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A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 3: The Advantages

Pete Goldin
Editor and Publisher
APMdigest

One of the reasons OpenTelemetry is becoming so popular is because of the many advantages. In A Guide to OpenTelemetry, APMdigest breaks these advantages down into two groups: the beneficial capabilities of OpenTelemetry and the results users can expect from OpenTelemetry. In Part 3, we cover the capabilities.

Start with: A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 1

Start with: A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 2: When Will OTel Be Ready?

Universal Observability Tool

"One specification to rule them all — Companies will be able to rely on OTel for all languages and types of telemetry (logs, metrics, traces, etc) rather than distribute these capabilities among several tools" says Michael Haberman, CTO and Co-Founder of Aspecto.

Standardized Instrumentation

"Working with distributed systems is confusing enough; we need to simplify it by standardizing on a consistent set of tools," explains Mike Loukides, VP of Emerging Tech Content at O'Reilly Media. "What happens if your IT group develops part of a product, but buys several important components from a vendor? You're going to have to debug and maintain the whole system. That's going to be a nightmare if the different components don't speak the same language when saving information about their activity."

"Opentelemetry is an instrumentation standard," says Pranay Prateek, Co-Founder of SigNoz. "You can use any backend and storage layer to store telemetry data, and any front end to visualize that data. So as long as these components support the OTLP format (OpenTelemetry's format), they can process and visualize OTel data."

Interoperability

"OpenTelemetry will be valuable for the same reason that other standards are: interoperability," says Loukides from O'Reilly. "It will make it easier for developers to write software that is observable by using a single standard API and being able to plug in standard libraries. It will make it easier for people responsible for operations to integrate with existing observability platforms. If the protocol that applications use to talk to observability platforms is standardized, operations staff can mix and match dashboards, debugging tools, automation tools (AIOps), and much more."

Automated Instrumentation

"Companies no longer need their developers to spend a lot of time and headache on manually instrumenting their stack," explains Torsten Volk, Managing Research Director, Containers, DevOps, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence, at Enterprise Management Associates (EMA). "Instead developers can augment the automatically instrumented app stack by adding telemetry variables to their own code to tie together application behavior and infrastructure performance. DevOps engineers and SREs automatically receive a more comprehensive and complete view of their app environment and its context. DevOps, Ops and dev all will benefit from the more consistent instrumentation through OpenTelemetry compared to manual instrumentation, as this consistency lowers the risk of blind spots within the observability dashboard."

"Instrumentation can now be shifted left by making auto instrumentation part of any type of artifact used throughout the DevOps process," he continues. "Container images, VMs, software libraries, machine learning models, and database can all come pre-instrumented to simplify the DevOps toolchain and lower the risk of critical parts of the stack flying 'under the radar' in terms of observability and visibility."

Future-Proof Instrumentation

"The main business benefit that we see from using OpenTelemetry is that it is future-proof," says Prateek from SigNoz. "OpenTelemetry is an open standard and open source implementation with contributors from companies like AWS, Microsoft, Splunk, etc. It provides instrumentation libraries in almost all major programming languages and covers most of the popular open source frameworks. If tomorrow your team decides to use a new open source library in the tech stack, you can have the peace of mind that OpenTelemetry will provide instrumentation for it."

"In a hyper-dynamic environment where services come and go, and instances can be scaled in a reactive fashion, the OpenTelemetry project aims to provide a single path for full stack visibility which is future proof and easy to apply," adds Cedric Ziel, Grafana Labs Senior Product Manager.

Cost-Effective Observability

OpenTelemetry makes observability more cost-effective in several ways.

First, it provides cost control because it is open source.

"Organizations had large opportunity-costs in the past when they switched observability providers that forced them to use proprietary SDKs and APIs," says Ziel from Grafana Labs. "Customers are demanding compatibility and a path with OpenTelemetry and are less likely to accept proprietary solutions than a few years ago."

