At an online CIO Week event, Cloudflare today added a digital experience monitoring capability to a portfolio of services layered on top of its core content delivery network (CDN).
Corey Mahan, director of product management for Cloudflare, said the Cloudflare Digital Experience Monitoring service extends a Cloudflare Zero Trust platform based on agent software dubbed Cloudflare WARP. The solutions delivers a wide range of software-as-a-service (SaaS) offerings spanning everything from data loss prevention (DLP) to email security.
He added that the overall goal is to reduce the total cost of IT by delivering SaaS application services more efficiently using a single agent rather than having to deploy multiple agents for each service.
The Cloudflare Digital Experience Monitoring service, available as a private beta, will enable IT teams to leverage the Cloudflare CDN to measure and analyze controlled data flows to public or private resources by emulating traffic flows using synthetic data. Via integration with the Cloudflare Zero Trust platform, IT teams can also access real-time data visualizations highlighting anomalies in connectivity or performance that might, for example, be indicative of a security breach, noted Mahan.
While there’s no doubt IT organizations are looking to streamline the number of IT vendors they need to manage, it’s not clear what the center of gravity will be for achieving that goal. Cloudflare is making a case for using the same global CDN that many organizations already rely on for networking services.
The Cloudflare Digital Experience Monitoring service leverages the company’s CDN to make it simpler to understand, for example, why users in one geography experience sub-optimal application experiences compared to another, said Mahan. That’s especially critical when more organizations than ever have employees working from home across multiple geographies, he added.
In the longer term, more networking and security functions will be consumed as a service. The challenge then becomes integrating those services into the DevOps workflows that are employed to deploy applications across a highly distributed computing environment. In many cases, what might initially appear to be an application performance issue winds up being a network connectivity problem that is more easily solved.
One way or another, the management of IT services in the months and years ahead will continue to converge. Organizations of all sizes will need to determine whether it makes economic sense to acquire platforms they need to manage versus consuming a service that is managed on their behalf. Most of the time, a service will be easier to consume and free up resources that can be applied to other IT functions, such as application development.
Of course, organizations will also need to take care to avoid locking themselves into a specific services provider. Ultimately, however, the question is whether managing a specific IT function provides enough differentiated value to be worth the time and effort when there is so much more to do.