Written by: Girish Shenoy
Vice President – Technical Services, Enterprise Solutions
The New CIO Mandate
Uptime Is a Lie
Your systems are up. Your dashboards are green. So why is your workforce frustrated?
For decades, CIOs lived by SLAs. Ninety-nine point nine percent availability. Mean time to resolution. Packet loss. These metrics tell us if the machine is breathing. They do not tell us if the business is winning.
Here is the uncomfortable truth: A fully available system can still be a productivity disaster.
Slow apps. Clunky workflows. Login fatigue. None of these triggers an SLA alert. But each one steals minutes from your best people. Multiplied across thousands of employees, you are bleeding hours and competitive advantage.
The old scorecard is broken. It measures infrastructure health, not human output.
Enter XLAs or experience level agreements. They flip the question from “Is the system working?” to “Can our people do their best work?”
This is not about soft metrics. It is about hard business outcomes, it’s about productivity and retention. Speed to market. The shift is underway. Forward-thinking CIOs are already moving beyond uptime. They are measuring experience. So why your best talent will quit because of slow software, and how SLAs never saw it coming.
The 11-Minute Leak
Your employees lose eleven minutes per day to technology friction. Every single day.
That is the finding from recent digital experience research. Slow app launches. Authentication loops. Laggy video calls. None of it shows up on your SLA dashboard.
Here is what does show up: 99.95% availability. Gold stars all around. But let us do the math. Eleven minutes daily. Two hundred forty working days per year. Forty-four hours annually. One full work week lost per employee. For a thousand knowledge workers, that is 44,000 hours of productivity vanished. Not into strategic work. Into staring at spinning cursors.
SLAs cannot see this. They measure uptime, not output. They track infrastructure, not irritation.
Your top performers feel it most. They are the ones pushing the system hardest. They are also the ones with the shortest tolerance for friction. When your best engineers spend fifteen minutes each morning waiting for their development environment to load, they do not blame the network. They update their LinkedIn profile.
The experience economy has entered the workplace. Employees now expect consumer-grade performance at work. Anything less signals disrespect for their time. XLAs track what matters: task completion rates, perceived speed, and frustration moments. They give you a dashboard for human productivity, not just server health.