IT Expense Study, Blind Spots in FinOps, GreenOps & More

First Edition of the FinOps Weekly Newsletter. We’ll compile all the relevant content in the FinOps Sector for the week, so you don’t have to. The most relevant articles, videos, and posts in less than 5 minutes.

Study: IT Expense Management Drives FinOps Maturity

Source: Third-party ITEM Drives FinOps Maturity (eweek.com)

  • FinOps Maturity: The study by Tangoe shows that third-party IT expense management solutions enhance FinOps maturity, leading to cost efficiency.

  • Cost Efficiency: Organizations using external ITEM solutions reported significant cost savings, with an average spending of $442,000 compared to $2.35 million for hybrid models.

  • Advanced FinOps Programs: 94% of organizations with third-party solutions have a dedicated team for cloud spending optimization, achieving better deployment success.

  • Automation Benefits: Automation in IT expense management reduces manual tasks and service outages, with a 22% reduction in regular outages from automated processes.

Unveiling Blind Spots in FinOps

Source: AWS Cloud Enterprise Strategy Blog

  • Limited Spend Segmentation: Organizations often lack real-time insight into cloud costs, leading to overspending, especially in development or test environments.

  • Underutilized Resources: The “set it and forget it” mentality results in underutilized cloud resources, such as redundant workloads that inflate costs.

  • Manual Cost Attribution: Manual chargeback processes are error-prone and obscure true economics, hindering effective cost management.

  • Neglecting Discounts and Commitments: Organizations miss out on substantial discounts by not committing to term-based agreements with cloud providers, despite predictable usage patterns.

Mastering FinOps: Cloud Cost Optimization Essentials

Source: FOCUS ON Business

  • FinOps Essentials: The article discusses the FinOps framework, which combines finance and DevOps to optimize cloud costs and resource utilization.

  • Key Principles: It outlines FinOps principles such as collaboration, business-centric decision-making, and universal accountability.

  • Lifecycle Phases: Describes the three phases of FinOps: Inform, Optimize, and Operate, each with specific actions and goals.

  • Implementation Steps: Suggest a Crawl-Walk-Run maturity approach for integrating FinOps into an organization, progressing from informal awareness to continuous innovation.

GreenOps, FinOps, And The Sustainable Cloud

Source: Forrester

  • GreenOps and Sustainability: GreenOps is a practice aimed at reducing the carbon footprint of cloud environments by optimizing resource usage, which includes factors like data center size, power type, and renewable energy use1.

  • Regulatory Pressures: New EU regulations and global initiatives are pushing for more sustainable cloud usage, with requirements for detailed reporting on energy consumption and CO₂ emissions.

  • FinOps Integration: GreenOps aligns closely with FinOps, as both aim for efficient cloud usage, resulting in lower costs and carbon emissions. Key practices include right sizing and scheduling compute off time.

  • Actionable Steps: Companies can reduce emissions by using carbon monitoring tools, selecting cloud regions with sustainable energy, minimizing data transfers, and demanding transparency from cloud providers

Special Mention

Earned Value Management: How to calculate in a FinOps context

Source: Anderson Silva on LinkedIn Pulse

  • Introduction to EVM in FinOps: The article introduces Earned Value Management (EVM) as a technique from Project Management that can be effectively applied to Cloud FinOps within the ‘Quantify Business Value’ domain.

  • Key Assumptions: It assumes the presence of well-defined Unit Economics, an established budget, and a Plan Value (PV) for effective EVM calculation.

  • Calculating EVM: Explains the calculation of Earned Value (EV) as the product of Planned Value (PV) and %Complete, using examples to illustrate scenarios of being under and over budget.

  • Cost Performance Indicator (CPI): Discusses the CPI, which is derived by dividing EV by Actual Cost (AC), and its significance as an indicator of cloud spend delivering expected business value.

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That’s all for this week.

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