A 668% three-year return.
Eight months to payback.
And the deals that bundle automation
are worth nearly 5× more.
Four findings on the business value of enterprise automation across North America and EMEA — drawn from IDC's in-depth study of Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform customers, Red Hat field deal data, and the hybrid-cloud strategy patterns shaping infrastructure decisions in 2026 — with a ten-point playbook for IT and platform leaders.
The year in one paragraph,
and twelve numbers.
Enterprise IT automation is producing the clearest return on investment in the modern infrastructure stack. Across the organizations IDC studied, Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform delivered a 668% three-year ROI with payback in just eight months — an average of $14.81M in annual benefits against a three-year discounted investment of $4.53M. The value is not concentrated in a single team; it compounds across network, cloud, configuration, development, and security functions as organizations expand from day-1 provisioning into day-2 operations.
The single largest value pool is resilience. Automation cut unplanned downtime by 61% and reduced outages by 46%, worth an average of $4.27M per organization per year — more than any other category. The second is staff leverage: network teams gained 38% efficiency, cloud and configuration teams 28% each, and development teams became 36% more productive, together freeing the equivalent of dozens of full-time roles to redeploy onto higher-value work.
The commercial finding is the one most likely to reshape go-to-market in NA and EMEA. In Red Hat field data, deals that bundle automation with virtualization are worth nearly 5× a virtualization-only deal — yet automation attaches to fewer than 4% of eligible deals today. The gap between proven value and current attach is the single biggest expansion opportunity in the portfolio.
The timing finding sharpens it. The VMware displacement moment is forcing thousands of NA and EMEA enterprises to re-platform their virtual estates onto KVM, OpenShift Virtualization, and hybrid cloud — and every migration creates a natural, urgent need for the automation control plane that manages the new environment.
$14.81M a year, and what drives it.
Average annual benefit per organization, decomposed into the four value pools IDC measured. Resilience and staff productivity dominate; the pattern holds across both NA and EMEA participants in the study.
The value compounds across teams.
Automation does not help one team — it helps every team that touches infrastructure. IDC measured efficiency gains and the equivalent full-time roles freed across five functions. The breadth is the point: the more teams adopt a single automation platform, the more silos collapse and the larger the cumulative return.
| Team / function | Primary benefit | Efficiency | FTEs freed | Annual value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 |
Unplanned downtime
Resilience & recovery
|
61% productivity loss recovered | 61% | 73.3 | $4.27M |
| 02 |
Development teams
App delivery
|
36% productivity gain, 43% more releases | 36% | 48.0 | $3.99M |
| 03 |
Network management
Planning, provisioning, edge
|
38% efficiency across responsibilities | 38% | 32.4 | $2.69M |
| 04 |
Public cloud management
Multi-cloud operations
|
28% efficiency, less over-provisioning | 28% | 20.2 | $1.68M |
| 05 |
Config & change management
Drift control, patching
|
28% efficiency, fewer rollbacks | 28% | 9.7 | $0.80M |
| 06 |
Compliance teams
Audit & governance
|
27% efficiency, automated audit trail | 27% | 1.8 | $0.10M |
Speed, not just savings
Beyond headcount leverage, automation collapses cycle times. Study participants deployed new compute resources 68% faster and managed network configuration changes 67% faster. One organization cut compute deployment from two business days to 90 minutes.
Development throughput rose in lockstep: 43% more applications released per year while requiring 45% less time per release.
Why breadth matters
The largest returns came from organizations that expanded automation beyond day-1 provisioning into day-2 operations — cybersecurity remediation, software deployment, patching, and self-healing incident response triggered directly from monitoring alerts.
Standardizing on one platform across NetOps, DevOps, SRE, and platform engineering is what breaks the silos and compounds the value.
The biggest value pool is not breaking.
Resilience is the single largest category of measured benefit. More robust, automated configuration means fewer outages, faster recovery, and far less lost productivity — the kind of value that shows up on the income statement, not just the IT budget.
| Unplanned downtime KPI | Before | With Ansible | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unplanned outages per year | 19.7 | 10.7 | 46% |
| Mean time to repair (hours) | 5.3 | 3.2 | 39% |
| Productive hours lost per user / yr | 4.7 | 1.8 | 61% |
| Value of lost productivity / org / yr | $8.37M | $3.24M | 61% |
One platform, two regional motions.
