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State of observability 2022 report: More enterprises are adopting observability tools


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Being efficient at work – whether as an individual or a team at a company – is all about using uptime wisely and keeping downtime at arm’s length. In the tech world of creating good software, observability tools, which measure the ability of the internal states of a system as determined by its external outputs, are all about helping developers use their work time more effectively.

With this in mind, data management platform maker Splunk, in collaboration with the Enterprise Strategy Group, today released the State of Observability 2022, a second annual global report that examines how observability is moving from first movers to mainstream business in shaping how organizations work. 

Observability leaders lead in more ways

The biggest takeaway researchers found, according to Spiros Xanthos, SVP and general manager of observability at San Francisco-based Splunk, is that the most sophisticated observability practitioners (those with three or more years of experience using the tools) are able to cut their company’s downtime costs by a whopping 90%. Turned into dollars, this means savings of an estimated $23.8 million annually on average, as compared to $2.5 million per year for observability-tool beginners (those with less than three years’ experience with the tools). 

Other key data points in the research include: 

  • Observability leaders have launched 60% more products or revenue streams from appdev teams in the last year compared to beginners.
  • Observability leaders report a 69% better mean time to resolution (MTTR) for unplanned downtime or performance degradation thanks to investment in observability.
  • 66% of leaders report that their visibility into application performance is excellent (compared to 44% of beginners). Similarly, 64% of leaders report that visibility into their security posture is excellent (versus 42% of beginners).
  • Twice as many leaders can detect problems associated with internally developed applications within minutes, resulting in an estimated 37% better MTTD.

“The most sophisticated observability practitioners have given themselves an edge in digital transformation while massively cutting costs associated with downtime and boosting their ability to out-innovate the competition,” Xanthos told VentureBeat. “These observability leaders are more competitive, more resilient and more efficient as a result.”

Observability becoming more mainstream

This area is maturing quickly, Xanthos said. 

“Two or three years ago, only the most advanced tech companies were using this,” Xanthos told VentureBeat. “What I see today is actually that the mainstream enterprise has adopted the idea and is pushing it; they are seeing the benefits in terms of how it can help with reducing downtime. Everyone is obviously at different levels of maturity. Most organizations are still beginners, and they still like playing with modern tools and having replacement and virtualization, and in some cases, initiatives. But it has become definitely mainstream.”

Increased cloud-service complexity also highlights the importance of observability for enterprises. Organizations have been moving to the cloud for more than a decade, and in more recent years, hybrid architectures and multicloud operations have complicated many organizations’ cloud ecosystems, Xanthos said.

Seventy percent of respondents are using multiple cloud services, the report said. Other data points:

  • 75% of respondents have many cloud-native applications that run in multiple environments, either multiple public clouds or a combination of on-premises and public clouds. 
  • Leaders are even more likely to report commonly running cloud-native applications (92% versus 68% of beginners).
  • 36% of organizations (and 47% of leaders) that use the public cloud to run internally developed applications use three or more different public clouds today, and 67% expect to do so within 24 months.

While the challenges of observability are global, the report reveals that there are significant variations across countries:

  • Canadian organizations trail in their observability journey: 79% are beginners (versus 58% averaged across other countries) and just 2% are leaders (versus 10% in the rest of the world).
  • French organizations more often report that their investments in AIOps technologies have helped them achieve lower MTTR (58% versus 43% averaged across other countries).
  • Japanese organizations have had noteworthy success using AIOps technologies to help solve recurring issues in their environment: 74% report that this has been a benefit of AIOps, versus a 55% average across other countries. 
  • Indian organizations are further along in the observability journey; only 29% are rated as beginners, versus 62% on average across other countries. 

For organizations across the globe looking to invest in observability, a lack of staff is one of the biggest hindrances in improving observability. Among respondents, 95% reported challenges in finding staff to monitor and manage infrastructure and application availability, while 81% of enterprises said a lack of staff had led to projects and initiatives failing.

“Organizations that use the right observability tools and practices and build to attract talent stand the best chance of becoming leaders in observability,” Xanthos said. “By tackling data volume and variety with AI, organizations can alleviate staffing concerns, while at the same time investing in skills training to draw in the very best talent available.”

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