Why it matters
Every minute of downtime is trust spent.
Uptime is the most visceral promise a SaaS company makes. When your product is down, your customer's work stops — and unlike a missing feature or a slow response, downtime is felt immediately, by everyone, at once. It's the fastest way to spend the trust you spent years building, and for customers who run their business on your product, repeated downtime is one of the most reliable reasons they start looking for an alternative. The number is engineering's to defend, but its consequences land squarely in retention.
The deceptive part is the math. The difference between 99% and 99.9% sounds trivial — a tenth of a percent — but 99% allows about three and a half days of downtime a year, while 99.9% allows under nine hours. 99.99% allows under an hour. Each additional nine is roughly a tenfold reduction in tolerable downtime, and roughly a stepwise increase in the engineering investment required to achieve it. That's why uptime is a business decision as much as a technical one: more nines cost real money and effort, and the right target is the one that matches what your customers actually need and what you can reliably deliver.