Our main use case for Stonebranch is job scheduling, and we see the reporting and versioning of Stonebranch as very effective compared to other tools. That is why we want to migrate.
Stonebranch specializes in enterprise automation, excelling in workload scheduling and batch processing across platforms like Linux, Windows, iSeries, and zSeries. This platform offers robust automation, enhancing operational efficiency and supporting digital transformation.



| Product | Mindshare (%) |
|---|---|
| Stonebranch | 4.5% |
| Control-M | 11.4% |
| AutoSys Workload Automation | 6.8% |
| Other | 77.3% |
| Title | Rating | Mindshare | Recommending | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control-M | 4.4 | 11.4% | 98% | 202 interviewsAdd to research |
| MuleSoft Anypoint Platform | 4.0 | 2.5% | 92% | 62 interviewsAdd to research |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 1 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 4 |
| Large Enterprise | 20 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 190 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 80 |
| Large Enterprise | 446 |
Stonebranch's platform-agnostic capabilities allow organizations to manage and integrate workloads seamlessly. Its Universal Controller is central to task management, offering a web-based interface for flexibility. Users appreciate its stability, with reliable agents facilitating workflow creation without specialized skills. Efficient file transfers and scheduling tools minimize maintenance, supporting diverse tech environments. Though Stonebranch is beneficial, users look for improvements in graphical workflow visibility, finalized API functionalities, and enhanced connectivity with tools like Microsoft SRS. Enhancements in training materials and cloud availability are also desired.
What are the key features of Stonebranch?Stonebranch finds applications in sectors requiring enterprise automation. Organizations leveraging Linux, Windows, iSeries, and zSeries utilize it for workflow automation, file management, and integrating distributed workloads. It supports tasks like data extraction and analytics, managing thousands of daily operations to enhance visibility and minimize manual interventions.
Stonebranch was previously known as Stonebranch Universal Automation Center.
Nissan, Coop, United Supermarkets, Groupon, CSC, Orbitz, Johnson & Johnson, BMW, Qantas.
| Author info | Rating | Review Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Lead Administrator at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees | 4.5 | I've found Stonebranch effective for job scheduling, especially its versioning, reporting, and cost efficiency. Though its scheduling setup is less intuitive than Control-M, it's stable, scalable, and supporting a successful migration across multiple regions. |
| Senior Technical Specialist at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees | 4.0 | I use Stonebranch for workload automation, finding its flexible features, GUI, and easy integration beneficial for saving time, especially with SAP workflows. While support is good, I am disappointed with its limited reporting capabilities due to the SaaS model. |
| Technology Analyst at Infosys | 4.0 | I use Stonebranch for SFTP/FTP transfers to mainframe, AS/400, SharePoint, drives, and S3. Its security and automation reduce errors, and support helps, but stability issues, high RAM, and updates can block transfers; I’ve seen no ROI and rate it 8/10. |
| Operations Engineer at a computer software company with 501-1,000 employees | 5.0 | I've used Stonebranch for over five years mainly for job scheduling; it's stable, scalable, affordable, and simplifies workflow monitoring and troubleshooting, though enhanced search filters and AI features would further improve the experience. |
| Associate Engineer Emerging Technology at Progression Infonet Pvt Ltd | 4.0 | As a technical user, I find Stonebranch complex but feature-rich, with excellent support. Installation improved, but it's more expensive and task-based compared to GoAnywhere MFT, making initial setup complicated. I score it 7.5/10. |
| Senior Technical Specialist at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees | 3.5 | We use Stonebranch as a workload automation solution for SAP jobs, replacing AutoSys. Its GUI and task monitor are valuable, though improvement is needed. We've achieved positive ROI, saving 40-50% compared to previous solutions. |
| Senior Manager at Colgate | 3.5 | I use Stonebranch UAC for automating 35,000 SAP jobs. It's stable with good support, despite a complex migration setup. While the price is moderate and it meets most needs, I find its analytics could be improved. |
| Senior Manager at Colgate | 4.0 | I find Stonebranch performs well with excellent graphical representation and is intuitive, despite requiring technical effort. It's stable and scalable. The initial setup was challenging due to our complex infrastructure. Overall, I rate it 8/10. |
| Associate Software Engineer at Mphasis | 4.0 | In my company, we use Stonebranch for automation on a private cloud with easy rerun and dependency features. While it's cheaper than Control-M, it lacks cloud availability, affecting scalability. Control-M remains more stable and secure. |
| Application and Database Administrator at Blue Bird Corp | 4.5 | Stonebranch has significantly streamlined our workflows, boosting efficiency, visibility, and saving costs by avoiding extra servers. I value its robust stability and user self-sufficiency, though I find its Microsoft SRS integration weak and wider adoption slow. |

Our main use case for Stonebranch is job scheduling, and we see the reporting and versioning of Stonebranch as very effective compared to other tools. That is why we want to migrate.
