Server Sets

AppFirst has come out with another great feature to make organizing and filtering your data easier: Server Sets!

How it works:

If you’re already familiar with Server Tags, then you know tags allow you to organize your servers into logical groupings (Production, Database, QA) to help you see and manage all your servers. Server Sets are the next step in organization.

Server Sets are a way of creating dynamic groups of servers based on the intersection of two or more Server Tags.
For example: Servers [1, 2, 3, 4] have a tag “Linux,” servers [5, 6, 7, 8, 9] have a tag “Windows,” and servers [3, 4, 5, 6] have a tag “Database.” A server set called “Linux.Database” would produce a server group of [3, 4]. “Windows.Database” would produce [5, 6], etc. If you later add a new server [10] with tags “Linux” and “Database,” server set “Linux.Database” would automatically produce [3, 4, 10].

How to get started:

From the Administration menu, select Server Sets. In the upper left hand corner click “Add Server Set.” A list of current Server Tags appear on the left. Select which Server Tags you’d like to include in your Server Set. Select the Server Tags in the order you would like them to appear in your Server Set (ie Select “NY”, “Production”, “Database” for a Server Set of “NY.Production.Database”). You must select at least two Server Tags to create a Server Set.

To read more about Server Tags and Server Sets, check out our Help Documentation.

Let us know what you think by emailing support@appfirst.com or leaving a comment on our blog!

SIIA Vision From the Top 2012: David Roth

SIIA’s Vision from the Top is a collection of interviews with SIIA member executives running some of the most exciting technology companies today.

Here’s the interview from our CEO, David Roth. You can download the complete copy of the publication SIIA Vision from the Top 2012.

With various forces combining to transform the IT landscape, how do you see the role of the IT department evolving?

The Complex Road to Business/IT Nirvana
The Application is the Business. And, the Business is the Application.

For companies that grasp and internalize the above, the road to Business/IT Nirvana becomes crystal clear. What is an application, really? It can be interpreted different ways by different people with different job functions. But at the most fundamental level, an application should be the business – and if it’s not, then that application is probably weakening the business.

IT spent the last 10 years trying to align itself with Business – until last year. The economic downturn blew up the alignment myth. CEOs told their CIOs “You have no IT goals. IT goals are the business goals.” Simple. Crisp. Total Alignment. But what’s the best way to help ensure that your applications are the business and vice versa? The goal of aligning IT to business goals is not new – it has been around for many years, and remains a ‘nirvana’ that organizations strive to achieve. In an October 2011 report by Forrester Research, Inc. titled “Transform Your I&O Organization Into an Innovation Machine,” report author Jean-Pierre Garbani writes, “In Partner Player organizations, technology and its leaders are viewed as critical to go-to-market offerings and provide a source of differentiation (the business is IT and IT is the business). ”

Once Business and Applications are indistinguishable, risks to Applications are nothing but risks to the Business. This is an exciting time in business and technology. Private, public and hybrid clouds enable and support sensational new business capabilities. People are recognizing the differentiation Garbani notes, and want to more quickly align their IT capabilities and their business successes. Why? Consider a recent study by Aberdeen that found that 68 percent of the time, IT finds out about application issues from end-users. Enterprise Management Associates estimates that the amount of outages and application problems averaged out across mid-market and enterprise size operations cause 60 hours of downtime per year. The cost of that downtime is averaged at $45,000 per hour (much higher for enterprises of course), and businesses spend nearly $3 million a year identifying and solving application issues in the cloud. ‘What’s so exciting about that?’ you’re asking. Well, never before have tools and methodologies been so available to propel IT transformation from IT centric to business centric. Today’s solutions assess and view critical business metrics, in a repeatable and highly consistent manner, providing enormous insight to leverage and work more successfully with cloud computing technology.

So, why are we still using system metrics as a proxy for business risks? We should not. The primary metrics should be application metrics that are synonyms for business metrics like ‘Sales in Past 5 minutes’. Traditional system metrics (like Network Latency) are still essential, but they now serve to support root cause analysis of business risks. Today, finally, there are solutions that provide critical business visibility through the technical operations. These tools can show not only that IT metrics are the business metrics, but that application metrics are business metrics. And I believe that companies that embrace this thinking will be successful.

