The HPE suite is amazingly beautiful, has a fantastic user experience, and provides a high amount of simplification across transactions when adopting cloud technologies significantly.
General Manager Strategic Programs at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees
It simplifies transactions when adopting cloud technologies.
Pros and Cons
- "The HPE suite is amazingly beautiful, has a fantastic user experience, and provides a high amount of simplification across transactions when adopting cloud technologies significantly."
- "I want to have some of those nicer features for when networks go flapping. I want to receive alerts before problems occur rather than when it actually goes down."
What is most valuable?
How has it helped my organization?
NNMi is super robust and seamlessly connects everything across applications, infrastructure, server, storage, and networks. We wanted to connect the dots together.
We have implemented not just NNMi, but the entire HPE suite. The trigger to do this was the digital transformation that we are undertaking at my company, which was really fueled by the desire to give a completely different digital experience to our employees.
We started out with adopting the cloud. We started out with an Office 365 migration a couple of years back. We did it in record time. We migrated 125,000 plus mailboxes in 18 weeks. We looked at a case study on the Microsoft website, and once we liked that, and IT liked it too, our users loved it. And users love Yammer, because that's their way of going ahead and chattering about with everybody else.
Then we said, “Why not get everything else on the cloud too, rather than being on premises”? We also had a lot of end-of-life infrastructure and we said, “Okay, we've got to go significantly into the public cloud”.
We're very heavy in Microsoft Azure and in about nine months we've migrated our entire enterprise application landscape onto the public cloud. We're talking about close to 200 applications outside of SAP itself, which we upgraded to SAP HANA. Everything else is in the cloud. We have a true hybrid infrastructure out there. We're also on AWS, of course. We have our trouble-ticketing system on AWS, so if Azure goes down, we've got something else up and running. And of course, we use it for disaster recovery.
NNMi has proved to be certainly better in a) giving us slightly better capabilities to switch to alternatives when incidents do happen, and b) being able to optimize our costs on the infrastructure monitoring side. Now we have the ability to monitor all of these networks globally from a single tool.
What needs improvement?
I want to have some of those nicer features for when networks go flapping. I want to receive alerts before problems occur rather than when it actually goes down. We need to have our service providers working very closely with us, which will not necessarily happen. We still have submarine cables getting cut which would completely leave us blacked out. But, those are not necessarily problems that happen very often.
For how long have I used the solution?
Our first deployment started out earlier this year. We've been kind of up and about with NNMi probably a little more than a complete quarter. That's about the duration that we've had it operational.
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What was my experience with deployment of the solution?
This transformation has meant, and it continues to be, a lot of change management and adoption by IT with getting them used to this paradigm change and these new tools coming in. But I think there is a lot more recognition of the fact that automation is going to transform their lives and that this is something for the better. I think that's been something which has been really positive and that's the stuff that I'm really working with.
I'm not the super techie person. I run transformation programs. My responsibility and charter is really to make sure that wherever we're running digital transformation, make sure that we take our employees, as well as our IT group, along so that they're not hit by something big. We take them along through this entire change out there.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Stability has been pretty good. But like I said, it's been up and running about a quarter now. I know there are a lot of other enterprises that have had it for years and years and have it running for very long and are doing extremely well.
I'm guessing that it will be the same for us, too. I do know that it's really kind of “best in breed” as a solution, so I'm not expecting any stability issues coming out of there.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
I think we shouldn't necessarily confuse usability, per se, with robustness or scale. That's something NNMi definitely goes ahead and gives us. I've heard it's really scalable. NNMi has been there, done that, for so long with very large, very complex enterprises at the kind of scale that we're talking about. I think I'm okay with usability.
How are customer service and support?
Technical support is good, I guess. We are not having trouble so far. But when we did want to get help or support, we got it.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
We used to have CA Spectrum and Wiley. During our transformation, we decided we needed something super robust to be able to seamlessly connect everything across applications, infrastructure, server, storage, and networks. We wanted to connect the dots together. That's what triggered us to go with HPE. I think it's doing pretty well.
How was the initial setup?
I was not involved in the initial setup. The decision to replace our previous solutions with HPE and NNMi was not taken by me. It was taken before I came to my current company.
I think there is a steeper learning curve compared to a lot of other new age products. A lot of the new age products which have been built in the last couple of years or so, are very, very intuitive. They are built with so called, "design thinking"; what people really, really talk about. That's not necessarily true of some of the older products that are out there.
What other advice do I have?
I work with big vendors like HPE as well as start-ups, especially now that we're on our hybrid journey. I'm using them to do backups for me on the cloud; both end-user computing backups, as well as server backups. Azure backup doesn't seem to work out for me.
I think what I would really be looking at in a vendor is does the vendor vision really synchronize very well with my vision of where I want to be? What is it that I'm looking for when want something to be provided to my end customers who are our 170,000 employees out there?