The value model holds across both regions, but the path to it differs. North America leads on cloud-management maturity and dev-team adoption; EMEA leads on compliance-driven and regulated-industry use, shaped by data-sovereignty and audit requirements. The figures below profile the typical engagement in each region.
The common thread across both regions is the hybrid-cloud reality. With roughly half of self-managed applications running in hybrid environments and only about one in ten in pure public cloud, the operational surface that automation has to cover — on-premises, multiple public clouds, and edge — is wider than ever. That breadth is precisely why a single, consistent automation control plane outperforms point tools in both NA and EMEA.
Bundled deals are worth nearly 5× more.
The most actionable commercial finding. In Red Hat field data, attaching automation to a virtualization deal transforms its economics — yet attach remains under 4%. Closing that gap is the largest near-term expansion lever in both regions.
The mechanism is straightforward. A virtualization or OpenShift deal sold alone captures only the platform line. When automation attaches, it brings adjacent security, compliance, and day-2 operations value with it — a single bundle can move a deal from a $300K platform sale to $550K of total ARR, a 1.5–2× multiplier on deal value.
Despite that, automation attaches to only 3.8% of eligible virtualization deals today. Doubling attach to the 8–10% range — by making automation a default option in every virtualization and OpenShift quote rather than a separate sale — is the single highest-leverage move available to NA and EMEA field teams.
The VMware displacement moment.
A once-in-a-decade market dynamic is reshaping the virtual estate across NA and EMEA. Enterprises moving off VMware face two simultaneous problems — and automation is the answer to both.
Enterprises leaving VMware confront infrastructure migration and operational complexity at the same time. As they re-platform virtual machines onto KVM, OpenShift Virtualization, or hybrid cloud, they inherit an environment that point tools were never designed to manage consistently. Automation becomes the control plane for the new estate — which is exactly why every displacement creates a natural, time-boxed attach point for Ansible.
The competitive window is open now and will not stay open. Four industry plays are driving the motion across both regions: financial services (large VM estates), telecommunications (network virtualization), government and public sector (compliance-driven infrastructure), and retail / eCommerce (container + VM hybrid). EMEA's sovereign and regulated-industry weighting makes the government and telco plays especially potent there; NA's scale makes financial services and retail the larger pools.
| Industry play | Primary driver | Strongest region | Relative pool |
|---|---|---|---|
| Financial services | Large VM estates, resilience mandates | NA lead | High |
| Telecommunications | Network virtualization, 5G / edge | EMEA lead | High |
| Government & public sector | Compliance-driven, data sovereignty | EMEA lead | Medium |
| Retail & eCommerce | Container + VM hybrid estates | NA lead | Medium |
Ten moves, ranked by expected lift.
Drawn from the value model, the attach data, and the displacement dynamic. Each carries a typical impact and a priority. The first four can be acted on this quarter in both NA and EMEA.
Make automation a default line on every virtualization & OpenShift quote.
Attach is 3.8% today; the value case supports 8–10%. Stop selling automation as a separate motion. A bundled quote moves a typical $300K platform deal toward $550K of total ARR — a 1.5–2× multiplier.
Run the VMware-displacement play as a hero motion in both regions.
Every migration to KVM, OpenShift Virtualization, or hybrid cloud needs an automation control plane. Hero plays win at 70% versus 35% for generic motions. Tag a fixed share of the OpenShift pipeline to automation plays.
Lead EMEA with compliance and sovereignty; lead NA with dev velocity.
Match the motion to the region. EMEA's regulated-industry and data-sovereignty weighting favors the 27% compliance-efficiency and automated-audit-trail story; NA's scale favors the 36% dev-productivity and cloud-ops story.
Lead every executive conversation with resilience, not features.
The 61% downtime reduction is worth $4.27M/org/year — the largest value pool and the one CFOs feel. Open with downtime and MTTR, not playbook syntax. It reframes automation from IT cost to business insurance.
