Not an expert either. All that I will add is that there is no one-size-fits-all and looking at quadrant placement alone seems silly. Define your requirements first. Perhaps you might share with your superiors the following excerpted from Gartner ID:G00260863, 2014 (Magic Quadrant for Client Management Tools) when it comes to making product choices:
"Organizations should not merely choose from vendors in the Leaders quadrant; they should create a list of criteria that describes their needs, and select from vendors that best meet those requirements. Organizations should use a vendor focused on this market that can meet their specific needs for at least the next three years. Strong focus should be placed on skills, training, process and proper product implementation, because these factors will influence an organization's product experience more than the specific functional capabilities." Mark On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 3:57 PM, Orlebeck, Geoffrey < [email protected]> wrote: > My experience is somewhat limited in SCOM, so this is by no means an > expert level response. When it comes down to it, we are using SCOM strictly > as a monitoring tool for Windows Server OS. We haven’t expanded (yet) into > Unix/Linux, networking or application performance monitoring. However, with > the ability to run custom PowerShell scripts, it is incredibly flexible for > the Windows OSes. > > One of the things I’ve learned via working in SCOM is that it’s 99% pure > monitoring tool. While you can run recovery tasks when an alert is raised, > if you need further intelligence, there’s an entirely different product > (System Center Orchestrator, AKA, SCOrch) that can feed data to/from the > other System Center suite of products (SCCM, SCOM, Service Manager, etc.). > > If you have any specific questions, you can email me off list and I’m > happy to offer up my own experiences if it helps. > > Thanks, > > Geoff > > > > *From:* [email protected] [mailto: > [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Art Flores > *Sent:* Wednesday, April 29, 2015 3:29 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* [mssms] OT: SCOM > > > > Howdy Folks, > > We are currently looking at 2 DCIM (Data Center Infrastructure Management) > tools for monitoring and managing IT resources. > > I was asked to research and compare the CA Technologies software tools (CA > Unified Infrastructure Management) with Microsoft’s SCOM. > > One of our managers from another department pointed out that the CA > software is one of the leaders in the Gartner Magic Quadrant, and that SCOM > was not even on the list. > > I asked to see a copy of the report, it was from September 2014, and of > the 17 products listed in the Magic Quadrant, SCOM was not there. Based on > this report, most of the managers want to go in this direction. > > In an effort to win over the pointy haired bosses, does anyone have a good > slide deck, link, or document that goes into detail about what SCOM can do? > > I found some good links on the web but most of them are not current, the > Operations Manger survival guide, Kevin Holman’s quick start deployment > guide, etc.., but I would like to make sure I am not missing out on any > other good information. > > Thanks. > > > Confidentiality Notice: This is a transmission from Community Hospital of > the Monterey Peninsula. This message and any attached documents may be > confidential and contain information protected by state and federal medical > privacy statutes. They are intended only for the use of the addressee. If > you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, or > distribution of this information is strictly prohibited. If you received > this transmission in error, please accept our apologies and notify the > sender. Thank you. > >