I have a vision. I have a roadmap. I have quarterly deadlines to say, "This is what I'm going to be doing and can a vendor really support me to do that?" I'm okay if they don't have some features, because I don't think everybody's figured out everything yet. As long as I know that: a) they really are gung-ho about the vision that I have and they're completely in line with that vision, and b) they have the capabilities to be able to solve some of those niggling problems which will definitely pop up when we're going to go through a transformation program of this kind of scale. Then I'm okay with them.
Disclosure: PeerSpot contacted the reviewer to collect the review and to validate authenticity. The reviewer was referred by the vendor, but the review is not subject to editing or approval by the vendor.
Enterprise System Management at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Integrates with other tools and products to give oversight of networks and systems.
Pros and Cons
- "Effectively monitor networks physical and virtual devices."
- "The technical documentation takes experience and much reading to master."
What is most valuable?
Effectively monitor networks physical and virtual devices. SPI's that provide functional reports and metrics. Integrates with other tools and products to give oversight of networks and systems.
How has it helped my organization?
Miss very few events. Rich reporting features.
What needs improvement?
A little better documentation, books updated like HP Network Node Manager: Getting Started.
For how long have I used the solution?
Since NNM was version 4.
What was my experience with deployment of the solution?
Some, but they can be worked though with HP Support.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
No
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
No
How are customer service and technical support?
Customer Service:
Good
Technical Support:Good
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
No
How was the initial setup?
Straight forward, though experience in installing or updating the tool is a must. The technical documentation is takes experience and much reading to master.
What about the implementation team?
In house. I have installed, upgraded NNM from version 4 though 10.10.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Like any enterprise solutions it has a cost. Not only in initial price, but in time to do advanced configuration and maintenance of the product.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
No
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Hi William - thanks for the review. You may want to join our LinkedIn group at www.linkedin.com/groups/4947509
Jon
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Director of System Management Design at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees
The main feature we find the most useful is that it makes a network topology map for us.
Pros and Cons
- "Because of the topological network mapping, our management can quickly take action when there's a network problem."
- "It needs better management for the routing protocol, which right now is really not very good."
Valuable Features
The main feature we find the most useful for us is that it makes a map of the topology of the network.
Improvements to My Organization
Because of the topological network mapping, our management can quickly take action when there's a network problem.
Room for Improvement
It needs better management for the routing protocol, which right now is really not very good. While it does allow us to come in and quickly manage faults in the network, there are issues with the connection and packages between the physical and software layers of the router.
Deployment Issues
There are no issues when we deploy it.
Stability Issues
We have no issues with stability. It's quite stable, in fact.
Scalability Issues
We have a large enterprise and a large network. We've had no problems regarding scalability.
Customer Service and Technical Support
We've had to contact them as sometimes we find bugs in the software. They're a little slow, but they're OK.
Other Solutions Considered
We've worked with CA and IBM, and they're still part of our architecture.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Test Analyst with 51-200 employees
Great GUIs, User-friendly and good reporting, but cumbersome license details.
Pros and Cons
- "The Network Manager has improved incident tracking and speed of response to trouble tickets."
- "Configuration was a bit cumbersome for SNMP traps on the routers and configuration of the SPIs was a little complicated."
What is most valuable?
The GUI and config manager.
How has it helped my organization?
The network Manager has improved incident tracking and speed of response to trouble tickets.
For how long have I used the solution?
A year plus.
What was my experience with deployment of the solution?
Configuration was a bit cumbersome for snmp traps on the routers and configuration of the SPIs was a little complicated.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
None that I noticed.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Solarwinds was what was used by the organisation but the management decided on a unified solution IT and Telco.
How was the initial setup?
It seemed a bit complex in some areas.
What about the implementation team?
A vendor did the implementation and they were very experienced and responsive to issues.
What was our ROI?
I'd say about 0.3 for now as we really haven't used it for that long yet.
What other advice do I have?
The solution is part of the HP NMS solution and the unification helps in keeping a flow of processes going in the organisation.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
I run the Product Management team for HP Network Management Center (NNMi, iSPIs and NA). In the last year, we have vastly simplified the product structure and license, offering an integrated fault and performance management product (NNMi) and a configuration and compliance management product (NA).
Both products come in 2 simple editions: Premium and Ultimate.
Simple, in-place migration from NNMi 9.x to 10.00.
we'd be glad to set up a call and give you an update on the new solution capabilities and product structure.
thx
-balaji
Consultant at a comms service provider with 51-200 employees
Complete Network Monitoring solution
Pros and Cons
- "A complete solution for network monitoring."
- "The cost is high comparing to its competitors, but the results are awesome."
Valuable Features:
Multi-vendor equipment support
Root cause analysis
Multi-type and rich reports
Deployment Issues:
Need a good estimation of the network (manly nodes) otherwise, the system will not work correctly.
Many issues can be found during deployment due to the use of many components and features by the product.
Scalability Issues:
Sizing should be estimated before deployment
Other Advice:
A complete solution for network monitoring.
The cost is high comparing to its competitors, but the results are awesome.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. My company is an HP partner
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Great review of NNMi