The Multibillion-Dollar Cost of Downtime: A Growing Business Concern
Downtime: A Growing Concern for the Global 2000
Downtime has become a significant business concern, costing the Global 2000 an estimated $600 billion annually.
Causes and Consequences
- Unplanned Outages: A recent report by Splunk found that unplanned outages and service degradation have increased by 50% over the past two years, resulting in an average loss of $300 million per company.
- Rise in Incident Costs: Customer expectations, cybersecurity threats, rising incident costs, and regulatory pressure have elevated downtime as a priority for technology leaders.
- Regulatory Fines: Regulatory fines have become a significant concern, with 57% of technology leaders identifying them as highly disruptive.
The effects of downtime can persist even after services recover, delaying product work, increasing investor concerns, and weakening brand trust. Rebuilding trust can take months, with almost 20% of marketing professionals saying brand reputation takes a quarter to recover after an incident.
Costs and Consequences
- Stock Decline: Companies experience an average stock decline of 3.4% following downtime, with investors paying close attention to operational resilience.
- Ransomware Payments: Ransomware payments remain a substantial expense, with approximately 40% of finance leaders admitting they pay attackers.
- Lost Revenue: Lost revenue of $95 million, regulatory fines of $51 million, and ransomware payouts of $40 million.
Solutions and Prevention
Organizations are investing in AI tools to improve resilience, with a median annual expenditure of $24.5 million. The most common use case is incident triage and root cause analysis.
Industry-Wide Impact
- Information Services and Technology: Recorded the highest downtime costs at $402 million.
- Energy and Utilities: Followed at $364 million.
- Retail: Reached $357 million.
EMEA records the highest downtime costs due to compliance failures and security-related expenses. In APAC, lost revenue remains the largest cost driver. North America records the highest staffing and productivity costs, while LATAM reports lower overall costs.
