DocumentCode
2457408
Title
How do we know that management is working?
Author
Keller, Andreas
Author_Institution
IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA
fYear
2006
fDate
2006
Firstpage
581
Lastpage
581
Abstract
Over the last years, the Management community has witnessed a shift away from information models and protocols towards value-added management services that improve the configuration and fault management of a distributed system, or optimize its performance. However, whenever we try to articulate the value of Management, it turns out that we neither have the methodologies, nor the tools to help us assess where we as a discipline are on the maturity curve and how ´self-managing´ the systems we build actually are. Metrics such as ´total cost of ownership´ or ´number of servers per administrator´ are often overly simplistic and essentially focus just on symptoms, not on the true factors that impact the value of management. It is therefore hard, if not impossible, to quantify the value that the investment in management technology actually yields actually yields, and there are no hard metrics available that facilitate the comparison between management systems from different vendors. The panel will address the following issues: 1. Can we measure automation and are we able to assess its value? 2. Is there a way to develop a ´Capability Maturity Model´ for Management? 3. What would such a model look like? 4. What are the key performance indicators of Management? 5. What lessons can we learn from system benchmarks that have been developed over the last 15 years? 6. Will we ever see TPC-Management or SPECManagement benchmark suites?
Keywords
Automation; Computer industry; Costs; Investments; Outsourcing; Protocols; Technology management;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Network Operations and Management Symposium, 2006. NOMS 2006. 10th IEEE/IFIP
ISSN
1542-1201
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0142-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NOMS.2006.1687589
Filename
1687589
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