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Observability-as-Code: Go Faster with Automation Using Terraform and Splunk

Webinar

Think About Your Audience Before Choosing a Webinar Title


Sponsored by SPLUNK


OnDemand
Anytime

Observability is required to gain actionable insights from today’s distributed and complex cloud-native systems. Are observability practices in your organization repeatable and collaborative? Traditional approaches to configuring monitoring assets, such as dashboards and alerts through UI, point-and-click systems, lead to siloed processes, limited ability to continually improve alerts in different environments and drift in best practices.

In this webinar, we will discuss how to consistently implement observability practices across different teams in your organization. We will show you how to provision monitoring assets using Terraform Providers alongside infrastructure and applications to achieve consistent observability and effective collaboration.

Kate Hymers
Staff Sales Engineer - Splunk
Kate Hymers is a staff sales engineer at Splunk and is one of the leading experts in APAC region on Splunk’s new Observability platform. Kate started out her career as a software developer before making the shift to sales engineering. For the past 10 years Kate has worked with market leading vendors for application quality, performance management, and observability. She is passionate about Cloud-Native technologies, DevOps, and the emerging innovation in modern Observability practices.

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What You’ll Learn in This Webinar

You’ve probably written a hundred abstracts in your day, but have you come up with a template that really seems to resonate? Go back through your past webinar inventory and see what events produced the most registrants. Sure – this will vary by topic but what got their attention initially was the description you wrote.

Paint a mental image of the benefits of attending your webinar. Often times this can be summarized in the title of your event. Your prospects may not even make it to the body of the message, so get your point across immediately.  Capture their attention, pique their interest, and push them towards the desired action (i.e. signing up for your event). You have to make them focus and you have to do it fast. Using an active voice and bullet points is great way to do this.

Always add key takeaways. Something like this....In this session, you’ll learn about:

  • You know you’ve cringed at misspellings and improper grammar before, so don’t get caught making the same mistake.
  • Get a second or even third set of eyes to review your work.
  • It reflects on your professionalism even if it has nothing to do with your event.