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An Old Proverb Reimagined: A Good IT Team Can Blame the Number of Tools

By Fernando Castanheira, CIO, Riverbed Technology

Business leaders want digital growth. IT teams carry the weight – but instead of driving innovation, they’re drowning in complexity. The saying “a bad workman blames his tools” doesn’t apply here. Today’s IT professionals are highly skilled, so expertise isn’t the issue; it’s an overload of tools. 

Why? As enterprises scale their digital estates, each new solution brings with it another monitoring dashboard, alert pipeline, or data source. And while these investments are all made with good intentions – to make operations smoother, safer, or smarter – the outcome is often the opposite.  

As it stands, these expanding toolsets are undermining the true potential of our IT teams. That’s why this article explores how simplifying, unifying, and automating the way data is handled can support them to refocus on what really matters: pursuing business growth.  

The Tool Sprawl is Real 

Today’s exponential spread of tools is actively affecting hardworking IT teams in all sectors across the world. The extent of the complexity it causes is staggering, with the average organization now relying on an array of tools from different vendors. Ironically, these components comprise a digital architecture in which the solutions designed to improve visibility instead end up obscuring it. 

A fragmented IT network like this makes it hard to maintain consistent performance and even harder to gain a clear end-to-end view of user experiences. Every alert, outage, or delayed time to respond to a vulnerability becomes yet another thread in a tsunami of data. 

At best, it’s an extreme inconvenience to untangle this complexity when every second of downtime can impact revenue and reputation. At worst, if left unaddressed for too long, the disruption it causes can quickly unravel into genuine business risks. 

Plate Spinning Under Pressure 

When every observability tool works in isolation, IT teams spend more time trying to navigate the sprawl than actually solving problems. Troubleshooting requires constant context switching between different dashboards and multi-tasking can become overwhelming. It’s only a matter of time before number of helpdesk tickets mounts up and the metaphorical spinning plates drop. 

Extrapolate that situation out into different departments, each with their own preferred platform, and what’s left is an organizational network weighed down by alert fatigue and siloed data. As a result, identifying the root cause of a performance issue could take hours – not due to any lack of skill, but because the relevant insights are displaced across too many data points.  

Inevitably, digital ambitions take a hit when resources are preoccupied with firefighting issues and reconciling data pipelines. And the lack of progress means business leaders start to lose confidence in their IT team’s ability to deliver. 

Cutting Through the Chaos with Unified Observability and AIOps 

It all begs the question: how can organizations move forward amidst the chaos? The answer lies in Unified Observability and AIOps (Artificial Intelligence for IT Operations), two complementary solutions that are designed to consolidate complexity and streamline operations. 

Unified Observability platforms collate information from data points all across the digital ecosystem into a single, holistic view. The effect is like looking down on a sprawling city from an airplane window: patterns, interconnections, and congestions suddenly become much clearer. This high-level perspective helps IT teams to eliminate siloes, reduce duplication, and pinpoint the real cause of performance issues faster. 

Meanwhile, AIOps deploys machine learning to sift through those large swathes of telemetry data, helping to identify anomalies, predict errors before they cause havoc, and even automate routine fixes. As well as improving cybersecurity, this intelligent automation also relieves employees of their most repetitive workflows.  

Together, these two technologies can revolutionize the day-to-day routines of IT teams – ending the tiresome hours of manual context-switching and restoring their focus on securing better business outcomes.  

Finding Clarity, Cost-Efficiency, and Calmness 

By addressing tool sprawl with this unified and automated approach to observability, enterprises build a digital backbone primed for visibility, stability, and efficiency. Most importantly, that allows them to regain control of their digital environments, instead of repeatedly “falling into the same trap: asking “what can this tool do?””.  

With this newfound certainty, they’re empowered to:  

  • Take a proactive stance – AI-driven monitoring tools anticipate issues before they escalate, which reduces downtime and enhances the overall user experience. 
  • Optimize performance – an end-to-end view of system health and behavior allows bottlenecks to be dealt with much faster. 
  • Save money through consolidation – the fewer tools deployed, the lower the licensing, maintenance, and training costs needed to integrate them. 

By elevating digital experiences in this way, businesses can create the ideal conditions for smarter, steadier growth – and with those foundations in place, a sense of concentrated calm can return to IT departments. The teams that were caught in a reactive cycle can finally focus on using their expertise where it can make a positive difference. 

Why Less is More 

The old cliché may claim that “a bad workman blames his tools”, but within complex digital environments, the reality is that even the best IT teams are being let down by too many. Simplifying these sprawling toolsets with full-stack solutions like Unified Observability and AIOps within a unified platform can give skilled professionals the clarity and control to make this blame a thing of the past. 

Consolidating a smaller number of AI-powered automation tools into a transparent overview will result in stronger performance metrics across the board – because when IT teams are empowered to see the whole picture, predict what’s to come, and then respond quickly, they achieve the levels of productivity that allow businesses to thrive. 

At a time when it feels tempting to integrate more applications, access more dashboards, and accrue more data, the smarter strategy is to actually do less – and do it smarter. 

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