When I talk with clients, deployments and even when I take time out to read the headlines, I still believe that the industry is confused about how Advanced IT Analytics (AIA) is evolving. Here are three big reasons why, as supported by our current data.
1. AIA cannot be adequately defined by discrete technologies — including Big Data
Industry attempts to define AIA purely in terms of discrete technologies or else simply "big data" may seem reasonable at first glance, but they actually create fictitious barriers. So many different analytic heuristics can come into play from machine learning, to advanced event correlation, if/then change-related analytics, just to name a few.
Similarly, the data sets involved may span everything from events, to time series data, to log files, to spreadsheets, to text and sentiment analysis, and the list goes on. And while the quantity of data is key, thinking of AIA primarily in terms of big data may turn out to be a recipe for failure more often than not. This is an area where relevance, use case and focus seem to count far more than science projects.
2. AIA is not just about operations
The more prevalent nomenclature tends to direct advanced analytics for IT purely as an enabler for operations, whereas the data in this report shows just the opposite is true. AIA as EMA understands it is a unifying layer that may support many IT roles from operations, to ITSM teams, to development, to the IT executive suite, to a growing number of business stakeholders. In fact, the 11 roles targeted by our AIA respondents included 4 domain, 4 cross-domain and 3 business stakeholders on average. Moreover, the IT executive suite led in driving AIA initiatives followed — are you ready for this? — by IT service management teams (ITSM) teams and cloud teams.
3. Service modeling interdependencies and AIA go hand-in-hand
Only 4% of our respondents showed no interest in capturing service models or service modeling interdependencies. The lead sources were:
1. Application discovery and dependency mapping (ADDM) for performance
2. Service modeling dashboard for business impact
3. Service modeling/system provided directly through the tool
4. ADDM for change – tied with a federate configuration management system (CMS)
OK, now think about the industry prejudices in this area. How many industry pundits out there are linking advanced analytics to anything resembling a CMDB? And yet there are many reasons for why this is becoming increasingly critical — and cloud, believe it or not, is one of them (as is also suggested by this research and other data). If you're an old network management hand, you may remember how the advent of topology once worked wonders. Now, it's just beginning to do it all over again in some more advanced environments — in a much more dimensional set of contexts and attributes that hold the potential to link stakeholders, processes, automation routines and business outcomes in a single dynamic fabric.
So Maybe AIA Isn't a Market After All
In the end, I would have to admit that AIA as I view it probably isn't a market in the traditional sense, since market definitions typically require narrow technology parameters for creating discrete buckets for market sizing and contrast. My vision of AIA is rather an arena of fast-growing exploration and invention, in which in-house development is beginning to cede to third-party solutions that can accelerate time to value (also something indicated by our research).
It's still too early to say for sure, but the progress and the opportunities are certainly exciting — and putting artificial boundaries around them isn't going to improve the pace of progress.
The Latest
In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 3 covers OpenTelemetry, DevOps and more ...
In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 2 covers AI's impact on Observability, including AI Observability, AI-Powered Observability and AIOps ...
The Holiday Season means it is time for APMdigest's annual list of predictions, covering IT performance topics. Industry experts — from analysts and consultants to the top vendors — offer thoughtful, insightful, and often controversial predictions on how Observability, APM, AIOps and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025 ...
Technology leaders will invest in AI-driven customer experience (CX) strategies in the year ahead as they build more dynamic, relevant and meaningful connections with their target audiences ... As AI shifts the CX paradigm from reactive to proactive, tech leaders and their teams will embrace these five AI-driven strategies that will improve customer support and cybersecurity while providing smoother, more reliable service offerings ...
We're at a critical inflection point in the data landscape. In our recent survey of executive leaders in the data space — The State of Data Observability in 2024 — we found that while 92% of organizations now consider data reliability core to their strategy, most still struggle with fundamental visibility challenges ...
From the accelerating adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and generative AI (GenAI) to the ongoing challenges of cost optimization and security, these IT leaders are navigating a complex and rapidly evolving landscape. Here's what you should know about the top priorities shaping the year ahead ...
In the heat of the holiday online shopping rush, retailers face persistent challenges such as increased web traffic or cyber threats that can lead to high-impact outages. With profit margins under high pressure, retailers are prioritizing strategic investments to help drive business value while improving the customer experience ...
In a fast-paced industry where customer service is a priority, the opportunity to use AI to personalize products and services, revolutionize delivery channels, and effectively manage peaks in demand such as Black Friday and Cyber Monday are vast. By leveraging AI to streamline demand forecasting, optimize inventory, personalize customer interactions, and adjust pricing, retailers can have a better handle on these stress points, and deliver a seamless digital experience ...
Broad proliferation of cloud infrastructure combined with continued support for remote workers is driving increased complexity and visibility challenges for network operations teams, according to new research conducted by Dimensional Research and sponsored by Broadcom ...