Being progressive on observability
Progressive manages an incredible amount of data, and the insurer needs unified visibility into all of it. Continuity is key. A thirty-second processing delay can rob customers of critical information they need while costing the company millions of dollars in lost time and revenue.
In the wake of a disaster or accident, Progressive’s Claims application processes are a lifeline — the company handles roughly 15 million web requests each day, protecting over $120 billion in market capitalization. Splunk APM’s full-fidelity tracing captured each of the app’s 8 million traces — adding up to 50 million spans — while having little to no impact on compute performance. On this huge volume of data, Splunk’s impact is just a 10-millisecond page response, with less than 1% on both CPU and memory processing.
And while being a modern insurance provider means relying on data and technology, it is still very much rooted in human empathy, and supporting people in their greatest times of need. “Our goal is to get you in and out of that claims process as quickly as possible so you can get back to your life, get that car payment ready to go for the claims process, get back to your job, and put this behind you,” says Kyle Sickels, Progressive’s claims monitoring capability leader.
The claims organization improved their understanding of the user experience with real user monitoring (RUM) in Splunk Observability Cloud which allows them to identify and prioritize when and where to work on a web app. Meanwhile, Splunk Observability Cloud provides real-time insights to help spot and resolve anomalies, successfully preventing disruptions, latency, and other critical issues.
Splunk’s application performance monitoring (APM) capability is also essential for maximizing revenue. It provides critical business continuity so Progressive can deliver vital services smoothly with no interruptions. Today, the team uses APM to determine the application error rate, which errors are occurring or if those errors are new, and the overall health of the applications. For business leaders, APM helps measure the quality at which they’re delivering those applications.
“When you have a company the size of Progressive, approaching $65 billion in annual revenue, with 10 minutes, one hour, two hours of outage, there are real dollars there,” says Jon Moore, domain architect at Progressive. “So if we can show that monitoring was able to pick up prior to a service disruption, we're able to show that the investments we make in the monitoring tool are giving the business value.”