The best features Stonebranch offers in my experience include versioning and reporting capabilities, and bundling of apps was very comfortable using Stonebranch. That was very helpful. Stonebranch is helping us with our migration from Control-M, which has been very effective. We have completed a few waves of migration, and everything seems to be going very well.
When I mention versioning and reporting with Stonebranch, the application teams keep changing their scripts based on their new development. Whenever they change a script, the old script is saved. Whenever we want to recall that script, the versioning is very helpful. Understanding what modifications we have done in the past and what is used currently is very helpful. Reporting helps us observe the trend of how much the script has executed in the past and what sort of load is expected in the future based on that analysis.
I feel that Stonebranch can be improved in certain areas. Since I have been a Control-M user for a very long time and have also used Dollar Universe in the past, creating a task or job and then creating a schedule with time triggers and other triggers in different objects feels a bit complicated compared to other tools in the market where everything is laid out in a single pane and scheduling is easy. Here, since we have a task and a time schedule and time trigger separately from the task, I am getting a bit confused becoming accustomed to those concepts, but that can be managed more easily.
I have started using Stonebranch very recently. For the past six months, we have been using Stonebranch because we are planning to migrate from Control-M to Stonebranch.
Stonebranch is stable. We have a huge workload across multiple regions and we are running on the same UAC. Until now, we have not faced any unstable situations compared to other tools.
Stonebranch's scalability is very good. We actually split our environment into three different parts: integration, development, and production. The scalability regarding Stonebranch is good.
Our customer support for Stonebranch has been good until now. We received very good training given by Stonebranch staff, including operator training and administration training. They are helping a lot in our migration from our current tool. We have completed a few waves and everything went very well.
Positive
I have previously used Dollar Universe and Control-M. Dollar Universe does not have many features like versioning and does not have effective reporting. Control-M has most of the features that Stonebranch has, but it is a much costlier solution than Stonebranch. We are planning to migrate our Dollar Universe and Control-M workloads to Stonebranch.
I can share specific outcomes with Stonebranch. For Control-M, we use a separate client that has to be installed across all customer machines. In Stonebranch, since it is web-based, it is very easy for our customers to use and monitor their jobs. In that way, it is very helpful and user-friendly.
Since I have been using Stonebranch for the past six months, I have not used much of all the features available in Stonebranch. The API features are very helpful to us. Other applications that want their own API can easily develop it in Stonebranch and we can use it. We also have a small mainframe environment. Using Stonebranch utility, we can easily schedule mainframe jobs. It is very easy for us to trigger a job in distributed systems and to trigger a job in mainframes, which was very helpful with Stonebranch.
I see that with Stonebranch, the licensing cost is less compared to other tools. Money has been saved. We are trying to implement it across all our different regions. We plan to migrate all the different work scheduling tools to Stonebranch, so I think we will have a single centralized license that will save a lot of cost to the company.
From an organizational cost perspective with Stonebranch, it is a bit cheaper than other tools available in the market. Many features are combined and put together in Stonebranch. We have different objects that can be used in Stonebranch, apart from other products such as Dollar Universe, which I have used earlier. Control-M is almost the same as Stonebranch because it is a client-server architecture. I feel very effective using Stonebranch and it is very easy to use since we are using a web interface.
Before choosing Stonebranch, we evaluated other options. We were trying to extend the Control-M license since it is costly, and we looked at Automic from Broadcom. Tidal and Redwood were also a few options that we had on our list. We found Stonebranch much more convincing than all those other options and also cost-effective.
I have a very large environment with Stonebranch. We have around ten thousand plus jobs which execute on our production and development environment. We have close to fifty plus applications and application owners who have their jobs scheduled using Stonebranch.
I do not have anything to add at the moment about needed improvements for Stonebranch because I am still learning the tool.
On a scale of one to ten, I rate Stonebranch as nine.
