The Butterfly Effect Within IT
April 19, 2013

Larry Dragich
Technology Executive

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The "Butterfly Effect" theoretically describes a hurricane's formation being contingent on whether or not a distant butterfly had flapped its wings weeks before. This highlights a sensitive dependence on environmental conditions where a small change at one place (Dev Env) can result in large differences to a later state (Production).

Consider the possibility that a small innocuous code change could go undetected, promoted through Development & QA, and then have catastrophic effects on performance once it reaches production. The environmental variants need to be minimized and closely monitored to prevent the anomalous behavior.

Depending on transaction volume and performance characteristics there will be a certain level of noise that will need to be squelched to a volume level that can be analyzed. This is the precipice where APM intersects Capacity Management and advanced analytics opens the door to predictive modeling. The ability to ascertain how the physical and virtual environments will react to a “what if” scenario is why optimizing the application life cycle is so important.

Consider the challenge of monitoring any new application brought into the environment being similar to predicting the behavior of a new child that enters the classroom. There is a sensitive dependence on initial conditions based on their own predispositions, which creates interdependencies on future actions that can be difficult to vaticinate.

Using the same technologies in a consistent manner to manage all environments has a tremendous benefit for minimizing anomalies, just as consistent classroom management provides a framework to reduce errant student behavior.

Conclusion

I’m suggesting that expanding an APM solution to cover all environments across the application lifecycle will help lay the foundation for providing an amplified feedback loop to improve application performance.

If your APM solution is flexible enough to integrate ubiquitously, and dynamic enough to be configured rapidly, then you will be poised for expansion and ready to support any new development methodology that comes your way.

You can contact Larry on LinkedIn.

Related Links:

15 Top Factors that Impact Application Performance

If you’re looking to connect with thought leaders and creative thinkers in the APM technology space join the Application Performance Management (APM) Strategies Group on LinkedIn.

For more information on the critical success factors in APM adoption and how this centers around the End-User-Experience (EUE), read The Anatomy of APM and the corresponding blog The DNA of APM – Event to Incident Flow

Larry Dragich is a Technology Executive and Founder of the APM Strategies Group on LinkedIn
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