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Documentation and Guides
  • ABOUT APONO
    • Why Choose Apono
    • Security and Architecture
    • Glossary
  • GETTING STARTED
    • How Apono Works
    • Getting started
    • Access Discovery
    • Integrating with Apono
  • CONNECTORS AND SECRETS
    • Apono Integration Secret
    • High Availability for Connectors
    • Installing a connector with Docker
    • Manage integrations
    • Manage connectors
  • AWS ENVIRONMENT
    • AWS Overview
    • Apono Connector for AWS
      • Installing a connector on EKS Using Terraform
      • Updating a connector in AWS
      • Installing a connector on AWS ECS using Terraform
    • AWS Integrations
      • Integrate an AWS account or organization
        • Auto Discover AWS RDS Instances
        • AWS Best Practices
      • Amazon Redshift
      • RDS PostgreSQL
      • AWS RDS MySQL
      • Integrate with EKS
      • AWS Lambda Custom Integration
      • EC2 via Systems Manager Agent (SSM)
  • AZURE ENVIRONMENT
    • Apono Connector for Azure
      • Install an Azure connector on ACI using Azure CLI
      • Install an Azure connector on ACI using PowerShell
      • Install an Azure connector on ACI using Terraform
      • Updating a connector in Azure
    • Azure Integrations
      • Integrate with Azure Management Group or Subscription
        • Auto Discover Azure SQL Databases
      • Azure MySQL
      • Azure PostgreSQL
      • Integrate with AKS
  • GCP ENVIRONMENT
    • Apono Connector for GCP
      • Installing a GCP connector on Cloud Run using CLI
      • Installing a GCP connector on GKE using CLI (Helm)
      • Installing a GCP connector on GKE using Terraform
      • Updating a connector in Google Cloud
    • GCP Integrations
      • Integrate a GCP organization or project
      • CloudSQL - MySQL
      • CloudSQL - PostgreSQL
      • Google Cloud Functions
      • Integrate with GKE
      • AlloyDB
  • KUBERNETES ENVIRONMENT
    • Apono Connector for Kubernetes
      • Installing a connector on Kubernetes with AWS permissions
      • Updating a Kubernetes connector
    • Kubernetes Integrations
      • Integrate with Self-Managed Kubernetes
  • ADDITIONAL INTEGRATIONS
    • Databases and Data Repositories
      • Microsoft SQL Server
      • MongoDB
      • MongoDB Atlas
      • MongoDB Atlas Portal
      • MySQL
      • Oracle Database
      • PostgreSQL
      • Redis Cloud (Redislabs)
      • Snowflake
      • Vertica
      • MariaDB
    • Network Management
      • SSH Servers
      • RDP Servers
      • Windows Domain Controller
      • AWS EC2 SSH Servers
      • Azure VM SSH Servers
      • Installing the Apono HTTP Proxy
    • Development Tools
      • GitHub
      • Rancher
    • Identity Providers
      • Okta SCIM
      • Okta Groups
      • Okta SSO for Apono logins
      • Google Workspace (Gsuite)
      • Google Workspace (GSuite) Groups
      • Azure Active Directory (Microsoft Entra ID)
      • Azure Active Directory (Entra ID) Groups
      • Jumpcloud
      • JumpCloud Groups
      • OneLogin
      • OneLogin Group
      • LDAP Groups
      • The Manager Attribute in Access Flows
      • HiBob
      • Ping Identity SSO
    • Incident Response Integrations
      • Opsgenie
      • PagerDuty
      • VictorOps (Splunk On-Call)
      • Zenduty
    • ChatOps Integrations
      • Slack integration
      • Teams integration
      • Backstage Integration
  • WEBHOOK INTEGRATIONS
    • Webhooks Overview
    • Anomaly Webhook
    • Audit Log Webhook
    • Request Webhook
      • Custom Webhooks
      • Communications and Notifications
        • Slack Outbound Webhooks
        • Teams
        • Outlook and Gmail (Using Azure Logic App)
      • ITSM
        • Freshdesk
        • Jira
        • ServiceNow
        • Zendesk
        • Freshservice
        • ServiceDesk Plus
      • Logs and SIEMs
        • Coralogix
        • Datadog
        • Logz.io
        • Grafana
        • New Relic
        • SolarWinds
        • Sumo Logic
        • Cortex
        • Logpoint
        • Splunk
        • Microsoft Sentinel
      • Orchestration and workflow builders
        • Okta Workflows
        • Torq
    • Integration Webhook
    • Webhook Payload References
      • Audit Log Webhook Payload Schema Reference
      • Webhook Payload Schema Reference
    • Manage webhooks
    • Troubleshoot a webhook
    • Manual Webhook
      • ITSM
        • PagerDuty
  • ACCESS FLOWS
    • Access Flows
      • What are Access Flows?
    • Create Access Flows
      • Self Serve Access Flows
      • Automatic Access Flows
      • Access Duration
    • Manage Access Flows
      • Right Sizing
    • Revoke Access
    • Dynamic Access Management
      • Resource and Integration Owners
    • Common Use Cases
      • Ensuring SLA
      • Protecting PII and Customer Data
      • Production Stability and Management
      • Break Glass Protocol
    • Create Bundles
    • Manage Bundles
  • ACCESS REQUESTS AND APPROVALS
    • Slack
      • Requesting Access with Slack
      • Approving Access with Slack
    • Teams
      • Requesting Access with Teams
      • Approving Access with Teams
    • CLI
      • Install and manage the Apono CLI
      • Requesting Access with CLI
    • Web Portal
      • Requesting Access with the Web Portal
      • Approving Access with the Web Portal
      • Reviewing historical requests with the Web Portal
    • Freshservice
    • Favorites
  • Inventory
    • Inventory Overview
    • Inventory
    • Access Scopes
    • Risk Scores
    • Apono Query Language
  • AUDITS AND REPORTS
    • Activity Overview
      • Activity
      • Create Reports
      • Manage Reports
    • Compliance: Audit and Reporting
    • Auditing Access in Apono
    • Admin Audit Log (Syslog)
  • HELP AND DEBUGGING
    • Integration Status Page
    • Troubleshooting Errors
  • ARCHITECTURE AND SECURITY
    • Anomaly Detection
    • Multi-factor Authentication
    • Credentials Rotation Policy
    • Periodic User Cleanup & Deletion
    • End-user Authentication
    • Personal API Tokens
  • User Administration
    • Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) Reference
    • Create Identities
    • Manage Identities
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On this page
  • Ensuring SLA
  • How to ensure SLA Agreements are met
  • Apono break glass protocols
  • Access management to customer data
  • Production stability

