VMware Aria Automation Other Advice

AN
IT Service Manager at Allianz

There are different AWS and Azure services, but these are not connected with our vRA as of now. In future, we will maybe look for some type of hybrid setup.

For applications, we are still provisioning the manual way after deployment. We have included some of the basic applications into our blueprints. So, they will get deployed along with the VM spin-up. If we haven't integrated the application centrally, then it is because we didn't get the customer approval because they felt like some customizations may need to be done during each deployment of the application. Therefore, they didn't agree to the integration of applications into the blueprints.

We are trying to onboard other internal customers into our vRA. We have been onboarding customers even onto vRA 7. So, it is a never-ending process because it is a huge company.

I would rate this product as a nine out of 10.

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NiteshKumar1 - PeerSpot reviewer
Principle consultant at Infosys

VMware is a leader in the market in terms of virtualization, so I would definitely recommend using this solution. 

Overall, I would rate the solution an eight out of ten. 

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Lekan Ogunwale - PeerSpot reviewer
CEO at Ultrasightconsulting Limited

Before implementing VMware Aria Automation, users should consider their specific use cases and how the solution aligns with the demands of their working environment. They should also take into account pricing considerations, potential need for ongoing support, and whether the support team is responsive and helpful. Additionally, users should evaluate the availability of features and assess whether the solution meets their requirements effectively.

Overall, I would rate it 5 out of 10.
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Buyer's Guide
VMware Aria Automation
March 2024
Learn what your peers think about VMware Aria Automation. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: March 2024.
767,847 professionals have used our research since 2012.
SurajSachdeva - PeerSpot reviewer
Data Engineer | Developer at Team Computers

We require only two people to maintain this solution, including one monitoring it and another going through all the software documents to be maintained.

Overall, I rate the solution a nine out of ten.

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Irshad Kazi - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Technical Consultant at ITC Infotech

I rate VMware Aria Automation a seven out of ten. They should provide only one license and free support services until the product’s life cycle ends. Also, its support team should respond faster.

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Vijayamurugan  K - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr MANAGER at L&T Technology Services

I rate VMware Aria Automation a seven out of ten.

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Nicolas Lethellier - PeerSpot reviewer
Software Architect and DevOps Facilitator at Thales

We encountered numerous challenging use cases that made it tough for us to deploy and handle. While the feature itself is intriguing, the administrative aspect has been quite burdensome for us. So, to sum it up, the feature rates a seven in terms of quality. However, when you dive into it and take responsibility for its ongoing maintenance, it turns into a nightmare. So, I would rate seven out of ten. 

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SS
Infrastructure Professional Service Team Lead at G-Able

I recommend the solution because we've worked with it for many years, but we only have two or three customers because of the price. So, we can't start many projects.

However, I would recommend this solution for the automation function itself, and how to group and publish those groupings is quite easy for customers to learn with Aria.

Overall, I would rate the solution an eight out of ten. 

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RA
CTO at Moca Financial

For any cloud-related thing, you have to think it through. Things get sticky, like external firewalls. Distribute, network, and plan because you are not going to get it right the first few times.

vRA is an orchestration engine, like a workflow engine. What it comes down to, because it is more of a generic tool, what are you using it for? I have seen in places that it has helped people in ITOps.

VMware's goal is to build a long-standing partnership.

I would rate it as a nine (out of 10).

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AP
Technical Manager at Gilead Sciences, Inc.

I rate VMware a nine out of ten. To get to a ten there are a few areas they could improve, especially vSAN. Performance-wise, there are no challenges, but from a product perspective, it is not that flexible. What we have in vSphere today is very flexible, but vSAN is not.

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Simranjit Singh - PeerSpot reviewer
Solutions Architect at a tech vendor with 1,001-5,000 employees

I strongly recommend gaining a thorough understanding of Aria before diving into it. Aria is not as straightforward as it initially appears. There are numerous aspects to consider, such as integrations, VRA usage, VRO, and so on. 

It's crucial to comprehend how Visualized Orchestration, Sensor Automation, and Sensor Orchestration work together harmoniously when orchestrating workflows. You really need to get proper VRA training before effectively utilizing it. It's not something you can pick up easily just by having coding knowledge. Some level of experience and training is essential for thorough usage.

Overall, I would rate the solution a nine out of ten. VMware Aria Automation has made a lot of things easier. It has really helped the operations team to spin up the virtual machines. Previously, if setting up infrastructure for the customer took weeks, now it can be done in a couple of days. It has reduced the time for the customers to get the infrastructure ready. So, I would definitely rate it nine. This solution has done a fabulous job over time. 

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Awadhesh KumarMishra - PeerSpot reviewer
Information Technology Architect at Kyndryl

I rate the overall solution an eight out of ten. 

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Tarek Nader - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr. vRA Consultant at VMware

I rate VMware Aria Automation seven out of 10. Aria Automation needs products like vRealize Orchestrator to extend its capabilities and accessibility. If you are using Aria Automation by itself, you won't get the features you want, and the license cost is high. It needs to be cheaper, easier to use, and have more native capabilities. 

Before deploying Aria Automation, you need to know the prerequisites for the nodes. Each appliance consists of multiple components, and each has its own log. You need to understand your use case and what you want to use so you can customize the services you need to provide. For simple services, you can use only Aria Automation. If you need to customize advanced services, you will have to purchase vRealize Orchestrator and also CI/CD DevOps tools.

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LH
Sr Virtualization Engineer at a healthcare company with 1,001-5,000 employees

I would definitely recommend vRealize Automation.

One thing that we've had to realize about this product is, it's dependent on some back-work that you do inside your vSphere environment to prepare for it: things like tags, things like folders, things like naming conventions. We've discovered that these are very important when you're attempting to roll out this product because you already have an established vCenter environment. For instance, in our case, where we had multiple data centers, we may have had different implementation times and perhaps may not have had the same standards around things like naming conventions, DV switches, or storage. Because they map, you have to very cognizant of that.

That's been an issue, not only on the Automation side but across the whole vRealize Suite. I also manage all of the vROps, the analytics, and the integration between the analytics, the vCenter, and the Automation.

It can be tricky. You need to be detail-oriented on how you configure and set up your vCenter so that you're consistent in all implementations. If you have a multi-vCenter environment, you want to make sure you use the same naming conventions across them.

