-

Survey Finds One in Three DBAs Eye Career Move as Demands on Role Increase

With AI, training, and unified tools, DBAs can trade firefighting for high-impact, value-driven work

AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--SolarWinds, a leading provider of simple, powerful, secure observability and IT management software, today released its 2025 State of Database Report, which delves into the increasing pressure on today’s database administrators (DBAs) and reveals a clear disconnect between executive perception and DBA reality. The report draws on insights from over 1,000 IT professionals, including 500 executives and more than 500 DBAs.

“As organizations grow ever more dependent on data and the DBAs who manage that data, it is imperative for us to create a corporate culture that removes complexities and misalignments, setting the stage for true team success.”

Share

As organizations manage diverse databases, multi-environment systems, and rising privacy demands, the DBA role has become both more critical and complex. A gap in expectations between DBAs and IT executives has intensified burnout, leading one in three DBAs to consider leaving their roles. Yet with unified tools, ongoing training, and a focus on strategic initiatives, organizations can empower DBAs not just to survive these pressures, but to become key drivers of innovation.

The Role of the DBA in 2025: Managing Increasing Complexity

As data environments evolve and organizations embrace hybrid and cloud-native architectures, the role of the database administrator has grown. While DBAs (81%) predominantly manage Oracle and SQL servers, these systems are now just one piece of the puzzle. This group is now responsible for an entire ecosystem of diverse data technologies that power analytics, AI and modern applications. They also monitor deployment environments, including:

  • On-premises: 57% of respondents
  • Public cloud: 31% of respondents
  • Private cloud: 12% of respondents

This growing complexity of the DBA role, coupled with misalignment with IT executives, can drive costly mistakes and impact the business’s bottom line.

Firefighting: A Persistent Cycle

For many DBAs, firefighting dominates the workweek, with 27 of their 40 hours spent on reactive tasks. This relentless pace not only fuels burnout but also sidelines strategic initiatives, and contributes to job dissatisfaction. Findings include:

  • 75% of respondents said alert fatigue is affecting their ability to prioritize and respond to incidents
  • 49% of those respondents who reported being affected by alert fatigue described the impact as "great" or "severe”

It’s important for executives to find and provide the right, innovative tooling that can mitigate complexity, rising costs, and alert fatigue.

AI Tools Reduce Workload, but DBAs Encounter Adoption Challenges

Both DBAs and IT executives see how AI tools strengthen DBA functions, reducing firefighting and supporting unified IT environments. DBAs already using AI tooling experience these benefits and more:

  • 62% say AI has helped diagnose performance issues more quickly
  • 60% report more reliable and consistent routine task execution
  • 54% have reduced the time spent on manual or repetitive tasks
  • 53% say it's freed them to focus on higher-impact work

AI adoption has also introduced new challenges that DBAs report more frequently than executives. These include added oversight, misalignment of AI workflows with daily processes, difficulties using AI tools due to poor data quality, and a lack of data governance or clear ownership.

Limiting Complexity and Creating Alignment

Modern DBAs face mounting challenges, but these pressures also create opportunities for transformation. Organizations that provide unified tools, AI-driven support, and ongoing training can turn reactive teams into strategic partners aligned with IT leadership. Those who move quickly gain a clear edge in managing complexity and driving business results.

“The data in this report outlines a reality in which the DBA role is growing more difficult due to the complexity of enterprise IT architectures, amplified by a persistent gap in viewpoint between DBAs and IT executives,” said Kevin Kline, Database Management Systems Expert, SolarWinds. “As organizations grow ever more dependent on data and the DBAs who manage that data, it is imperative for us to create a corporate culture that removes complexities and misalignments, setting the stage for true team success.”

Organizations looking to improve their database management function, visit https://www.solarwinds.com/

For more on the 2025 State of Database Report, visit here.

Connect with SolarWinds

#SWI
#SWIcorporate
#SWIproducts

About SolarWinds

SolarWinds is a leading provider of simple, powerful, secure observability and IT management software built to enable customers to accelerate their digital transformation. Our solutions provide organizations worldwide—regardless of type, size, or complexity—with a comprehensive and unified view of today’s modern, distributed, and hybrid network environments. We continuously engage with IT service and operations professionals, DevOps and SecOps professionals, and database administrators (DBAs) to understand the challenges they face in maintaining high-performing and highly available hybrid IT infrastructures, applications, and environments. The insights we gain from them, in places like our THWACK community, allow us to address customers’ needs now and in the future. Our focus on the user and our commitment to excellence in end-to-end hybrid IT management have established SolarWinds as a worldwide leader in solutions for observability, IT service management, application performance, and database management. Learn more today at www.solarwinds.com.

The SolarWinds, SolarWinds & Design, Orion, and THWACK trademarks are the exclusive property of SolarWinds Worldwide, LLC or its affiliates, are registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and may be registered or pending registration in other countries. All other SolarWinds trademarks, service marks, and logos may be common law marks or are registered or pending registration. All other trademarks mentioned herein are used for identification purposes only and are trademarks of (and may be registered trademarks of) their respective companies.

© 2025 SolarWinds Worldwide, LLC. All rights reserved.

Contacts

MEDIA CONTACTS:
Cait Lower
SolarWinds
Phone: +1- 512-498-6287
pr@solarwinds.com

SolarWinds Worldwide, LLC.


Release Versions

Contacts

MEDIA CONTACTS:
Cait Lower
SolarWinds
Phone: +1- 512-498-6287
pr@solarwinds.com

More News From SolarWinds Worldwide, LLC.

CORRECTING and REPLACING SolarWinds Launches Autonomous Operational Resilience Tour

AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "AWS re:Invent:" section of the release dated November 6, 2025 should read: AWS re:Invent: You can find SolarWinds at booth 1380, where three demo stations and refreshments will be available, along with the opportunity to enter for a chance to win exclusive SolarWinds gear and Build and Connect sets. The updated release reads:  SOLARWINDS LAUNCHES AUTONOMOUS OPERATIONAL RESILIENCE TOUR Company to showcase innovation and new AI-driven capabilities at KubeCon,...

SolarWinds Recognized for Second Consecutive Year in 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Digital Experience Monitoring

AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--SolarWinds, a leading provider of simple, powerful, and secure IT management software, today announced that it has been recognized for the second consecutive year in the 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Digital Experience Monitoring (DEM). The company was acknowledged for its SolarWinds® Observability offering, which we feel delivers a comprehensive and unified view across applications, infrastructure, networks, and digital experience. SolarWinds Observability p...

New SolarWinds Report: Gen AI Significantly Drops Incident Response Time for ITSM Teams

AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--SolarWinds, a leading provider of simple, powerful, secure observability and IT management software, today released its 2025 ITSM Report, which outlines a clear delineation between Information Technology System Management systems that leverage generative AI (GenAI) in their operations and those that do not. The report analyzed more than 2,000 ITSM systems and more than 60,000 aggregated and anonymized customer data points. Over the past year, IT teams have moved...
Back to Newsroom