"No vendor lock-in means more control over observability costs," Prateek from SigNoz elaborates. "The freedom to choose an observability vendor of your choice while having access to world-class instrumentation is a huge advantage to the business."

"OpenTelemetry can also help reduce the cost associated with ramping up your engineering team," he continues. "Using an open source standard helps engineering teams to create a knowledge base that is consistent and improves with time."

Second, OpenTelemetry reduces cost because it is easy to use and reduces development time.

"Standardizing generation and exporting signals provides consistency across the development organization and leads to less development cost/time," says Nitin Navare, CTO of LogicMonitor.

Go to: A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 4: The Results

Pete Goldin is Editor and Publisher of APMdigest

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A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 3: The Advantages

Pete Goldin
Editor and Publisher
APMdigest

One of the reasons OpenTelemetry is becoming so popular is because of the many advantages. In A Guide to OpenTelemetry, APMdigest breaks these advantages down into two groups: the beneficial capabilities of OpenTelemetry and the results users can expect from OpenTelemetry. In Part 3, we cover the capabilities.

Start with: A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 1

Start with: A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 2: When Will OTel Be Ready?

Universal Observability Tool

"One specification to rule them all — Companies will be able to rely on OTel for all languages and types of telemetry (logs, metrics, traces, etc) rather than distribute these capabilities among several tools" says Michael Haberman, CTO and Co-Founder of Aspecto.

Standardized Instrumentation

"Working with distributed systems is confusing enough; we need to simplify it by standardizing on a consistent set of tools," explains Mike Loukides, VP of Emerging Tech Content at O'Reilly Media. "What happens if your IT group develops part of a product, but buys several important components from a vendor? You're going to have to debug and maintain the whole system. That's going to be a nightmare if the different components don't speak the same language when saving information about their activity."

"Opentelemetry is an instrumentation standard," says Pranay Prateek, Co-Founder of SigNoz. "You can use any backend and storage layer to store telemetry data, and any front end to visualize that data. So as long as these components support the OTLP format (OpenTelemetry's format), they can process and visualize OTel data."

Interoperability

"OpenTelemetry will be valuable for the same reason that other standards are: interoperability," says Loukides from O'Reilly. "It will make it easier for developers to write software that is observable by using a single standard API and being able to plug in standard libraries. It will make it easier for people responsible for operations to integrate with existing observability platforms. If the protocol that applications use to talk to observability platforms is standardized, operations staff can mix and match dashboards, debugging tools, automation tools (AIOps), and much more."

Automated Instrumentation

"Companies no longer need their developers to spend a lot of time and headache on manually instrumenting their stack," explains Torsten Volk, Managing Research Director, Containers, DevOps, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence, at Enterprise Management Associates (EMA). "Instead developers can augment the automatically instrumented app stack by adding telemetry variables to their own code to tie together application behavior and infrastructure performance. DevOps engineers and SREs automatically receive a more comprehensive and complete view of their app environment and its context. DevOps, Ops and dev all will benefit from the more consistent instrumentation through OpenTelemetry compared to manual instrumentation, as this consistency lowers the risk of blind spots within the observability dashboard."

"Instrumentation can now be shifted left by making auto instrumentation part of any type of artifact used throughout the DevOps process," he continues. "Container images, VMs, software libraries, machine learning models, and database can all come pre-instrumented to simplify the DevOps toolchain and lower the risk of critical parts of the stack flying 'under the radar' in terms of observability and visibility."

Future-Proof Instrumentation

"The main business benefit that we see from using OpenTelemetry is that it is future-proof," says Prateek from SigNoz. "OpenTelemetry is an open standard and open source implementation with contributors from companies like AWS, Microsoft, Splunk, etc. It provides instrumentation libraries in almost all major programming languages and covers most of the popular open source frameworks. If tomorrow your team decides to use a new open source library in the tech stack, you can have the peace of mind that OpenTelemetry will provide instrumentation for it."

