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Embracing AI Can Support Business Resiliency During Economic Uncertainty

Ritu Dubey
Digitate

During economic uncertainty, enterprises want improved business uptime, productivity gains, and revenue assurance. To be best positioned to achieve these objectives, it is vital to have a resilient IT and business infrastructure in place. However, with pressure on cost control, reducing and optimizing budgets, companies can't simply hire more support staff, so other optimization avenues need to be explored.

Looking back at previous recessions or economic downturns, investment in technology was one of the first areas to be affected by budgetary cuts and, while it may be tempting for management to look at IT budgets as an area to cut back on for short-term savings, in the long term this can damage a company on a much more fundamental level. Failure to invest in IT could, for example, see an organization left behind technologically while its customers and competitors forge ahead, eroding competitive advantage.

The past few years of the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw business operating models forced to radically shift, and quickly, have helped to demonstrate the importance and value of technology as the backbone of modern business. Investment in technology during this time kept businesses connected, communicating, and operating in the most logistically challenging times. As a result, there is now a greater understanding and appreciation at the management level of what technology brings to the table.

Having said that, of course, investments in IT operations still must show demonstrable business value, especially in testing economic conditions, and that has been historically challenging. In fact, at a November 2022 keynote event in London, Gartner stated that research they conducted found that just 17% of organizations are consistently able to demonstrate the business value of IT. That percentage must improve significantly, and that's where enterprises look to automation to increase IT resilience and optimize performance across the enterprise, without increasing costs. Automating IT tasks can help with business scaling and create sustainable competitive differentiation, which can be a key element during uncertain times.

How AI and AIOps Drive Intelligent Automation

The autonomous enterprise will define the future of corporations, driven in no small part by AI, which enables organizations to streamline and intelligently automate some of the most essential and elemental IT operations tasks, such as monitoring, alerts, root cause analysis, incident management, service request automation such as managing employee onboarding and offboarding. Intelligent automation not only makes organizational IT systems stronger but also frees up skilled IT staff to focus on higher value projects.

By integrating AI and machine learning (ML), enterprises can leverage AIOps to add even more value to IT operations. Embedding historic baseline data, ML works with AI to pull new, deep data from right across an organization as directed, apply intelligent analysis to that data, and add context and meaning. The result is actionable intelligence, which can help management to better understand their business, the economic impact of any downturn, uncover operational inefficiencies and where there may be room for reviews and improvements. As AIOps builds intelligence and knowledge across an organization, it enables proactive and predictive monitoring, so potential problems can be identified and assessed, alerts raised and proactive repairs options given, based on data analysis and historic event profiles and scenarios.

As more enterprises digitize their operations, AIOps are no longer limited to supporting traditional tech workflows, but are now employed across a variety of mainstream business processes, from finance to sales to sourcing and procurement (S&P).

AIOps Delivers Tangible Benefits in Business Performance Monitoring

To illustrate the value of AIOps to an organization, let's consider business performance monitoring. Within today's modern enterprise, business applications and systems, and the supporting IT infrastructure are incredibly complex. Monitoring the health of critical business processes across an organization is vital for seamless business transactions and robust business continuity. As more organizations embrace digital transformation to become fully automated enterprises, historic dependency on labor intensive, inefficient and error-prone manual monitoring and issue resolution is removed. Instead, end-to-end visibility, allied to the correct tools can automatically detect potentially disruptive incidents early and, through AIOps, recommend remedial action. This frees up IT team expertise to focus on higher value, more complicated tasks.

If we look at the retail industry, for example, AIOps is deployed to proactively monitor the performance or health of technology operations across stores, e-commerce sites, and other channels such as mobile apps. Analyzing business processes, applications, middleware, infrastructure, and devices, AIOps applies data analysis, context, and intelligence to automatically detect, visualize, flag, and diagnose anomalies, highlighting root causes and providing automatic resolution of the issues. AIOps can deliver a wealth of benefits to retailers, not only in terms of improved operational KPIs such as Mean-Time-To-Detect, Mean-Time-To-Resolve, time to triage and overall system efficiency, but Business KPI's through optimized inventory, smoother retail operations, improved customer experience and retention, and reduced downtime, leading to higher revenue.

IT Investment is a Multi-faceted Win-Win

The bottom line is that technology is continuously evolving, with AI, ML, automation and cloud-native products and platforms deployed to drive both ROI and positive business outcomes. Strategic investment in IT is really an investment in preparation, business resilience, and advancing competitive positioning. Embracing automation drives the tangible business value of IT operations and encourages the mindset that IT be seen as a business driver as opposed to a cost center. AI and AIOps deliver a wealth of operational improvements, including significantly better system performance and uptime, predictive and preventative intelligence, along with enhanced security and compliance.

The agility and business flexibility that all these technologies provide can help enterprises to better understand challenges, changing market conditions and uncertainty by embedding greater intelligence to decision making through the application of data science, improving efficiencies and better positioning businesses to support future growth — all without breaking the bank.

Ritu Dubey is Global Head of New Business Sales and Market Development at Digitate

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Embracing AI Can Support Business Resiliency During Economic Uncertainty

Ritu Dubey
Digitate

During economic uncertainty, enterprises want improved business uptime, productivity gains, and revenue assurance. To be best positioned to achieve these objectives, it is vital to have a resilient IT and business infrastructure in place. However, with pressure on cost control, reducing and optimizing budgets, companies can't simply hire more support staff, so other optimization avenues need to be explored.

