Is the cloud a good investment? Does it deliver strong returns? How can we invest responsibly in the cloud? These are questions IT and finance leaders are wrestling with today because the cloud has left many companies in a balancing act—caught somewhere between the need for cloud innovation and the fiscal responsibility to ensure they are investing wisely, getting full value out of the cloud.  

One IDC study shows 81% of IT decision-makers expect their spending to stay the same or increase in 2023, despite anticipating economic “storms of disruption.” Another 83% of CIOs say despite increasing IT budgets they are under pressure to make their budgets stretch further than ever before—with a key focus on technical debt and cloud costs. Moreover, Gartner estimates 70% overspending is common in the cloud

The need for cloud innovation amid economic headwinds has companies shifting their strategies, putting protective parameters in place, and scrutinizing cloud value with concerted efforts to accelerate return on investment (ROI), specifically on technology.  

New Parameters Designed to Protect Cloud Investments 

While many companies are delaying new IT projects with ROI of more than 12 months, others are reducing innovation budgets while they try to squeeze more value out of existing investments. Regardless of how pointed their endeavors are, most IT and finance leaders are looking for ways to better govern cloud transformation. That’s because, in today’s economic climate, leaders aren’t just responsible for driving ingenuity, they are held accountable for ensuring the company is a good steward of its technology investments with concentrated emphasis on: 

ROI: Capitalizing quickly on new cloud technology, recognizing benefits, and taking ownership of IT assets, success measurement, and feedback loops Operationalization: The ability to effectively use and secure cloud assets as well as manage new service providers and expenses Sustainability: Ensuring that cloud transformation can continue to afford positive outcomes with minimal impact on the business for both near- and long-term success 

If the past three years were dedicated to accelerated cloud transformation, 2023 is being devoted to governing it. But it’s not just today’s tumultuous times calling for executives to heed to the reason of fiduciary responsibility. The cloud also necessitates it—particularly when companies want to achieve ROI faster. 

Cloud ROI Dynamics: Understanding the Economics of Innovation 

The cloud can make for an uneven balance sheet without proper oversight. It needs to be closely watched from a financial perspective. Why? The short answer: variable costs. When the cloud is infinitely scalable, costs are infinitely variable. Pricing structures are based on service usage fees and overage charges where even marginal lifts in usage can incur steep increases in cost. While this structure favors cloud providers, it starkly contrasts the needs of IT financial managers—most have per-unit budgets and prefer predictable monthly costs for easier budgeting and forecasting.  

Additionally, companies aren’t always good at estimating what they need and using everything they pay for. As a result, cloud waste is now a thing. In fact, companies waste as much as 29% of their cloud resources.  

As companies lift and shift their workloads to the cloud, they trade in-house management for outsourced services. But as IT organizations are loosening their reign, financial management teams should be tightening their grip. Those who aren’t actively right sizing their cloud assets are typically paying more than necessary. Hence, why overspending can easily reach 70%. 

Achieving Cloud ROI in One Year 

Achieving ROI in one year requires tracing where your cloud money goes to see how and where it is repaid. Budget dollars go down the drain when companies fail to pay attention to how they are using the cloud, don’t take the time to correct misuse, or overlook service pausing features and discounting opportunities.  

But cloud cost management is not always a simple task. The majority of IT and financial decision-makers report it’s challenging to account for cloud spending and usage, with the C-suite cite tracing spend and chargebacks of particular concern. The key to cost control is to pinpoint and track every cloud service cost across the IT portfolio—yes even when companies have on average 11 cloud infrastructure providers, nine unified communications solutions, as well as a cacophony of unsanctioned applications consuming up to 30% of IT budgets in the form of Shadow IT.  

When you factor in these dynamics and consider that cloud providers have little incentive to improve service usage reports, helping clients better balance the one-sided financials of the relationship, you can see why ROI can be slow-moving.  

FinOps comes in to bridge this gap. 

Managing Cloud Cost Centers: The Rise of FinOps 

Cloud services are now dominating IT expense sheets, and when increasing bills delay ROI, IT financial managers go looking for answers. This has given rise to the concept of FinOps (a word combining Finance and DevOps) which is a financial management discipline for controlling cloud costs. Driving fiscal accountability for the cloud, FinOps helps companies realize more business value and accelerate ROI from their cloud computing investments. 

Sometimes described as a cultural shift at the corporate level, FinOps principles were developed to foster collaboration between business teams and IT engineers or software development teams. This allows for more alignment around data-driven spending decisions across the organization. But beyond simply a strategic model, FinOps is also considered a technology solution—a service enabling companies to identify, measure, monitor, and optimize their cloud spend, thus shortening the time to achieve ROI. Leading cloud expense management providers, for example, save cloud investors 20% on average and can deliver positive ROI in the first year. 

FinOps Best Practices  

As the cloud makes companies agile, managing dynamic cloud costs becomes more important. FinOps help offset rising prices and insert accountability into organizations focused on cloud economics. Best practices for maximizing ROI include reconciling invoices against cloud usage, making sure application licenses are properly disconnected when no longer necessary or reassigned to other employees, and reviewing network servers to ensure they aren’t spinning cycles without a legitimate business purpose. 