We already had established standards, but as new people came on board, they may have varied something thinking, "Oh, I can just shorten this," or "I'll hyphenate this VLAN_, no, actually I'll do a VLAN-". When you go to map that, to automate that, and you go to read your available VLANs, suddenly it doesn't recognize them because you're not consistent in your conventions. That's one thing we really discovered in automation.

The second was using naming conventions that are consistent and searchable so that you can understand different applications and environments. That's going to be very important when you're actually building automation and workflows.

It's something that the customer needs to be cognizant of and vigilant about as they move towards automation. Automation is taking the existing infrastructure and attempting to automate it and use it and leverage it in a way that's dependable and consistent. I think that's the greatest thing we get out of Automation. It isn't speed, it's consistency; consistency in deployment, consistency in execution.

I give the solution a nine out of 10, based on my satisfaction with the product. My experience with its growth over time - the last few versions I've looked at, 7.3 to 7.4 - is that it is going to give us some capabilities in integration that we didn't have before.

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VK
Lead Software Engineer-Cloud Development at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees

Often times, when I think of a missing feature I end up seeing that it is planned for an upcoming release. The solution keeps up with development so it is a great option.

I rate the solution a nine out of ten. 

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CS
Solutions Architect at a financial services firm with 5,001-10,000 employees

We are currently using version 7 of the solution but we are transitioning to version 8.

I would rate this solution a seven out of ten.

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AJ
CTO/CEO at a tech services company with 1-10 employees

While implementing a solution like vRA, the most important thing is to understand why you're using it for a use case. If you want to implement a solution to do automation, I would suggest seeing what kind of integrations it provides with different endpoints and plan around it. vRA provides pretty extensive integrations. My advice would be to first just understand why you want to use vRA and then have a strategic roadmap implemented. You should start with a basic implementation and then go on top of it.

vRA has enabled us to derive value from the cloud more rapidly, but we have not yet fully realized that value. We are planning to use the multi-cloud features more as we go along. It is in the roadmap that we have for this year. Similarly, vRA has enabled us to manage the cloud easily through its entire life cycle, but we have not exploited it fully. We have not utilized it for multi-cloud environments. We have mostly focused on the on-prem environments and on Azure and AWS to a certain extent. We are working on utilizing vRA along with other automations from our tech cloud. There is an internal roadmap that we have for this year in which we want to monitor multiple multi-cloud environments, not only for our own staff but also for our customers.

We have not used VMware Cloud Templates and iterative development for GitOps much. We have not used the multi-cloud Infrastructure as Code yet. We are planning to use it.

We have also not used vRA much to extend our security footprint into the cloud. We have done it here and there but not fully and not to the extent that I am happy about.

I would rate vRA an eight out of 10.

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SS
Senior Systems Admin at a retailer with 1,001-5,000 employees

I give the solution a nine out of ten. Again, that's probably our own being behind. It's entirely possible the newest version is a ten. It's the whole extension, further into more modern technology, but we're not on the newest version at the moment. So it's probably already there and we don't see it yet. We're trying to get everything pulled together between our company and several other companies, to be on the same version. We're in the process of upgrading to the 6.5 and then, hopefully, very soon to 6.7.

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JP
Product Engineer at a tech vendor with 1,001-5,000 employees

I rate VMware vRealize Automation seven out of 10. I recommend it for any company that constantly deploys VMs. This tool will help you a lot. 

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HaridevNagula - PeerSpot reviewer
Technical Lead Specialist at Hitachi Systems, Ltd.

Before deploying the product, we must have a blueprint of how we want to use it. Then, we can plan it accordingly. We must plan the organizational needs before deployment. It will ensure minimum changes while deploying because it needs a lot of integration. A lot of third-party vendors will be involved during customization. However, having proper planning, knowledge, and technical abilities and integrating multi-skill vendors will make a perfect blend of technology for a better experience. Overall, I rate the product a seven out of ten.

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Abhishek_Agarwal - PeerSpot reviewer
Principal Consultant at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees

Try to use the maximum level of automation possible within VMware Aria Automation. It will help you to achieve the maximum results. This solution has a lot of other features other than provisioning, like tighter integration with third-party products, ISVs, backup software, and open APIs. To fully utilize the product, you would need to get into these areas along with normal provisioning.

On a scale from one to ten, I would rate VMware Aria Automation at nine.

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UM
IT Infrastructure Manager at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees

We recommend VMware technologies to any of our colleagues or anyone asking to compare to other virtualization technologies in the market.

We have had VMware for more than twenty years. We are very old VMware customers and have a big setup.

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BP
Solutions Architect at a healthcare company with 5,001-10,000 employees

The solution is getting better. VMware has been paying a lot of attention to it lately, and it's been inheriting a lot of their cloud efforts, user interface improvements, and getting more intuitive. It's a nice thing. To be able to build custom forms and do more things, which directly respond to our customer's needs.

If I had to rate the solution one to ten, I would give it a seven. There is room for improvement, but it looks like they are making those improvements and putting a lot of work into it.

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JJ
IT Manager at a individual & family service with 10,001+ employees

Start with VMware vRA. Other solutions haven't been in the game long enough. You're going to have a lot of custom-scripting that VMware already puts in there.

I rate it an eight out of 10 only because I wish we had a way to get through the technical support department faster. We've been with them long enough - and I've already talked to the sales guy about this - that they should almost have an "express lane." You lose two or three days going through the normal process. It goes to level-one and he bounces it to level-two, to level-three, when pretty much, because we've got this long history, they should know that when we call, it needs to be bounced all the way up to the top. That's just the reality.

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PN
Solution Architect at Presidio Networked Solutions

As is the case with any other automation product, VMware Aria Automation also requires a journey. You will need to start slow, build the platform, and make sure you have good out-of-the-gate use cases. You can start with automating basic server requests. If you already have CICD tools in your environment, then you can integrate them and try a few playbooks.

You will definitely need to train your staff so that they can keep moving forward with the tool. It is a complex product, and you will need at least one full-time employee who has experience with scripting and an interest in automation who can be dedicated to this solution.

Overall, VMware Aria Automation is flexible, reliable, and scalable. With VMware Aria Automation as a cloud service, it is even easier to deploy and manage. Therefore, I would give this solution an overall rating of eight out of ten.