Looking back at previous recessions or economic downturns, investment in technology was one of the first areas to be affected by budgetary cuts and, while it may be tempting for management to look at IT budgets as an area to cut back on for short-term savings, in the long term this can damage a company on a much more fundamental level. Failure to invest in IT could, for example, see an organization left behind technologically while its customers and competitors forge ahead, eroding competitive advantage.

The past few years of the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw business operating models forced to radically shift, and quickly, have helped to demonstrate the importance and value of technology as the backbone of modern business. Investment in technology during this time kept businesses connected, communicating, and operating in the most logistically challenging times. As a result, there is now a greater understanding and appreciation at the management level of what technology brings to the table.

Having said that, of course, investments in IT operations still must show demonstrable business value, especially in testing economic conditions, and that has been historically challenging. In fact, at a November 2022 keynote event in London, Gartner stated that research they conducted found that just 17% of organizations are consistently able to demonstrate the business value of IT. That percentage must improve significantly, and that's where enterprises look to automation to increase IT resilience and optimize performance across the enterprise, without increasing costs. Automating IT tasks can help with business scaling and create sustainable competitive differentiation, which can be a key element during uncertain times.

How AI and AIOps Drive Intelligent Automation

The autonomous enterprise will define the future of corporations, driven in no small part by AI, which enables organizations to streamline and intelligently automate some of the most essential and elemental IT operations tasks, such as monitoring, alerts, root cause analysis, incident management, service request automation such as managing employee onboarding and offboarding. Intelligent automation not only makes organizational IT systems stronger but also frees up skilled IT staff to focus on higher value projects.

By integrating AI and machine learning (ML), enterprises can leverage AIOps to add even more value to IT operations. Embedding historic baseline data, ML works with AI to pull new, deep data from right across an organization as directed, apply intelligent analysis to that data, and add context and meaning. The result is actionable intelligence, which can help management to better understand their business, the economic impact of any downturn, uncover operational inefficiencies and where there may be room for reviews and improvements. As AIOps builds intelligence and knowledge across an organization, it enables proactive and predictive monitoring, so potential problems can be identified and assessed, alerts raised and proactive repairs options given, based on data analysis and historic event profiles and scenarios.

As more enterprises digitize their operations, AIOps are no longer limited to supporting traditional tech workflows, but are now employed across a variety of mainstream business processes, from finance to sales to sourcing and procurement (S&P).

AIOps Delivers Tangible Benefits in Business Performance Monitoring

To illustrate the value of AIOps to an organization, let's consider business performance monitoring. Within today's modern enterprise, business applications and systems, and the supporting IT infrastructure are incredibly complex. Monitoring the health of critical business processes across an organization is vital for seamless business transactions and robust business continuity. As more organizations embrace digital transformation to become fully automated enterprises, historic dependency on labor intensive, inefficient and error-prone manual monitoring and issue resolution is removed. Instead, end-to-end visibility, allied to the correct tools can automatically detect potentially disruptive incidents early and, through AIOps, recommend remedial action. This frees up IT team expertise to focus on higher value, more complicated tasks.

If we look at the retail industry, for example, AIOps is deployed to proactively monitor the performance or health of technology operations across stores, e-commerce sites, and other channels such as mobile apps. Analyzing business processes, applications, middleware, infrastructure, and devices, AIOps applies data analysis, context, and intelligence to automatically detect, visualize, flag, and diagnose anomalies, highlighting root causes and providing automatic resolution of the issues. AIOps can deliver a wealth of benefits to retailers, not only in terms of improved operational KPIs such as Mean-Time-To-Detect, Mean-Time-To-Resolve, time to triage and overall system efficiency, but Business KPI's through optimized inventory, smoother retail operations, improved customer experience and retention, and reduced downtime, leading to higher revenue.

IT Investment is a Multi-faceted Win-Win

The bottom line is that technology is continuously evolving, with AI, ML, automation and cloud-native products and platforms deployed to drive both ROI and positive business outcomes. Strategic investment in IT is really an investment in preparation, business resilience, and advancing competitive positioning. Embracing automation drives the tangible business value of IT operations and encourages the mindset that IT be seen as a business driver as opposed to a cost center. AI and AIOps deliver a wealth of operational improvements, including significantly better system performance and uptime, predictive and preventative intelligence, along with enhanced security and compliance.

The agility and business flexibility that all these technologies provide can help enterprises to better understand challenges, changing market conditions and uncertainty by embedding greater intelligence to decision making through the application of data science, improving efficiencies and better positioning businesses to support future growth — all without breaking the bank.

Ritu Dubey is Global Head of New Business Sales and Market Development at Digitate

Hot Topics

The Latest

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 ...

Image
Azul

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 ...

Image
Cloudbrink's Personal SASE services provide last-mile acceleration and reduction in latency

In MEAN TIME TO INSIGHT Episode 13, Shamus McGillicuddy, VP of Research, Network Infrastructure and Operations, at EMA discusses hybrid multi-cloud networking strategy ...