The Benefits of Deploying AI in IT Operations
November 18, 2019

Akhilesh Tripathi
Digitate

Share this

Digital transformation reaches into every aspect of our work and personal lives, to the point that there is an automatic expectation of 24/7, anywhere availability regarding any organization with an online presence. This is a boon to consumers but a huge strain on the IT professionals who must meet that expectation in a rapidly changing environment. As much as 30% of the typical IT environment changes from year to year, forcing IT teams to reskill and stay on their toes in the midst of already-demanding jobs. This environment is ripe for artificial intelligence, so it's no surprise that IT Operations has been an early and robust adopter of AI.


IT's Redundant Task Problem

Hundreds of thousands of incidents can occur in mere minutes in today's complex, dynamic environments, generating overwhelming amounts of operations data. IT workers have to cut through this deluge to find and address problems like a credit card transaction mistakenly declined or a network crash that throws a crucial system offline. It's become nearly impossible for even the best IT teams to respond quickly and effectively.

Though these issues must be resolved, this reactive IT mode does not help the business grow. Worse, an IT worker can start to feel like the mythical Sisyphus, pushing a stone up the hill to solve one problem, only to see it roll down again when another ticket opens. Such an environment can drive even the brightest, most capable IT professionals to burn out and leave.

IT teams carry the triple burden of trying to prevent unexpected downtime — and the financial loss it entails — while improving IT efficiency and continually transforming customer experience. Doing so requires that IT workers engage in log analysis, performance optimizing, capacity planning and infrastructure scaling. While IT infrastructure is dynamic, its problems are well defined. These tasks demand finding patterns in massive data sets and are often dull and repetitive. They are perfect, then, for AI automation. AI tools can enhance both the speed and accuracy of such work, reducing stress on IT employees.

Improving Efficiency and Performance

The use of automation in IT is not new, but it typically has not scaled well in dynamic enterprise environments. Today's AI-based automation is different. IT departments using off-the-shelf AI tools are already reducing unscheduled downtime of revenue-generating systems. In fact, AI tools are helping IT operations resolve problems within minutes instead of hours and transforming customer experience for IT and the business overall.

AI can use multiple kinds of intelligence, making it autonomous, adaptive and scalable. As a recognition intelligence, it can find patterns in immense quantities of data. As a reasoning intelligence, it can tell what those patterns mean: Are they reflecting deviations in normal enterprise systems behavior that mean a system breakdown is looming or an attack from malicious sources is imminent? And as an operating intelligence, it can help manage the problem — both making recommendations for how to fix it and invoking automated, prescribed actions to fix it.

The IT environment features distinct towers of expertise. There's the database, middleware, operating systems, storage, network and so on. Each tower is staffed by people who know its area intimately but may have a limited view across the overall enterprise. AI improves how IT people see the connection between technology and the business. It can be a contextual engine that cuts across all of IT's siloed towers; it is better able to pinpoint the source of a problem than any individual in the organization. Experience shows us that the most difficult part of fixing IT issues is identifying the source of the problem.

Deploying AI in IT

AI's prominence in popular culture has created a variety of perceptions about what it can do, from panacea to paranoia. It is crucial for CIOs to have a clear sense of how and why AI is going to be applied in IT. CIOs who do not carefully define how AI will be applied risk losing control of business expectations for the technology.

CIOs can introduce AI into the IT department in a variety of ways. The greatest ROI comes from using it for business assurance, keeping revenue-generating systems running and fixing whatever problems do occur more quickly. Another effective way to get buy-in for and payoff from AI is to apply it to specific issues such as improving customer experience issues or driving IT agility.

Another benefit of AI for the IT team is that it may not be necessary to upskill current staff or hire new, hard-to-find AI talent. It doesn't hurt to have IT staff with AI skills, but vendors are building intelligence into their systems, and IT-oriented AI-as-a-Service offerings are available. From an enterprise perspective, AI-based IT should mean significantly less time putting out IT fires. That means CIOs can begin to redeploy their human capital, focusing their team more on the growth and transformation of the enterprise instead of keeping the lights on. Ultimately, that means AI will help the CIO be much more aligned with business needs.

AI offers immediate benefits to the IT department that will expand over time. It will continue to learn and be able to manage more complex tasks and issues. This will continue to free IT staff to better respond to customer needs and initiatives that drive business goals.

Akhilesh Tripathi is CEO at Digitate
Share this

The Latest

April 25, 2024

The use of hybrid multicloud models is forecasted to double over the next one to three years as IT decision makers are facing new pressures to modernize IT infrastructures because of drivers like AI, security, and sustainability, according to the Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI) report from Nutanix ...

April 24, 2024

Over the last 20 years Digital Employee Experience has become a necessity for companies committed to digital transformation and improving IT experiences. In fact, by 2025, more than 50% of IT organizations will use digital employee experience to prioritize and measure digital initiative success ...

April 23, 2024

While most companies are now deploying cloud-based technologies, the 2024 Secure Cloud Networking Field Report from Aviatrix found that there is a silent struggle to maximize value from those investments. Many of the challenges organizations have faced over the past several years have evolved, but continue today ...

April 22, 2024

In our latest research, Cisco's The App Attention Index 2023: Beware the Application Generation, 62% of consumers report their expectations for digital experiences are far higher than they were two years ago, and 64% state they are less forgiving of poor digital services than they were just 12 months ago ...

April 19, 2024

In MEAN TIME TO INSIGHT Episode 5, Shamus McGillicuddy, VP of Research, Network Infrastructure and Operations, at EMA discusses the network source of truth ...

April 18, 2024

A vast majority (89%) of organizations have rapidly expanded their technology in the past few years and three quarters (76%) say it's brought with it increased "chaos" that they have to manage, according to Situation Report 2024: Managing Technology Chaos from Software AG ...

April 17, 2024

In 2024 the number one challenge facing IT teams is a lack of skilled workers, and many are turning to automation as an answer, according to IT Trends: 2024 Industry Report ...

April 16, 2024

Organizations are continuing to embrace multicloud environments and cloud-native architectures to enable rapid transformation and deliver secure innovation. However, despite the speed, scale, and agility enabled by these modern cloud ecosystems, organizations are struggling to manage the explosion of data they create, according to The state of observability 2024: Overcoming complexity through AI-driven analytics and automation strategies, a report from Dynatrace ...

April 15, 2024

Organizations recognize the value of observability, but only 10% of them are actually practicing full observability of their applications and infrastructure. This is among the key findings from the recently completed Logz.io 2024 Observability Pulse Survey and Report ...

April 11, 2024

Businesses must adopt a comprehensive Internet Performance Monitoring (IPM) strategy, says Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), a leading IT analyst research firm. This strategy is crucial to bridge the significant observability gap within today's complex IT infrastructures. The recommendation is particularly timely, given that 99% of enterprises are expanding their use of the Internet as a primary connectivity conduit while facing challenges due to the inefficiency of multiple, disjointed monitoring tools, according to Modern Enterprises Must Boost Observability with Internet Performance Monitoring, a new report from EMA and Catchpoint ...