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DU
Cloud Architect at Swisscom

I would rate this solution a seven because it hasn't perfectly adapted to our use cases with multi-tenancy. 

If you're looking into this solution I would tell you that if you use this solution only within your own company, you'll be fine. If you have a business like ours, it can get complicated. 

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AJ
Senior Infrastructure Design at a insurance company with 1,001-5,000 employees

My advice would be to hire Professional Services. Don't do it yourself.

When looking to work with a vendor, the most important factor is skills. They need to have the right skills, especially when you don't have time, your project timeline is very short. Skills are the key: someone who knows the product, who has lot of experience, and who has done it before.

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AO
Technical Project Manager at Bilgibim

Buy the solution. There is no problem. For the last three years, our customer hasn't had any problem. With vRA, the customer saves time.

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KB
Senior Associate at a consultancy with 10,001+ employees

Do your research beforehand, because the architecture itself can get you tripped up if you don't properly align your certificates. You definitely have to have an idea of where you want to end up.

There is certainly room for improvement with some of the little things I was talking about, like either better managing of the upgrade process, or just making the infrastructure deployment a little bit easier. It feels like all of the pieces have been automated on one level or another, like with the PowerShell scripts, doing all the IS, Windows boxes preparation. They just need to get it to be more end-to-end.

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RM
Sr. Technical Specialist at a comms service provider with 1,001-5,000 employees

If you are already a VMware, definitely consider the cost implications of going with vRA versus a competitor.

VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) is 100 percent mature on the private cloud. We don't have any issues working on it.

We are using other solutions from VMware to extend our network security.

Training is a continuous process. 

I would rate this product a nine out of 10.

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DP
Infrastructure Architect at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

Make sure that you know what you're getting into, first off, what it's for and what you might need it for because I might recommend maybe a less robust product line for your needs as opposed to something that's more of like a higher infrastructure, corporation-level product line, like vRealize.

Every version, they've updated the UI, scalability, added new products to be able to work with different cloud vendors. Overall, that part of it's fine, there have been improvements from version to version.

As far as automation techniques, like Chef or Puppet or Ansible, it's the age-old thing: Mac, Windows, Linux, whatever works for what I need, I'll use. I don't really have a preference, as long as it works for what I need.

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DW
IT Manager at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees

Talk to a lot of different companies and people that have done it. Find out what not to do and what to do. It will make your journey easier.

We are working on a lot of the digital transformation right now. We are working more on the Pivotal Container Service (PKS) product, and a lot of integrations that they're doing with the performance monitoring, the metrics, and KPIs. This is very important to us.

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Transparency: Be very open with us. 
  • Be very knowledgeable about their products, so that we don't have to go through three or four different people to get one answer.
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it_user730257 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior IT Engineer at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees

I think documentation and support are probably the most important things. If you don't care about documentation and support, you can grab a free one and try and build it. If you want someone who is going to be able to answer your questions, someone who's got the documentation already, so when you have a given error, they have it right on their webpage: "This is what this error means. Go do this." VMware's very good about that.

Overall, VMware is very good. It's very stable, very extensible, but it does have a relatively high learning curve. So folks that don't have the resources to dedicate to it may not be able to get very far. I do think it's a very good product, but it's very much a build-your-own product. That's good in other ways.

I would suggest people think about: "How much of this do you want to figure out yourself?" Because even within that process of building your own, you still have that layer of support. If you're looking at which one to pick, pick the one that's going to be able to provide you with advice. We've had professional services working with us on a lot of it at different points in getting it up and running. That's been a very nice driving force towards getting it to completion.

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it_user660039 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Consultant at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

As soon as I started using this tool, I started seeing results immediately. This product is flexible and easy to implement. Its multi-tenancy support makes it more effective for use with different customers.

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MS
Vice president at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

I would rate this solution an eight. There's always room for improvement, nothing's perfect but we haven't had any major problems because of it or with it.

I would advise someone looking into this solution to check out the training before you get it and not afterward because it covers all of the deployment.

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RT
Virtualization Engineer at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

My advice is "do it."

Functionality really is the most important criterion when selecting a vendor. If I can purchase a product or a service that is going to check all the boxes, that's more important to me than price, personally. The company signs the checks though, so they might see it differently.

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CN
Director of Infrastructure at a retailer with 1,001-5,000 employees

We moved to the solution because it is pushing the agility of IT.

The upgrade process was fine.

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ES
Technical Architect at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

From experience working with other service provider cloud products, VMware vRealize Automation Center is the best out-of-the-box solution to quickly build out your cloud portal and fully integrate it into your orchestration layers, as well as your compute and storage infrastructures. It can support multiple public clouds as well as hypervisors, providing that single pane of glass for management, operations, and reporting. I would give it a nine out of 10 as there is always room for improvement, since cloud is always evolving.

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JT
Customer Apps Manager at Telecommunications Services of Trinidad & Tobago Limited (TSTT)

VMware is great.

We have multiple criteria when selecting a vendor. But in general, we look at

  • support
  • experience
  • cost.

I rate this solution at eight out of 10 because of the high level of functionality that it has. Why not a 10? Because there are some things that we wish we could have in the application, which the solution will have at some point, from what I'm seeing, but at the present, they're not there.

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it_user587121 - PeerSpot reviewer
Linear Dimensions, Consultant at a government with 10,001+ employees

vRA is great. If you're looking for a multi-tenanted solution that is very easy, from a customer perspective, to use, and make it seamless for the customer to actually get what they're looking for, i.e. a server, developers love this. For the customer, from the time to market and ease of use perspectives, you can't go wrong with vRA. It's that good.

I would rate it at about nine out of 10. If they would integrate DR, that would bring it to a 10.

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it_user438321 - PeerSpot reviewer
Product Manager at a media company with 5,001-10,000 employees

VMware’s vRealize Automation is a good product, made for large enterprises. From my experience, vRA requires a highly skilled team to maintain, version upgrades without downtime are not possible, and overall it doesn’t scale fast. Every change requires weeks of planning and testing to see how the product is going to respond.

With the release of vRealize Automation 7, there is a deployment wizard that reduces the complexity of setup. Make sure you have very knowledgeable technical staff to operate this product on a daily basis. There are 15 roles that come with the product by default; it’s a lot to learn.