I chose a nine for Stonebranch because I feel it is not as user-friendly compared to other tools. To be frank, Control-M is more visually appealing, and the monitoring of alerts is much easier in Control-M.
We did not purchase Stonebranch through the Azure Marketplace. We have our VMs in Azure, but we are not using the SaaS component of Stonebranch. I feel that would be much more user-friendly, but currently, we are not using it from Azure; we just have a VM in Azure and are deploying it there.
I do not have anything at the moment regarding other improvements needed for Stonebranch.
Since I am not directly involved in the pricing and licensing which is handled by a different team, what I have been shared is that compared to other market products, it is much cheaper and has a lot of features.
I would advise others looking into using Stonebranch that it is a very modern solution in the workload automation industry and it has a lot of features, especially in that we can build our own API and push it to the repositories. The SaaS component is also a very good feature so that we do not have to worry about maintaining the infrastructure for Stonebranch, and we can just focus on our daily business scheduling of jobs and working. In every way, it is a very much improved product in the industry.
I do not have any additional thoughts about Stonebranch. As of now, I am very happy using Stonebranch and eager to learn all the new features available. I am looking forward to a good relationship with Stonebranch because we are going to migrate many workload scheduling tools across our multiple regions.

Stonebranch is used for workload automation, and we are mainly using it for running background jobs for SAP systems and other connected satellite systems such as access.
We have automated several processes with the help of Stonebranch, such as system shutdowns. Once you install the agent on the server, you can create UNIX jobs with shell scripting or something that has been secured and encrypted in Stonebranch itself, and it will perform the task.
We have programs available in SAP systems that run there, but at the same time, we have created a schedule for transport movement in the SAP system, such as making changes and moving them from the development or quality system to production through a workflow. This workflow gets triggered on time, takes the action, and completes it. This represents the biggest automation we have seen; previously, we had to spend considerable time, but because of this workflow, it helps us save time.
Stonebranch calendars and triggers are quite flexible, and we can create those very easily. The GUI is also a significant advantage. Compared to other tools such as CA Workload Automation or Autosys from Broadcom, which was entirely backend-based at the UNIX level with scripting, Stonebranch allows you to see how jobs have been created and what different fields and options are available, which were unavailable with those tools.
Real-time analytics in Stonebranch are available from the current statuses of the jobs. However, we are disappointed with the reports. Because it is a SaaS-based platform, we cannot perform different joins if we want data from different tables; we have to ask Stonebranch to create something and provide it to us. This is a vendor support issue because, being a SaaS-based platform, we do not have access to the databases, so if we want to obtain reports, we need to request multiple reports and do it one at a time.
Regarding compliance and security features in workload automation, I have worked with them in Stonebranch. I went through the audit feature where we are able to see what kind of actions and everything in detail; it was already available, and there are various audit tabs as well, which provide us with information about which audit tab this particular log belongs to.
Stonebranch reports have been disappointing, and I would appreciate it if they could have features where various tables of the database could be joined and provide the report, which can be pulled and shared across.
It has been almost four years since I have been working with Stonebranch.
From one to ten, I would rate the stability of Stonebranch as seven, and the three I am deducting are just because of the reports.
I would rate the scalability for Stonebranch as nine, referring to its ability to scale and expand.
For technical support, I can say it is almost eight; they are providing good support.
Stonebranch can be compared with products such as BMC, JAMS, and Redwood, as we have experience with those options.
Among the three, Stonebranch was the best product for us, and that is why we selected it.
The initial setup for Stonebranch was simple; we got support from the vendor to shift things from the earlier tool, so it was a good experience.
We are using Stonebranch right now.
I would rate the pricing for the product between six to seven, considering one is high and ten is low.
Integration with third parties for Stonebranch is easy; with the REST API itself, it can be done, so it is quite open to integrate with other tools as well. I would give Stonebranch a final rating of eight overall. I would definitely recommend Stonebranch to other users.

My main use case for Stonebranch is file transfers, such as FTP and SFTP protocols, where I mostly transfer files from Stonebranch to mainframe, AS/400, SharePoint, shared drives, and S3 buckets.
A specific example of a file transfer I have managed with Stonebranch is creating a job to trigger the transfer from mainframe to Stonebranch.
My main use case involves using Stonebranch for SharePoint and shared drives, where I build a PowerShell script and configure the setups, including the whole path to access Stonebranch and place the file in that specific path.
