After a bit of troubleshooting, you determine the cause of the issue is not the wireless. The DHCP scope is exhausted. Users could connect, but they couldn't obtain an IP address. You shorten the lease time, expand the scope, and call it a day. While you're at it, you wonder if DHCP is the reason connecting has been taking longer than usual, so you fire up Wireshark.
Ok, hopefully the way you run your network is nothing like this. However, let's face it: this is an exaggerated version of the reality that many deal with on a day to day basis. There is often little insight into the individual operations that contribute to network performance as a whole. "The wireless is down" could mean any number of things, many of which may be out of the purview of the team managing the wireless network. Troubleshooting is often a reactive process. Even when there is visibility into network operations and baselines are known, it can be difficult to determine if your "normal" is actually optimal.
I recently attended a presentation by Nyansa at Networking Field Day 12. Nyansa is a startup focusing on what they call Cloudsourced Network Analytics. Their goal is to go beyond providing visibility in the form of pretty graphs and actually provide actionable insight about how to improve the end user experience.