
Enterprise IT teams are under constant pressure to reduce operational costs while improving service delivery. Meanwhile, ticket volumes, infrastructure complexity, and user expectations continue to rise. As a result, many organizations are investing in IT Service Management (ITSM) automation—but leadership typically asks one key question before approving the investment: What is the return on investment?
Calculating ITSM automation ROI requires more than estimating productivity gains. Enterprises need a structured framework that ties automation directly to operational savings, service efficiency, and measurable business outcomes. Below is a practical approach IT leaders can use to evaluate and justify ITSM automation investments.
The first step in calculating ROI is identifying which IT service processes generate the highest operational cost. In many enterprises, a large percentage of service desk tickets involve repetitive requests that are ideal for automation.
Typical examples include:
By analyzing historical ticket data—such as ticket volume, resolution time, and request categories—IT teams can identify automation opportunities that will generate the highest financial impact.
To measure ROI accurately, organizations must first establish the cost baseline of manual ITSM operations.
A common formula used in enterprise IT environments is:
Manual Service Cost = (Average Resolution Time × Technician Hourly Rate × Ticket Volume)
Example:
Monthly service desk cost:
20,000 × (12/60) × $40 = $160,000
This baseline provides a clear benchmark for measuring the financial impact of automation.
Automation reduces the number of tickets handled manually while also accelerating resolution times.
Typical enterprise results include:
If automation handles 40% of tickets in the previous example, manual ticket handling drops from 20,000 to 12,000 tickets per month—significantly lowering operational costs.
Once projected savings are clear, calculating ROI becomes straightforward.
ROI Formula
ROI = (Annual Cost Savings – Automation Investment) ÷ Automation Investment
Example:
Annual savings: $770K
First-year ROI:
($770K – $350K) ÷ $350K = 120%
This type of calculation provides a clear, finance-ready justification for automation initiatives.
A global financial services organization handling more than 25,000 monthly IT support tickets faced rising service desk costs and slow response times.
Challenges
Automation Strategy
The company automated several common service desk workflows, including:
Results After One Year
The organization also freed thousands of IT staff hours for higher-value initiatives such as infrastructure reliability and digital transformation.
For enterprise organizations, successful automation initiatives start with a clear business case. The most effective ROI models include:
When automation is tied to measurable financial and operational outcomes, IT leaders can justify investments more easily and accelerate adoption across the organization.
Enterprises that approach ITSM automation strategically—supported by clear ROI modeling—are able to reduce operational costs, improve service delivery, and scale IT operations more efficiently. For IT leaders evaluating automation initiatives, the opportunity lies not just in reducing tickets, but in transforming how IT services are delivered across the enterprise.
About TJDEED Technology
TJDEED Technology is a leading IT and digital transformation company in Jordan and the Middle East, delivering enterprise IT service management, cybersecurity, cloud, infrastructure, AI, and automation solutions for public and private sector organizations across the region.
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