Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/gzlr83/automating_and_orc)
has announced the addition of the "Automating
and Orchestrating the Third Era of Enterprise IT" report to
their offering.
After the passing of the mainframe era and the age of distributed
computing, today we are at the beginning of the third era of enterprise
IT. This third era focuses on delivering business services in a more
efficient manner and is highlighted through three key trends: Cloud, Big
Data, and DevOps.
Cloud, Big Data, and DevOps all focus on leveraging IT to make the
organization more competitive through increased agility and efficiency.
The third era of enterprise IT is characterized by a radical focus on
utilizing this agility and efficiency for eliminating the traditional
rift between IT operations and business process requirements.
Ultimately, business stakeholders investing in IT resources are not
interested in technical reasons for why a certain IT service is not
attainable. For the overall organization to be more competitive, IT must
help align business processes with market requirements more quickly and
at a lower cost than the competition.
Cloud, DevOps, and Big Data initiatives all have grown out of the need
to address the rising number of interdependencies between enterprise
applications along with the ever increasing amount of data that those
new systems collect. Yet all three of these initiatives can
exponentially add to the complexity of the infrastructure needed to
facilitate the demand for agility. For IT to reliably execute business
workflows, these interdependencies must be managed end-to-end across the
traditional automation domains, including workload and run book
automation, virtualization management, managed file transfer, and
application process automation and release management. Automation today
can be seen as the "glue," tying together a rapidly growing number of
business applications and aligning these applications with their
respective business processes. Therefore, it is essential to implement a
platform that can provide cross domain automation, instead of following
the traditional siloed approach of deploying a myriad of domain-specific
automation solutions.
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/gzlr83/automating_and_orc
