THE RISE OF CLOUD ECONOMIC
The real effect of the global transition to the clouds turned out to be much wider than anyone could expect. Cloud services became highly popular and diversified.
MAIN TYPES OF CLOUD DELIVERY MODELS
1.IaaS (Infrastructure-as-a-service);
2.PaaS (Platform-as-a-service);
3.SaaS (Software-as-a-service);
4.XaaS (Anything-as-a-service).
While simplifying the life of IT specialists, Cloud solutions quickly became a headache for the rest of the office – financiers, buyers and managers. Tech guys suddenly were enabled to make decisions on IT infrastructure spending independently. In addition, the cloud economic model turned out to be disproportionately more difficult to analyze and control than the traditional negotiation and procurement process.
Fully automated hourly, minutely or even per-second billing for hundreds of different cloud services from dozens of providers has quickly shifted IT finance from Excel and quarterly planning to the world of big data and real-time response.
HOW FINOPS APPEARED?
When IT costs sky-rocketed, companies realized that with the transition of technical departments to DevOps, the rest of corporate processes needed to be transformed as well. This is when various approaches to cloud financial management started to appear. Soon a full-fledged functional area was formed. It was called FinOps (Financial Operations, by analogy with DevOps – Developer Operations).
WHAT IS FINOPS?
FinOps (or Cloud FinOps) is a corporate cost management process for cloud technologies. Basically, it is adapted to the new realities IT procurement program, that replaced data centers with long procurement cycles (CAPEX) with hourly billed clouds (OPEX).
FinOps is not just a set of tools or instructions. It’s a cultural shift blurring the line between IT and Finance
IT FINANCES BEFORE CLOUD
To understand where the need for FinOps came from, let’s look at the traditional IT procurement model (many companies still have it today, despite the emergence of more effective alternatives).
Imagine an IT company developing new software. The technical team needs to prepare project documentation with an estimate of the necessary IT resources. Then this document (with budget figures and forecasts) is approved by financiers and managers. This is followed by the purchase of equipment (servers, network infrastructure, etc.) and the deployment of systems in data centers: setting up servers, purchasing and installing software, etc.
After two months of development, it turns out that the company needs additional capacity. The technical manager forms an application and sends it to the supply department. But the quarterly planning meeting is still far away, and the CFO refuses to approve new costs. Development slows down until new servers are bought.
Now imagine a company that has dozens of parallel projects, several data centers in different parts of the country or even the planet. At the same time, shortage or excess capacity is not the only problem.
TRADITIONAL IT PROCUREMENT MODEL
- Finance is in full control of IT costs;
- Minimum agility – everything is predictable and static;
- The supply cycle is very long;
- The price of a mistake is high as the financial plan is rarely revised
WHAT HAS CHANGED WITH THE CLOUD?
Before the cloud era, the shortcomings of the above-mentioned system did not have a particular impact on the company’s positioning. Everyone was in equal conditions, somewhere the interaction between IT and supply / finance was more effective, somewhere less, but the key stages were all the same: estimates, data centers, approvals.
With the advent of cloud computing in the late 2000s, the situation began to change rapidly. The emergence of the IaaS model – virtual distributed data centers with tools for remote control of the main infrastructure processes – has allowed IT professionals and developers to deploy all necessary capacities without leaving their computers and, more importantly, without the need of financiers’ approval.
IN A NUTSHELL
FinOps is one of the hottest topics in the IT industry right now. Big companies actively build their own FinOps teams consisting of both financial and engineering specialists. Their mission is to design and maintain sustainable cloud cost management processes. Jobs like “FinOps Analyst” or “FinOps Manager” are now increasingly common on headhunter websites and job boards.
Consulting companies and integrators are also starting to add FinOps services in their packages. Market giants McKinsey and Deloitte are today’s leaders of cloud costs optimization.