The best feature Stonebranch offers in my experience is its security, allowing users to easily access files while creating accounts for particular users, making file transfer and retrieval easy with a level of security superior to other transfers.
Stonebranch's security stands out to me because I use SFTP for secured file transfers, which includes encryptions and antivirus scanning to block any files containing viruses from transferring.
Stonebranch has positively impacted my organization because without it, I cannot send files, causing a huge impact since file transfers play a key role in production.
Stonebranch can be improved due to an issue I had a few weeks ago with data leakage, as the servers consume more RAM than usual during continuous file transfers, and this utilization should be less.
For my purposes, I believe there is nothing that needs improvement because Stonebranch is good as it is, and for further improvements, I will need to check with the vendor.
I have been using Stonebranch for five years.
Stonebranch is not stable as it has its flaws.
Customer support is good because I have an L1 team continuously monitoring my configurations and transfers, which helps me get support even in the middle of the night due to failures.
Neutral
Before Stonebranch, I used XFB transfers and Connect:Direct transfers, which were unreliable and not as secure as Stonebranch.
I have not seen a return on investment since there are no relevant metrics such as fewer employees needed, money saved, or time saved.
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing has been straightforward.
Before choosing Stonebranch, I evaluated other options since I had a bunch of software I considered, but Stonebranch provides more secure transfers than the others.
Stonebranch's security stands out to me because I use SFTP for secured file transfers, which includes encryptions and antivirus scanning to block any files containing viruses from transferring.
In terms of automation, I automate many tasks using Stonebranch, which helps reduce failures such as duplicate file transfers.
Specific outcomes from using Stonebranch include reducing errors, as my business cannot move without it. Error reduction is my key priority, and I educate users to not repeat errors, requiring them to include an MSA ID and ICN, which plays a key role in file transfers.
I rate Stonebranch an eight out of ten because everything has flaws, including Stonebranch. During migrations or updates, the application blocks transfers, which is a significant issue since file transfers are essential for selling products.
I advise others looking into using Stonebranch that it is a good tool for file transfers, allowing easy configuration of setups from anywhere and integration with anything.
Stonebranch is a good application for SFTP transfers that I use almost every day, and I have no additional thoughts about it before we wrap up.
My main use case for Stonebranch is for job scheduling and to see the workflows and for troubleshooting any failures.
For our daily work, we use Stonebranch to see that if the workflow is going smoothly without any troubles, and if there is any kind of issue that if any job is running beyond its expected limits, then we use to check if there is any data issue or not. If there is any kind of a data issue, then we monitor it and check with the appropriate team to see how to fix that issue.
Stonebranch is a very handy application, and the best feature is the orchestration.
Stonebranch impacts our organization positively as it is very useful in terms of its pricing and overall user interface. We can easily find anything with a small search, and searches work without any issues. The updates and the experience are very smooth without any glitches.
Stonebranch helps in reducing the times and the errors, and as a team, we can coordinate very smoothly with each other because the runtime is very fast, ensuring that each and every member is having similar experiences without any bugs. Stonebranch helps us to troubleshoot any kind of issue without any delay.
Stonebranch saves a lot of time when it comes to watching the overall workflows because we can watch overall workflows in one go and search multiple tasks in one session. It also requires fewer employees to search a particular task and to see a particular workflow because we can search multiple tasks and triggers in one session, making it very useful.
Stonebranch can be improved by making it more familiar to other tech geeks. We can add various other features such as AI to improve its accessibility because in today's world, AI is more important than manual things. If it uses AI, it will be improved.
We can add a search bar in Stonebranch and enhance the searches, such as if we need to add more filters. The filtration options are very limited, so we can add more filter options so that we can search out any specific task or job very easily. Apart from that, an AI assistant will be very beneficial for the future.
I have been using Stonebranch for over five years.
Stonebranch is very stable, and there are no bugs or glitches, so it is a perfect tool in terms of stability.
Stonebranch is a very scalable application, and we can use it on various integrations and applications. We are using it on Informatica and various other Jenkins jobs to trigger from Stonebranch, making it a very scalable tool as far as scalability is concerned.
There are very rare scenarios that we actually face any issues, but I can recall one scenario where we had to call customer support, and the service executive was very prompt in providing a solution. We really appreciate the overall service quality of Stonebranch.
Positive
Stonebranch is our first software, and we are very happy with it.
My experience with the pricing, setup cost, and licensing of Stonebranch has been that it is a very affordable tool, and our organization has been using it for the last overall ten years, so we are very happy with this product as per the pricing is concerned.
