Applications are the reason businesses buy into information technology. The productivity gains and additional visibility software packages can shift the productivity and revenues of a business by an order of magnitude.
Unfortunately, the reverse is also true. An underutilized, poorly implemented software package can grind productivity to a halt and push end user frustration through the roof. To add insult to injury, businesses pay real dollars for software and implementations that can absolutely slam their productivity and business into the ground.
Complicating matters further, when businesses buy a new truck or piece of machinery, they can physically see it and clearly know when it is working or not. There are gauges that give a clear picture on the relative health of the equipment at any given point in time. Software is invisible and for the most part comes with few gauges to assess how well it is functioning and no gauges or metrics reflecting what impact the software is having on productivity.
Everyday businesses put their faith in applications written by people they do not know in unknown places around the world. These application developers likely do not understand how the business the application is designed to support even works, with no real motivation to want to learn how that application can make business better. I find that scary on a lot of levels, but we do have sales slicks and customer testimonials to help us all sleep better at night.
Add server, desktop and application virtualization to the mix for security, cost savings and additional productivity enhancements, with minimal performance instrumentation again, and you get another layer of fog that IT departments need to find their way through to deliver an exceptional end user experience to their end users.
So what do we do about this?
When applications and technology hardware begin performing poorly or fail, business productivity takes a hit. We naturally want the problem identified and fixed as quickly as possible to return the business to full productivity. So how do we do that?