Fresh from completing its purchase of ProactiveNet earlier this week, IT
management software specialist BMC has unveiled details about how it plans to
integrate its new acquisition's analytics software into its portfolio.
Tom Bishop, chief technology officer at BMC, said that the deal "plugged a
gap" in the company's analytics portfolio, adding that ProactiveNet's ability to
collect data from a variety of sources across the IT infrastructure would give
IT managers much better oversight and help them identify trends that could lead
to IT problems, effectively providing them with "an early warning system".
"Businesses now have a lot of data about their IT environment, but the
challenge is turning that data into usable knowledge," he explained. "That is
what ProactiveNet's analytics capabilities enables."
With ProactiveNet having previously operated as a BMC partner the company
expects to have few problems integrating the two portfolios at the data level.
However, Bishop said BMC also has more ambitious plans to increase the
automation of several IT processes by tying ProactiveNet's analytical
capabilities together with BMC's existing problem resolution and incident
management functionality.
"We want to tie the analytical information into our problem management
process flows so that we can begin to solve some of the more common IT problems
in an automated manner," he explained. "I won’t say we will automate everything
as that would be a case of over selling and under delivering, but there is the
opportunity to automate more problem resolution processes."
Bishop added that integration work would begin immediately with a view to
delivering the first integrated product sets within six months.
The move was welcomed by Bola Rotibi of analysts Ovum who argued that BMC's
new analytics capabilities would appeal to customers. "There is a lot of
interest in analytics at the moment across the IT management space and we are
really seeing the functionality that has always been used on customer data being
transferred to apply to operational data," she explained. "IT managers need this
more in-depth information if they are to solve the problems of high failure
rates and this deal makes a lot of sense for BMC, particularly in the wake of
its acquisition last year of [problem management software specialist] Identity.
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