I did not evaluate other options before choosing Stonebranch, but along with Stonebranch, we are using Informatica.
Stonebranch is a very handy tool, especially if you want to orchestrate your product and are looking for something very scalable and stable; Stonebranch is very useful. It is one of the best solutions out there in the market. I give this product a review rating of ten.
Currently, I only work with Stonebranch. We are partners of Stonebranch, as they are an OEM. I am from the technical team, so I have to understand what type of requirements they want in their environment. After analyzing all their requirements, I have to deploy the product. First, I have to understand their requirements, then I have to deploy that product in their server or environment. I configure all their required needs in the customer environment. As a member of the technical team, I have to first understand what type of data transfer they want, what type of protocol they need, and how many users want to share their data and files. After gathering information from the customer side, I estimate how much data they will transfer in one year. After understanding that, we have to get a task-based subscription from Stonebranch after analyzing the requirements from the customer side.
Stonebranch installation has improved significantly. They recently changed the product, and I can say they improved it by about 50 percent. Now, we have to go into GoAnywhere MFT and we can set up by interface, and we need to select any option if we want to transfer any files or any data between two users. We just follow instructions, and it is so simple and easy to use. However, in Stonebranch, they previously made it very difficult. We first had to configure SFTP, meaning we needed to use a protocol such as FTPS, SFTP, or HTTPS. First, we had to choose which type of protocol we wanted to go through. After choosing, we had to make configurations between those SFTP points.
If I compare GoAnywhere MFT with Stonebranch, after the installation part, for end users, Stonebranch is more complicated to configure. However, because it is complicated, it means they provided more features and a broader way of use for Stonebranch. They provide many types of components, features, and protocols, so it is more complicated. It does not mean it is difficult to use; it is complicated. Not anyone can understand it; only a technical person can understand which type of product they are providing.
Stonebranch is more expensive compared with GoAnywhere MFT because they provide many types of services, protocols, and broader features in their product. In a pricing scenario, they provide a task-based subscription. In GoAnywhere, we just have to pay for a one-year subscription for working. We can install many users in our MFT, meaning we can use many types of data to transfer from one side to another. There is no restriction. However, in Stonebranch, pricing matters are based per task. One file sent from one location to another means one task is completed. We have to calculate what our customer, based on their requirements, how many tasks they will do. After understanding this, we had to give it based on their requirements. Stonebranch works task-based, and they give subscriptions based on tasks.
Maintenance is required from Stonebranch. Stonebranch requires maintenance because they also provide upgrades, and there is also a case where support must be needed. Maintenance is provided by Stonebranch. Maintenance is needed from Stonebranch's side product because of upgrades, any new requirements from the customer side, and any new versioning or changes from Stonebranch also require maintenance. Maintenance is required from both Stonebranch's side and the customer side as well.
As of right now, I only work with Stonebranch.
For support, as compared with GoAnywhere, Stonebranch is more supportive because they respond quickly. They provide very quick support and guidance. For example, if we have to understand any type of feature in Stonebranch environment, we just raise a case to Stonebranch support team. Then within one or two days, someone will come from Stonebranch side, and that person will give every detailed explanation of what we want to understand. They provide a very quick response from their side.
Stonebranch is workload automation software. I would give them a score of 7.5 out of ten compared with GoAnywhere because it is more complicated to set up and configure.

Basically, it is a workload automation that we are using to run our various SAP application jobs. The background jobs are scheduled from third-party tools. We used to trigger from AutoSys. This is a replacement product for AutoSys.
It is GUI based. The earlier product was totally on the command line. That was difficult for newcomers.
It can be a self-service, and we get two environments. Previously, we had to copy-paste when we created a job. Here, we can just move it over. In SAP, we can say, "You create a bundle, and you move it." You just create on one side, and it will always be synchronized between testing and production.
We like that it has GUI and is not just a command line.
The task monitor is quite useful in most cases.
It's stable.
The solution can scale.
Technical support is helpful.
It can be hard to manage the task monitor. We are still working with the vendor, and we are trying to make the changes as per our requirements. We are asking them to build some new solutions so they can be helpful in the new releases in our organization.
In terms of the task monitor, we should not have to try to calculate how many hours back we have to check or monitor a job.
We'd like to have some sort of mobile app in the future.
We implemented the solution in 2021.