The vRealize Suite is a great product for those that want excellent governance and tight controls. Integration with Active Directory groups works flawlessly for both vRA business groups and entitlements.

In order to truly take advantage of the power of vRA/vCAC, you need vRealize Orchestrator. It’s a totally separate entity to maintain, patch, upgrade, connect to vCenter Server and of course manage its code.

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AC
IT Consultant at a government with 5,001-10,000 employees

I would recommend doing an integration with hybrid cloud. With vRA, this is excellent.

I would rate this solution as an eight (out of 10).

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SD
Cloud engineer at a government with 10,001+ employees

I would rate this solution a nine because we've had a good experience with their consultants. Also, because the product is evolving. 

I would advise someone looking into this or a similar solution, to test the solution beforehand and to be in contact with VMware for advice and help with configuration. You'll realize this solution isn't so complicated.

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MK
DevOps Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

I rated this solution a seven because I wouldn't give a ten to any product since there is no such thing as an ideal product. Developers complain about some minor stuff so it's still not always the perfect product for us. I wouldn't give it a lower score because at the end it does what it's supposed to do. We are using it, customers are happy, it brings customers which makes money. It does the job.

I would advise someone who is looking into VRA or a similar solution to try to network with other companies, to learn from the mistakes they've made, from the stuff they've discovered. Also, I would advise using VMware to help you design the architecture you are trying to implement, don't do everything yourselves.

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MS
Project Architect at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees

If you're looking into vRA, I would advise that you to choose it but don't customize it.

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CF
Team Lead Private Cloud at a retailer with 10,001+ employees

The new version is user-friendly and intuitive. We have upgraded to 7.5, and this has been a good step for the product's usability.

Today, I would start with the vRA device. In the beginning, we did a lot of stuff with vRealize Orchestrator, so we had to develop our workflows on our own, which is a bit more complicated. So, vRA is good idea if you want to start and get quick results.

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KP
Principal Engineer at T-Mobile

Make sure you think out the entirety of your deployment because it's hard to change components after the fact. Make sure that the initial deployment is good. We got that from VMware. They were very good at understanding the size of the environment and they tried to scale it for that environment.

I would rate this solution at about eight out of 10. It has been good but, as I said, there are some faults. Overall, it has performed phenomenally and the support behind it has made it absolutely useful.

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it_user730290 - PeerSpot reviewer
Product Manager at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

Go for the product, but make sure you have experienced folks on the platform that can help your admins to ramp up and go to market quickly.

When selecting a vendor, make sure:

  • They have continuous support.
  • The performance of their platform will scale, even if you load up the system to a point.
  • The system actually will be able to dynamically detect flaws and prompt the admin to go fix the flaw.
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Min Chan Myae - PeerSpot reviewer
Project Manager at Access Spectrum Company Limited

I would recommend this solution to others.

I rate VMware Aria Automation an eight out of ten.

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ND
Virtualization Engineer at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

Give it time to save you time.

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DG
Systems Engineer at a insurance company with 1,001-5,000 employees

Use it, but be ready to invest a lot of time, man-hours, into building it out in the way that you want to use it. It can do a lot of things, and that's one of the problems - that it can do a lot of things. So you have to know what you want it to do before it'll do what you want it to.

In terms of it being intuitive and user-friendly, from an end-user perspective, I believe it is. From the administration and development side, it's a little bit complex. It takes a little bit of time to understand how everything works behind the scenes of vRA and vRO, but once you start learning it, it's kind of intuitive, once you get your feet wet with it.

I rate vRA about a nine out of 10, because of some of the "gotchas" that aren't really well documented. But it is very valuable for us in how we've implemented it and how we're utilizing it.

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WP
Executive Manager at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

I rate it nine out of ten because of the simplicity of the solution. It's so easy to manage

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MT
Principal Vendor Manager at a healthcare company with 501-1,000 employees

You should look at the complexity and size of your environment, and when utilizing that background for your requirements, I personally would recommend VMware. You should look at what your deliverables are in this solution. If you do that, you have something you can measure it by, to determine if it's a good fit for you. But I do suggest that you look at VMware as a potential vendor.

I rate the solution at seven out of ten because I don't believe it's a perfect solution. It fits in our data center and it works for our organization, so it's a good solution for us. Yet, at the same time, technology changes so quickly today that a solution you bought three years ago, even if it's upgraded, isn't the solution that's going to fit. For example, we're all going to the cloud or on-prem/off-prem, and because of that, that solution may be in the cloud tomorrow, so I won't be buying it anymore, I'll be buying the cloud version of it because it's utilized through a different service provider.

My most important criteria when working with a vendor are really easy. I evaluate the vendor based on these things: 

  • What is their reliability? 
  • What is their pricing model?
  • Is it a partnership versus our just being a customer that they want to make large margins from?
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TG
Systems Engineer with 10,001+ employees

I would recommend vRealize Automation. 

If you don't already have experience in it, you're probably going to hire a partner to help deploy it and make it tie into your environment. Make sure the third-party stuff works with it, make sure the APIs are open. We use it to automate. During the provisioning process, we use it to talk to the Infoblox with the DNS stuff and the IP provisioning, and to talk to our Veeam too. Just make sure that the rest of your stuff is going to work with it.

I rate it a nine out of ten. To get it to a ten they should make it easier to use and to understand what it's doing.

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CD
IT Director at a computer software company with 201-500 employees

For a specific business, you need to know what you're trying to do. For ours, it's a match that I wish we would have had immediately. It has paid dividends.

I give vRA a nine out of 10. Sure, there's room for improvement. I don't know all of those areas, I'd let my more technical people speak on that. For us, this has been one of those solutions where ownerships loves it, appreciates it, sees the difference.

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KM
DevOps Engineer at a pharma/biotech company with 5,001-10,000 employees

Find out what the requirements are and what do you want do with it, then see if it fits. If you're looking to deploy virtual machines through a self-service portal, this product works well.

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor: It meets our requirements.

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SH
Cloud Architect at Dyntek

Really look at the competition that's come a long way. Cisco's product, ServiceNow's product, Red Hat even has a product that is competing and, depending on their workload type and their end point type, there are potentially better solutions. But if you are a fully integrated VMware environment, this is still the best option.

