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it_user730392 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior systems architect at Byte ideas and solutions
Consultant
I use it mainly for its monitoring capability and predictive analytics.

What is most valuable?

The monitoring capability, the predictive failures and the predictive features such you need these many more servers or you need this much more storage is really what I mostly use it for.

Since I'm a consultant, so I mostly do the implementation. When I use the product, it's after the initial install or as we're ramping up or moving the VMs into the environment and seeing how all the hardware/resources are being effective. We use vRealize to basically plan out where we need to scale.

How has it helped my organization?

It allows us to give more efficiency to our clients. Instead of having to oversell hardware, we can scale it. For example, we can say let's start with this block, give it six months and see what vRealize tells us about our pattern of the data usage.

What needs improvement?

It does eat up a lot of the CPU cycles, I will say that this is actually a general complaint about a lot of the VMware software that I use. I love VMware, but one of my complaints is that a lot of the application servers such as vCenter, vRealize, the operations manager, etc. eat up a lot of the CPU cycles and memory cycles, especially if you have any kind of large database. I would like to see some more optimization there.

I'm sure that other people have a laundry list of the improvements. Since I'm a consultant/an implementation/immigration guy, I think it does what I need it to do. I use it for its predictive analysis basically.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Stability is very good.

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What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

The scalability is amazing.

How was the initial setup?

I thought the setup was straightforward. However, someone else was trying to do it before me, and they thought it was complex.

We did not receive any in-house support.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Reputation, support, and overall visibility are important criteria for us while selecting a vendor.

We looked at other solutions namely VMware, Veeam and Tintri.

The reason as to why I chose VMware is because I've used every other major virtualization platform and their support as well as community is by far the best.

What other advice do I have?

Definitely use it, especially if you need to carry out predictive analytics.

For knowing how to scale your environment, I think it's a priceless tool.

Make sure you've got enough room and resources for the installation.

Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
PeerSpot user
it_user730377 - PeerSpot reviewer
VP at a consultancy with 1,001-5,000 employees
Consultant
Monitoring, capacity management and the holistic view of our virtualization infrastructure were the key features for us.

What is most valuable?

Monitoring, capacity management and the whole holistic view of our virtualization infrastructure were the key features for us.

First, we were using a different virtualization platform with zero monitoring and now, we have moved over to a virtualization site with vROps, so it's pretty good; it does what it says. It has been very helpful for us in terms of the roll out of VMware.

How has it helped my organization?

It has tremendously improved the way our organization functions. As I mentioned earlier, we had zero insight previously to the whole virtual platform, however, now with vROps and the analytics that it provides, we probably have insight in to what's happening with Harperizer stack and virtual machines so it's very helpful. Capacity management was a different problem altogether, but with vROps capacity management and predictive analysis, it's pretty helpful; it's really helpful.

What needs improvement?

Frankly, the predictive DRS was one such feature that needs improvement and proactive HA was another. I think we need more integration points between the IT Center to the Service Point which I don't think is a straightforward exercise. I think they also need to focus on the IT SNMP so that the integration is more seamless.

The navigation tool reporting and the way we create reports could also improve. We're good engineers, so I don't think that should be a problem, at least not for us. We have great dashboards and the reporting structure is pretty good.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

It's pretty stable. We just broke down and we're in the process of migrating to VMware and so far, it has been stable. With VMware's PSE, I think we have a good design out there to support/sustain based on the requirements.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Again, it has scaled to meet all the requirements. Definitely, with the help of VMware, it has scaled to support all the data center, including the robots.

How are customer service and technical support?

I would probably give the technical support team an 8/10 rating.

There is room for improvement probably in terms of the support that we received per se. I think we want to ensure that our engineers have access to the best VMware engineers. We don't want the level one teams and try to do the same stuff that we know our engineers are capable of doing. I think we need more streamline in terms of acknowledging the customer's impact and ensuring that it's translated properly within VMware, so that we have the right engineer from day zero.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We have been with the vCloud Suite and the whole product family. As I mentioned, monitoring was the very key factor for us and towards the success of this project. Hence, vROps was the perfect choice with VMware to have vROps as a monitoring tool.

