Tech

The tools are ready. So why are most cloud native teams still running three observability stacks?

Cloud-native teams are drowning in tool sprawl, clinging to Prometheus, Jaeger, and Loki despite OpenTelemetry’s promise of unified telemetry—because vendor lock-in, legacy dashboards, and the sheer inertia of existing pipelines make consolidation a political, not technical, battle. The result? Three observability stacks where one should suffice, each siloed by team fiefdoms and the sunk-cost fallacy of custom integrations.

A February 2026 survey of 407 cloud native practitioners—DevOps engineers, SREs, platform engineers, and engineering leaders across more than 20 industries—reveals a persistent gap between available tooling and actual deployment. Despite mature, interoperable projects like OpenTelemetry, Prometheus, Jaeger, and Loki, nearly 46.7% of organizations still operate two to three observability tools in parallel. Only 7.4% have achieved a single unified observability experience.

The core problem: organizational inertia, not missing features

The survey data suggests the fragmentation isn't primarily a tooling gap. Projects like OpenTelemetry provide a vendor-agnostic instrumentation layer across languages and runtimes. The challenge is organizational: teams adopt tools incrementally, across different time periods and for different use cases, and the integration work required to unify these streams doesn't happen on its own. When asked what single improvement would most benefit their observability setup, the lack of a unified solution ranked first across all company sizes, from startups to large enterprises.

Setup friction outweighs feature gaps

Teams aren't struggling with what their observability tools can do—they're struggling with the effort to configure and maintain them. 54% of respondents identified dashboard and alert configuration as their number-one setup challenge, ranking above any missing product capability. Integration complexity followed at 46.4%, and data pipeline setup at 33.2%. In cloud native environments, this friction shows up at boundaries between systems: connecting OpenTelemetry collectors to backend analysis systems, propagating trace context across service meshes, ensuring log correlation with trace IDs, or configuring alert rules that reflect dynamic container-based workloads.

AI-assisted observability: demand with realistic expectations

59.5% of respondents want AI-powered anomaly detection as a built-in capability. Automated incident summaries and predictive alerting followed as top priorities. However, 48.3% want human oversight maintained before any fully autonomous remediation action. This isn't a rejection of AI-assisted automation—it reflects a measured response to production system complexity. The workflows that add most value surface anomalies, correlate signals across telemetry types, and generate actionable context, while leaving remediation decisions in human hands until automated responses are well-understood.

Integration quality drives long-term adoption

81% of teams report being satisfied with their current observability setup, yet 63% remain open to switching. The primary driver of that openness? Integration quality, cited by 55.5% of respondents as the top reason they would consider switching—ahead of features, cost, and support. Teams that have invested in OpenTelemetry-native instrumentation and operate within an ecosystem of interoperable, standards-based tools appear to build a more durable foundation than those relying on proprietary integrations.

Bottom line

The cloud native observability ecosystem has mature standards and projects. The real work ahead is closing the gap between what's technically possible and what teams can realistically deploy, configure, and operate with confidence. Community investment in better operator tooling, improved default configurations, and reference architectures for common stack combinations would lower time-to-value for the majority of teams that aren't yet running a unified observability experience.

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