Our 2025 Data Observability Trends and Predictions
Based on industry movements and customer conversations, here’s what we expect in the year ahead.
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Welcome to 2025. Last year brought rapid shifts in AI, enterprise adoption, and the evolving role of data observability. But what’s next? Based on industry movements and customer conversations, here’s what we expect in the year ahead.
1. Observability Must Work Across Modern and Legacy Stacks
While cloud adoption continues, legacy systems aren’t disappearing anytime soon. Enterprises need observability solutions that can seamlessly monitor Snowflake, Databricks, and modern data platforms alongside on-prem systems. The focus in 2025 is on connectivity and precision, ensuring observability tools provide insights where they’re needed, without unnecessary overhead.
2. Snowflake and Databricks: More Overlap, More Complexity
Snowflake and Databricks are no longer separate worlds. As both platforms expand their capabilities, enterprises are finding themselves running workloads across both. This is increasing demand for observability that spans hybrid environments, tracks performance differences, and integrates seamlessly across multiple platforms.
3. AI in Observability: Smarter Assistance, Not Just Automation
AI is making observability faster and more efficient, but it’s not replacing human oversight. The real value? AI-assisted workflows will soon help data teams focus on critical issues by filtering noise, summarizing data trends, and identifying root causes more quickly. In 2025, expect AI to become a more powerful assistant rather than a hands-off automation tool.
4. Data Quality and Observability Are Becoming One
Static, rule-based data quality checks are no longer enough by themselves. Enterprises are moving toward more adaptive monitoring, where AI-driven anomaly detection complements traditional rule-based approaches. Observability is playing a bigger role in ensuring data trust at scale, making it a necessary investment for teams responsible for data reliability.
5. Build vs. Buy: The Case for Purpose-Built Observability
In past years, many enterprises have believed they could build their own observability tools. Today, commercial observability solutions have outpaced what internal teams can maintain. Solutions like Bigeye provide automation and cross-platform integrations that are difficult to replicate in-house. The question for 2025 isn’t whether or not to buy– it’s which platform best aligns with your organization’s needs.
6. The AI Cost Equation: Efficiency Takes Priority
AI adoption skyrocketed in 2024, but enterprises are now realizing how expensive it is to run large-scale AI workloads. In 2025, observability will be a key tool in tracking AI resource consumption, optimizing performance, and reducing unnecessary spend. Expect to see FinOps strategies become a major priority for data and engineering teams managing AI infrastructure.
7. Traditional Observability Vendors Are Entering the Space—But with Trade-Offs
Infrastructure monitoring giants are starting to move into data observability. However, traditional observability solutions weren’t built to handle data lineage, governance, or advanced business logic, especially not across multiple platforms. While competition is increasing, purpose-built data observability platforms remain the best option for teams needing deep insights into data reliability, pipeline performance, and anomaly detection.
What This Means for You
Data observability in 2025 is about precision, automation, and seamless integration with your existing stack. The focus isn’t just on detecting issues—it’s on helping teams resolve them faster, reduce costs, and maintain trust in analytics.
Looking for a data observability platform that helps you stay ahead? Check out Bigeye and request a demo today.
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