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HP OpenView Alternative

HP OpenView Alternative | RightITnow ECM — One Tool, Not Fifty
HP OpenView is End of Life. HP sold its software division to Micro Focus — and OpenView support has since been discontinued. If you're still running it, now is the time to plan your migration.
HP OpenView Alternative

One tool to replace fifty — and deploy in a day

HP OpenView was a suite of 50+ individually licensed products bolted together over 30 years. RightITnow ECM delivers unified IT event management in a single, fast-to-deploy platform.


1
License, not 50+ separately priced modules
Hours
Typical ECM deployment — not months of consulting
Zero
Dead-end vendor risk — ECM is actively developed
20+
Native integrations with your existing monitoring stack

OpenView wasn't one product. It was a puzzle.

To cover the same ground as a single ECM deployment, HP OpenView required you to purchase, license, integrate, and maintain a suite of individually priced modules — each with its own upgrade cycle and support process.

HP OpenView grew to more than 50 core products through decades of acquisitions. To manage a complex enterprise environment, you needed components like these — each licensed separately, each requiring integration work, each its own maintenance burden:

Network Node Manager (NNM) Operations Manager (OVO/OM) Performance Agent (OVPA) Performance Insight (OVPI) Reporter (OVR) Business Availability Center (BAC) Service Information Portal (SIP) Internet Services (OVIS) SiteScope Oracle SPI VMware SPI Exchange SPI Service Desk + many more…
↓   versus   ↓

RightITnow ECM — one platform, one license

Cross-domain event correlation, automated incident lifecycle management, bi-directional ITSM integration, and a single pane of glass across your entire hybrid IT environment. No puzzle required.


The real cost of OpenView complexity

Users and analysts consistently flagged the same frustrations — years before HP finally discontinued it.

Product is End of Life

HP sold OpenView — it no longer exists in its original form

HP's software division was sold to Micro Focus, and OpenView has since reached End of Life. Running EOL software means no security patches, no new features, and increasing support risk.

Licensing nightmare

"We are constantly in turmoil over HP pricing"

Enterprise customers publicly called out HP's pricing structure as unnecessarily complex, with dozens of separately licensed modules making budget planning and procurement a constant struggle.

Consulting dependency

Implementation requires many hours of specialist consulting

Integrating the many components of the OpenView suite — each with its own architecture — involves enormous consulting overhead that often dwarfs the license cost itself.

Legacy architecture

A UI aesthetic from the 1980s

OpenView's interface reflected its Unix origins. Network Node Manager, the core product, was first released in the mid-1980s — and the design philosophy never fully escaped that era.

Support frustration

"It's kind of a nightmare dealing with HP service and support"

Real users reported slow response times, confusing upgrade procedures, and poor knowledge transfer — making it hard to get timely help when things went wrong.

Hybrid cloud gaps

Not built for the infrastructure you run today

OpenView was designed for physical, on-premises infrastructure. Extending it to cover virtualized environments, containers, and cloud services requires additional modules and significant custom integration work.


RightITnow ECM vs. HP OpenView

A direct look at what matters to IT operations teams making the switch.

Capability RightITnow ECM HP OpenView / Micro Focus
Product status Actively developed End of Life — sold to Micro Focus
Number of products required One unified platform 50+ individually licensed modules
Time to deploy Hours to days Months of consulting typical
Licensing model Simple, single license Complex per-module pricing
Cross-domain event correlation Out of the box Yes, across multiple products + integration effort
ITSM / Service Desk integration Bi-directional, automated Requires separate Service Desk module + config
Hybrid cloud support Native Partial, requires additional modules
Modern UI Intuitive, visual interface Legacy interface, Unix-era design roots
Vendor support quality Focused, responsive Historically rated as slow and complex
Long-term roadmap stability Independent, focused vendor EOL — migration to new platform required

What teams say after making the switch

Organizations that consolidated on RightITnow ECM from complex legacy monitoring suites.

"We deployed a central event processing console against our existing legacy systems in record time. RightITnow provided a simple, cost-effective licensing model."
Enterprise IT Operations Team
"Our NOC now only watches ECM, which has improved response times. We've unified our workflow across technology areas, which reduced administrative overhead."
Global Infrastructure Operations
"Chronic issues that had been long masked became obvious within days, allowing us to dramatically cut down our event volume — before we'd even trained our team."
IT Operations Director, Financial Services

From OpenView sprawl to a single console

ECM is designed to consolidate events from your existing monitoring tools — without requiring a rip-and-replace.

1

Inventory your sources

Map which OpenView modules and other monitoring tools are generating events that your NOC needs to act on.

2

Connect in hours

ECM's native connectors pull events from SolarWinds, Nagios, SCOM, VMware, CloudWatch, and more — including SNMP and Syslog from legacy infrastructure.

3

Configure correlation rules

Use ECM's visual interface to set up deduplication, suppression, and cross-domain correlation — no scripting languages required.

4

Retire the old stack gradually

Run ECM alongside your legacy tools during transition. Decommission OpenView modules as confidence in ECM grows — on your schedule.


Frequently asked questions

HP OpenView is End of Life — what are my options?
HP sold its software division to Micro Focus, which has rebranded many OpenView products under Operations Bridge and related offerings. However, these carry their own complexity and migration costs. RightITnow ECM offers a simpler path: connect your existing monitoring tools into a single event management console without rebuilding your entire operations stack from scratch.
We use HP NNM and OVO together — can ECM replace both?
ECM consolidates events from both network and server/application monitoring into a single console. Rather than replacing your monitoring agents outright, ECM ingests their events, applies correlation and deduplication, and routes actionable incidents to your Service Desk — covering the event management layer that NNM and OVO provided together.
Can we run ECM alongside our existing OpenView deployment during migration?
Yes. ECM is designed for coexistence with legacy infrastructure. Many customers begin by forwarding events from their existing tools into ECM for consolidation, then phase out legacy components over time as they validate ECM's coverage — without any forced cutover.
How does ECM handle the event correlation that OpenView Operations Manager provided?
ECM supports deduplication, X-in-Y occurrence rules, problem-solution event pairs, and topology-aware correlation — covering the core correlation use cases of OVO/OM. Configuration is done through a visual drag-and-drop interface rather than proprietary scripting, which significantly reduces the expertise required to tune the system.
What does the licensing model look like compared to OpenView's module pricing?
Unlike OpenView's per-module, per-product licensing structure — which users consistently described as complex and difficult to budget for — ECM uses a straightforward model designed to be easy to plan against. Contact us and we'll provide a clear quote based on your environment size and integration requirements.

Ready to simplify your monitoring stack?

See how RightITnow ECM replaces OpenView's complexity with a single, fast-to-deploy console — and get your NOC back in control.

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This page is not affiliated with HP, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, or Micro Focus. HP OpenView is a trademark of Hewlett-Packard Development Company.