Previously, it was all in-house developed scripts, then SCOM, partially one of the virtual machines; but other than that no other solution, otherwise a stack.

Cooperation from the vendor is what we look for while selecting a vendor. We need to ensure that the vendor understands our agenda, our goals, and then, works hand-in-hand with us, so as to ensure we need our timelines, then we can go to the market and are up and running. We don't need to beat around the bush with VMware and they have done a pretty good job with that.

How was the initial setup?

The setup was straightforward. There were certain bits which were complex partly due to the way we do things. But again, with VMware's support and guidance, I think our roll out was pretty smooth and we hit all the targets in terms of our project turning; so, it was green all the way through.

What other advice do I have?

I would definitely advise others to have a look at vROps. It's definitely good. The analytics engine is very powerful and the management feature is pretty good. Also, if you have other portfolios like VRA, VRB, it seamlessly operates with the VMware component. I would definitely recommend it.

Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
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VMware Aria Operations
September 2025
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it_user730452 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Director of Technology Infrastructure at a retailer with 10,001+ employees
Vendor
Improves our organization by quickly remediating problems

What is most valuable?

The key for us is visibility into the infrastructure, both at the application layer and with performance of historical trends. Thus, the ability to drop in and see when an application has changed, what's gone wrong, and getting them to focus on a quick remediation.

How has it helped my organization?

Quick remediation of problems.

What needs improvement?

They could improve their consistency in execution.

I would like to see these additional features in the next release:

  • Deeper dive analytics
  • Better licensing models.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

No issues. It's been good.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

No issues so far.

How are customer service and technical support?

We have contacted technical support in the past. They are very good. We do have a TAM resource on-site, which definitely gives us an in when we are having problems.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We weren't using anything previously for virtualization. We invested in this solution because we needed to stay ahead of our competition and landscape. It was the obvious choice for consolidating our datacenters and simplifying the infrastructure.

How was the initial setup?

It seemed fairly straightforward, but I have very complex engineers.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

IBM, PureSoftware, and Dell EMC.

What other advice do I have?

Advice for anyone looking at VM solutions:

  • Stay abreast of the changing technology, because it is moving fast. Simple is better for time to market.
  • Do some PoCs and train your engineers.
  • Research total cost of ownership, deployment time, and the complexity of their applications.

Our most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Reliability
  • Peer reviews
  • Technical support
  • Their willingness to work with us.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
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it_user730182 - PeerSpot reviewer
Director Of Cloud Product Engineering at a media company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Allows transparency in capacity and performance management across a large enterprise infrastructure

What is most valuable?

Metrics and telemetry across our many environments, which allows us to be able to have transparency in capacity and performance management across a large enterprise infrastructure. The analytics that vROps provides related to things like oversized virtual machines, waste, and so on.

How has it helped my organization?

Capacity and performance management take five minutes, instead of five days.

What needs improvement?

There's room for improvement in the upgrade process. It always becomes a bit of a challenge, and the one big thing for us is we have no means of creating a CICD upgrade process for it. Somebody's got to download bits, click buttons, etc. until you get to the final stage. I'd like to see it fully-automated so that we don't have to mess around with manual tasks. It can take anywhere from two days to a week to complete the upgrade.

Also, the interface is very busy. It's complicated. It's tough for people. I can't tell my management to go log in and find something. You really have to drill in and click deep, so a lot of what we do is pull metrics out and put them in other dashboards, just so they're meaningful for us. If there was a means of doing that, it would be a better solution. Though it's definitely getting better over time.

What was my experience with deployment of the solution?

It was all over the place. I think VMware and our Technical Account Manager (TAM) were a big help.

The initial issue was we downloaded it, then installed it ourselves. We didn't really talk to anybody. We probably should have kept tabs with the people who know the product from VMware.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

It's gotten better over time. We had some challenges at first. It took a while to get things going right for us.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

It's getting much better. The latest version is much better.

We have approximately 80,000 virtual machines. It works pretty well overall.

How are customer service and technical support?

We have a good impression so far. We usually go through our TAM and get through to somebody who maybe is at a higher level when we need help. Though I don't really call them.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We switched because we needed a streamlined solution. Before, we had people logging in to do a lots of different things, like creating spreadsheets, charts, and graphs.