The stability is good. I'd rate it eight out of ten.
We have around 400 people using the solution right now. We likely will increase usage in the future.
I'd rate the general scalability seven out of ten. There is room for improvement.
Technical support is excellent. People are always available to help and support us if we have any kind of issue.
Positive
I was one of the key parts of the implementation process of this solution, and we migrated from AutoSys. Therefore, before this product, we were using CA AutoSys.
This was a migration project where we provided our database, the previous one, and there was a tool that automatically converted the awarded job into Stonebranch. All the conversion was done from the Stonebranch side, and we got a person as well from Stonebranch during migration. There was a person who worked with us a decade back for the AutoSys install as well. He was well aware of our environment, so he helped us a lot. It was easy. It was not that complex.
It is much more GUI. That said, we are looking for how the various automation can be done since, through command lines, you can create a number of jobs. While you are creating a single job, it takes 15 minutes with the GUI, however, if you go for the command line, within two or three minutes, your job gets completed. We have built our own solution for automation using some REST API and all those various integrations. It is working for our organization right now. However, we are requesting some kind of solution from Stonebranch. They should have been providing that to us already.
For deployment, three or four people were engaged with the setup on their side. To manage everything, they provided us with a person who required help to manage it. Eventually, since it was a cloud platform on their side, if there is some configuration necessary, which they do it. They get a notification, and they fix it very immediately if there is an issue. The response time is very good from their side, and we don't have to worry about maintenance.
I was on the consultant side and participated in the installation process.
We've witnessed a positive ROI and saved around 40% to 50% compared to the other tool we used.
The pricing is good. I would rate it eight out of ten. The pricing is similar to AutoSys. It's lower than Redwood, which was on the higher side in terms of pricing.
We did do POCs with various other products.
If it's a fresh implementation, I'd recommend the solution to others.
I'd rate the solution seven out of ten. There are still a few features missing, like having a mobile app.

We have 35,000 jobs that are running in SAP at different times of the day and at different frequencies. All those have been configured in Stonebranch Universal Automation Center.
Stonebranch Universal Automation Center could improve the analytics.
I have been using Stonebranch Universal Automation Center for over one year.
Stonebranch Universal Automation Center is stable. Since we went live we have not seen any problems. If it is configured incorrectly it can be unstable, but if it is configured well it has high availability.
The support is good from Stonebranch Universal Automation Center.
I rate the support from Stonebranch Universal Automation Center as nine out of ten.
Positive
The initial setup of Stonebranch Universal Automation Center is a bit complicated. The migration added some complexity. If it was not for the migration it would have been easy.
The price of the solution is at a medium level compared to the competition.
I rate the price of Stonebranch Universal Automation Center a four out of five.
My advice to others is that if there is a migration project they have to be thorough. The planning phase is really important when the migrations are happening. However, for a straightforward implementation, it's an easy process. If you are doing it as a vanilla installation, then it will be easy. If you are migrating from one automation to another, then the Stonebranch Universal Automation Center is going to be challenging because much of the terminology and the way of automation is going to get changed.
I rate Stonebranch Universal Automation Center a seven out of ten
The solution can complete most of the requirements we need with our SAP system.

We use Stonebranch to manage and migrate automated tasks.
Stonebranch performs well, and the graphical representation is excellent. Overall, it requires more technical effort from our teams, but the solution is intuitive, so anybody can use it.
We've been using Stonebranch for about six months.
Stonebranch is stable, and the high-availability mode works well.
Stonebranch is scalable enough to meet all our requirements so far. We could automate 30,000 tasks without issue.
I would rate Stonebranch somewhere in the middle for ease of setup. It wasn't too straightforward for us because our infrastructure is complex. There were a few parts we had to move. We have decommissioned 5 percent of our jobs annually. Total deployment took us around six months because we went system by system, so that's why it took a long time.
Our in-house team worked with outside consultants.
I'll rate Stonebranch Universal Automation Center eight out of 10.

Two people are using this solution in my company.
It's deployed on a private cloud.
It improved the batch cycles in background and helping everyone to receive the files and reports on time without miss and client is happy from this tool without much escalations, issue it is working fine and upgradation of Agents and Controllers also cheap as compared to other Tools and its easy to handle while patching of Linux and Windows servers on every month and lots of Automation can be done with help of this tool.
The features are upgraded, and every six months they're releasing patches. There are features like dependencies. Some jobs are one block, and some jobs are different blocks. That dependency can be set, and many jobs can be dependent or in one block. You can do many automations.
