December 9, 2024 - 5 min read
The True Threat of Business Downtime
Bhooshan Thakar
VP & GM of InfoScale
Can your business survive one day without your most critical IT systems? Banks without online banking, doctors’ offices without a patient portal, airlines without a booking system? Could your business handle that kind of severe disruption even for one hour? A recent Forbes article reports that large enterprises can see costs as high as $9k per minute from downtime.
Technology, and more specifically applications, are integral to daily operations, whether it's e-commerce platforms, internal communication tools, or customer relationship management systems. When critical systems experience downtime, the repercussions can be severe. Increased global access to technology has created higher customer expectations. They demand round-the-clock product and service availability. IT organizations are under constant pressure to deliver the highest levels of availability for their mission critical IT services.
Understanding IT Downtime
IT downtime covers any period when systems, services, or networks are unavailable. This could be planned or unplanned, such as – maintenance, technical failures, cybersecurity incidents, or natural disasters. Any time a business's technology is unavailable, it can lead to significant loss.
The digital landscape today is ruled by applications. Until a critical application is unavailable, most people don’t take notice of IT downtime. Not all applications are made equal, business critical applications can impact an organization more severely if they experience any downtime. Top tier applications require more scrutiny and proactive preventative measures to mitigate the risk of an outage.
Any disruption to a component of the application stack can cause an outage. These can come in the form of a software bug, infrastructure configuration error, networking error, and even storage failures. Adding to the challenge, IT operations teams manage hundreds of applications across the enterprise, spanning a multitude of different environments.
The process to identify the root cause and apply the right fix or failover can take hours or days. Which is downtime that mission critical applications and the business just cannot tolerate.
Let’s zero in on the implications of application downtime.
Implications of Application Downtime
Downtime is often thought of as the time a service or application was inaccessible. However, to accurately measure the true costs of downtime, organizations must consider the impact across the entire business.
- Financial Impact: Impact to the bottom line can be steep. Depending on the industry, there are not only the costs of getting back up and running but also the costs of fines and penalties.
- Productivity & Operational Disruption: Employees rely on applications to complete their work. With critical applications down, employee’s ability to complete tasks, meet deadlines, or even just communicate effectively within their network will be significantly impacted. This can impact not only employee satisfaction and productivity, but it can also create delayed project delivery and completion, impact to services, supply chain disruption, and affect overall performance.
- Operating Expense: The amount of IT resources and labor spent triaging and applying a fix for the downtime caused is an additional, more in depth impact than the general company productivity and operational disruption. Days or even hours spent recovery operations is also lost development time for IT.
- Reputation: Compounding financial impact and productivity loss can leak into a negative customer experience. This can discredit an organization with their current customers and dissuade potential new customers from wanting to engage in business. Customers expect reliability and availability from applications, and frequent downtime can frustrate users and erode customer trust. This often leads to customers seeking competitive options that are more reliable. A single incident can result in lost customers, negative reviews, and diminished brand loyalty.
- Regulatory/ Compliance Impact: As if the above implications aren’t enough, organizations have regulatory and compliance consequences to manage. Unavailability of critical systems can impact reporting and recording leading to legal ramifications and fines.
Every Minute Counts
When faced with a mission critical application being down, every minute counts. An organization cannot wait days or even hours to be back up and running. Real time resilience is key to quick recovery with minimal to no data loss during restoration.
In today’s technology-driven landscape, application downtime can be disastrous. By understanding the potential consequences — from lost revenue to damage to reputation — organizations can adopt proactive strategies to minimize downtime risks. A commitment to reliability strengthens operational resilience and enhances customer trust and satisfaction, ultimately leading to greater success in a competitive environment.