Regarding implementation, you should have a very well documented process for your current provisioning. You should have documented all the types of workloads and blueprints you would potentially need based on user demand, not based on what the admins think. We made that mistake. We offered what we thought the user would want and most of the blueprints we created went unused. But then when we went the opposite way in the newer release. We basically poled our entire community and they gave very specific responses. So, focus on what the users tell you they want otherwise they're not going to use the product.

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it_user730266 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior IT Specialist with 5,001-10,000 employees

Make sure you deploy the latest version.

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it_user321303 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr. Systems Engineer at a pharma/biotech company with 10,001+ employees

It simplifies daily chores, so go get it.

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DM
Sr. Manager, Open Systems Service Desk at a healthcare company with 501-1,000 employees

In general, I'd recommend vRA but make sure that your framework is set, that you understand what your processes are so that you can fit into the framework.

It's not intuitive and user-friendly but we've made it that way. We've allowed the DevOps teams to incorporate some of their components inside of the catalogs themselves, so we give them a little bit more flexibility, rather than dictating what they need to do. That way, it really runs true to their process.

I rate vRA about an eight out of ten because of the inability to get this thing stood up, initially. We weren't the first to actually do it, and yet, it seemed like we were the first to do it. But because of its scalability, it's a product that we decided to go with.

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RN
Systems Engineer at a educational organization with 51-200 employees

We are overall satisfied with the product.

Give it a try. Try it out in the labs from VMware. Evaluate it quite deeply, and see if it fits for your purpose or company.

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PP
Technical consultant at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

vRA 8, from what I have seen of it, in a session here at VMworld 2018 Europe, fulfills every need we have. The Service Broker is better. vRA simply speaks with all my other endpoints and I see a lot of benefits in that.

I would rate this solution as an eight because the way we set it up reduces the effort which would normally have been needed to deploy a virtual machine or perform data actions. I'm not giving it a higher score simply because of the difficulties we have run into in the past with it as well as the difficulties we continuously face during upgrades.

We are currently discussing if we should stay on vRA or move back to vCloud Director. For now, I would recommend vRA, having seen the roadmap of vRA 8, which, in my opinion, is really good.

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YB
IT Architect at a consultancy with 10,001+ employees

I would recommend use the solution.

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PS
Head of Cloud and Technology with 1,001-5,000 employees

I recommend going directly to the cloud which already has the self-service portal and other fancy features.

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BW
Systems Administrator at a manufacturing company with 1,001-5,000 employees

It is a solid 10. It's completely taken a lot of time off my plate so I can concentrate on other things, including learning the product as well as vRO, vRealize Orchestrator. 

If it's too complex for you, get a consulting company, because it makes the process a lot easier. I would definitely speak with other people who have implemented it in their environment. We've actually done that in the past for other products. It's nice to hear what other companies think about the product. It will help accelerate your decision.

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor: 

  1. Ease-of-use.
  2. Functionality to the point where it's not going to break, and there are no bugs in it. If the product has been long known to contain very harsh setup routines, it's going to take a long time for bugs get fixed, or there are multiple bugs which keep showing up in every version, this is something that I don't want to deal with.
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AN
Systems Administrator at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

I would easily give vRA a nine out of ten. It has done everything that we need. We're not the most complex use case, but it's done everything we need, we can just forget about it in the background.

It's a nine and not a ten because of the training stuff. It would be helpful to have a nice flow of training for a new employee. I'm the "old guy" of the shop and we're bringing on new people or new use cases. For example, the user-services department needs to start using it. How do we bring in new people to use its fleshed-out features, in addition to just our using it, where other departments are using it? How do we bring those people in? That's the only thing we really need.

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BK
Ops Manager at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

I rate it at six out of ten right now. To get to a ten, they definitely need to improve on the administration and the troubleshooting. From an operations perspective, it is a nightmare. From a user perspective, it is pretty good.

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MU
IT Solutions Architect at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

Right now, it works for what we use it for. We're not using all its features, but the pieces that we use work fine.


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AN
Systems Administrator at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

vRA has a very nice toolset for being able to integrate with VMware. It is great for being able to automate things within the VMware environment. We probably need to learn more about it, so we can fully realize its use, what the plugins for other things are. But it's doing everything that we need for now. We've seen that it has room to grow with us.

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it_user746703 - PeerSpot reviewer
Enterprise Architect at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

The most important criteria when selecting a vendor include:

  • What is it really offering, for us as a customer, and for our end customers?
  • How much flexible they have in understanding our needs and accommodating those needs.
  • Support: How much support are they ready to offer, what are their capabilities in terms of getting us live, through the product lifecycle, and then helping us manage that product as we move along?

I think vRA stands at the top of the list of the products that we rate, because of the problems that it has helped us to solve, in terms of providing the services to our end customers. I think it has helped us a lot.

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BW
Systems Administrator at a manufacturing company with 1,001-5,000 employees

Absolutely go for it. I believe in it. I've seen and I've heard companies talk about how valuable it is. My only suggestion is, if you're strapped for time, get a consultant or some third-party or VMware Support to help you with the deployment. There are a lot of "gotchas" in there that we didn't know about and I'm glad we did go with a consulting company.

I give it a nine out of ten. I never really like giving something 100 percent because there's always room for improvement. I feel that it's a very solid system but there are little tweaks in there that could be done better.

For example, HTML 5, which I hear is coming. But also, to me, they should make it easier to figure stuff out. It's a little hard when you're trying to branch out and do it on your own. If the consultant goes away for a day and you're trying to figure things out, tooltips or some sort of help or some sort of highlighting of things that would give little tidbits indicating you need to link this to this over in this direction, etc; that would help out new people.

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it_user746757 - PeerSpot reviewer
Software Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

I give it a six out of 10 because we still haven't met what we intended it for.

It works very well just spinning up VMs, creating blueprints, for doing some of the basic stuff. But doing some of the more advanced stuff, it still needs a little bit more work.

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it_user305391 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Engineer at SynchroNet

It has a long way to go still but, for what it does, it does well and it helps enable you. Even if there are a lot of problems with the product itself that still need to be fixed, I don't think that they outweigh the actual business value that you'll get by having the product if you do a lot of deployments or if you need to provide access to developers. There's a whole myriad of cases that you could be using it for. If it falls within one of those cases, it can be extremely helpful.