The rerun portion is quite easy and very fast. If the database is good, then it is very nice.
It's not available on the cloud, so they should take that due to safety, security, and scalability.
I have been using this tool for seven years.
Its quite stable and all applications hosted on Stonebranch server runs without any issue.
It's scalable and robust and it can be used or any customer worldwide irrespective of the complexity of the Customers.
Technical support is very good. They're not available on weekends. If you raise a ticket, they will resolve it within half an hour. They'll take the remote system and know what the problem is.
They are very technically very sound and familiar with this tool.
Positive
I have also used Control-M. Compared to Control-M, Stonebranch is also cheap. If Control-M is down, it will be up within five seconds and will be working fine. Control-M is very stable, and many companies are using it. Stonebranch is new and has been in the market for 5 to 10 years.
Their structure is very nice, and it's better than Stonebranch. Control-M is more complex, but the security and stability are better than Stonebranch.
Setup is easy. You can install the engine controller and whatever system that people want. You can take the details from them. You can set it up and try running a job in quality test systems. Then after that goes live, you can go to production systems.
Implementation takes one to two years.
Best expertise.
Stonebranch is cheaper than Control-M, so many companies are using Stonebranch.
The license is paid every year.
I would rate this solution 8 out of 10.
My advice is that it's very easy to use, and you can schedule the jobs on all applications, Informatica, and SAP, and it will run fine.
The primary use case is that we are now at the point where we are creating workflows and it is allowing us to shorten the time it takes for tasks to go through multiple machines. We wanted something that would give us better visibility.
We have different systems that do different things very well, and we previously had time frames for when tasks would have to be done. It has allowed us to streamline the workflow so that the machines aren't sitting idle. The work gets done and the information is available through production at a much quicker rate.
It really cuts down the time that multiple machines take to touch a task. We may have our ERP system create a file and send it to our integration server where it will dice and mash up some inventory requirements. We will send an order by FTP to our vendor and, at the same time, we're seeing that we have sent it in and that it should be on a truck and coming in in a few days. We see the specific time and can alert the planning group that we've already done this. It used to be these tasks were done on separate machines and would take 30 or 45 minutes per machine. If everything was clean, it only took 10 minutes from start to finish, but there was a lot of dead time making sure that each machine had time to complete its task in a base scenario. So it has really helped our abilities in terms of where we're at as a manufacturing organization.
Stonebranch has also saved us money because it has kept us from having to over-provision Windows Servers. With this solution we can put stuff in a workflow and get it through as quickly as can be, instead of allocating time on other boxes to do things. I believe it has kept us from having to add Windows Servers and drive up our costs with Microsoft.
I like that the users can kick off the tasks that the administrators have allowed them to kick off so that they are more in control of the data that they need. They don't have to contact IT or other people to get the data they need. It makes the users very self-sufficient and they like it too. They don't have to wait on people. When they know they need it, they can just go start the job and whenever it's done they get the data.
We're using the Universal Controller and, while it took a little while to get everything we needed into it, once it was there it became a really nice tool. We can delegate tasks through it or we can delegate all tasks for certain machines through it. It's a really nice, central point to let us know which tasks have failed. I come from a programming background and, as a programmer, I would output a log file from our jobs. After a while, people forget to check log files. With Stonebranch, as long as the error code is there, it displays on the dashboard right away, so you don't have to remember to go check the log file. It gives us a lot better visibility, and a lot more quickly. The Universal Controller, and everything we do with Stonebranch, is on-premise.
The tasks are incredibly capable, and as long as you name them with a nice, uniform naming convention, they are very useful. You can create some interesting workflows through various machines, or you can just have it kick off single tasks. All in all, I really like the Universal Task. You can do some mutually exclusive stuff, such as an "A not B" kind of thing. It has a lot of capabilities behind the scenes. We don't use it to its full capabilities, but it is very strong and a very capable interface.
I really like the agents. We've had no trouble with them interfering with any of our other systems or vendors — and some of the machines they're running on are very flaky. But I've never been able to trace any problems back to Stonebranch. The problems we had after Stonebranch were the same problems we had before we put the Stonebranch agents on those machines. The interoperability is really nice. It has a minimal footprint, it doesn't consume much RAM, and there is very little network overhead unless the machine is actually doing something and sending data back. It's really nice to fire-and-forget. The syscontroller tells the task to start on the remote machine. The remote machine executes it and when it's done it sends back the package of data that the control holds and consumes. It's really a very well thought-out system.
