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Redefining APM

Ishan Mukherjee
New Relic

Application performance monitoring (APM) has historically involved a lot of hunting and educated guesswork. If performance deteriorated, monitoring teams would investigate factors like CPU, RAM and storage availability in hopes of identifying the culprit. This often led to dead ends because the root of performance problems was somewhere else. Disparate data points were often displayed on multiple screens, requiring operators to correlate information manually. And problems that weren't easily identified by infrastructure monitoring were nearly impossible to detect.

APM is being redefined by innovations in performance monitoring and a new perspective that places user experience at the center of the equation

Now, APM is being redefined by innovations in performance monitoring and a new perspective that places user experience at the center of the equation. Instead of requiring operators to constantly query the system about its status, modern observability solutions continually display the state of the system as part of normal operations. Visualizations enable operators to see problems quickly, in some cases even before they manifest themselves in a degraded user experience. In short, traditional APM is reactive while modern approaches are proactive and predictive.

There is a clear demand for APM's insights. According to New Relic's 2023 Observability Forecast, more than half (53%) of survey respondents had deployed APM, a 17% increase year-over-year. Nine in 10 (89%) expected to deploy APM by 2026. The monitoring is working. More than two-thirds (69%) of those who currently deploy APM said their organization's MTTR improved since adopting observability, including 35% who said it improved by 25% or more.

Observability solutions now peer into the deepest recesses of applications, uncovering every factor that may affect performance. These include such new cloud-native variables as the health of software containers, tool- and language-specific characteristics, connectors to external data sources, custom integrations, and application program interfaces.

A Complete Picture

The latest generation of APM tools can trace an intricate web of interconnected services to unmask the threads of communication that tie them together. Auto-discovery identifies new applications and code deployments and automatically incorporates them into the fabric of services being monitored. Machine learning observes the factors that affect the performance of individual applications over time and learns to look for changes that presage a slowdown or outage.

A critical feature of today's solutions is an integrated dashboard that enables operators to view such useful troubleshooting aids as distributed traces — which track interactions within complex systems — alongside APM telemetry. They look for significant incidents that influence performance and continually aggregate log information into clusters that allow patterns to be observed without the need for administrators to search or scan through thousands of log entries. Coordinated timestamps correlate changes in performance with possible causal factors and enable operators to drill down on anomalies for problem detection and resolution.

The result is a view of application performance from both above and below. At the center of the operator view are the metrics that are most critical to the user experience, such as response and load times. Alongside that are summaries of alerts, deployments, service levels and vulnerabilities, which are the most critical factors in diagnosing performance problems.

If a spike in response times is detected, operators can scroll down to look at elements of infrastructure, dependencies, databases, containers and other services. By viewing distributed traces alongside APM telemetry, they can quickly identify the root cause of service issues and navigate to the relevant trace to further investigate the problem. They can even drill into the application code to spot problematic changes and see when they were introduced.

This doesn't mean traditional metrics are no longer needed. They are still a great way to identify common infrastructure problems such as bad memory or a corrupt database table. The difference with redefined APM is that the customer experience is at the center and all the factors that affect it are tied to that crucial metric. The latest solutions also enable rich integrations with third-party solutions as well as connections to the vast collection of APIs, software development kits and tools available in the OpenTelemetry observability framework.

Organizations don't have to worry about their APM solutions becoming obsolete but can focus on what really matters: Delighting users.

Ishan Mukherjee is SVP of Growth at New Relic

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Redefining APM

Ishan Mukherjee
New Relic

Application performance monitoring (APM) has historically involved a lot of hunting and educated guesswork. If performance deteriorated, monitoring teams would investigate factors like CPU, RAM and storage availability in hopes of identifying the culprit. This often led to dead ends because the root of performance problems was somewhere else. Disparate data points were often displayed on multiple screens, requiring operators to correlate information manually. And problems that weren't easily identified by infrastructure monitoring were nearly impossible to detect.

APM is being redefined by innovations in performance monitoring and a new perspective that places user experience at the center of the equation

Now, APM is being redefined by innovations in performance monitoring and a new perspective that places user experience at the center of the equation. Instead of requiring operators to constantly query the system about its status, modern observability solutions continually display the state of the system as part of normal operations. Visualizations enable operators to see problems quickly, in some cases even before they manifest themselves in a degraded user experience. In short, traditional APM is reactive while modern approaches are proactive and predictive.

There is a clear demand for APM's insights. According to New Relic's 2023 Observability Forecast, more than half (53%) of survey respondents had deployed APM, a 17% increase year-over-year. Nine in 10 (89%) expected to deploy APM by 2026. The monitoring is working. More than two-thirds (69%) of those who currently deploy APM said their organization's MTTR improved since adopting observability, including 35% who said it improved by 25% or more.