This insight is elevating the responsibilities of CTOs and CIOs. They have always held responsibility for the vision and execution of a company’s IT organization, but today they are at the business table. This is a fundamental shift that has been evolving and which is well underway today. Finally, IT is no longer an ‘expense bucket’ but a true business peer. When asked what the IT goals are, the answer is “business goals” – they are, and should be, one and the same. IT departments at today’s successful businesses ensure everyone within IT has specific alignment in their roles with responsibility to those business goals. Whether an employee is a Sys Admin or in Dev Ops, the next generation IT operation has a clearer understanding of the department’s end-to-end alignment to the business goals, and just as critical, a way to measure it. But how does a company or organization get from start-up chaos to business/IT hand-in-hand nirvana? They need to recognize that it’s a process and have the right tools in place to know where they’re at in the process and how to keep business and IT metrics continually aligned.

Where Are We, How Did We Get Here, and What’s Next? The Complexity Challenge

Having trivialized alignment as a red herring worth completely ignoring, let’s get back to reality. There is no silver bullet to immediate “Total Alignment.” We learned early on that businesses have a natural progression in terms of their business model and alignment with IT. No one moves quickly or painlessly from ‘survival mode’ of look-guess-fix-repeat to an operation where IT and business goals are fully aligned, where IT and business metrics are harmonious, and where business and IT are working hand-in-hand to manage business risks. Through our close work with customers, we have identified five stages of a business risk ‘maturity model’ – starting with ‘Survival’, then moving up to Reactive, Planning, Proactive, and finally full Alignment of business and IT. Forrester has recognized this progression also. The January 2012 report: “Develop An IT Service Management And Automation Strategic Plan” identifies it as a ‘Complexity Curve’ – companies moving along the curve transition from one state to the next. In the beginning they’re focused on applications and infrastructure, then as the business grows, so grows the number of applications, then the applications become more complex services, and then finally become integrated with the business. Both of these models help companies identify their current stage of business/IT alignment, and also help guide businesses and IT departments through the challenging path of progression to complete business/IT alignment.

Successful organizations such as Etsy and Zynga have already merged the idea of business and IT performance as one and the same. They have helped the world understand how this can be done. We now have platforms and services that emulate these leaders and allow all of us to reach that nirvana. A place where IT risks are nothing more than business risks. A place where an IT application is the business. And, IT goals are nothing but business goals.

Businesses and organizations cannot evolve from survival mode to business/IT nirvana quickly and still focus on running a successful operation. But today there is a platform and tools available that are easily optimized for any organization at any stage of progression toward business/IT nirvana. The successful business will take advantage of these capabilities to ensure that the application is the business, and the business is the application.

Collector Profiles

AppFirst is proud to announce their newest feature: Collector Profiles!

Collector Profiles allow you to set up new collectors based off existing collector’s settings. All logs, server tags, Nagios Scripts, applications, and alerts from the model server can be loaded from a model collector (that you design) and autoloaded into your new collector. There are no limits to the number of profiles you make, or how many collectors you can download from it!

For example, you have one database collector and decide to add another one (or two, or seven) you can create a model collector profile from your database server and name it “Database.” From that point on, whenever you add a new database collector, you can use the collector profile “Database” and have all your logs, applications, server tags, alerts and Nagios Scripts autoloaded onto your new collector!

How to create a model collector profile:

From Administration – Collector Profiles you can select “Create” in the upper left hand corner. Give the model a unique profile name and select which collector will serve as the model. From here you can review and modify which logs, server tags, Nagios Scripts, applications, and alerts will be on the profile. You can edit or delete profiles at any time by going to Administration – Collector Profiles and clicking the edit or delete icons to the right of the Profile Names.

Please note: Alerts are entered into profiles as written. Review alerts to make sure they do not include server names to avoid confusion.

