Performance Is a Business Metric Now
Why Speed, Responsiveness, & Throughput Shape Real Business Outcomes
Have you ever been working to meet a deadline when suddenly, your computer crashes? Maybe you’re able to get it back up and running, but your applications are taking too long to load, so now you’re fighting against time and a system that won’t function the way you need it to.
These seemingly minor technical issues might not appear to be a big deal in the long run, but they can significantly impact your business advantage. Performance isn’t just a technical metric. It’s the ability to get work done and scale your business as you take on new customers. An application or architecture that can accommodate the growth of your company allows you to focus on revenue, not IT. This is the kind of challenge Protected Harbor is built to tackle.
The Problem
When performance is treated as an IT concern instead of a business behavior, organizations feel the effects long before they recognize the cause. The first step to acknowledging a performance issue is defining your metrics.
Let’s consider radiology.
Images generated during radiology can be quite large in size. Certain imaging, such as MRIs, take up a substantial amount of disk space and have long retention periods to comply with the strict regulations of the medical field. As a practice grows, this issue only gets worse.
If an organization lacks proper IT staffing and knowledge, their inability to scale the environment can result in insufficient performance to maintain an increasing number of concurrent scans. Radiology infrastructure requires a very thoughtfully designed network to transmit large amounts of sensitive data to a single location.
Another issue to consider is where these images are being stored. You need to scale the environment to accommodate growth. As you do this, it’s also important to have a clear understanding of how the different components in your deployment should be operating.
Performance is often discussed abstractly, while businesses feel the effects of poor performance concretely. Organizations can’t always articulate why or when something occurs, but you know the business impact of a poorly performing tool.
Maybe a medical imaging organization can tell images aren’t sending as expected and people are wasting valuable time on troubleshooting issues, but without a clearly defined benchmark for performant operations, it’s not clear how poor their performance really is.
This lack of benchmark and knowledge can lead to insufficient backups and protections against infection/ ransomware, along with an incomplete understanding of where to move next. If you can’t clearly define your issues, you can’t plan on resolving them and don’t know how to prioritize a resolution.
Degraded performance can result in HIPAA non-compliance. If backups aren’t running as expected or operating efficiently, the organization can be at compliance risk in the event of an attack. This issue may start out as an IT concern but can evolve into a critical business exposure.
When systems hesitate, work slows. If you feel like your customers or patients are waiting on you because you’re waiting on your systems, you might want to examine how much this is hurting your business. If it’s taking longer for employees to input and manage their application data, it’s taking longer to get a return on your investment and business.



