Competitive Brief
Executive Summary
Datadog and New Relic are converging on an AI-native observability platform vision, with both aggressively positioning AI agents, agentic monitoring, and automated remediation as the next frontier. Our key opportunity lies in leveraging Datadog's significantly broader product surface area—spanning security (CNAPP, SIEM, code security), software delivery (CI Visibility, feature flags), and service management (incident response, workflow automation)—as a unified platform moat that New Relic has not matched. The AI/agentic monitoring race is effectively a coin-flip in messaging; winning will depend on depth of integration across our wider platform.
Competitor Overview
New Relic positions itself as an "Intelligent Observability" platform that "resolves issues at scale—before they impact your bottom line." It targets SREs, developers, and business stakeholders across retail/commerce, media/entertainment, finance, SaaS/technology, telecommunications, and automotive verticals. Its core value proposition centers on AI-powered, predictive observability with specific emphasis on an SRE Agent for automated remediation, AI-enhanced session replay for identifying UX friction, cloud cost visibility (multi-cloud and Kubernetes), agentic monitoring for controlling AI agent behavior and token usage, deep OpenTelemetry commitment as a universal open standard, and an Agentic Platform that delivers observability insights to AI agents where engineers work. New Relic's messaging leans heavily into business-outcome language (protect revenue, maximize conversions, reduce MTTR) and emphasizes a consumption-based, user-friendly pricing model as a differentiator.
Pricing Comparison
| Dimension | Datadog (Us) | New Relic |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing model | Per-host, per-GB, per-feature SKU-based pricing (public pricing page available) | Pricing not visible on scraped homepage; historically consumption-based with free tier (100 GB/mo ingest + 1 full-platform user) |
| Free tier | 14-day free trial | "Get Started Free" prominently offered—implies persistent free tier |
| Packaging approach | Individual product SKUs that can be combined; separate pricing for infra, APM, logs, security, etc. | Historically all-in-one platform access; pay per data ingested and per user seat |
| Key implication | Flexible but can lead to bill complexity at scale | Simpler cost model messaging; appeals to cost-conscious buyers |
Note: Neither scraped page contained detailed pricing tables. Comparison is based on known public models and page CTAs.
Feature Gap Analysis
| Feature / Capability | Datadog (Us) | New Relic |
|---|---|---|
| Infrastructure Monitoring | ✓ | ✓ |
| APM / Distributed Tracing | ✓ | ✓ |
| Log Management | ✓ | ✓ |
| Real User Monitoring (RUM) | ✓ | ✓ (Digital Experience Monitoring) |
| Synthetic Monitoring | ✓ | ~ (not highlighted on homepage) |
| Session Replay | ✓ | ✓ (with AI-powered friction detection) |
| AI / LLM Observability | ✓ (LLM Observability, GPU Monitoring) | ✓ (AI and Agentic Monitoring) |
| Agentic AI Platform | ✓ (Bits AI Agents, Bits AI SRE, MCP Server, Agent Directory) | ✓ (SRE Agent, Agentic Platform) |
| Cloud Security (CSPM, CIEM, SIEM, Workload Protection) | ✓ (full CNAPP + Cloud SIEM) | ~ (Security mentioned but limited to vulnerability management) |
| Code Security (SAST, IAST, SCA, Secret Scanning) | ✓ | ✗ |
| App & API Protection (WAF/RASP) | ✓ | ✗ |
| CI/CD Visibility & Test Optimization | ✓ (CI Visibility, Test Optimization, Continuous Testing) | ✗ |
| Internal Developer Portal / Software Catalog | ✓ | ✗ |
| Feature Flags | ✓ | ✗ |
| Network Performance Monitoring | ✓ | ✗ (not highlighted) |
| Database Monitoring | ✓ | ~ (not explicitly featured) |
| Data Streams Monitoring | ✓ | ✗ |
| Cloud Cost Management | ✓ | ✓ (multi-cloud & K8s cost visibility) |
| Kubernetes Autoscaling | ✓ | ✗ |
| Observability Pipelines | ✓ | ✗ |
| OpenTelemetry (native, first-class) | ✓ (supported) | ✓ (heavily emphasized as core differentiator) |
