PTP helps teams understand AIOps as a practical way to reduce the time people spend on repetitive operational work. In real environments, that means correlating alerts, routing incidents intelligently, and automating selected remediation steps so operations teams can focus on the issues that actually matter.
In plain English
What AIOps means in practical terms
AIOps is operational intelligence that helps IT teams cut through noise, reduce manual effort, and respond faster to real issues. Instead of forcing analysts to sort through hundreds of alerts, AIOps helps surface the events that need action and supports the workflows needed to respond.
At a glance
What AIOps helps teams do
- ✓ Correlate alerts to reduce noise and event volume
- ✓ Route incidents to the right person, system, or workflow
- ✓ Support self-healing and selected remediation steps
- ✓ Apply dynamic thresholds, suppression, and trend context
- ✓ Map service dependencies across applications and infrastructure
- ✓ Improve visibility across on-prem, AWS, and Azure environments
Short answer
What is AIOps?
AIOps is the use of intelligence and automation to make IT operations faster, clearer, and less manual. It helps reduce repetitive operational tasks by correlating alerts, identifying meaningful incidents, triggering notifications, and in some cases initiating remediation.
For IT and cloud operations teams, the value is simple: fewer noisy alerts, faster incident response, better context, and stronger visibility across complex environments.
Watch the video
Video: what AIOps looks like in modern IT operations
Watch the discussion on how AIOps helps reduce alert noise, improve routing, support automation, and give teams better visibility into service impact.
How it works
How AIOps reduces operational workload
1. Alert correlation
AIOps can correlate related alerts so teams are not overwhelmed by volume. Instead of forcing analysts to inspect hundreds of signals, the platform helps isolate the core event that actually needs attention.
2. Intelligent routing
AIOps can create tickets, trigger notifications, or route incidents to the right person automatically. That reduces delay between detection and action and helps teams meet service expectations more consistently.
3. Self-healing automation
AIOps can automate selected remediation steps, such as restarting a service or running a predefined workflow. This reduces manual effort and speeds up response when common issues appear.
Modern capabilities
What modern AIOps platforms do beyond basic monitoring
Modern AIOps is not just about collecting alerts. It also helps operations teams push monitoring templates to discovered assets, establish baseline monitoring quickly, and apply smarter context to events as they happen.
- ✓ Dynamic thresholding based on behavior and seasonality
- ✓ Delta comparisons to add context to changing metrics
- ✓ Suppression during maintenance windows or approved changes
- ✓ Faster detection of meaningful issues versus expected noise
- ✓ Automation workflows tied to incidents and operational policies
Service visibility
Service maps help teams see what is actually affected
One of the most useful AIOps capabilities is service mapping. Instead of treating infrastructure components as isolated parts, service maps show how systems, applications, and dependencies connect.
That makes it easier for operations teams to move from an alert to the actual business or application impact. When an incident happens, teams can see which service is affected, what components support it, and where to focus first.
Hybrid cloud operations
Why AIOps matters across AWS, Azure, and on-prem infrastructure
AIOps is especially valuable in hybrid environments where operations teams need visibility across cloud platforms and on-prem systems. It gives teams one place to monitor assets, track performance, view trends, and correlate events across the full environment.
That matters because cloud providers manage the underlying platform, but organizations still need monitoring and management inside their own environments. Without that visibility, it becomes much harder to standardize, optimize, and troubleshoot business-critical services.
Platform example
How platforms like OpsRamp support AIOps workflows
Platforms such as OpsRamp help operations teams centralize monitoring, correlate events, customize templates by customer or workload, and manage infrastructure from a more unified view.
For managed services teams and internal IT organizations alike, that kind of platform can help turn scattered tooling into a more consistent operational workflow.
Business value
The business benefits of AIOps for IT operations teams
- ✓ Reduces alert fatigue and operational noise
- ✓ Improves incident routing and response speed
- ✓ Helps teams focus on meaningful events
- ✓ Strengthens visibility into service performance
- ✓ Supports more consistent operations across hybrid infrastructure
- ✓ Creates a better foundation for automation and operational scale
Related video
Also watch: why AIOps matters for alert fatigue, faster triage, and lower operational risk
This related video explains why AIOps has become more important as IT teams deal with growing volumes of alerts, cross-platform infrastructure, and rising operational complexity. It covers how AIOps helps reduce alert fatigue, improve workflow automation, correlate multiple alerts into one actionable incident, and support faster root-cause identification across cloud and infrastructure environments.
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