Blog Entry of 2006-Aug- 9 in Network Monitoring Basics
Interview: The Benefits of Network Monitoring (Part 2)
- 4. Benefit: Secures your turnover, because you will know about problems literally within one minute and you can take immediate action
- 5. Benefit: Gives you a chance to switch to your redundancy systems.
- 6. Benefit: Know about performance bottlenecks before your customers find out?
- 7. Benefit: Long term performance data gives you a chance to plan and implement upgrades (e.g. new server hardware, leased lines) without the need for hectic solutions
- 8. Benefit: Control whether your provider meets your service level agreement.
As you can see on June 22nd in the afternoon suddenly a traffic peak occured which used up to 2 MBit/s of the dataline. When this happens all users surfing across this data line will notice a slowdown of their web experience. As a rule of thumb a data line should normally not be loaded to more than 20-30% of its nominal rate for some time.
7. Benefit: Long term performance data gives you a chance to plan and implement upgrades (e.g. new server hardware, leased lines) without the need for hectic solutions
Question: How easily can an "online" business owner/partner analyze data? Are the reports and the interface, again, essentially that intuitive and user friendly?
It takes a little technical understanding, but the graphs are really easy to use. Look at the graph above!With these graphs you can easily discover unsual behaviour and e.g. constant growth in traffic or an overload.
8. Benefit: Control whether your provider meets your service level agreement.
Question: What, realistically, could a network provider/hosting company to do compensate a client for breaching the SLA? Credit? Free service for a period?
That depends on the contract that you have with the hosting company. Many offer discounts or free months. But the main point is that without your own monitoring you must trust your hosting companies sayings and measurements... Only your own monitoring results give you a chance to really start to argue with them if their service is not up to their promises.