User Group

The February 10th meeting takes our group in another unique direction. The TUG is very excited to have Bobby Krupczak talk to us about his new, open source, product named Cartographer. Bobby is Chief Scientist of the Krupczak Organization.

You probably remember Bobby as a co-founder of Empire Technologies and creator of SystemEDGE — an SNMP agent for systems and application management. After selling Empire and working for the buyer for a few years, he retired, took some time off, and has now started another software company to develop next-generation management technologies. His new software, the Cartographer project, focuses on the interactions between systems, applications, and networks and applies peer-to-peer concepts to de-centralize the traditional manager/agent (or client/server) model common in today’s management architectures.

Bobby will do a live demo of Cartographer as well as tell us about it and XMP, a management protocol that he created for Cartographer. You won’t want to miss this meeting!

Please attend and help us out by registering at http://ansmtug-feb-2009.eventbrite.com if you intend to attend so we can provide a headcount for food and drink.

Visit the ANSMTUG website for more information!

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Interesting Links for February 2nd

in General

Links that I have found interesting for February 2nd:

  • ProspectHills – We are a well-funded start-up actively seeking energetic, passionate and talented software engineers and salespersons because we are building solutions that will radically accelerate data center and IT service management results.
  • Integrien Gets Patent – Integrien, a provider of performance analysis software for the enterprise, said today that the firm has gained a patent for its technology. The patent is the firm's first. According to Integrien, the patent — United State Patent 7,467,067 — covers its IT performance management system, and is part of its flagship product Alive. The U.S. Patent and Trademark office lists Mazda A. Marvasti as the inventor on the patent, which was filed in September of 2006.
  • New Relic . Serious about Rails performance – RPM is a Ruby on Rails Performance Management solution that enables developers to quickly and cost effectively detect, diagnose, and fix application performance problems in real time
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