CA this week laid out its plans to further unify and simplify its extensive product portfolio, homing in on governance, management and security technologies that would help customers optimize their businesses.
The company, at its 12th CA World user conference in Las Vegas, shared with press details of its Unified Service Model that it said represents 18 months of integration with in-house developed and acquired technologies. For instance, CA tapped application-dependency mapping and modeling technology it acquired with Cendura last fall to include the ability to populate the Unified Service Model with data from across an enterprise network. It promises to model IT services based on IT assets and their interrelationships as well as incorporate other elements, such as user identity, business policies and financial costs associated with IT.
Building on its Enterprise IT Management initiative announced at the last CA World in November 2005, CA's Unified Service Model would provide integration across CA products and help customers simplify their technology implementations, the company said. (See story on CEO and President John Swainson's keynote address.)
"IT organizations have been on a path forward from being just a backroom function to an internal service provider to now becoming an engine for competitive advantage," said CA CTO and Executive Vice President Al Nugent during a Sunday press conference. "An intimate linkage to the business will be required for IT to make this transition."
CA said the Unified Service Model is part of 16 CA Capability Solutions, which comprise existing products with updated integrations pre-packaged for customers looking to solve specific pain points. The technology is incorporated into CA products to provide an added layer of integration for software tools "that make sense." For instance, CA Network and Voice Management would include technology the company acquired with Concord Communications such as eHealth and Aprisma's Spectrum to tackle network fault, availability and telephony management. The Unified Service Model enables these products to share data schemas that make the data collected easier to integrate and correlate.
CA focused its Capability Solutions on three primary technology areas -- governance, management and security -- to help customers address the most pressing issues facing IT today. CA contends the level of detail in such technology areas must broaden to include users. The Unified Service Model builds upon the integration CA provided in its configuration management database announced 18 months ago and adopted by 70 CA customers.
"The Unified Service Model provides more than IT asset information and their relationships. It understands who has access to services, what the services costs and the identity of users that user the services. It is a much broader view of a service that runs across the silos of IT that all groups need to work off," said Ajei Gopal, general manager of CA's Enterprise Systems Management business unit. "It provides the same notion of what a service looks like across an organization."