The 2026 State of Enterprise Application Lifecycle Management survey makes one thing plain: production issues with enterprise applications are recurring costs that measure in millions. Over half of IT leaders report that configuration or process changes cause production issues at least sometimes, often, or almost always, and many place the annual cost of those incidents between $500K and $5M or more. For a CIO and other executive leaders, this is a material drag on operating margin.
At the same time, 64% of organizations now allocate between 21% and 50% of their total IT budget to implementing and managing enterprise applications. Yet, despite the fact that organizations are making significant investments in managing their apps, they still have costly outages when changes go live.
Why Production Issues Are Still Endemic
The survey points to a structural imbalance between the pace of change and the operating model used to manage it.
- Cloud vendors and internal teams are shipping constantly.
65% of organizations manage three or more major releases per year across their key applications, and 8% handle 12 or more. That is effectively a continuous-change environment.
- Your teams are flying semi-blind.
Across all strategic burdens, “difficulty assessing the impact of changes and updates” is ranked number one, ahead of cost, staffing constraints, and even integration complexity. In other words, changes are being approved and deployed without a clear, data-driven view of where they will break things.
- The most expensive parts of the lifecycle are also the most fragile.
Integrations are the top cost driver (61%), followed by ongoing management of those integrations (37%), configuration (34%), and testing (34%). Those are precisely the areas most likely to trigger an outage when something goes wrong.
These are symptoms of an outdated operating model for enterprise applications in a cloud-native, integration-heavy world.
What This Means in Business Terms
The survey’s findings translate into four core business realities.
- Run-the-business spend is crowding out change-the-business investment.
With 64% of organizations dedicating up to half their IT budget just to implement and manage enterprise applications, a growing share of the technology spend is locked into maintenance, releases, and firefighting. That leaves less room for innovation, new revenue-enabling capabilities, or strategic acquisitions of digital assets.
- Operational risk is under-managed relative to its cost.
43% of leaders say reducing implementation and operational risk is an “extremely important” outcome, yet more than half still experience regular production issues from changes. The risk-adjusted cost of each release remains high, and the variability in outcomes makes forecasting and performance commitments difficult.
- Consulting and overtime are becoming hidden tax categories.
Integrations, configuration, and testing, which are the top cost drivers, frequently require bursts of specialist consulting and internal overtime around each release. Those peaks don’t necessarily show up as a single budget line, but they accumulate as a tax on every transformation initiative.
- AI expectations are high, and they are pointed at savings, not just speed.
83% of respondents say they are completely or very likely to adopt agentic AI for managing their enterprise applications, and 69% estimate it could save between 5,000 and 30,000 hours annually. When asked how they would use freed resources, leaders prioritize employee experience, new business capabilities, backlog reduction, and reduced consulting and operational costs. That is a clear mandate to shift from labor-based scaling to automation-based scaling.
In short, the status quo is a compound-interest problem: every year you add more apps, more integrations, and more releases, but you are still managing them with processes built for a slower, less interconnected environment.
How Opkey Reduces Business Risk
Opkey is built to address exactly the areas the survey identifies as high-cost, high-risk: integrations, configuration changes, testing, and release velocity. For executive leaders, its value shows up in fewer incidents, reduced external spend, and more capacity for strategic work.
Reduce the cost and frequency of change-related incidents
Opkey automatically discovers end-to-end business processes across applications like Oracle, Workday, Salesforce, ServiceNow, and SAP, and maps them to the tests required for each release. When a change is proposed or a vendor releases a new update, Opkey’s agentic engine identifies which configurations, processes, and integrations are impacted and triggers targeted, automated tests before anything hits production. This directly attacks the top strategic burden in the survey—difficulty assessing change impact—and reduces the 52% of organizations that currently see frequent production issues from changes.
Financial impact: fewer outages, shorter incident durations, and less lost productivity across finance, HR, supply chain, and customer-facing functions.
Convert manual and consulting-heavy testing into autonomous coverage
Because Opkey auto-generates and maintains regression tests from observed business processes, your teams no longer need to hand-author scripts for each release or pay consultants to rebuild tests after every major change. This aligns with the 56% of leaders who want to reduce or significantly reduce their reliance on SIs and consultants, as well as those who see testing and configuration as top cost drivers.
Financial impact: lower SI invoices, reduced overtime around release windows, and more predictable release costs.
Bring integration risk under control
Given that 61% of respondents name integrations as their highest cost driver—and 37% highlight ongoing integration management—Opkey’s ability to validate cross-application flows is critical. It tests real business processes that span multiple systems (for example, order-to-cash, hire-to-retire, procure-to-pay) so that integration failures are caught in pre-production rather than in the middle of a quarter-end close or a peak sales period.
Financial impact: fewer revenue-impacting integration outages and lower spend on emergency fixes and war rooms.
Turn AI expectations into measurable savings
The survey shows that 83% of organizations are likely to adopt agentic AI for lifecycle management and expect to save thousands of hours per year, redeploying those hours into employee experience, new capabilities, and backlog reduction. Opkey operationalizes this vision by using AI not just as a chatbot but as a set of agents that discover processes, generate tests, analyze impact, and maintain documentation automatically.
Financial impact: concrete hour savings that you can quantify, report, and reallocate, plus a credible story to your board about how AI is reducing your run-the-business cost base.