Sell day-2, not just day-1.
The largest returns came from organizations that expanded beyond provisioning into cybersecurity remediation, patching, and self-healing. Package "Automation Jumpstart" offerings (service + consulting + content) to accelerate day-2 adoption.
Target high-node accounts for automation expansion.
Value scales with estate size — study participants ran automation across ~4,800 nodes managing 64% of revenue-supporting technology. Prioritize the largest virtual and hybrid estates where the FTE-leverage math is strongest.
Tie an AIOps motion to monitoring-driven self-healing.
Trigger Ansible playbooks directly from monitoring alerts to cut MTTR and developer troubleshooting time. AIOps reframes automation as a continuous risk-mitigation and cost-efficiency engine, not a one-time setup.
Fund VMware-demand-gen marketing jointly across NA and EMEA.
The displacement window is open now. Co-fund automation-for-VMware campaigns and run VM day-2 ops events and workshops to convert migration intent into attach before competitors define the control plane.
Set a 1.5× quota incentive for stack (platform + automation) deals.
Attach behavior follows compensation. Reward bundled deals explicitly so the field defaults to selling the stack, not the platform line alone. Pair with a monthly attach-rate dashboard by region.
Anchor every business case on the 668% / 8-month proof point.
The IDC numbers are the most credible asset in the bag. Lead procurement and CFO conversations with 668% three-year ROI and eight-month payback, then localize the FTE and downtime math to the customer's estate.
Methodology & sources.
About this report
This benchmark synthesizes three sources into a North America and EMEA view of enterprise automation value. Quantified business-value figures (ROI, payback, efficiency gains, downtime, revenue) are drawn from IDC's Business Value white paper on Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform (March 2024, IDC #US51839824), based on in-depth interviews with 15 enterprise organizations headquartered primarily in the United States with additional participants in the United Kingdom — a sample that maps directly onto the NA and EMEA scope of this report. Commercial and go-to-market figures (deal-size uplift, attach rate, hero-play win rates) are drawn from Red Hat field deal data. Hybrid-cloud context reflects Red Hat's 2024 Global Tech Trends findings.
Value model
ROI and payback use IDC's standard three-step Business Value methodology: a
before-and-after benefit assessment, a three-year total-cost investment
profile, and a depreciated cash-flow analysis. Net present value is
calculated against a 12% discount rate. Time savings are valued
at burdened salary ($100,000 fully loaded for IT staff,
$70,000 for non-IT), at 1,880 working hours per
year. Year-one benefits are prorated for an average 6.1-month
deployment period.
Regional treatment
The IDC value figures are reported per organization and are not split by region in the source study; this report presents them as the NA/EMEA benchmark and characterizes regional motion differences (lead value drivers, entry use cases, dominant expansion plays) qualitatively, based on Red Hat field patterns. Where a figure is illustrative of a regional motion rather than a measured regional split, it is described as such.
Key figures & provenance
668% three-year ROI, 8-month payback, $14.81M annual / $34.75M three-year benefit, $30.22M NPV, 61% less unplanned downtime, 46% fewer outages, 39% lower MTTR, 38% network / 28% cloud / 28% config / 27% compliance efficiency, 36% dev productivity, 68% faster compute deployment, 43% more releases, 23% faster time to market, $8.54M higher gross revenue — IDC, March 2024. +470.7% automation+virtualization deal uplift ($30K → $171K), 3.8% attach rate, 1.5–2× deal multiplier, 70% hero-play win rate — Red Hat field data. ~50% hybrid / ~10% public-cloud application split — Red Hat 2024 Global Tech Trends.
What this report does not include
Customer-identifying detail beyond anonymized study quotes, list pricing, per-account commercial terms, and measured region-by-region financial splits (the source study reports per-organization figures only). All dollar figures are in USD and may not sum exactly due to rounding.
See what automation is worth in your estate.
Request a value assessment and a Red Hat specialist will localize the 668% ROI model, the FTE-leverage math, and the downtime savings to your node count, team structure, and migration roadmap — NA or EMEA.