Vertical image, women with information overlay
Vertical image of two women coding in the office
Cloud Solutions

FinOps

In a cloud-based environment, managing costs can be challenging due to the dynamic nature of cloud resources, varying workloads, and a multitude of pricing models.

FinOps, short for Financial Operations, is an advanced discipline combining financial management principles with cloud computing expertise to optimise the cost and efficiency of cloud resources.

Essentially, FinOps provides a structured approach to cloud cost management, allocation, and optimisation.

In today’s cloud-dominated business landscape, FinOps plays a crucial role in managing cloud costs effectively. Utilising the right approach alongside a focus on data-driven insights, FinOps can be a game-changer for any business seeking to maximise the value of their cloud investments.

The Value of Implementation

FinOps

Collaboration

FinOps promotes cross-functional collaboration between finance, IT, and development teams. By aligning the efforts of these teams, organisations gain a comprehensive understanding of cloud spending, usage patterns, and cost drivers.

Cost Allocation

FinOps emphasises accurate cost allocation across different projects, departments, or business units. This enables better accountability and cost visibility, leading to more informed decision-making.

Cost Efficiency

By adopting FinOps best practices, organisations can significantly reduce cloud overspending, leading to cost savings and improved financial performance.

Increased Accountability

FinOps fosters a culture of accountability and responsibility for cloud spending, leading to better cost control and resource utilisation.

Business Agility

Optimising cloud costs allows organisations to scale resources efficiently and adapt to changing business requirements quickly.

Informed Decision-Making

Data-driven insights from FinOps practices enable stakeholders to make well-informed decisions regarding cloud investments and resource allocation.

Lady with tablet at work, FinOps
Cloud Adoption

FinOps

By practicing FinOps principles, organisations can significantly optimise their cloud infrastructure, achieve cost efficiency, and maximise the value of their cloud investments. FinOps serves as a crucial bridge between financial considerations and cloud operations. Its data-driven and collaborative approach enables organisations to fine-tune their cloud infrastructure, making it more cost-effective, scalable and aligned with business requirements. Through FinOps and cloud iteration businesses can;
  • Rightsize Resources to actual workload requirements
  • Propose the Utilisation of Savings Plans & Reserved Instances Offered by Cloud Providers
  • Implement Cost Optimisation Strategies alongside Cost Management Automations
  • Surface Requirements & Deliver Cloud Governance Through Usage Policies & Internal Standards
  • Continuous Monitoring the Cloud Environment & Regularly Iterate Cloud infrastructure as well as Workloads
The Cloud Infrastructure & FinOps Connection

The Well Architected Cloud

Poorly architected  infrastructure in a cloud environment can lead to wasteful spending, poor resource allocation, and missed cost-saving opportunities. To mitigate escalating cloud costs, it is crucial to assess and remediate the cloud environment. By simply,  building and implementing a well-architected infrastructure following best practices as well as standards, businesses can easily leverage automation and enforce cost governance policies within their cloud estate. In conjunction, organisations need to understand that cloud management is an iterative process, which requires continuous monitoring and updates to ensure optimal performance as well as identify and rectify areas of inefficiency and overspending. Poorly architected infrastructure can lead to;
Inefficient Resource Utilisation Due to Poor Resource Allocation
A Lack of Optimised Automation Processes Leading to Diminished Performance Optimisation

No Cost Governance or Policies Devising Ineffective Guardrails

Absence of Tagging Alongside Ineffective Performance Monitoring Leading to Over Provisioning
Unnecessary Data Transfer Costs due to Poor Strategic Considerations Leading to Poor Infrastructure Configuration
Missed Cost Saving Opportunities Due to Lack of Strategic Assessments & Planning
Inadequate Security Measures Leading to Costly Recovery Efforts Across the Cloud Estate
Vendor Lock-In Due to Lack of Planning in Relation to Selecting Tooling & Cloud Service Provider

Inability to Scale Effectively Due to Poorly Architected Infrastructure