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In the real world, businesses come in every size, from
self-employed entrepreneurs like me to mega malls like
Wal-Mart.
On the Internet, companies come in every size, too,
from a stand-alone ebook sales page with webmaster
and owner all in one, to 300 pound gorilla like Amazon,
with over a million pages requiring the entire population
of a small country to serve as webmaster.
If your site is a single page, it is its own network.
But if your site is any bigger, and you have plans
to grow, it is a network or is fast becoming one.
You need network monitoring.
Most ecommerce webmasters are at least somewhat familiar
with website monitoring. Many use a website monitoring
service or software to keep track of "uptime"
and "downtime".
At your local shopping mall, serious business requires
more than just knowing when the front doors are open
and when they are closed. Serious ecommerce needs
to know more than just when the site is accessible.
That is what network monitoring is all about.
Chances are, your e-business owns one of the following,
or uses one of the following remotely:
DNS servers: These are used to translate your site
name, like www.mycompany.com, to the numbers called
"IP addresses" that computers understand.
If DNS servers are not working properly, end-users
will not be able to find your site and will get an
error. Usually only an external or remote monitoring
service will detect such a problem.
An FTP server: File Transfer Protocol servers are
used to help you
exchange files with remote users. If you use FTP,
a monitoring
service can make sure it is always up and running.
POP3 and SMTP servers: These are used for exchanging
emails. If you are using email, chances are you are
using SMTP and POP3. If your SMTP server is down,
everyone who sends you email will receive an error,
stating that your mail
server is down and cannot accept incoming email. To
say that the impression this leaves your customers
is bad would be an understatement. If your POP3 server
is down, you will be unable to retrieve email from
your mailbox. Once again, only external monitoring
will prevent such a problem.
Firewalls: Many businesses use firewalls to protect
their internal network from un-authorized traffic,
such as spyware, viruses and sabotage by competitors.
Furthermore, a firewall is your first line of defense.
If your firewall goes down, your whole network may
actually become inaccessible from outside. In other
words, if you host your own web site and mail servers,
those will become
inaccessible to the outside world if your firewall
goes down. Once again, remote network monitoring is
required to detect that a problem exists and quickly
get it repaired.
Internet connections: Users come to your network
from multiple backbones, depending on the company
they use to connect to the Internet and their location.
It is important to ensure that your connection performs
well for each user. A remote monitoring service can
ping your networks from multiple locations around
the world, thus testing most major routes to your
web server or network. Before hiring a network monitoring
service, check to see that they have both your customer
geography and the Internet backbone layout covered.
Very few websites of any size and functionality are
anything less than a complete network, and many networks
rely on servers in different parts of the world.
A good network monitoring service can ensure, as
a base, that all servers are properly functioning,
that data can be sent to and received from each server,
and that each function sharing the server responds
as required. An advanced network monitoring service
can even remotely monitor the temperature of your
servers.
What you need to monitor depends on how extensive
your network is. A network monitoring expert can help
you determine what needs monitoring. If you own the
servers, or are remotely hosted on dedicated servers,
you most likely need everything monitored. If your
site is hosted on shared servers, you might need fewer
functions monitored.
About the Author:
David Leonhardt is a freelance writer and SEO consultant.
Contact him at
http://www.SEO-writer.net
He wrote this article for Dotcom-Monitor:
http://www.dotcom-monitor.com
Read more on network monitoring:
http://www.dotcom-monitor.com/network-monitoring.asp
Read more on website monitoring:
http://www.dotcom-monitor.com/website-monitoring.asp |