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it_user730173 - PeerSpot reviewer
System Infrastructure Architect at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Features
  • Stability
  • A community who know the product and can share information about it.
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it_user674106 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr Systems Engineer at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

Do your research ahead of time and try to find others in your area who have already deployed the product. Your VMware rep can usually provide contacts that may be able to provide advice. Additionally, start talking to internal developers at your company and see what pain points they have and how automation can help. This communication will also help when you start publishing catalog items in automation, because a lot of more advanced workflows will require knowledge of Javascript and PowerShell. Lastly, start working with Orchestrator now. It has the steepest learning curve, but it is critical to understand how it works for advanced workflows. Orchestrator is already included with your vCenter licensing.

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DB
IT Director at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees

My advice would be to heavily invest in training in vRO. vRO is the backbone of what vRA does. I also recommend that you come up with a plan. Don't try to automate everything in the first step. Find the good use case and make sure you offer new value to the customers that you're building it for, prior to just replacing what they have with something new. IT admins commonly don't like to have their interface changed so dramatically.

When looking for an IT vendor that would integrate in the data center, I look for an extensible API. It's very helpful when that vendor gives me the ability to either write a REST plugin, or they've written one themselves, and they're fully familiar with the software-defined lifecycle. It's great when they have a vRO plugin that I can tap into and orchestrate and automate but, if they don't, I need good documentation of their REST API and then we'll write our own vRO plugin. We haven't really seen many vendors integrate directly into vRA, but if they're tapping into vRO then we're in good shape. vRA and vRO, for us, are just brothers.

The solution, overall, used to not be intuitive and user-friendly but they've taken some good feedback in the last two years and made some significant improvements that have really helped us out in managing upgrades. It used to be very difficult to upgrade. It's gotten a lot simpler and that has made our lives quite a bit easier. Also, the stability of the distributed, highly-available infrastructure for vRA.

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RC
Solution Architect at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

While it's user-friendly use, you need to know what you are doing with it.

Get your requirements beforehand. Make sure of the services that you want to provide and have them nailed out. If you are just writing VMs, then you don't need vRA. If you are providing services, you're going to become a broker of services to people, so you have to plan ahead. Also plan the workloads that you're going to be providing because they will consume a lot.

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JM
Delivery Consultant at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

For me, being a consultant, vendor selection isn't what matters. I want to use whatever is best for the customer. So whatever fits their business use case best is what I'm going to go with, what I'm going to recommend.

vRA does most things really well. There are still some issues such that, if you are going to go 100% cloud, if you don't want anything on-premise, there are some other solutions that might have a leg up.

Use vRA, but it's more about the process than it is about the product. You have to make sure that the users, who are going to be internal IT most of the time, that their expectations are set appropriately. Make sure that you have buy-in from the higher-ups as far as automating processes. You have to make sure you have by-in at all levels.

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it_user730134 - PeerSpot reviewer
Project Lead at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Look at the support they provide, the backing of their product, and so on.
  • Have a big company name, like VM, where they have stability.
  • Fitting the your needs - nobody wants a product that they are never gonna use.

If you get a lot of virtual machine requests, this is the product to get.

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it_user730275 - PeerSpot reviewer
Virtualization Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

They're the pioneers of virtualization.

The vSphere stack and all their other products are integrated with our core stack, which is vSphere. That's really the big reason why we like all their other products.

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SB
Principal Systems Engineer at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

It is a complicated product, but you can do anything with it.

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GN
Architect at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

If your requirements are on par with what VMware is providing, we would recommend it.

I would rate VMware solutions, overall, at eight out of ten. Whenever we talk about VMWare, people only think about the hypervisors, virtualization. But it's not only about the virtualization at the compute level, it's also at the storage level, at the network level, at all levels. It's about a complete solution. It creates an abstract layer on top of all these things.

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it_user746712 - PeerSpot reviewer
EVS Engineer 3 at Cabela's

It's a great product. It saves us a lot of time. It cut down a lot of late nights for us.

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BT
Senior Systems Administrator at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

The solution is user-friendly, to a degree. I feel like you still have to know a little bit of the ins and outs of how to get into it, some of the commands to use for what, exactly, you're trying to do. But besides that, it's pretty user-friendly.

In terms of increasing infrastructure agility with it, we have, maybe to a small degree. I don't feel that, with our implementation of vRealize Automation, we have really gotten very far. We've only scratched the surface. Like I said, we only use it for our internal IT, and we're just being able to save a little bit of time by the things that we do. We haven't really dug deep into what it's capable of.

It has made it easier for IT to support developers but I don't feel like we're at that point yet where the developers are involved. We have it as a future (goal) to involve our developers and have them be able to get on a webpage, and be able to do things automatically, without them having to put in a ticket or request us to do something for them; just making it automated. As we get to that point, though, I think it will be very useful.

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IC
Product Engineer at a tech company with 5,001-10,000 employees

My advice would be to go to hands-on labs to see if it's exactly what you're looking for because, as far as the reality versus the expectation goes, it might be a little bit of a shock, especially for the non-technical person. If they're going to say you, "It's going to be great. You're going to know everything," there are some things you might have to take into consideration. They might have to do a little tutorial for you. I would just try to set your expectations.

I rate it at eight out of ten. I believe it's intuitive and user-friendly. Could it improve? Yes. Could it be worse? It could've been a lot worse. So it's okay.

The extra two points are because one of the first issues, on one of the first versions that I took training on, was around the idea that, yes, here's your dashboard so people can deploy resources without having to know too much, but it seemed kind of bare as far as presenting it to those people. That's the only gap that I see and it's just going to be filled in with user experience and people like me saying, "I'd like a little bubble to pop up," or something to hover with information when someone has to give approval. I'd like for them to be able to see why they are approving this, without having to go dig into why we set up that limit. 

It would be nice to have a tooltip that says, "This was agreed upon..." or whatever comment I want to display. For example, if I want to reference a ticket number internally: "Approved, XYZ," or "Related to mass ticket maintenance ABC," so they can say, "Yes, that's right, this is the DFW migration," or the like. They're non-technical and those are the kind of terms they use. I find the UI is missing that part. I have to explain it to them. And then, of course, they're going to forget, or they're going to get a new guy in, and he's going to say, "Why do I keep having to approve these things?" It would be really nice if it just told him right there. This is why you're approving it because of mandate such-and-such, or memo number 123.

