Open with visibility
Lead with the outcome: seeing devices, sites, and relationships clearly.
Start with the broad operational value, then move into the screens that prove NetLoom can discover, organize, and act on real network data. Every screenshot placeholder below is named for an actual page or workflow.
Lead with the outcome: seeing devices, sites, and relationships clearly.
Prove the product fits actual environments with agent packaging and fleet visibility.
Use jobs, logs, and automation to demonstrate that NetLoom is more than passive inventory.
Use a screenshot from inventory that shows grouped devices, status cues, filters, and the sort of density that signals a serious operations tool.
Show the buyer that a single device page carries rich detail: interfaces, relationships, credentials, service data, and history that makes troubleshooting faster.
This shot should demonstrate why NetLoom is not just another scanner. Include enough port/interface detail that the viewer understands the graph comes from structured network data.
Show deployed agents, runtime targets, online status, version awareness, and operational controls. This is especially useful for MSP and multi-site buyers.
Show active jobs, queued work, scan state, and operator controls to communicate that discovery is an active system.
Use a run-detail or job-detail screen to make the automation story concrete. Buyers should see logs, state, outcome, and evidence that NetLoom can carry work through to completion.
Lead with inventory, topology, device detail, and site structure. The value proposition is clarity and control.
Lead with agents, multi-site visibility, customer separation, and operations workflow. The value proposition is scale.
Lead with topology, discovery jobs, alerts, and automation. The value proposition is faster response and less guesswork.
Lead with locations, networks, deployed agents, and relationship views. The value proposition is reduced blind spots.