A CloudBolt Software survey found that while the majority (98%) of respondents worked for organizations with a formal FinOps team (82%) or are actively considering adding one (16%), realizing value from FinOps is slow. More than half of existing FinOps teams (54%) were formed just 12 months ago or less, the survey also found.
The trouble is, only one in of 500 respondents claimed to achieve any material value from FinOps to date. More than three-quarters of respondents (76%) said they will have to wait two to three years to see real FinOps-driven results.
The survey polled 500 executives, engineers and developers at companies with over 5,000 employees in the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom and Australia. It was conducted by Wakefield Research on behalf of CloudBolt Software, a provider of a platform for managing distributed computing environments.
A total of 45% of respondents also questioned FinOps efficacy in the real world. Specifically, 15% flagged FinOps as being “theoretically easy but harder in practice,” with another 13% regarding it as “much ado about nothing.” Another 10% said it is “nothing more than a suggested framework,” while 7% labeled FinOps as “a necessary evil.”
Nevertheless, a full 89% also described FinOps as the silver bullet for reining in the complexity of cloud cost management, with 68% noting that FinOps is among their organization’s most strategic priorities for 2023. The average size of a FinOps team is now 4.1 people, with the “director level” being the senior-most leader on the team 53% of the time, the survey noted.
A total of 71% noted that achieving this year’s IT goals without a FinOps practice would pose a significant challenge, with 74% reporting that FinOps is now on par with ITOps, DevOps, SecOps and other IT disciplines.
In addition, 71% of respondents said funding for FinOps initiatives increased in 2023, with 58% reporting key performance indicators (KPIs) and metrics to the C-suite or board of directors.
CloudBolt Software CTO Kyle Campos said it’s clear that when it comes to reining in costs, large enterprises are struggling to effectively manage IT across multiple silos. In many cases, organizations were investing heavily in IT before and during the COVID-19 pandemic to drive digital business transformation initiatives without many cost controls being put in place, he added.
Now that organizations are encountering economic headwinds, many chief financial officers are now asking IT leaders to be a lot more efficient, noted Campos.
Developers, in particular, have for years been provisioning cloud infrastructure resources with little to no oversight. Unfortunately, developers are prone to leaving the proverbial lights on by, for example, leaving application development environments running over a weekend or simply forgetting that a virtual machine has been left to run for weeks—sometimes even months.
Developers are also not especially good at alerting IT leaders of possible spikes in consumption due to, for example, a data-intensive workload being constructed. No finance team likes to be surprised by a monthly bill for a cloud service that is twice as much as the previous month.
The one thing that is certain is that time is of the essence. FinOps, at its core, may not necessarily be a new idea, but IT organizations that fail to practice it may soon find themselves being held more accountable than any time in recent memory.