From other products that we work with - I came from the troubleshooting operation side of the house before I started working in Product, so I worked with VMware on ESXi and vSAN - they have always been good at taking our opinions. For vRA, I'm starting that process with them, so I'm not expecting them to have a turnaround yet, but I'm expecting them to take our feedback, for sure.

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it_user746724 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Manager at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

It's one of the cool tools in the industry. Go get VMware.

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AK
Sr. Cloud Automation Consultant at a tech services company with 11-50 employees

Make sure you give yourself enough time to implement or replace all your use cases as a business.

The solution requires specific expertise with it to be able to use it effectively.

I would rate this product as a seven (out of 10). 

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it_user730323 - PeerSpot reviewer
Enterprise Infrastructure Manager at a mining and metals company with 10,001+ employees

Do it and do it quickly.

It depends on what your app stack is and whether your cloud-native or not. However, if you have a monolithic stack like Oracle and the traditional data center apps, it's the way to go. But, if you are cloud centric and use a lot of web services, then it's probably not the right solution.

You should form a team, be committed to it and expect to put in a lot of work/effort/time into it.

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DK
Systems engineer

I would rate this solution a neutral five. It has a lot of potential but it's very hard to use. It has a steep learning curve and you need to invest an obscene amount of time to be able to do anything. 

I would advise someone looking into this solution to be prepared to invest some serious time. 

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AR
Solution Architect at a aerospace/defense firm with 51-200 employees

In terms of advice, being here at VMworld 2018 is a start. I'm sitting through a lot of these presentations and there's a myriad of information available that is located right here, as opposed to me having to go search for it across the web.

When we consider working with a vendor, for us, government certifications help. From our perspective, ATOs and STIGs and all those types of things being in existence before we start to work with them are important, because having to obtain all those things from us is a difficult portion of it. Also, product support for integration with other systems, that's always a key to us. Those are the two main factors.

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it_user746751 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Systems Admin at a consultancy with self employed

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  1. Reputation.
  2. Support, reliability, and longevity of the company.
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it_user730152 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Architect at University of florida

It's a product worth looking at.

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it_user727512 - PeerSpot reviewer
Technical Architect at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

From my experience, people think of a High Available, then they plan to deploy a distributed environment, but I don't see much value. Because if they've got a distributed environment, it gets complex and there are more issues and sometimes people run out of patience. So I advise: Go for a simple environment that does 99% of the workload, then, if needed, you can scale it.

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AR
Senior Systems Administrator at Webroot Software

I would rate the solution as an eight out of ten. It has been extremely useful for our end users. To administer, it has been a bit more difficult.

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MW
Systems Engineer at a insurance company with 1,001-5,000 employees

I rate vRA at seven out of ten. There's some room for improvement, but it's better than the old way that we used to do things. It's a good product, it could just use some ironing out.

The most important criterion when selecting a vendor, to my mind, is support: a support network, whether it be knowledgebase articles online, forums online, or calling into actual, paid support.

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JS
Systems Admin at a consultancy with 11-50 employees

Make sure that you know what your infrastructure looks like before you start.

I rate this solution at eight out of ten, with potential to grow. I still have to learn a lot more about it. Once I learn some of the additional features and add-ons that  I can implement, I think it will increase.

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DB
Chief Architect at Enterprise Networking Solutions (ENS-Inc)

Be particular about requirements and what your goals are with the customer. There is a lot more to this product than doing a deployment, so make sure you understand the use cases.

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it_user746754 - PeerSpot reviewer
Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

Most important criteria for selecting a vendor: Brand recognition, but also VMware being the biggest. We thought that might be the best route in terms of support and community.

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it_user730203 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

The most important criteria when looking at various vendors are reliability, their position within the industry, and the ability to get references from existing customers.

Do a lot of planning upfront because some of the choices you make, when you initially deploy, you'll have to live with in the end. Sizing is the main one.

I would suggest hiring a PSO.

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it_user730281 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Network Server Analyst at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees

Make sure, and this solution does this, it touches on everything you want to see in a solution in terms of CPU memory. This is such an all-encompassing solution.

Someone that's willing to be a good partner with us. Someone who's responsive, and who when they set us up, or when we enter a partnership, they don't just disappear afterward.

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it_user715128 - PeerSpot reviewer
Infrastructure Automation and Cloud Specialst at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees

Probably the decision to run a private cloud, such as VMware, versus running things in someplace like the public cloud and it being AWS. The main thing is about the scale, and getting sufficient scale, it can be cost effective to run your own private cloud. Best to find the right algorithms, if not setting up the hardware themselves; but you probably do need to reach that multi-million pound scale to make that the right decision. Smaller players are probably better off thinking about comparing costs without a cloud provider, and maybe a less niche product.

It's a good product. It's very extensible. It is fairly complex to set-up, and its fairly closely tied to VMware's infrastructure, so there's a lack of portability to public clouds and a lack of ability to manage infrastructure is code natively. Although it can be persuaded to do it, it's not always straightforward. Those are probably the biggest downfalls.

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it_user713790 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Systems Engineer at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

Take as much training as you can before trying to deploy and use the product.

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DR
CEO at Lidoma

I would not recommend this product. I think that there are better products to meet your needs that are competitors on the market. 

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LC
Team leader infrastructure at Asseco SEE

I would rate this solution a nine and would advise someone looking into this or a similar solution to invest in VMware Orchestrator. It's behind vRealize Automation for almost everything. You should know vRealize Orchestrator first and then try to deploy, install, and configure vRealize Automation. 

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NW
System Engineer at a retailer with 10,001+ employees

Read as much as possible and then take it slowly and don't try to jump in full force. Make sure you have a good plan going into it. That was one of our mistakes. We were expecting, "Oh, this will be pretty easy," but once we got into it, was a little more complex than we were thinking.

I give the solution about a seven out of 10, given the process we've gone through with it. We've had it now for three years, but we haven't been able to really deploy it in production. I don't know if it's because of the documentation or just the ability to be able to use it and make it functional.

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PJ
Cloud Services Engineer at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

If you have the validated designs or PSO guidance for setup, go with that now. Try to keep it as out-of-the-box as possible, in a supported configuration.

I rate this solution at seven out of ten. By now, it does the job we need it to do most of the time. There are definitely areas where it could use some improvements.