There is room for improvement with its connectivity with the Microsoft SRS system. It is very weak. They keep telling us it works with it, and technically it does, but it does not provide a lot of visibility. We have lost a lot of visibility migrating to Stonebranch, compared with just running tasks on the SRS server. That's really about the only thing that is a sore point for us.
We don't really use the Stonebranch Marketplace. We looked at it earlier and management really wasn't impressed. So admin was told not to worry about it. It could be that if we were looking at it now, now that we're smarter, I think we would find things there. But we have gotten used to the way we're doing things now, so we don't want to rock the boat.
We started looking at Stonebranch in early 2017. We had everything on, all the machines were connected, by mid-2017, and we had moved all services and scheduled tasks and cron tasks to it by late 2017.
We had been using version 6.3 and we are in the process of upgrading to 6.8 now.
It's rock-solid.
The resiliency is very good. It is very solid. If the server shuts down, it will do its best to try and make up what it can, depending on how you have configured it. But it does a really good job of trying to recover gracefully.
For example, a while back we had a Unix server go down and it was going down because of a bad connection with something that was hosted on another box. Stonebranch was aware of the problems that we were having even finishing. Once we got all the problems cleared, instead of it trying to continue running all 800 jobs that had been started but never finished, it only tried to rerun the last job, which I thought was a really nice solution. We didn't have 800 instances of the same job trying to be rerun.
Our production Stonebranch server is interacting with 27 different systems: Unix, AIX, Red Hat, and Windows systems. It's firing off about 1,000 jobs an hour and there's no problem. I don't see it taxing the CPU of the box we've got it running on it. It's incredibly scalable. I cannot imagine what it would take to start getting it overheated.
Technical support is very capable. The helpdesk is very responsive and knowledgeable and if they don't know, they will reach out to somebody on the engineering team. About 90 percent of the problems that I've had to talk to their helpdesk about have been through error on my part. Either I thought something was supposed to do something it obviously doesn't do, and I would have known if I had read the documentation better, or I had misconfigured something. They are very responsive and very knowledgeable.
We used cron and Task Scheduler from Microsoft and a gut-feel on how long systems should take to process something.
The initial setup was very straightforward. I've come from a programming background, so distributed systems like this are something I'm very familiar with. It seemed pretty straightforward. It was a simple cut-and-dry task. It seemed very basic to me.
It took us between eight months and a year to deploy it across our organization. The implementation strategy was to get it done and make it work as quickly as we could.
We had a consultant from Stonebranch come down for a week. I worked with him a little bit. He did some work and then I would do some work.
I've made a few calls to their helpdesk, but I have done 90 percent of it on my own, including the upgrades. It's a very simple system. It's not complex, but it does allow you to do complex things.
Go at this slowly and methodically. When they came in, they did a lot of things very quickly, and we didn't really understand the implication of the answers we were giving. We have gone back to re-do a lot of that work. Now that we're smarter, and much better at this, we have found that being slow and methodical pays off in the long-run.
The solution has enabled digital transformation at our company but it's been a very slow process, and that is because the people we have are very traditional, old-school people. This is a little outside of the norm for people who grew up using the Windows Task Scheduler. They are having a little trouble with this. The idea of correcting workflows is still new to some of these people. It is allowing us to have the digital transformation — we're able to move things through quicker — but I don't know that everybody is aware of this or is taking advantage of it. New systems are being bought and spec'd out, and we can get Stonebranch to work with them, but it's kind of as an afterthought. They aren't used to thinking of Stonebranch when they're looking at the new systems.
We've got a couple people in engineering that are using the solution but it's mostly IT people who are using it, programmers and their managers. Our ERP coordinator uses it a lot. In engineering we've got CAE administrators using it to shut down and restart processes for their systems. And we have a couple of other users using it, but their use is very limited. We give them the tasks but we don't give them a lot of tasks as they are a small cog in the wheel. You can't give them too much power or they'll be messing up somebody else's job. We're mostly giving knowledge workers the ability to handle their own tasks if they can do it in a vacuum. That amounts to a few people in finance, a few in production, a couple in engineering and most of the people in IT. I'm the only person who handles deployment and maintenance of the solution. But that is not my full-time job. Once tasks get set up, they go and they run and they just work.