In the past, many organizations grew and managed their own data centers. Some still do. And many are still developing their own automated incident management (aka Autonomous Operations) tools. But as IT grows and becomes evermore complex and fast-moving, the reality of what it means to do so kicks in, and organizations are re-evaluating their strategies.
As a customer of StatusHub, you are aware that you can quickly and easily communicate with your customers when an incident occurs. With our partnership with Zendesk, you can display a number of events from your StatusHub directly inside the main ZenDesk Support interface.
Exceptional customer service is key in the world of IT, where something could go wrong at any given moment. This level of support equates to business retention, client satisfaction and high success rates and profits. In this post, I’ll introduce a hypothetical scenario, where “MSP Team A” provides 24×7 after-hours support to a valuable client.
451 Research Senior Analyst Nancy Gohring and Moogsoft EMEA CTO Will Cappelli outlined market opportunities and challenges during their instructive webinar “AIOps Predictions 2020.”
Can you trust AIOps tools not to make mistakes? Is there an implementation standard for AIOps? What’s the risk of not adopting AIOps?
Since the term ‘AIOps’ came into use in the monitoring sector a couple of years ago, there has been much confusion about what it means. We hear from users asking if they need it – a difficult question given that the answer depends on how you define it. Since there isn’t a broadly accepted definition, a range of vendors now market their products as AIOps offerings, even though these products cross subsectors and may not be directly competitive.