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JK
Sys Admin at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees

My advice is: Get training.

I give vRA a seven out of ten, for now. In addition to the database issue I mentioned, it's not quite clear how to do certain things. I have not been given training on it. The learning curve is steep. For me, a lot of it is on-the-job training. There might be a better way to do things, a quicker way, but I don't know what it is right now. For now, I don't find it that intuitive to use.

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AB
Field Service Engineer at a tech services company with 5,001-10,000 employees

I recommend this solution, though it is not that great. It is okay for what it is for. When it works it's great. For me, personally, I don't want a call from a customer that it failed. Most of the time it works. If it doesn't, then we do troubleshooting.

I rate it a seven out of ten because it needs improvement in stability, performance, and quality.

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EK
Engineer with 5,001-10,000 employees

Understand your business processes before working with it. That's what we're doing right now: getting a better grasp of our business processes and how the lifecycle of these VMs work, so we can better utilize vRealize Automation.

I rate it at eight out of ten because of its intuitiveness, its ease of use, and the features that it will bring to us - a two-man team - will be like having a couple of extra guys on hand. And that's really great. I know PowerCLI is there and we can always script it out. But automation is really a powerful tool that we're looking forward to using, that will make it a lot easier. It covers a lot more. So we're happy about that.

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VB
Network Lead at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

The solution is intuitive to the end-user, absolutely. I've created a web portal, through vRA, in which users' specific requirements are built-in. Now, to develop that was not overly fun, but, overall, it is good.

I give it an eight out of ten because it has provided my development team a pure self-service portal. We deploy thousands of machines and reclaim. So, their time to business and their time to market has been improved exponentially.

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it_user715146 - PeerSpot reviewer
Assigned Client Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

vRA is very powerful, but you need to know what you're getting into. You really can do almost anything that you want using the product in conjunction with vRealize Orchestrator, but it requires a lot of knowledge and work.

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it_user667686 - PeerSpot reviewer
Technical Lead at a tech services company with 5,001-10,000 employees

There are so many features that this product has, so evaluate all of them.

From day 1 that it went into production, we started seeing its benefits.

We are using the vRealize Orchestrator heavily.

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TR
Solutions Architect at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

My advice would be, use it with NSX and with Infoblox.

I give it an eight out of ten, mostly due to the learning curve to catch up to where you need to be. Some third-party integration, that would still be nice to see.

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it_user730221 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Senior Infrastructure Engineer at a tech company with 1,001-5,000 employees

Really pay attention to how you design your blueprints and your workflows, because a lot of developers do not want to do that. They do not want to design their own blueprints and workflow operations. They want it to already have been done for them. Make sure you have a strong relationship with your DevOps team so you can get the most out of this product. Because if you are trying to do it single-handedly as an Operations Center without the go-between, it'll be a struggle to get Development onboard with this type of product. But once they do get on board with the product, they won't want to look back.

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor: Supportability is huge, not to say everybody on our team should be experts in everything they do, but when you do need help, you want to make sure that you're working with top-tier support. I don't want to have to run through the wringer of, "Okay, I got to go through Tier-1, then Tier-2, then finally I can work with Tier-3 (somebody on my level of knowledge)."

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it_user509208 - PeerSpot reviewer
Cloud Solutions Architect at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

It requires very limited time to set up an enterprise environment. There is a lot of inter-configuration required to ensure your environment is built properly.

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MC
IT Professional

I think we will be leaving the platform. 

For our business case, it was the wrong product, but there was nothing else on the market at the time. When we deployed our virtual machines, we had a very big template with 30 to 40 machines. It was difficult to configure all the virtual machines and blueprints. It was locked when it was deployed with vShield, and now, there is NSX and vShield is no longer supported.

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DL
Principal Architect at a tech consulting company with 51-200 employees

VMware is the pioneer of virtualization. They are way ahead of everybody else. Some of the other products have caught up, which has been fantastic because it has driven innovation. It is forcing the industry to evolve more quickly, innovate, and come up with better solutions. 

It is a very popular product. You have to do is you have to have a good understanding it. You can't just jump into it, especially half in. You have to understand what you are trying to solve. Have a good understanding of what you are trying to set up, like a defined solution.

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RE
Solution Architect at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

If the use case matches, it is the perfect product for you.

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EM
Systems Engineer at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

It's a good solution. The deployment can be complex so I would recommend engaging professional services for setting up a proof of content environment to evaluate it.

I rate vRA at eight out of 10 because of issues with the stability of the appliances. But other than that, it's a pretty solid product. It does exactly what we need it to do and we are happy with it.

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it_user730341 - PeerSpot reviewer
Infrastructure System Administrator at a consultancy with 1,001-5,000 employees

Advice for looking at VM solutions:

Definitely research the product and see what's out there.

Look at blog posts of vRA. There's quite a few resources that you can search and find on the web which will basically get you on the ground running for deployment, even simply XaaS forms.

Most important criteria when selecting a vendor:

  • Support
  • The cost is always important.
  • The ability of their features to match with ours.
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it_user730179 - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager Of IT Operations Back End at a leisure / travel company with 1,001-5,000 employees

If you are looking to implement the product, do it together with VMware. It was a good experience for us.

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it_user722256 - PeerSpot reviewer
Founder & CEO at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

Go for it. It's a perfect product of a heterogeneous environment.

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it_user619107 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior System Analyst at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees
it_user716568 - PeerSpot reviewer
Private Cloud Lead at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

This is one of VMware's best products for automation.

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BM
Computer Repairman with 5,001-10,000 employees

I'm happy with the product. I would absolutely recommend it to a colleague.

When you compare it to other products in the market, it depends on what you're trying to do.

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it_user715152 - PeerSpot reviewer
Deployment Lead at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

Read the knowledge base articles from VMware.

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it_user661293 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Technical Architect at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

Use it for automation in order to achieve Agility, Efficiency and Control over the IT Service Delivery..

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it_user678801 - PeerSpot reviewer
Information Technology Services at TUI InfoTec GmbH

It improves the work, making it better. It also makes daily work much easier.

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AE
Head of IT at Interswitch

I would recommend this solution.

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Buyer's Guide
VMware Aria Automation
March 2024
Learn what your peers think about VMware Aria Automation. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: March 2024.
767,847 professionals have used our research since 2012.