Observability solutions now peer into the deepest recesses of applications, uncovering every factor that may affect performance. These include such new cloud-native variables as the health of software containers, tool- and language-specific characteristics, connectors to external data sources, custom integrations, and application program interfaces.

A Complete Picture

The latest generation of APM tools can trace an intricate web of interconnected services to unmask the threads of communication that tie them together. Auto-discovery identifies new applications and code deployments and automatically incorporates them into the fabric of services being monitored. Machine learning observes the factors that affect the performance of individual applications over time and learns to look for changes that presage a slowdown or outage.

A critical feature of today's solutions is an integrated dashboard that enables operators to view such useful troubleshooting aids as distributed traces — which track interactions within complex systems — alongside APM telemetry. They look for significant incidents that influence performance and continually aggregate log information into clusters that allow patterns to be observed without the need for administrators to search or scan through thousands of log entries. Coordinated timestamps correlate changes in performance with possible causal factors and enable operators to drill down on anomalies for problem detection and resolution.

The result is a view of application performance from both above and below. At the center of the operator view are the metrics that are most critical to the user experience, such as response and load times. Alongside that are summaries of alerts, deployments, service levels and vulnerabilities, which are the most critical factors in diagnosing performance problems.

If a spike in response times is detected, operators can scroll down to look at elements of infrastructure, dependencies, databases, containers and other services. By viewing distributed traces alongside APM telemetry, they can quickly identify the root cause of service issues and navigate to the relevant trace to further investigate the problem. They can even drill into the application code to spot problematic changes and see when they were introduced.

This doesn't mean traditional metrics are no longer needed. They are still a great way to identify common infrastructure problems such as bad memory or a corrupt database table. The difference with redefined APM is that the customer experience is at the center and all the factors that affect it are tied to that crucial metric. The latest solutions also enable rich integrations with third-party solutions as well as connections to the vast collection of APIs, software development kits and tools available in the OpenTelemetry observability framework.

Organizations don't have to worry about their APM solutions becoming obsolete but can focus on what really matters: Delighting users.

Ishan Mukherjee is SVP of Growth at New Relic

Hot Topics

The Latest

In MEAN TIME TO INSIGHT Episode 12, Shamus McGillicuddy, VP of Research, Network Infrastructure and Operations, at EMA discusses purchasing new network observability solutions.... 

There's an image problem with mobile app security. While it's critical for highly regulated industries like financial services, it is often overlooked in others. This usually comes down to development priorities, which typically fall into three categories: user experience, app performance, and app security. When dealing with finite resources such as time, shifting priorities, and team skill sets, engineering teams often have to prioritize one over the others. Usually, security is the odd man out ...

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Guardsquare

IT outages, caused by poor-quality software updates, are no longer rare incidents but rather frequent occurrences, directly impacting over half of US consumers. According to the 2024 Software Failure Sentiment Report from Harness, many now equate these failures to critical public health crises ...

In just a few months, Google will again head to Washington DC and meet with the government for a two-week remedy trial to cement the fate of what happens to Chrome and its search business in the face of ongoing antitrust court case(s). Or, Google may proactively decide to make changes, putting the power in its hands to outline a suitable remedy. Regardless of the outcome, one thing is sure: there will be far more implications for AI than just a shift in Google's Search business ... 

Image
Chrome

In today's fast-paced digital world, Application Performance Monitoring (APM) is crucial for maintaining the health of an organization's digital ecosystem. However, the complexities of modern IT environments, including distributed architectures, hybrid clouds, and dynamic workloads, present significant challenges ... This blog explores the challenges of implementing application performance monitoring (APM) and offers strategies for overcoming them ...

Service disruptions remain a critical concern for IT and business executives, with 88% of respondents saying they believe another major incident will occur in the next 12 months, according to a study from PagerDuty ...

IT infrastructure (on-premises, cloud, or hybrid) is becoming larger and more complex. IT management tools need data to drive better decision making and more process automation to complement manual intervention by IT staff. That is why smart organizations invest in the systems and strategies needed to make their IT infrastructure more resilient in the event of disruption, and why many are turning to application performance monitoring (APM) in conjunction with high availability (HA) clusters ...

In today's data-driven world, the management of databases has become increasingly complex and critical. The following are findings from Redgate's 2025 The State of the Database Landscape report ...

With the 2027 deadline for SAP S/4HANA migrations fast approaching, organizations are accelerating their transition plans ... For organizations that intend to remain on SAP ECC in the near-term, the focus has shifted to improving operational efficiencies and meeting demands for faster cycle times ...

As applications expand and systems intertwine, performance bottlenecks, quality lapses, and disjointed pipelines threaten progress. To stay ahead, leading organizations are turning to three foundational strategies: developer-first observability, API platform adoption, and sustainable test growth ...