"In a hyper-dynamic environment where services come and go, and instances can be scaled in a reactive fashion, the OpenTelemetry project aims to provide a single path for full stack visibility which is future proof and easy to apply," adds Cedric Ziel, Grafana Labs Senior Product Manager.

Cost-Effective Observability

OpenTelemetry makes observability more cost-effective in several ways.

First, it provides cost control because it is open source.

"Organizations had large opportunity-costs in the past when they switched observability providers that forced them to use proprietary SDKs and APIs," says Ziel from Grafana Labs. "Customers are demanding compatibility and a path with OpenTelemetry and are less likely to accept proprietary solutions than a few years ago."

"No vendor lock-in means more control over observability costs," Prateek from SigNoz elaborates. "The freedom to choose an observability vendor of your choice while having access to world-class instrumentation is a huge advantage to the business."

"OpenTelemetry can also help reduce the cost associated with ramping up your engineering team," he continues. "Using an open source standard helps engineering teams to create a knowledge base that is consistent and improves with time."

Second, OpenTelemetry reduces cost because it is easy to use and reduces development time.

"Standardizing generation and exporting signals provides consistency across the development organization and leads to less development cost/time," says Nitin Navare, CTO of LogicMonitor.

Go to: A Guide to OpenTelemetry - Part 4: The Results

Pete Goldin is Editor and Publisher of APMdigest

Hot Topics

The Latest

Regardless of OpenShift being a scalable and flexible software, it can be a pain to monitor since complete visibility into the underlying operations is not guaranteed ... To effectively monitor an OpenShift environment, IT administrators should focus on these five key elements and their associated metrics ...

An overwhelming majority of IT leaders (95%) believe the upcoming wave of AI-powered digital transformation is set to be the most impactful and intensive seen thus far, according to The Science of Productivity: AI, Adoption, And Employee Experience, a new report from Nexthink ...

Overall outage frequency and the general level of reported severity continue to decline, according to the Outage Analysis 2025 from Uptime Institute. However, cyber security incidents are on the rise and often have severe, lasting impacts ...

In March, New Relic published the State of Observability for Media and Entertainment Report to share insights, data, and analysis into the adoption and business value of observability across the media and entertainment industry. Here are six key takeaways from the report ...

Regardless of their scale, business decisions often take time, effort, and a lot of back-and-forth discussion to reach any sort of actionable conclusion ... Any means of streamlining this process and getting from complex problems to optimal solutions more efficiently and reliably is key. How can organizations optimize their decision-making to save time and reduce excess effort from those involved? ...

As enterprises accelerate their cloud adoption strategies, CIOs are routinely exceeding their cloud budgets — a concern that's about to face additional pressure from an unexpected direction: uncertainty over semiconductor tariffs. The CIO Cloud Trends Survey & Report from Azul reveals the extent continued cloud investment despite cost overruns, and how organizations are attempting to bring spending under control ...

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According to Auvik's 2025 IT Trends Report, 60% of IT professionals feel at least moderately burned out on the job, with 43% stating that their workload is contributing to work stress. At the same time, many IT professionals are naming AI and machine learning as key areas they'd most like to upskill ...

Businesses that face downtime or outages risk financial and reputational damage, as well as reducing partner, shareholder, and customer trust. One of the major challenges that enterprises face is implementing a robust business continuity plan. What's the solution? The answer may lie in disaster recovery tactics such as truly immutable storage and regular disaster recovery testing ...

IT spending is expected to jump nearly 10% in 2025, and organizations are now facing pressure to manage costs without slowing down critical functions like observability. To meet the challenge, leaders are turning to smarter, more cost effective business strategies. Enter stage right: OpenTelemetry, the missing piece of the puzzle that is no longer just an option but rather a strategic advantage ...

Amidst the threat of cyberhacks and data breaches, companies install several security measures to keep their business safely afloat. These measures aim to protect businesses, employees, and crucial data. Yet, employees perceive them as burdensome. Frustrated with complex logins, slow access, and constant security checks, workers decide to completely bypass all security set-ups ...

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