Given the speed and complexity of the cloud computing era, application performance monitoring (APM) is an increasingly important element of successful business. When critical applications like Big Data software runs slowly, productivity drops, IT costs rise, and employees and customers can become frustrated.
Application performance monitoring targets these issues. It provides tools for managing code, understanding application dependencies, viewing transaction times and other technical indicators, and gauging overall user experience.
APM tools help a business know when it’s on track with overall objectives, but they also aid developers in understanding whether or not they’re coding effectively. For example, a tool may track data analytics metrics in relation to the customer journey and their overall experience. Or they may provide insight into performance issues related to servers, storage, software as a service, or other factors. On the other hand, it might deliver code level visibility into Java or .NET apps and spot problems.
These tools typically fall into three basic categories: metrics based, code level performance and network based. In the solutions below, you’ll see that many tools combine some element of each of these elements.
Although every organization can benefit from APM tools, finding the right vendor and specific solution can prove challenging. Different products approach application performance monitoring in different ways, including the type of infrastructure, level of automation, the use of machine learning, and the ability to integrate with cloud applications.
Organizations should consider these functional areas when selecting a solution:
There are a number of key considerations in selecting an application. These include cloud integration, IoT integration, database support, dashboard visibility and controls, reporting (including historical analytics) code language support, the ability to conduct end-to-end tracing, cross-application tracking capabilities, code-level diagnostics and tracing, and notification and alert capabilities. Each of these elements comprise the framework – and the framework must check enough of your boxes.
Due diligence is vitally important when selecting a vendor. It’s wise to thoroughly question an APM solutions provider and understand its business philosophy, technology framework and vision for the future. Other important considerations are licensing costs, update policies, service level agreement (SLA) and overall customer support. But most important: are they offering some level of flexibility for your specific business needs? Are they willing to negotiate?
In this Datamation article for application performance monitoring tools we have identified 10 top vendors/tools:
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Value proposition for potential buyers: Broadcom purchased CA Technologies in late 2018. The platform—available both on premises and as a SaaS solution—delivers core APM, infrastructure, network, end-user, cloud, mainframe and business transaction monitoring within the vendor’s CA Digital Experience Insights (DXI) platform. The focus is heavily on actionable analytics that identify problem points and promote improved digital experiences. Broadcom is ranked as a “Leader” in Gartner’s MQ.
Visit BroadcomValue proposition for potential buyers: Cisco acquired AppDynamics in 2017. The APM solution is available as both an on-premises and SaaS solution. The platform offers core APM monitoring but also analytics tools for tracking end users and various types of infrastructure, including mainframes, cloud, and SAP S/4HANA. Gartner ranks Cisco (AppDynamics) as a “Leader” on its MQ.
Visit AppDynamicsValue proposition for potential buyers: The website monitoring platform focuses on risk assessment, diagnostics, user management and server monitoring for online environments. Quest is designed to simplify IT management by encompassing a framework of data protection, database management, security, performance monitoring and more.
Visit QuestValue proposition for potential buyers: The privately held firm offers an APM solution that is available on-premises, on a managed services basis or as a SaaS offering. It includes APM, DEM, infrastructure, network monitoring and AIOps capabilities—along with real-time topology and AI algorithms that automatically detect anomalies and understand the business impact across users, applications, and infrastructure. Dynatrace is ranked as a “Leader” in Gartner’s MQ.
Visit DynatraceValue proposition for potential buyers: IBM offers both on-premises and SaaS-based APM solutions. Each uses an approach specifically optimized for the user’s application environment. IBM’s large network of business partners, and the product’s ability to connect with a wide range of products and solutions, makes it a popular choice for larger and mid-size organizations. Gartner ranks IBM as a “Challenger” on its MQ.
Visit IBMValue proposition for potential buyers: Microsoft delivers full APM support only as a SaaS solution, though the vendor’s older System Center Operations Manager can tackle basic functions. The solution is designed to work with Azure, and it supports .NET and Java applications, along with apps written in Python, Go and Node.js. Microsoft is ranked as a “Challenger” on Gartner’s MQ.
Visit MicrosoftValue proposition for potential buyers: The vendor offers APM only as a SaaS solution. It is designed to work with cloud platforms such as AWS, Azure and Google Cloud. It supports Kubernetes containers and microservices monitoring, as well as business-centric analytics, infrastructure monitoring and distributed tracing capabilities. Gartner ranked New Relic as a “Leader” in its MQ.
