By Roy Schulte, Vice President and Distinguished Analyst, Gartner
Event processing is the underlying foundation for business activity monitoring
(BAM), one of today's most important IT-enabled management techniques. BAM promises
to improve the quality and timeliness of many kinds of operational business decisions
by providing near-real-time insights into business operations and the external
environment. The rapid spread of business dashboards is evidence that business
is ready, willing and able to adopt BAM on a broad scale, although dashboards
are only one of the channels for distributing event-based insights to end users.
BAM is one of the few IT-enabled initiatives that end-user business people can
appreciate first hand. They readily grasp the value of having fresher and better
information, especially when they can see a prototype that displays the key performance
indicators (KPIs) that they personally want for their day-to-day jobs.
CIOs and application managers can expect an increasing number of requests from
the business units for BAM and other event processing systems. Architects and
developers who haven't built such systems in the past can learn from the experiences
of those who have. The issue of tool selection has a few surprises: most BAM
systems are not built with commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) "BAM" tools,
and most event processing is not done by COTS complex-event processing (CEP)
engines either. However, BAM tools and CEP engines are quite valuable and cost-effective
when used in the right situations.
To address the growing importance of this field, Gartner has organized a new
conference on Event Processing and Business Activity Monitoring (BAM) to be
held from September 19-21, 2007 in Orlando Florida (see http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=502259&tab=overview).
It is aimed primarily at architects, software engineers, business analysts and
IT managers. The conference has a special emphasis on case studies. About 13
case study speakers will participate, along with 3 experts from academia and
a number of Gartner analysts. We will also be joined by 16 vendors of event
processing and BAM products who will demonstrate the range of capabilities available
on the market today. This article provides a look at some of the issues regarding
tool selection for those who will attend the conference and others who just
want to learn more about the subject.
Given the power of an ESB to support SOA implementations it is imperative to understand in detail the functions and structure of the ESB. This paper...Learn More