Advanced IT Analytics: Making it Simpler to Optimize What’s More Complex

Apr 13, 2017 3:03:33 PM

The growing market for analytics in IT is one of the more exciting areas to watch in the technology industry. Exciting because of the variety and types of vendor innovation in this area. And exciting as well because our research indicates the adoption of advanced IT analytics supports data sharing and joint decision making in a way that’s catalytic for both IT and digital transformation.

On the other hand, IT analytics are not necessarily a panacea. Some of the offerings, rich in potential, are also so rich in complexity that actual use case justification and time to value can create more of a wall blocking forward progress than a bridge crossing the IT-to-business divide. Moreover, many IT organizations are still resolutely in ‘build-your-own’ mode using backend data lakes and homemade analytic techniques that can create another steep impasse. In fact,  EMA’s advanced IT analytics research shows that only 37% of IT organizations are seeking primarily a third-party source for advanced IT analytics, with 39% taking a primarily in-house approach and 24% claiming an even mix of both.  When asked what the primary obstacle was to going forward with advanced analytics, the top-line answer was the technology products are not yet fully baked.

Part of the problem in the market (using the term loosely because IT analytics really span multiple markets) is understanding use case. Too many analytics initiatives are focused on data collection without a clear sense of priority, relevance or value. By way of analogy, this is something we saw and still see in our consulting in support of CMDB and CMS solutions. The first thing you want to ask yourself, is what do you want to achieve? What are your (and your organizations’) priorities?

Are they, for instance…

  • Performance and availability management across the application infrastructure?
  • Support for understanding the impacts of change and optimizing change for performance?
  • Optimizing cloud resources (public and or private) for service delivery, value and cost—including insights into capacity and usage?
  • Optimizing IT for DevOps and agile efficiencies?
  • Integrated security with performance and change management (SecOps)?
  • Or financial optimization of IT across the board in terms of cost and value from an OpEx and CapEx perspective?

And this list is far from complete.

The truth is, in many cases some of the same data can be applied to virtually all of the above use cases. But the truth is also that to maximize the value of those data interdependencies, significant levels of maturity in reporting and analysis, and flexibility in deployment, are 100% required.

Based on our research, the most in-demand set of objectives for IT analytics is something of a mosaic. It combines performance and availability management, with insights into infrastructure utilization, along with support for cloud migration and DevOps. And in this, increasingly, lurk security concerns as well.

For instance, the top five objectives in leveraging IT analytics in support of cloud were:

  1. Improved network security
  2. Hybrid cloud optimization
  3. Compliance
  4. Integrated security and performance
  5. Real-time service performance

Note how intertwined security and performance are, along with needs for optimization and real-time insights.

When it came to issues surrounding leveraging AIA for optimizing change, cloud migration dominated—with three of the first four areas of concern, including: public cloud efficiencies, internal cloud efficiencies, and hybrid cloud efficiencies—all virtually tied. The first-ranked issue for optimizing change had to do with managing data for consistency, currency and accuracy.

When it came to DevOps and agile, tops on the IT analytics agenda were:

  1. Optimizing application performance by providing feedback to development from production
  2. Minimizing the time developers spend troubleshooting production performance issues
  3. Supporting application developers directly (with performance insights)

One Solution Example

Today, I’d like to highlight one analytics innovator, Corvil, that has meaningfully addressed the need for cost-efficient versatility in optimizing hybrid cloud for performance and availability. Corvil’s Open Network Data Analytics also offer insights into security and change, as well as support for agile and DevOps requirements. But the news of the day is Corvil’s recent introduction of the Corvil Sensor (which provides a flexible, software-only, cost-effective (it’s free) approach to extending the reach of Corvil’s core analytics into public, private and hybrid cloud environments.

To be clear, Open Network Data Analytics is focused on packet analytics. But Corvil has optimized its use of ‘network data’ to support not only full visibility into the network infrastructure, but also application dependencies including database, middleware and mobile endpoints. It is also well designed to compare and contrast workload performance between on-premise and cloud environments, as well as between different cloud providers, enabling IT to optimize infrastructure efficiency.

More to come

Corvil is of course just one innovator in an industry arena that’s largely populated by innovators. But with its recent announcement, Corvil stands out for truly grasping the need for flexibility and time to value in optimizing the hybrid world.

I’d also like to point out that selecting advanced IT analytics solutions requires planning for you to meet your own unique requirements. These are never generic, and fortunately the emerging choices are far from generic as well. Moreover, effectively deploying a transformative analytic technology requires a willingness across IT to work in new, more collaborative and more efficient ways.

With all this in mind, I’ll be looking more closely at how advanced analytics for IT are being designed, deployed and adopted in the coming months.  So stay tuned. There’s more to come.

 

Dennis Drogseth

Written by Dennis Drogseth

Dennis joined Enterprise Management Associates in 1998 and currently manages the New Hampshire office. He has been a driving force in establishing EMA's New England presence. Dennis brings several years of experience in various aspects of marketing and business planning for service management solutions. He supports EMA through leadership in IT Service Management (ITSM), CMDB systems, as well as megatrends like advanced operations analytics, cross-domain automation systems, IT-to-business alignment, and service-centric financial optimization. Dennis also works over several practice areas to promote dialogue across critical areas of technology and market interdependencies. Dennis also helped to build the network management practice area at EMA.

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