To upload a new collector to a profile (profiles cannot be applied to existing collectors), simply go to Administration – Collector Profiles and click “Download” to the right of the Collector Profile of your choice. Directions for downloading a collector profile will appear in a popup window.

For Windows: Please notice Step 2 of the installation process, as it is here you will find the credentials for entering in your Profile Field on the AppAccess install wizard.

Tell us what you think of Collector Profiles by commenting here or emailing support@appfirst.com.

Leading Research Firm Names AppFirst “Cool Vendor” in Application Performance Monitoring

Report Highlights Companies That Should be Considered Part of Corporate IT Strategy

NEW YORK, NY – May 1, 2012 – Gartner Research today named AppFirst as one of four companies highlighted in a new report from Research Director Jonah Kowall and Research VP Will Capelli entitled Cool Vendors in APM.  AppFirst is a leading provider of critical business and system visibility solutions, designed to aid businesses in their quest to completely align IT with business goals.  AppFirst’s platform and solutions enable IT to integrate business performance and system metrics into a single repository.  With that capability, organizations are impacted in powerful ways: sharing insights about customers, engaging the organization to innovate at the most grassroots level, executing to bring that innovation to market, and resolving issues before their customers even know there is a problem.

“We highlight Cool Vendors in APM that should be considered as part of an IT operations management software strategy,” said Jonah Kowall, Gartner research director, in his report entitled “Cool Vendors in Application Performance Monitoring, 2012.” “This dynamically evolving market segment holds high interest for those in IT operations, application support, development and quality assurance, and for line-of-business managers.”

Because IT sits as the nexus point between customers and the services they consume, IT has focused and unique knowledge to lead the organization.  To support the transition to true alignment, technology executives must have access to the business and system metrics that live within applications to provide critical business visibility through technical operations.  AppFirst delivers the platform and solutions needed to be able to use those metrics to drive business.

“We are pleased that Gartner has recognized the importance of Application Performance Monitoring Solutions as critical to the overall IT operation,” said Pamela Roussos, chief marketing officer for AppFirst, Inc.  “By having direct and immediate access to business metrics, IT is ideally suited to integrate those metrics into the overall risk framework, becoming the go-to source for business and systems risk management.”

AppFirst Solutions

AppFirst recently unveiled new initiatives designed to support organizations in their move to complete alignment:

  • Systems Risk Management Solution – Following AppFirst’s continued commitment to DevOps teams, the Systems Risk Management solution delivers tools that provide a 360-degree view of risks and use baselines, enabling execution of any technical action from a common set of data.  This allows companies to be alerted to, and prevent failures, and allows IT to evangelize prevention over recovery.
  • Business Risk Management Solution – Focused on supporting technical executives, this solution moves organizations to a truly aligned state where IT is the direct source for business risk management.  Tech execs can now have a shared view of business risks and how they relate to the overall system, allowing business performance metrics to be integrated into the overall risk framework.

For more information on these initiatives, or any other AppFirst solutions, please visit the website at www.appfirst.com.

 

About AppFirst, Inc.

AppFirst is the leading SaaS-based provider of critical business and systems visibility solutions that allow organizations to closely align their IT and business goals to manage business risks.  Focused on mid-market IT executives, as well as application architects and DevOps, the company delivers the platform and solutions that integrate business performance and system metrics into a single repository, providing cause analysis at a glance.

The company provides a simple yet thorough way to use business and system-related metrics to quickly and easily identify the root cause of application and infrastructure problems and measure the impact to the business, increasing revenues and customer retention.

Founded in 2009, AppFirst is a New York City-based company venture backed by FirstMark Capital, First Round Capital and Javelin Partners. For more information, visit http://www.appfirst.com. Follow us on Twitter or subscribe to the AppFirst blog to stay up-to-date on the latest AppFirst news.

 

Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in its research publications, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors with the highest ratings. Gartner research publications consist of the opinions of Gartner’s research organization and should not be construed as statements of fact. Gartner disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.

The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.