What is Digital Experience Monitoring?

Digital experience monitoring (DEM) is the evolution of application performance monitoring (APM) and end user experience monitoring (EUEM) into a comprehensive tool that analyzes the efficacy of an enterprise’s applications and services.

Essentially, DEM combines these functions and goes beyond both — all to ensure consistency across the customer experience.

We can easily understand DEM from this definition via Gartner:

“DEM technologies monitor the availability, performance and quality of an end-user experience when using a Cloud, SaaS or web application. This can include employees such as users accessing their intranet or corporate CRM website and customers such as customers of a retail website. DEM technologies seek to observe and model users’ behavior as a continuous flow of interactions in the form of user journeys.”

Emerging in recent years, the DEM discipline that is an essential element of one of three functional dimensions of APM, which includes:

In today’s digital world, a seamless user experience is the most significant aspect of driving customer behavior. DEM allows an enterprise to optimize the online components of their business, from digital marketing to web security and beyond, by utilizing real user monitoring to identify performance issues and improve processes.

Why is digital experience monitoring important?

Today, the moving parts involved with running a business are more intertwined than ever before. The result of this synergy is a convenient and cohesive customer journey — as long as all of the business processes involved on the backend are operating efficiently and effectively.

However, an unintended consequence of this finely woven network of services is the fragmentation that occurs behind the scenes. More often than not, IT operations are less likely to be maintained by one centralized, collaborative team. Instead, multiple teams manage the work associated with specialized components, such as:

Each of these teams works independently of each other and with their own system of communication and technical jargon. Ideally, these teams operate without friction to synthesize the processes the businesses need, just like a finely tuned machine.

DEM is a real-time monitoring tool that helps the "machine" of your enterprise run smoothly by:

  1. Identifying any vulnerabilities that contribute to outages, downtime, or disruptions to the user experience, such as slow page load times.
  2. Assessing the root cause of issues that affect performance while recommending solutions.

A combination of human and machine-initiated interactions provides the most comprehensive solution to performance monitoring. This is why many online businesses are moving away from solely traditional end user monitoring in order to incorporate DEM, which utilizes information from both.

(Try Digital Experience Monitoring, part of Splunk Observability Cloud, offering monitoring solutions for all enterprise needs.)

Benefits of digital experience monitoring

Implementing experience monitoring solutions is crucial to any enterprise undergoing a digital transformation. Streamlining the digital processes associated with running a business creates a solid foundation for:

Although humans still primarily interact with applications, an increasing number of machines exchange information via artificial intelligence.

A perfect example is The Internet of Things (IoT), which is the embedding of computing devices in everyday objects, allowing those objects to send and receive information. DEM monitors the performance data of these processes to ensure ongoing functionality.

The ability to predict and adapt are essential today. Customers aren't aware of the backend challenges of keeping the various cogs moving smoothly; they only know how they feel interacting with the different facets of your business, from mobile apps to web applications to social pages. Customers expect quality and consistency at every level, no matter how distributed your systems may be.

The metrics offered by an experience monitoring strategy allows businesses to identify and mitigate issues that may negatively impact the customer experience — and consequently, the reputation of the organization itself.

(Related reading: machine data and machine customers.)

A Typical Microservice Architecture map

Types of digital experience monitoring tools

There is any number of issues that can result in frustrating user experiences — and not all of them are within your control. For instance, glitches could be:

Understanding why a problem is occurring is the first step to solving it or offering resources to the user, and DEM tools can help identify problems and offer solutions.

Testing an application prior to release can be challenging without users to stumble upon causes for concern, but no one wants to release a product full of errors either. In this scenario, you can use two monitoring approaches:

(Related reading: synthetic monitoring vs. real user monitoring & user engagement metrics.)

Challenges of digital experience monitoring

While it’s impossible for any human to be everywhere all at once, DEM gets us a bit closer to that sort of understanding. The greatest challenges of delivering the best performance include divergent technology and division of responsibilities. DEM can facilitate with the associated issues of both.