Key approaches include: 

Auditing: The ability to granularly collect and maintain service information across the broader cloud ecosystem, analyzing real-time usage data in a central system using AI-powered analytics Cost Optimization: The insights to recognize cloud waste and quickly reduce inefficiencies, adjusting services and reallocating unused app licenses or infrastructure resources Vendor and Expense Management: The ability to validate spending and use automation to reduce the management burdens of bill pay, chargebacks, and allocation Professional Services: Strategic and tactical help at key moments including cloud migrations, cloud service discovery, contractual negotiations, and IT budget forecasting and spending 

Is the cloud a good investment? Yes, as long as the company can effectively see and use its assets, monitor its expenses, and manage its service. The cloud started as a means to lower costs, minimize capital expenses, and gain infinite scalability, and that reputation should payout even after being pressure tested by the masses. With a collaborative and disciplined approach to management, companies of every size can recognize quick ROI without generating significant waste or adding unnecessary complexity.  

To learn more about cloud expense management services, visit us here.     

Cloud Computing

Today, the metric for success of cloud native services is measured by cost efficiency, business agility, and the speed of business transformation. Cloud has become more than a technology transformation driver; it is now recognized as a business transformation accelerator. While building compelling experiences on cloud through software innovation, enterprises have focused on automation agenda required for infrastructure configuration, provisioning, compliance, and change management. Cloud migration, being the first step, is followed by the process of setting up cloud operations.

As cloud offers scalable and powerful computing solutions at low costs with reliable storage options that meet the most demanding workload requirements of the modern times – cloud technologies, can be used to quickly deploy solutions around the world on any device. TCS helps enterprises navigate the digital transformation process by accelerating migrations at scale.

Below listed are various steps followed by TCS for cloudification that yield sustainable cloud value economics to enterprises as they begin to embrace cloud journey.

Arriving at a cloud footprint potential: The important elements of the assessment include integration blueprint, LoB-wise SaaS/PaaS adoption roadmap, application propensity to cloud based on the technology, and the data residency considerations that ensure better application performance at optimal network bandwidth consumption.Deciding the timing of cloud adoption: Once cloudification assessment has been done, we at TCS juxtapose the assessment against the underlying infrastructure dimensions to figure out the timing of application migration to cloud. The key elements which drive the timing of current applications to move from DC to cloud are primarily based on the EOL refresh cycle of infrastructure estate and also the rigidity of current sourcing/licensing arrangements. We understand the overall value of current assets and lifespan that has guided us to make reasonable assumptions for our cloud solution.Robust cloud foundation: As part of our cloud foundation strategy, we believe enterprises must gain from the native automation capability of AWS and drive the right consumption mind-set by adopting good cloud usage standards like cloud charging model based on real-time Financial Operations (FinOps). One must also bear in mind that foundation evolves vertically during the course of migration and horizontally to accommodate new expectations of the business such as AIML, IoT initiatives within one or multiple hyper-scalers.Pragmatic migration plan from an integrated approach between apps, data, infrastructure, and security workstreams: A smart approach is to weave-in layered modernization strategy starting at OS and DB layer wherever appropriate as part of the migration journey to scale modernization initiatives down the road. Also note that success of the migration is decided not only by the applications running seamlessly on cloud, but also by decommissioning velocity of current DC workloads to minimize dual-run environments and associated overheads.Earn business acceptability: The key elements of business acceptability dimension include security assurance, regulatory compliance and most importantly, ease of audit readiness. This dimension is key to sustain perpetual value from cloud beyond one-time migration given the ever-evolving expectations in this space.

Cloud value economics – food for thought

Cloud was seen primarily as a means to reduce IT running costs five years ago with focus on DC exits to cloud. However, today with numerous value creation possibilities that the hyper-scalers offer, enterprises are actively looking at ground-up modernization options including review of current business processes before investing in cloud-native development. The above mentioned five dimensions of cloud value economics lend a relevant perspective to a robust start of cloud journey. Our delivery wisdom has taught us that modernization/cloud-native development goals can be catalyzed by migration first. However, one needs to think about modernization in the long-term especially in areas of cloud-native architecture decisions, multi-cloud commitments, and SaaS adoption for sustainable yet agile cloud value economics.

TCS’ cloud services help accelerate digital transformation in a fast-moving business environment. As cloud helps businesses achieve differentiation and accelerate innovation, the learning and value enablement possibilities are numerous from each cloud journey.

Author Bio

TCS

Ph: +91 8682815444
E-mail: aditya.jn@tcs.com

Aditya Jaigopal Nagaraj leads the strategy office and business operations at TCS’ AWS business unit. He has more than 20 years of experience in designing innovative business solutions for large enterprises. He specializes in building purpose-driven, cloud-based solutions across various industries and in crafting transformative large deals in IT infrastructure and Cloud. He is passionate about building energized teams, teaching students, building robotic models and curating model train collections.

To learn more, visit us here.

Cloud Computing