For DevOps & Engineering Leaders

Know exactly what your team is running. Before the board asks.

Cost, compliance, and capacity — for the Kubernetes fleet you're responsible for. Without becoming the person who debugs pods.

The job you actually have

You're not paid to run kubectl. You're paid to answer questions.

The CFO wants to know why cloud spend is up 18%. The CISO wants Q3's audit evidence by Friday. The VP of Engineering wants to know if the platform team needs more headcount. The CEO wants to know why the payment service went down at 2am last Tuesday.

Every answer requires data you don't quite have, from systems that don't quite talk to each other, collected by people who'd rather be shipping. The spreadsheet gets stale the moment it's exported.

Radar is the data layer that makes those answers easy. Cost attribution, compliance evidence, risk posture, and team throughput — in one place, always current, ready to export.

Five questions, five answers

The questions you get asked. The answer you currently give. The answer Radar lets you give.

What is Kubernetes costing us — by team?

Before Radar

We'll pull from AWS Cost Explorer, reconcile with Kubernetes labels, spot-check a few services, and get you a rough number by end of quarter.

With Radar

Radar shows it per namespace, per label, per team. Export CSV. Chargeback report done in an afternoon.

Are we SOC 2 ready?

Before Radar

We have the policies. The controls are implemented. The evidence collection is... a shared drive of screenshots.

With Radar

Every RBAC change, Helm revision, and namespace action is logged for a year. Filter by control, export, attach to the audit package.

Is the infrastructure team scaling with the company?

Before Radar

They're busy. Every Kubernetes question goes through them. We might need to hire.

With Radar

Radar handles the Kubernetes-layer questions self-serve. Your team's throughput scales without headcount.

What's running in production right now?

Before Radar

Let me get you a spreadsheet. It was accurate as of three weeks ago.

With Radar

Live inventory across every cluster. Services, versions, Helm releases, image sources — in one view.

How risky is our Kubernetes posture?

Before Radar

We think it's fine. We haven't had a major incident in months. Knock on wood.

With Radar

31 continuously-evaluated checks. Security drift surfaces in the UI. Risk score trends over time.

What leaders use

The capabilities that turn Kubernetes from a cost center into a measured business function.

Cost attribution that finance accepts

Per-team, per-workload cost breakdown via OpenCost. Chargeback reports in CSV. Finally answer 'what is Kubernetes costing us?' with a real number.

Audit-ready evidence

SOC 2 evidence the auditor asks for is already in Radar. Export filtered timelines. Hand it over. Move on.

Fleet inventory that's always right

Spreadsheets go stale. Radar's inventory is live. Know what's running, where, on what version — at any moment, without asking.

Risk posture at a glance

31 built-in cluster checks for security, reliability, and CNCF best practices. Catch the drift before the audit does.

On-call sustainability signals

Incident frequency per cluster, MTTR trends, and which engineers are shouldering the load. Signal for staffing decisions, not vibes.

Platform team leverage

Your platform team isn't the bottleneck for every Kubernetes question. Self-serve visibility means they ship the golden path instead of answering tickets.

The numbers that matter

What design partners measure after 90 days.

Composite ranges from early adopters. Bring your own baselines to the conversation — we'll help model the upside.

Metric
Before
After 90 days
Impact
Incident MTTR
23 min average
6 min average
73% reduction
Engineer time on kubectl
~3 hrs / week / eng
~30 min / week / eng
$X saved per 10 engineers
Audit evidence collection
2 weeks / audit
2 hours / audit
Redirected to engineering work
Platform team ticket volume
40 tickets / week
10 tickets / week
Platform ships features instead
Compliance, answered

Radar's compliance posture — and how it helps yours.

SOC 2 Type 2

Annual audit, no material findings. Report available on request from trust.skyhook.io.

Customer-managed data residency

US hosted by default. Enterprise customers can request an EU region, or BYOC/on-prem if the data has to stay in their own account.

Give your team a tool. Give your board an answer.

Self-host the OSS engine free forever, or start hosted free for up to 3 clusters. Scale to the whole fleet on Team or Enterprise plans.

Apache 2.0 OSS · Unlimited clusters self-hosted · Hosted free tier for up to 3 clusters