The term you are looking for is Intrusion Detection System (IDS). There is a related term called Intrusion Prevention System (IPS).
IDS's monitor traffic coming into your servers at the IP level and will send alerts based on sophisticated analysis of the traffic.
IPS's are the next generation of IDS which actually attempt to block certain activities.
There are many commercial and open source systems available including Snort, SourceFire, Endace, and others.
In short, you should look at adding one of these systems to your mix for real time monitoring and potentially blocking of hazardous activities.
I wanted to add a bit more information here as the comments area is just a bit small.
The main thing you need to understand are the types of attacks you will see. These are going to range from relatively unsophisticated automated scripts on up to highly sophisticated targeted attacks. They will also hit everything they can see from the web site itself to IIS, .Net, Mail server, SQL (if accessible), right down to your firewall and other exposed machines/services. A wholistic approach is the only way to really monitor what's going on.
Generally speaking, a new site/company is going to be hit with the automated scripts within a few minutes (I'd say 30 at most) of going live. Which is the number one reason new installations of MS Windows keep the network severely locked down during installation. Heck, I've seen machines nailed within 30 seconds of being turned on for the first time.
The approach hackers/worms take is to constantly scan wide ranges of IP addresses, this is followed up with machine fingerprinting for those that respond. Based on the profile they will send certain types of attacks your way. In some cases the profiling step is skipped and they attack certain ports regardless of response. Port 1443 (SQL) is a common one.
Although the most common form of attack, the automated ones are by far the easiest to deal with. Shutting down unused ports, turning off ICMP (ping response), and having a decent firewall in place will keep most of the scanners away.
For the scripted attacks, make sure you aren't exposing commonly installed packages like PhpMyAdmin, IIS's web admin tools, or even Remote Desktop outside of your firewall. Also, get rid of any accounts named "admin", "administrator", "guest", "sa", "dbo", etc Finally make sure your passwords AREN'T allowed to be someones name and are definitely NOT the default one that shipped with a product.
Along these lines make sure your database server is NOT directly accessible outside the firewall. If for some reason you have to have direct access then at the very least change the port # it responds to and enforce encryption.
Once all of this is properly done and secured the only services that are exposed should be the web ones (port 80 / 443). The items that can still be exploited are bugs in IIS, .Net, or your web application.
For IIS and .net you MUST install the windows updates from MS pretty much as soon as they are released. MS has been extremely good about pushing quality updates for windows, IIS, and .Net. Further a large majority of the updates are for vulnerabilities already being exploited in the wild. Our servers have been set to auto install updates as soon as they are available and we have never been burned on this (going back to at least when server 2003 was released).
Also you need to stay on top of the updates to your firewall. It wasn't that long ago that one of Cisco's firewalls had a bug where it could be overwhelmed. Unfortunately it let all traffic pass through when this happened. Although fixed pretty quickly, people were still being hammered over a year later because admins failed to keep up with the IOS patches. Same issue with windows updates. A lot of people have been hacked simply because they failed to apply updates that would have prevented it.
The more targeted attacks are a little harder to deal with. A fair number of hackers are going after custom web applications. Things like posting to contact us and login forms. The posts might include JavaScript that, once viewed by an administrator, could cause credentials to be transferred out or might lead to installing key loggers or Trojans on the recipients computers.
The problem here is that you could be compromised without even knowing it. Defenses include making sure HTML and JavaScript can't be submitted through your site; having rock solid (and constantly updated) spam and virus checks at the mail server, etc. Basically, you need to look at every possible way an external entity could send something to you and do something about it. A lot of Fortune 500 companies keep getting hit with things like this... Google included.
Hope the above helps someone. If so and it leads to a more secure environment then I'll be a happy guy. Unfortunately most companies don't monitor traffic so they have no idea just how much time is spent by their machines fending off this garbage.