Divergent tech

The broad spectrum of user technology is a logistical nightmare for DevOps. There’s of course the differences in operating systems, both desktop and mobile. Then all the updates required for all of them to operate at an optimal state. Many users rely on more than one device, perhaps across a variety of operating systems, a range of hardware limitations and then inconsistencies in user behavior, such as using a web application versus a mobile app — and on top of all of that, connection types ranging from wi-fi to cellular data.

Division of responsibilities

While it's all too easy to blame users for using wide-ranging technologies, potential issues lurk on your own servers as well.

As microservices become more popular in terms of project architecture, it's easier to develop a kink in the communication pipeline among your own teams, and it can be difficult to track down the problem when it's coming from within. It's more difficult to see your digital services as a unified tool when responsibilities are divided. Sometimes that division becomes clear to your users, too.

How to create your DEM strategy

Digitization is changing not only our world, but also the objects within it. We’ve got smart everything: smart phones, smart cars, smart televisions, smart appliances, and more. Whether the technology has AI embedded in it or not (yet), customers still expect a seamless experience. Connectivity, monitoring, and applications are required for many objects and most enterprises — DEM exists to fulfill a growing need.

Upgrade your existing APM suite by incorporating digital experience monitoring to prepare for the advancement of technology and to create more ease as your business interfaces with its users and expands into additional platforms.

Related Articles

LLM Monitoring: A Comprehensive Guide on the Whys & Hows of Monitoring Large Language Models
Learn
6 Minute Read

LLM Monitoring: A Comprehensive Guide on the Whys & Hows of Monitoring Large Language Models

Discover the ultimate guide to monitoring Large Language Models (LLMs). Learn the whys, hows, key metrics, and strategies for safe and reliable performance.
What is Predictive Modeling? An Introduction
Learn
8 Minute Read

What is Predictive Modeling? An Introduction

Learn the fundamentals of predictive modeling, its role in analytics, and its applications in IT, cybersecurity, business, and advanced machine learning.
QoS Explained: Quality of Service in Networks
Learn
8 Minute Read

QoS Explained: Quality of Service in Networks

Learn how QoS (Quality of Service) ensures reliable network performance by prioritizing critical traffic, reducing latency, and managing congestion.
Top Cybersecurity Trends in 2026: 9 Trends to Watch
Learn
8 Minute Read

Top Cybersecurity Trends in 2026: 9 Trends to Watch

Discover the top cybersecurity trends shaping 2026, highlighting key insights and strategies to help organizations stay resilient.
The Role of SCA in Software Security: The Software Composition Analysis Complete Guide
Learn
10 Minute Read

The Role of SCA in Software Security: The Software Composition Analysis Complete Guide

Learn all about SCA. Software composition analysis is a type of security testing that identifies the open-source and third-party components used in modern software.
Server Monitoring Today: Why Monitoring Your Servers Matters & How to Approach It
Learn
6 Minute Read

Server Monitoring Today: Why Monitoring Your Servers Matters & How to Approach It

Today, we’ll cover server monitoring tools and services including the value they bring to an enterprise, and how to select the right system.
The Software Development Lifecycle: The Most Common SDLC Models
Learn
8 Minute Read

The Software Development Lifecycle: The Most Common SDLC Models

Explore the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC), its stages, importance, and popular models like Agile, Waterfall, and Iterative, for efficient software creation.
Active vs. Passive Monitoring: What’s The Difference?
Learn
6 Minute Read

Active vs. Passive Monitoring: What’s The Difference?

Active and passive monitoring: which one is for you? Let’s look at the two methods, along with their use cases, data volumes, and control over the data.
Data Encryption Standard: What Is DES and How Does It Work?
Learn
5 Minute Read

Data Encryption Standard: What Is DES and How Does It Work?

Learn about the Data Encryption Standard (DES), its history, how it works, key features, limitations, and its evolution to modern encryption like AES.