| Incident Management & Workflow Automation | ✓ (Incident Response, Case Mgmt, Workflow Automation, App Builder) | ✗ (not highlighted) |
| Mobile App Testing | ✓ | ✗ |
| DORA Metrics | ✓ | ✗ |
| Product Analytics & Experiments | ✓ | ✗ |
| Governance Console / Access Control | ✓ | ✗ (not highlighted) |
Key gaps: New Relic's primary gaps relative to Datadog are in security (no CNAPP, no SIEM, no code security suite), software delivery (no CI visibility, no feature flags, no developer portal), and service management (no built-in incident response or workflow automation). However, New Relic is leaning harder into OpenTelemetry as a first-class citizen and positioning its SRE Agent for automated remediation more prominently than Datadog's equivalent Bits AI SRE messaging. New Relic's AI-powered session replay (auto-identifying friction vs. watching video) is a specific UX innovation worth monitoring. Datadog's gap is primarily perceptual: New Relic's simpler pricing narrative and OTel-first positioning resonate with teams wary of vendor lock-in and unpredictable bills.
Positioning Angles
We should position as the only platform that unifies observability, security, and software delivery in a single pane of glass—New Relic's homepage showcases six product areas (APM, DEM, AI Monitoring, Infra, Logs, Security) while Datadog offers 30+ integrated products including full CNAPP, SIEM, CI/CD, feature flags, and an internal developer portal.
We should position as the platform where AI operates across the widest context surface—while New Relic promotes an SRE Agent and Agentic Platform, Datadog's Bits AI spans SRE, Security Analyst, and a general-purpose Agent Directory backed by Watchdog anomaly detection across infrastructure, applications, security, and software delivery data simultaneously.
We should position as the security-native observability platform that eliminates the need for separate cloud security tools—New Relic's security capability is limited to vulnerability management with "guided remediation," whereas Datadog offers CSPM, CIEM, Cloud SIEM, workload protection, SAST, IAST, SCA, secret scanning, and app/API protection as integrated products.
We should position as the platform built for engineering leadership accountability with DORA metrics, SLOs, and product analytics built in—New Relic's homepage messaging focuses on individual engineer workflows while Datadog uniquely offers DORA Metrics, Product Analytics, Experiments, and Service Level Objectives that connect engineering output to business outcomes.
We should position as the choice for enterprises already running on AWS, Azure, or GCP with purpose-built migration and cost optimization tooling—Datadog prominently offers cloud-migration eBooks and dedicated monitoring solutions for AWS, Azure, GCP, and Oracle Cloud, while New Relic's cloud-specific enablement is less visible.
Battle Card Quick Reference
Our strongest differentiator: Platform breadth—Datadog is the only vendor that natively integrates full-stack observability, cloud-native security (CNAPP + SIEM), software delivery (CI/CD + feature flags), and service management (incident response + workflow automation) into a single platform with shared context, eliminating tool sprawl and context-switching that competitors require.
Their most common objection: "New Relic is simpler to adopt, cheaper with consumption pricing and a generous free tier, and avoids vendor lock-in through native OpenTelemetry support—Datadog's per-SKU pricing is unpredictable and the proprietary agent creates lock-in."
Our best response: Datadog fully supports OpenTelemetry alongside its agent and offers granular cost controls (Observability Pipelines for data routing, Cloud Cost Management, Governance Console for access control); the per-product pricing means teams pay only for what they adopt rather than subsidizing unused platform capacity, and the breadth of integrated products reduces total cost by replacing 3–5 separate security, CI/CD, and incident management tools that New Relic customers must still procure and maintain independently.