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The Top 25 Network Problems And Their Business Impact

We've created a neat poster outlining the most common network problems that we encounter in today's networks.  Now, a list of 25 network problems wouldn't be very interesting all by themselves, so we've added a description of the typical business impact of each problem (see screenshots below).  People who look at it tend to look through the problems and find the one that bit them most recently ("Hey! We had that problem last month!")  With both the problem and business impact, the poster becomes a valuable tool for communicating between network people and managers or applications people.  And, of course, NetMRI identifies these problems; therefore, it provides visibility into things that impact business operations, and ultimately, the ability for the business to make money.

We had the poster on display at Interop and it was so popular that we gave out all the copies we had available.  At Networkers this year (2008) Chesapeake Netcraftsmen, a partner of ours, will have it with their name/logo, so look for them at booth 249.

Eric Krapf, co-organizer of VoiceCon and chief blogger at the nojitter.com web site, wrote in his blog about the problems described in the poster after discussing it with me.  Brad Reese, who does a blog for The Cisco Subnet, did a blog on it (http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/27814), along with a list of all the problems.  He asks an important question: "What do YOU think is a top network problem?"

Go to http://www.netcordia.com/landing-pages/download-poster.asp to get one mailed to you.

  -Terry

 

Top25NetProbs-small image

 

Comments

 

tslattery said:

Some people have asked if the number on each problem means anything.  No, it is just a handle that makes it easy to refer to them without typing the name of the problem.

If you'd like to provide information ranking them in your network, we can make the number mean something.

 -Terry

May 15, 2008 12:02 PM

About tslattery

Terry Slattery, CCIE #1026, is a senior network engineer with decades of experience in the internetworking industry. Prior to joining Chesapeake NetCraftsmen as a full time consultant, Terry was the founder and CTO of Netcordia, and inventor of NetMRI, a suite of network management products. Terry started Netcordia as a consulting company in 2000 and transitioned to a network management product company in 2003. During the consulting days, he used his network design and implementation skills to lead a team in the design and implementation of a high availability network at a brokerage clearing house. Terry is the former President and founder of Chesapeake Computer Consultants, Inc., a networking and computer systems training and consulting company. He co-invented and patented the vLab(tm) internet-based remote lab system. He is co-author of the McGraw Hill text Advanced IP Routing in Cisco Networks. Terry led the team that developed the current Cisco IOS user interface under contract to Cisco Systems. Terry is experienced in the design and installation of large TCP/IP based networks and is a successful network protocol instructor. He is the second Cisco Certified Internetworking Expert (CCIE) #1026 and the first outside of Cisco. He enjoys membership on the Vanderbilt University Engineering School’s Industrial Advisory Board and the IEEE.

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