We use SCOM here at work.  I'm a catch all system admin of all System Center 
products.  Cost wise, if you have the system center datacenter license for your 
servers, you have already bought SCOM (or it's free if you want to sell it that 
way).  I use SCOM for mostly monitoring.  You can have it kick off tasks when 
alerts come in.  We have SCOM run defrags when an alert saying the drive is 
fragmented (very basic task).  We use the network monitoring part as well.  I'm 
not the networking guy, so I'm not 100% what is possible.  You can create those 
cool maps with your network gear on it with up/down indicators like other 
products. You throw in SCORCH and the product really shows it's true colors 
(again free if you have System Center datacenter licenses). If you have 
questions hit me up off the message board.


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Orlebeck, Geoffrey
Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2015 6:58 PM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: RE: [mssms] OT: SCOM

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]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Art Flores
Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2015 3:29 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[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.

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