What is our primary use case?
My main use case for Toad for Oracle is as a tool for Oracle application development. It is a GUI-based tool that we use for managing, developing, querying, monitoring, and administering Oracle databases while simplifying database administration.
A quick specific example of how I use Toad for Oracle in my day-to-day work includes browsing tables, views, procedures, functions, packages, triggers, and indexes without writing SQL.
Toad for Oracle is used as a back-end database for core business applications, and it helps with that.
How has it helped my organization?
Resolving performance issues with Toad for Oracle has benefited my organization by helping with faster troubleshooting when something is taking much more time or has performance issues. It provides real-time visibility in the database, active sessions, blocking locks, running SQL, and performance issues.
Toad for Oracle helps my organization save time, reduce errors, prevent downtime, and save money compared to its cost. It helps with faster troubleshooting, which equals less downtime, resulting in reduced system downtime, lower SLA violations, and increased IT productivity. The tool also enables faster performance tuning.
What is most valuable?
The best features that Toad for Oracle offers include the ability to write SQL queries, execute scripts, test database changes, and troubleshoot application issues.
Toad for Oracle helps with troubleshooting application issues. My process involves identifying slow queries for performance issues, and Toad helps me find which SQL is consuming resources using Session Browser and SQL Monitor.
The best features in Toad for Oracle that I find useful are the Schema Browser and the SQL Editor.
What needs improvement?
Toad for Oracle could be improved by offering deeper support for Oracle Cloud or hybrid databases, as it is a mature tool.
The learning curve is steep for beginners, and the infrastructure is a bit complex.
Regarding Toad for Oracle's AI capabilities, governance and security are limited. It is not a fully AI-driven tool, but it does have some intelligent features such as SQL optimization suggestions.
The accuracy and reliability of Toad for Oracle's output have drawbacks. There is no AI assistant for natural language queries, no predictive analytics, and no anomaly detection, which means its AI capabilities are minimal compared to modern cloud database tools.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Toad for Oracle for almost three years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Toad for Oracle is stable and confirmed to be reliable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Toad for Oracle's scalability is effective. It does not scale the databases itself but scales as a client tool used to manage large Oracle environments. It scales well in enterprise environments and is widely used in banks, telecom companies, government organizations, and large enterprises.
Toad for Oracle's scalability in my organization is efficient as it handles large databases and increasing workloads effectively.
How are customer service and support?
We have never contacted customer support for Toad for Oracle.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I have not used a different solution before Toad for Oracle. We only use Toad for Oracle and have not switched from anything else.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing for Toad for Oracle is that the logistics team in our bank follows this, and it is a commercial product.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Before choosing Toad for Oracle, I evaluated other options, but I forgot the names.
What other advice do I have?
My advice to others looking into using Toad for Oracle is that it is powerful, but you should learn SQL basics and Oracle concepts first and not jump directly into advanced DBA tools. This way you avoid mistakes in production. You should also always double-check queries before execution. I would rate this review as 15.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
On-premises