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  1. ACCESS FLOWS
  2. Common Use Cases

Ensuring SLA

How to meet SLA (Service Level Agreements) with Apono

PreviousCommon Use CasesNextProtecting PII and Customer Data

Last updated 7 months ago

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Ensuring SLA

An SLA is a legally binding contract between a service provider and a customer. SLAs ensure both parties clearly understand service quality expectations and the repercussions of not meeting the agreed-upon standards.

The service provider and the customer negotiate and agree upon SLAs, typically before the service commences. This is necessary to create a clear understanding of the performance and reliability expectations for the service and to safeguard the interests of both parties.

If your company is a technology vendor, providing SaaS or other services and products to customers, SLA are your business.

This means you are required to ensure performance and reliability, prevent downtime and fix issues within set timeframes. Usually, these timeframes range from immediate, in the case of urgent issues, to several hours or days.

To achieve this, most companies have on-call, incident response protocols and tools, where some developers or teams work in alternating shifts to fix production issues when they arise. How do you make sure customer SLA are met, while also keeping least privilege and preventing standing access to the most sensitive environments and resources?

Apono is here to help.

How to ensure SLA Agreements are met

Apono break glass protocols

Committed to fixing production incidents 24/7? Apono helps users create Access Flows that enable break glass protocols. This is especially handy off-hours (at night and during weekends and holidays, when approvers might not be available).

  1. Enable automatic access upon request to on-call shifts and developers on-duty

  2. Create bundles that represent customer environments, tenants, databases and other resources to grant to developers in case of emergency

    1. Developers can request a bundle which grants them the exact access they need to investigate and solve the issue

  3. Use our webhooks solution to trigger Access Flows automatically when an incident is created in your incident response tool

Access management to customer data

Apono helps you drive sales and keep customers satisfied by ensuring least privilege to customer environments and databases. This can also help prevent mistakes in customer environments, like changes to production environments, human error and confusion between tenants and mistakes, like change or deletion of data.

  1. Create Access Flows around CRUD actions to customer environments and databases.

  2. Make sure developers and Customer Success representatives gain such access only in case of incident that requires their attention or upon approval.

Production stability

SLA is often about how quickly your R&D team can fix production issues, but a big part of SLA is reliability.

DevOps and SRE professionals can reduce downtime risk with Apono by putting guardrails around production environments and resources.

  1. Create Access Flows around CRUD actions on production environments and resources, like code repositories, instances, servers, and more. Apono provides fine-grained access management so that you can control access granularly.

  2. Make sure developers gain such access only in case of incident that requires their attention or upon approval.

  3. Help your developers prevent human errors. Apono access requests and access details separate different environments and prevent confusion; developers can only request the access permitted to them by Access Flows and the access request process zooms them in to the right resource or bundle for their tasks.

Learn more about Apono break glass protocol

Learn more about protecting customer data

Learn more about production stability with Apono

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