Editorial

In the Spotlight: Imperial College London

Imperial College London has adopted a data-driven observability and security strategy with Splunk to improve visibility across its hybrid IT environment, accelerate incident response, and support a more resilient digital experience for students, researchers and staff.

Posted 27 April 2026 by Christine Horton


Background

As one of the world’s leading universities, Imperial College London operates a complex digital estate that functions much like a “mini city.” Its environment includes teaching spaces, research laboratories, accommodation, sports facilities, libraries, conference venues and administrative services, all supported by critical IT systems.

Challenge

Imperial College London Credit: Splunk

This environment creates significant operational and cybersecurity demands. Students and staff need secure access to services from anywhere in the world, while researchers depend on reliable systems to support teaching, collaboration and innovation.

Prior to transformation, Imperial needed stronger end-to-end visibility across its growing hybrid infrastructure, spanning on-premises assets, cloud services, devices and applications. The university also wanted to reduce the time taken to identify and resolve incidents affecting users.

Solution

Imperial adopted Splunk Cloud Platform and Splunk Synthetic Monitoring. Together, these tools provide a unified view across the university’s hybrid IT estate. Operational teams can monitor systems performance, understand user experience, detect issues quickly and respond before outages escalate.

The platform ingests data from multiple services and environments, allowing teams to analyse how systems interact and where bottlenecks or failures may occur.

The implementation focuses on cloud-based observability, monitoring and analytics capabilities, including:

  • real-time dashboards for systems performance
  • synthetic monitoring of user journeys and digital services
  • log and event data analysis
  • visibility across cloud and on-premises infrastructure
  • incident investigation and root-cause analysis
  • reporting to support operational decision-making

This gives technical teams a clearer picture of service health while helping leadership make evidence-based decisions.

The partnership supports both day-to-day operations and long-term digital resilience planning.

Results

The project has delivered measurable outcomes, including:

  • 17,000 students and 8,000 staff supported and protected
  • 100+ services monitored
  • Data integrated from more than 60 sources
  • Faster investigation and response to outages or performance incidents
  • Improved visibility across the university’s hybrid environment
  • Better user experience for students and staff accessing services globally.

Imperial has also used insights from the platform to inform broader decision-making, from improving student experience to evaluating future technology investments.

Next steps

As digital demand continues to grow, Imperial plans to build on this foundation by expanding observability and security capabilities further. The university identified future potential in solutions such as Splunk Enterprise Security, IT Service Intelligence and automation tools.

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