How was the initial setup?

My team was involved in the initial setup. It was straightforward, but again, it didn't work at first because of some decisions we made with the architecture. So after talking to VMware, they kind of led us in the right direction. We made some changes and things started working really well after that.

What other advice do I have?

vROps and vSphere integrate well together.

The community is huge. We're really big into open source. We rely on the community for just about anything and everything.

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Reputation
  • Brand
  • Accessibility.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
PeerSpot user
it_user730236 - PeerSpot reviewer
Delivery Consultant at One enterprise solutions
Consultant
The monitoring makes it easy to identify the bottlenecks and potential problems

What is most valuable?

The monitoring.

How has it helped my organization?

Easy to identify the bottlenecks.

What needs improvement?

We would like it to connect to other third-party products. We monitor some Cisco switches, and we are also looking for some storage. At the moment we only use it for EMC.

Sometimes it's very difficult to browse between different components. I'm looking at the latency and it's difficult to figure out which data store was related to that latency. That was one problem I figured out, so linking different components would be helpful.

I would also like to see more automation.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Very good. It was very stable. No problem at all.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

We don't scale too fast.

How are customer service and technical support?

We've barely used it. Once or twice, but for general questions. Nothing about problems. I would give it an eight or nine out of 10. We were able to reach the right person.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Sys IQ and another I can't remember at the moment. We switched when I realized I was spending too much time on troubleshooting.

I'm looking at the features, I'm not looking too much at the name of the company.

How was the initial setup?

Pretty simple.

What about the implementation team?

We deployed it for ourselves in our datacenter, but also for our customers.

What other advice do I have?

vROps would be my advice because it's simple to use, you have a panel to very quickly identify trouble, eventual problems; and it's easy to troubleshoot.

Make sure you have a good understanding of the infrastructure. Define the product you need to monitor.

Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
PeerSpot user
it_user730116 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT System Architect with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
Allows users at all levels to see what is happening in the environment

What is most valuable?

vROps allows us to quickly get an overview of what's going on in the environment, without even having to know too much. So from the low-end to the high-end individual, everyone can get something out of it. Obviously the better you are at it, the more you can truly drill down and find something invaluable. But even the service desk people that we have can look at it in the morning and say, "Okay, the environment is good or bad." Or they might see things in there before the customers do. So it's just a very quick and easy way to see what's going on.

How has it helped my organization?

How tightly integrates with the VM world. There's a lot of nice solution packs so we use Horizon, vSAN. They get integrated into the solution packs initially but then they get integrated with the product over time, and we get this better end to end view. Obviously we use VDI with vSAN to also get the end to end view, the protocol down to the storage and everything in between. So it's really clever.

What needs improvement?

I'd like to see some sort of better integration with vSphere. I couldn't get into the account setup, so it would be nice to set up an account somewhere which connects to vSphere. It would be nice if that was more streamlined. It would be something like, "Here's my vCenter, here's my admin credentials, create me an account, do the right delegation for me." Essentially it would automate the setup a bit further. I had to create roles, create accounts, and that sort of repetitive work that whoever has to deploy vROps will do.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

I've never had a trouble with it. Once it's been set up it's been really "set-and-forget" from a management point of view.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

My environment is probably, in the big picture, fairly small. We have one server that easily covers our environment. I do not consider vROps resource-heavy at all.

How are customer service and technical support?

I think I had to use them only during set up because we were getting a lot of false positives. And that was a known issue then. When we first set up the environment and we were saying, "Are these... we don't believe we're seeing that but vROps says we're seeing that." Once that was all squared away it was fixed in a later version. Just bad timing, I guess.

We got it resolved quite quickly, so really no issues with tech support from that point of view. It was understood this was an issue on VMware side, and it was knocked out of the park. They knew what they were doing.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We went with it because it was recommended to me by a colleague who had already deployed it. He showed me what he gets out of it, and I could see the benefit in it for us as well. So the switch came internally to us.

How was the initial setup?

I did the deployment at my site. It's very straightforward. It's deploying an appliance and just connecting it to your vSphere environment. You need to let it sit for a bit, to make sure it gets baselines for everything, but it was really easy. Took me more than about a day or two to get it fully running and to get everything connected that I wanted to get connected.

