The job of IT teams has become much harder thanks to the new realities of hybrid IT, with workflows occurring across on-premises and cloud-based networks and applications. Yet so much rests on your ability to respond to these challenges, all while managing the expectations of your customers and the health of your bottom line. With the growing complexity of ecosystems comes the need for better visibility, both into specific systems and across your entire stack.
Observability solutions address this by providing visibility across your network, infrastructure, systems, application, database, digital experience and log monitoring.
In other words, observability enhances your ability to observe your digital ecosystem with more transparency, more effective detection and more intelligent insights. Take, for example, the very timely and pressing issue of outages. On average, the typical business experiences nine brownouts or outages every month, lasting roughly twelve hours each and averaging $13.7M annually, according to new research we conducted at SolarWinds.
Over the course of the year, that can add up to nearly 1,300 hours, with outages chipping away at your organization’s productivity, reputation and competitive edge.
It’s not enough to monitor for these outages and address them once they take down your systems. Repeated or prolonged outages signify a gap in the enterprise’s ability to comprehensively monitor and understand its network’s internal state and performance. A robust observability strategy can preemptively detect anomalies and potential issues—before they become full-blown outages.
According to new data from the 2023 IT Trends Survey released this month by SolarWinds, companies who’ve embraced observability tend to not only lead in detecting, remediating and preventing outages—they’re experiencing better business and IT outcomes, too.
The technology professionals surveyed shared how observability is helping them achieve better performance, compliance and resilience in digital environments—and how you can follow their lead.
Observability Drives Better Business Outcomes
The observability leaders surveyed were 300% more likely to say their organization is doing extremely well with growing revenue and 250% more likely to say the same about their organization’s speed of innovation. Interestingly, they also reported a better employee experience: They were 388% more likely to rate their organization as doing “extremely well” with employee experience and also reported fewer and smaller skill gaps on their teams.
So, how does embracing observability actually translate into better business outcomes? According to the data, observability leaders are…
- Investing in top priorities: Data shows organizations using observability solutions to support the priorities most critical to their growth and success: Improve their customer experience (96%), enable faster innovation (71%), reduce time spent solving (71%) and detecting (60%) issues and increase operational efficiency (55%).
- More automated and integrated: Observability leaders embracing automation and investing in tools that provide enhanced efficiency are 214% more likely to say they are doing extremely well with operational efficiency, 750% more likely to say they are doing extremely well with auto-remediation of complex alerts and 300% better at automatically collecting background diagnostic data for IT support staff.
- Ahead on IT: The data found that those ahead of the curve on observability are also leading by huge margins when it comes to monitoring, detecting and resolving issues that could otherwise bring the business to a screeching halt. When it comes to IT, they are 233% better at auto-escalation of tickets, 213% better at auto-remediation of simple alerts and 36% better at settling alert levels based on historical behavior.
How to Reap Observability Benefits in Your Organization
All told, observability adoption is still in its early days. Only 1% of enterprises are already up and running using observability tools on a regular basis, while another third are undergoing the implementation process.
That’s good news for other businesses who are ready to reap the rewards—it’s not too late to be an observability pioneer.
If you’re interested in bringing observability to your own organization, start by addressing a few important factors that can help you sidestep challenges—such as the accelerating pace of change in technology (72%) or insufficient budget (58%)—that might otherwise obfuscate your observability opportunities:
- Make sure your observability solutions are appropriate for multi-cloud environments: Multi-cloud environments have become standard for many companies because of the many upsides, but they can be challenging for IT teams to manage. Strategically accelerate your organization’s cloud migration with an observability solution designed for complex hybrid and multi-cloud environments to save a lot of headaches down the road.
- Give your teams autonomy—and build toward autonomous operations: Observability brings your enterprise a step closer to autonomous operations. Autonomous operations, where IT systems can govern themselves, providing a proactive approach to addressing issues, rather than reactive, won’t replace your human teams but rather free up their time and brainpower to support the business and drive innovation.
- Don’t ignore the database: Databases represent the most difficult ecosystems to observe, tune, manage and scale. They require significant computing power, tend to be memory-intensive and likely make up the bulk of your organization’s cloud spending. Tasks crucial to the health and functionality of your business—including troubleshooting, root cause analysis and remediation—simply cannot happen without full, transparent observability across the numerous resources a database needs to engage to do its job.
Observability helps balance competing priorities and demystify application requirements while increasing your overall DevOps agility, efficiency and speed to market. Observability not only fosters transparency and collaboration but also encourages a system of ongoing review, which benefits the organization, IT teams and—crucially—your customers.