That leaves framework vendors struggling to prove their usefulness,
and point product makers striving to do more than just plug holes in
frameworks. They all promise cure-all products, but no one can deliver
one. "One-size-fits-all technology doesnt exist. Thats
not even true of pantyhose, never mind software," says Valerie
OConnell, a managing director at Aberdeen Group, a market research
firm.
Frameworks that integrate point products will win, says Dave Ferree,
an e-business director at Aptia, a systems integrator in San Jose. He
points to RiverSofts recent licensing of its Network Management
Operating System source code to HP for use in OpenView. This will give
OpenView Layer 2 topology capabilities.
Struggle Summary
|
| The
struggle: |
The market is teeming with framework and point product vendors
offering stand-alone products as well as multipurpose software suites. |
| Examples of opponents: |
On the framework side, Aprisma, CA, HP and Tivoli; on
the point product side, Concord Communications, Micromuse, RiverSoft and
Tavve Software. |
| Outlook for resolution: |
Too soon to tell whether framework, point products
or suites will win out. |
| User impact: |
Users have no clear choice. Framework providers have not been
as innovative as point vendors, but point vendors don't have broad
solutions.
|
"This was a good move because now HP can develop that capability
into its products quickly," says Paul Edmunds, senior network analyst
at Duke Energy, which uses OpenView and runs point products.
Not so fast
But HP has gotten burned by teaming with a point product vendor, so
other industry watchers arent ready to declare frameworks the
long-term winners. They point out that some HP OpenView shops that purchased
supplemental Tavve management tools eventually replaced the framework
product, choosing instead to rely on the point offerings for performance,
root cause analysis and other management issues.
"Tavve developed products to aid HP OpenView, but those products
ultimately replaced OpenView," says Frank Dzubeck, principal at
Communications Network Architects, an industry analysis firm. Brand
loyalty may be a thing of the past, he adds.
Framework vendors must change the perception that their offerings are
as big as their names and as cumbersome to implement, says John McConnell,
president of McConnell Associates, a network management consulting firm.
"A lot of care and feeding goes into frameworks," he says,
and thats when point products become appealing. Until, of course,
the latest technology changes and users have to go shopping for more
software. So both sides are putting together suites that address several
needs at once.
But users cant simply adorn their infrastructures with the latest
management products and expect positive results, OConnell says.
They have to think beyond network management to systems and applications
management, and strategically unify business goals with IT management
to determine what product is best. And thats not going to be simple.
"Complexity is not going to be decreased by adding a forest of
point products," she says.
OConnell credits CA for getting product development right. It
puts "all its products on the equal footing of Jasmine ii, going
well beyond classic integration to architecture and design," she
says. For example, the company recently released a suite of customer
relationship management tools and integrated the new software with Jasmine
ii, an e-business platform, and its Neugents technology. Because CA
put Jasmine ii at the heart of all CA offerings, it doesnt need
to force-fit products into a current trend, she adds.
As an example on the point side, Concord will periodically be releasing
application software modules for its eHealth Suite of network and system
management products. The first module, AdvantEdge for Exchange, shipped
in November. It adds functionality for monitoring and managing Microsoft
Exchange groupware applications.
Multipurpose suites, as good as they might be, dont really solve
the bigger integration issue something that can only be addressed
through standards. But network management vendors are behind in adopting
standards, Dzubeck points out. Framework vendors havent accepted
that they must standardize for the network management market to move
ahead, but they will if they keep losing business to point product vendors,
he adds.
Some believe the saturated network management market has paved the
way for management service providers (MSP). With staff shortages and
time crunches, customers of all sizes consider outsourcing an option.
But like framework vendors and point product makers, MSPs will come
on strong, promising to do everything for you. Chances are, rather than
clarifying your choice, theyll only muddy it more.