Cloud computing continues to revolutionize how businesses innovate and grow in today’s hypercompetitive global environment. While the race to the cloud has catapulted businesses into a new realm of speed and agility, few are cashing in on the cloud’s promise to drive down costs – and the challenges are mounting amid the proliferation of multi-cloud environments.
But don’t blame the technology. The problem is typically a case of too much spending and too little oversight. Businesses are struggling to effectively manage a critical new resource that’s vastly different from the legacy environment it replaces, with cloud use decentralized and billing structures that are complex.
There is no question that organizations need a radical new approach to managing their cloud spending. The answer? FinOps.
The term – a play on ‘finance’ and ‘DevOps’ – refers to the financial management of cloud resources by cross-functional teams focused on spend accountability and business-value optimization. With FinOps, teams from IT, finance and business units collaborate on data-driven spending decisions. Transparency is prioritized and everyone takes ownership for their cloud usage.
Simply put, FinOps aligns cloud spending with business objectives and helps to ensure that cross-functional teams work harmoniously to enhance financial control and predictability, reduce friction, and deliver products and services faster in today’s consumer-centric digital economy.
The move to the cloud is well underway. Eighty-eight percent of respondents in KPMG’s global tech report 2022 say they are advanced in their adoption of the technology, however only 34 percent of business executives say their organization’s cloud program has lowered its total cost of ownership.
*Source: KPMG global tech report 2022
This report examines five key mistakes KPMG professionals are witnessing today as businesses increasingly embrace the power of cloud capabilities.
Moving forward
FinOps success demands that you bring engineering and finance stakeholders together to plan, measure, report, analyze and optimize costs. It’s not enough to simply implement new tools, communicate a few expectations and occasionally meet for updates. A holistic operating model should be designed, implemented, orchestrated and evolve as new tools, techniques, ways of working and other factors emerge with time.
If you are thinking about standing up and readying your organization for FinOps, here is a simple framework that can guide you on your journey:
Plan
Laying the groundwork
- Tools: Determine tool requirements – examine if existing tools are fit-for-purpose
- Organization: Identify the “home” of the FinOps function
- Reporting: Identify initial KPIs
Socialize
Get buy-in
- Communication: Host FinOps conversations with impacted teams
- People: Define initial resources to be part of day-1 FinOps team
- Reporting: Create a reporting & KPIs roadmap
Prepare
Ready the organization
- Governance: Define tags, metadata, and organizational taxonomy
- Tools: Configure and deploy tools
- Automation: Define initial usage and spend threshold
Launch
Engage stakeholders
- Tools: Deploy initial dashboards and integrate allocations with IT financial management cost models
- People: Broad communications & change management
- Reporting: Begin feedback process on reporting and KPIs
All of these actions may strike you as big steps to reach, so you may be thinking ‘Where do I start?’ or ‘Where am I in the journey?.’ Here are some actions you can take:
- Establish foundational capabilities like a virtual cross-functional cloud finance function to begin working on consolidated billing, picking appropriate tools, and creating financial principles for funding and expense management
- Create ‘routine’ transparency and governance where the cross-functional cloud finance function shifts to maintaining and iterating things like automated reporting, chargebacks, and detailed roles and responsibilities across the organization
- Predict and optimize spend from a depth of established and trusted historical data, custom models and stakeholder feedback
Contact a local KPMG professional to help you get it right.