Mumbai: New Relic, the Intelligent Observability company, today released its State of Observability for Media and Entertainment report, offering deep insights into the factors driving observability adoption across the media and entertainment sector. Based on data from the New Relic 2025 Observability Forecast, the report connects observability with reduced outages and strong returns on investment (ROI), revealing that high-impact outages cost media and entertainment companies an average of $2 million per hour and take about 40 minutes to resolve.
Outages Damage Brand Reputation
The findings reveal that outages—especially during live broadcasts or major streaming events—can severely damage brand reputation. For 33% of respondents, outages cost between $1–$2 million per hour of downtime, with the average high-impact outage costing $2 million per hour. The top causes include security issues, network failures, capacity constraints, and software deployment errors. Although detection and resolution times are in line with the industry median (30 minutes to detect and 40 minutes to resolve), the financial and reputational stakes are far higher in media and entertainment, where even short disruptions can trigger mass subscriber churn and lost ad revenue.
Observability Creates Strong ROI and Business Value
Media and entertainment organizations are reporting significant returns from their observability investments, with 51% achieving a 2–3X ROI, higher than in industries such as finance and retail. Observability also boosts system reliability and collaboration—39% of respondents said it improved uptime, while 36% noted enhanced real-user experience. Executives are recognizing the business value, with 50% reporting observability helps meet technical KPIs and 36% citing stronger tactical execution.
AI Enhancing Customer Experience
As audience experience becomes central to revenue growth, companies are increasingly leveraging observability’s AI capabilities to automate manual tasks like incident detection, personalized recommendations, and post-incident analysis. AI adoption, alongside a greater focus on security, governance, and compliance, emerged as the top driver of observability investment, followed by faster software release cycles, business application integration, and cloud-native development.
“The audience is the ultimate arbiter in the media and entertainment industry. Any digital downtime can tarnish a platform’s reputation in minutes, confirming that flawless, on-demand content isn’t a luxury—it’s the expectation,” said New Relic Chief Technical Strategist Nic Benders. “Organizations are under immense pressure to deliver a perfect experience at scale. Our report proves that observability is delivering measurable business value, as over half of respondents are seeing 2–3x ROI on observability spend.”
Other Key Findings
- Tool consolidation is accelerating: the median number of observability tools per organization has dropped to four, with 40% now using three or fewer—up 10% from 2024.
- Business data integration is growing: nearly half (48%) of media and entertainment organizations are merging customer, HR, and operations data with telemetry to gain real-time visibility and quantify business impact during outages.
















