Downtime is one of the most visible failures in any organization. When systems stop working, productivity drops, frustration rises, and trust is tested.
In January 2023, a contractor working on a database within the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration accidentally deleted a file. The result was a nationwide air travel halt that delayed or canceled more than 10,000 flights. While extreme, the incident highlights a broader truth: critical disruptions are often triggered by small issues that escalate faster than anyone expects.
For most organizations, downtime builds quietly through slow applications, unstable devices, and small interruptions—but modern IT leaders are shifting their focus to improving the digital employee experience (DEX), spotting issues early and preventing disruptions before they impact work.
Downtime is an outcome, not the starting point
Downtime is typically defined as any period when a device, application, system, or network is unavailable or not operating as intended. In practice, it’s what happens when technology no longer supports people.
Consider a retail environment where checkout systems become sluggish. Transactions still go through, but lines grow longer, and customers become impatient. Long before systems fail completely, productivity and experience are already suffering.
This is why downtime shouldn't be treated as a purely technical event because it’s the result of friction that often starts much earlier.
Why reactive IT no longer scales
Traditional IT support models are built around reaction. A problem occurs, a ticket is raised, and the team responds.
That approach worked when environments were simpler and mostly centralized. Today, IT teams support thousands of distributed endpoints, a growing number of applications, and increasingly high expectations from employees who rely on technology to do their jobs.
In today’s reality, tickets arrive too late. By the time users report an issue, productivity is already lost. Repeating the same fixes over and over also consumes time that could be spent improving systems more strategically.
To stay ahead, IT teams need a way to spot issues before they become incidents.
Where DEX enters the picture
DEX focuses on how employees actually experience their digital tools, from device performance and application stability to reliability and ease of use.
Instead of asking whether a system is technically available, DEX asks whether it works well for the people who depend on it.
By looking at experience signals alongside technical data, IT teams can:
- Identify friction early, before it escalates into downtime
- Understand which issues impact productivity the most
- Address root causes instead of repeatedly fixing symptoms
DEX turns invisible frustration into actionable insight for IT teams and gives them the context they need to act earlier and more confidently.
Shift left from firefighting to proactive IT
A proactive IT approach builds on DEX by shifting focus from fixing failures to preventing them.
This means continuously monitoring endpoints and applications, identifying patterns that signal risk, and resolving issues in the background whenever possible. Small interventions, applied early, can prevent major disruptions later.
TeamViewer ONE supports this shift by bringing DEX, endpoint visibility, and secure remote connectivity together in one platform. Instead of relying on disconnected tools and delayed tickets, IT teams gain a clearer view of where friction is building and how to address it.
The goal is not to add more complexity, but to simplify how IT sees, prioritizes, and resolves issues across the digital workplace.
When issues do happen, speed still matters
Proactive IT doesn’t eliminate incidents entirely. Hardware fails, updates break, and unexpected events still occur.
The differentiator is how prepared teams are to respond. With better visibility and secure remote access, issues can be diagnosed and resolved faster, often without requiring on-site support or prolonged disruption.
Preparation shortens recovery time and reduces the overall impact on employees and the business.
Why this shift matters now
The cost of downtime is well documented, from lost revenue and productivity to reputational damage and employee dissatisfaction. But the less visible cost is the constant friction that slows work even when systems are technically available.
Organizations that invest in experience-led IT are better equipped to manage complexity, scale support, and meet rising expectations. They spend less time reacting and more time shaping a digital workplace that actually works.
Move faster than friction
Downtime may be inevitable, but disruption doesn’t have to be. By focusing on digital employee experience and embracing a proactive IT mindset, organizations can detect earlier, automate faster, and fix forever.
Platforms like TeamViewer ONE help turn this approach into reality, enabling IT teams to fix issues before users feel them and create space for the work that drives the business forward.