What about the implementation team?

I had the offer of a team but I did not accept it at the time. I wasn't sure how much I would use the product.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Microsoft, and that's really about it.

What other advice do I have?

When selecting a vendor to go with, it goes down to total cost of ownership pretty quickly. The product has to work, it's got to be reliable, and obviously it's got to provide benefits that are worth whatever investment in, time, money, licenses, you have to make.

Every solution we add to the environment adds complexity to the environment, so it's now under the product we advocated to use or maintain. You can only have so many products in your environment before there's just too much information so you need to keep it simple, to a certain extent.

Set it up and test it. It's really not hard to do. One day, two days, depending on how complex your environment is, and then just let it sit. It will pull in a lot of information, and you can see very quickly if it's telling you things you need to know.

There are some nice VMware session videos on it. Also read up. There's plenty of guides online. Really, it's not a complex thing to implement.

Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
PeerSpot user
it_user730128 - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager it at Tech elecon
Consultant
​It enables to me to do a deep dive and get insights into my infrastructure

What is most valuable?

I can get insights into my infrastructure. Along with the VMware software, it offers me infrastructure consolidation. And I can get a predictive input on what is going where and how my infrastructure is working.

How has it helped my organization?

It enables to me to do a deep dive and get insights into my infrastructure. When I have predictive input on what is going on in my datacenter, it saves me lots of time and lots of cost as well.

What needs improvement?

The dashboard which provides the information; if it could be like Salesforce, that kind of dashboard. Because what I end up having to do a lot of drill downs into each and every inventory to detect the issues. So if I could have all the issues on one dashboard and the rest in another one it would make my life easier.

For how long have I used the solution?

I've used as vROps now for the last five years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

It is absolutely stable. I haven't had any issues to date.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

The scalability is also good because nowadays datacenters are not that simple. It's always scalable up and down and sideways.

How are customer service and technical support?

I have not used it to date.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

No we did not. We went with it because it would give me the insight into the datacenter. It was the ultimate solution. And since we are using the VMware environment, it was a must have.

How was the initial setup?

It was straightforward.

What about the implementation team?

We did it ourselves.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Dell, EMC, and one other. Among the most important criteria in choosing a vendor are their technology roadmap as well as the productivity.

What other advice do I have?

When you look at the VMware infrastructure and software piece, they're more or less offering what vROps is offering you right now. It is comparable to any other third-party solution for the VMware. So it's always better to go with the best one.

To prepare for implementation, first and foremost you need to make sure that you inventory all the hardware and the stakes. And it's important that everything is on the same version. Multiple versions will make your life more complex because all the versions are in additional dashboards. It's not like a motherboard version and then a dashboard. Each version has different dashboards.

Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
PeerSpot user
it_user730251 - PeerSpot reviewer
Systems Engineer at a transportation company with 10,001+ employees
Vendor
You can't find better technical support than VMware

What is most valuable?

Capacity planning:

  • Being able to see what's being used.
  • What's forecasted to run out of space.
  • What's the most constrained resource at any time.

How has it helped my organization?

When I get asked questions on how our infrastructure is doing (by management), I can give an accurate answer.

What needs improvement?

The advanced version could be more affordable, therefore giving us access to more advance features.

For how long have I used the solution?

Five years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

I have never had any problems with it.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

No issues. When I made it to capacity, it's been built pretty seamless to do that.

How is customer service and technical support?

Customer Service:

We've got an account manager. We also have an SE from VMware to help if I get stuck with support, but I haven't had that problem.

Technical Support:

I don't know if you're gonna receive better support with another vendor than you do from VMware themselves.

They are very knowledgeable. I feel like I am getting the getting the right person when I contact them.

How was the initial setup?

I wasn't involved with the initial setup, but I have done upgrades (by myself) and they have been very straightforward. Upgrades take about an hour to an hour and a half to complete.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

We didn't really evaluate anyone else.

What other advice do I have?

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Brand name reputation
  • Support, how good is it (according to other customers and community forums).
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
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Buyer's Guide
Download our free VMware Aria Operations Report and get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions.
Updated: September 2025
Buyer's Guide
Download our free VMware Aria Operations Report and get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions.