Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

March 2022

Why it's important to have a monitoring strategy

Developing breathtaking apps isn't easy. You have to generate amazing ideas, incubate projects, hire best-in-class talent, and scale your solution across various hiccups and road bumps. So, this shouldn't be too surprising: 99.5 percent of apps fail. But here's what is surprising: most apps don't fail because of bad ideas, budgetary issues, or scaling woes. According to surveys, nearly 90 percent of users leave apps due to ongoing performance issues — not a lack of interest, time, or money.

Finding value through problem localisation

As the tech ecosystem continues to swell and digital solutions become a beacon of productivity and profitability for companies across industries, development speed and agility are becoming differentiators — even for small companies on the outskirts of the ever-expanding tech fog. Here's how problem localisation can minimise your change failure rate, boost your deployment frequency, and create a stable and usable environment across your tech stack.

What is Application Performance Management (APM)?

Your business can live or die based on the performance of the applications through which your customers access it. For a large company, downtime can mean thousands of dollars in lost revenue. Problems arising that make your application unusable could push away new customers who must instead move towards solutions who have stayed on top of their problems. In this digital world, most businesses highly depend on software to monitor and support various elements.

How to Monitor the Health of your Applications

Between the meteoric rise of telehealth visits (which has seen a whopping 3,800 percent increase since COVID-19), the ever-increasing healthcare tech stack, and the up-and-coming wave of Medtech pushing the boundaries of patient and healthcare experiences, one thing is clear: healthcare is grappling with digital technology. There's an ever-so-tempting $3 trillion in cost savings on the horizon. But to ride that digital wave to success, you need to avoid wipeouts.