Visit New RelicValue proposition for potential buyers: Oracle is a long-time provider of APM tools. It offers an on-premises solution through Oracle Enterprise Manager (OEM) and a SaaS solution through Oracle Management Cloud (OMC). The latter platform is a multitenant framework that addresses APM requirements across applications, infrastructure and end-user monitoring environments. Oracle is ranked as a “Challenger” in the Gartner MQ.
Visit OracleValue proposition for potential buyers: Riverbed is a long-time provider of APM solutions. It offers several products that address different enterprise requirements. These include both on-premises and SaaS-based solutions for monitoring, analyzing and addressing anomalies and various other challenges. Gartner ranks Riverbed as a “Challenger” in its MQ.
Visit RiverbedValue proposition for potential buyers: The vendor entered the APM market in 2016, after acquiring the assets of AppNeta. It offers powerful tools that span IT networks, infrastructures and applications. These include host agents, SNMP polling and application dependency mapping. The vendor’s solutions are available in both on-premises and SaaS-based versions. The on-premises solution is called Server & Application Monitor (SAM) and the SaaS product is named AppOptics. Gartner ranked the company a “Niche Player” in its MQ.
Visit SolarWindsVendor | Focus | Key Differentiator | Key features |
---|---|---|---|
Broadcom (CA Technologies) | On premises and SaaS APM that revolves around actionable analytics to improve digital experiences. | Offers a digital Experience Insights (DXI) platform that addresses infrastructure, network, cloud, end-users, and business transaction monitoring. | Analytics tools; assisted triage workflow that offers drill-down visibility into issues. |
Cisco (AppDynamics) | Offers on premises and SaaS APM with monitoring, diagnostics and analytics. | Addresses a wide array of APM requirements, including mainframes, clouds, and SAP S/4HANA. | Supports business and IT metrics; integrated machine learning and powerful cloud tools. |
Dell Foglight (Quest) | A SaaS-based APM solution that risk assessment, diagnostics, user management and server monitoring for online environments. | The Quest platform provides tools that consolidate and standardize database performance management across diverse multi-platform environments. | Database monitoring; performance optimization; advanced workload analytics. |
Dynatrace | APM available on-premises, as a managed service or as a SaaS solution. | OneAgent architecture supports a wide array of environments, from mainframe to COTS and SaaS through a combination of legacy and newer technology infrastructure and tools. | Offers real-time topology and AI algorithms that automatically detect anomalies and understand the business impact across users, applications, and infrastructure. |
IBM | SaaS-based multi-tenant APM solution. | Includes a web-based UI and configurable dashboard that monitors AWS, Azure and other cloud environments using cloud-native APIs. Offers strong AI capabilities. | RUM synthetic transactions monitoring, log analytics, middleware monitoring, multivariate anomaly detection, and business insight. |
Microsoft | Full APM support available through a SaaS solution. Basic APM functionality though System Center Operations Manager. | The solution works with Azure and supports .NET and Java, along with apps written in Python, Go and Node.js. | Includes DEM, log analytics and cloud-native monitoring for Azure, with support for containers and Kubernetes. |
New Relic | SaaS-based APM. | Auto-instrumentation framework supports cloud platforms such as AWS, Azure and Google Cloud with an excellent UI and strong workflow features. | Dashboard provides deep visibility into applications and performance. Includes machine learning and AI features. |
Oracle | Offers on-premises and SaaS-based APM through different applications. | Oracle Management Cloud handles Oracle workloads as well as heterogeneous frameworks. The solution is available in different versions for different specific purposes. | Strong analytics and orchestration features. Growing support for modern programming languages and open source tools. |
Riverbed | Offers on-premises and SaaS APM. | Riverbed’s core APM solution, AppInternals, delivers agent-based, bytecode instrumentation and deep integration with the vendor’s other products and tools. | Offers coupled DEM and NPMD functions; supports large volumes of data through comprehensive infrastructure monitoring and application and user management. |
SolarWinds | Offers on-premises and SaaS solutions. | Offers powerful tools that span IT networks, infrastructures and applications. These include host agents, SNMP polling and application dependency mapping. | The SaaS solution, AppOptics, supports Docker and Kubernetes, along with code-level instrumentation and infrastructure monitoring. |
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