For decades, uptime was the gold standard of IT success.
If systems were available, infrastructure was stable, and major outages were rare, technology teams were considered effective. Boardroom conversations often revolved around a single number: uptime percentage.
99%.
99.99%.
The closer to perfection, the better.
But something interesting has happened over the last few years.
Businesses are achieving impressive uptime figures while employees still complain about slow systems. Customers abandon transactions because applications lag. Collaboration tools remain technically available but perform inconsistently during critical meetings.
In other words, technology can be “up” without delivering a great experience.
That’s forcing CIOs to ask a different question:
Is uptime still the best way to measure IT success?
Increasingly, the answer is no.
Historically, uptime was a logical metric. Most enterprise technology environments were centralized. Applications lived in data centers. Employees worked from offices. Infrastructure availability directly reflected user experience.
If a server went down, everyone felt it.
If a network failed, operations stopped.
In that world, uptime was a reliable indicator of IT performance. Many organizations built entire operating models around maximizing availability. Network Operations Centers monitored infrastructure, IT teams tracked outages, Service providers committed to uptime-based SLAs and for a long time, it worked.
The problem is that today’s enterprise environment looks very different.
Infrastructure is distributed, Applications are cloud-based, Employees work from multiple locations, Customer experiences depend on dozens of interconnected systems, availability alone no longer captures that complexity.
Most IT dashboards are still dominated by infrastructure metrics:
These metrics remain important but they often fail to answer a much more relevant question:
How is technology performing for the people using it?
Consider a simple example.
An ERP application may show 100% availability during the month.
However:
From an infrastructure perspective, everything appears healthy. From a business perspective, productivity is declining.
Gartner has repeatedly highlighted the growing importance of digital employee experience and user-centric technology measurement as organizations adopt hybrid work models.
This shift reflects a broader realization: Technology performance and business performance are becoming inseparable.
What we’re seeing across enterprise IT is not the abandonment of uptime, it’s the expansion of measurement. Forward-looking CIOs still monitor availability, but they increasingly combine it with experience-based indicators.
Examples include:
How quickly do critical applications respond?
Can employees work without technology friction?
How quickly are issues resolved when they occur?
Are employees satisfied with workplace technology?
Can customers complete transactions without disruption?
These metrics provide a more complete picture of operational health because ultimately, users don’t care whether a server is online, they care whether they can get their work done.
This shift is particularly important in India. Organizations are managing increasingly distributed environments:
In these environments, infrastructure availability tells only part of the story. A manufacturing plant may remain operational while application delays affect production workflows. A GCC may maintain excellent uptime while employee productivity suffers due to poor collaboration experiences.
A retail chain may experience no outages while transaction latency affects customer experience. The challenge is not availability.
It’s visibility.
IT leaders need to understand how technology is experienced, not just how infrastructure is performing.
A financial services organization maintained infrastructure availability above 99.9%. On paper, everything looked excellent, yet employee complaints continued to rise. The issue wasn’t outages.
It was performance.
Employees were experiencing:
None of these issues significantly impacted uptime metrics but collectively, they affected productivity across the organization.
Once IT began measuring user experience alongside availability, the root causes became easier to identify and address.
The lesson was simple: High uptime did not automatically mean high performance.
The next evolution of IT operations will be experience-led.
Organizations are increasingly adopting:
This doesn’t replace uptime monitoring, it builds upon it.
Availability remains the foundation, experience becomes the differentiator. Businesses that understand both will gain a clearer view of operational health than those relying on infrastructure metrics alone.
Uptime is still important. Nobody wants systems that are unavailable but availability alone no longer reflects how technology supports business outcomes.
Modern IT environments are too complex, too distributed, and too dependent on user experience for a single metric to tell the whole story.
To move forward:
Because the most successful IT organizations are no longer asking:
“Are our systems running?”
They’re asking:
“Are our people productive?”
And increasingly, that’s the metric that matters most.