Sonar, although it’s mainly geared towards competitor updates, is: by it’s nature is a perfect tool for keeping a close eye on dependencies.
Modern products and modern teams are built on and reliant upon a number of dependencies, from hosting providers, payment gateways, email APIs, to third party widgets and feeds. When these providers go down, it can cause internal havoc and confusion, it only takes one small breaking change in a dependency to impact users of your service in unexpected ways. Teams often find themselves drudging through status pages and looking for third party reports to get an idea of what’s going on, and that’s if there’s even enough information to suspect a third party in the first place.
Sonar, although it’s mainly geared towards competitor updates, is: by it’s nature is a perfect tool for keeping a close eye on all of this. The underlying engine is keeping watch on Status Pages and changelogs, so you can be in the know when any reputable public company breaks or changes - automatically.
In this post we’ll take you through how to set Sonar up and use it effectively for this case.
It’s easy to miss an important API deprecation notice or a minor feature release from your hosting provider because it got buried in an overflowing inbox. Providers change things constantly, and relying on email alerts or fragmented Twitter updates just doesn’t scale for a serious engineering team.
The real pain comes during an outage. Your app breaks, your team wastes a crucial hour debugging your own code, only to finally realize it’s an unannounced third-party API outage causing the bottleneck.
By feeding your dependencies into Sonar instead of your competitors, you create a single source of truth for your entire stack’s health and evolution.
Flipping Sonar from a competitor intelligence tool to an infrastructure monitor is straightforward. Here is how to get your workspace set up:
Once your providers are plugged in, Sonar transforms into a dedicated command center for your stack. Here is where the real value comes in:
To get the most out of this setup, you don't even need to keep the ChangeCrab dashboard open.
You can push Sonar activity directly into your team's Slack, Discord, or project management tools via webhooks. When a dependency’s status page updates to reflect an outage, your dev team gets alerted instantly where they already work. You can also utilize Sonar's "Signals" to spot theme matches, tracking specifically when a dependency announces security patches or compliance updates that require your immediate attention.
You can't control what your third-party providers do, but you can entirely control how quickly your team reacts to them. Sonar gives you that speed and visibility.
Log into your ChangeCrab account, navigate to Sonar, and start adding your top 5 dependencies today to see it in action.
Note: Sonar is included in our Premium plan ($19.95/mo) and is available to preview for free accounts.