Boomi launched the
findings of a commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting on
behalf of Boomi, December 2023, that reveals companies are fraught with
uncontrolled and wasteful cloud spend, and cost remediation tactics are
introduced too late or without a full picture of the environment.
The independent study found 72% of global companies exceeded their set
cloud budgets in the last fiscal year. With public cloud spend expected
to reach more than $1 billion in the US by 2026, the stakes are high for
improving cloud cost management and optimization (CCMO) strategies.
Although the study shows leaders prioritizing CCMO tactics earlier in
the cloud development process (65%), most companies lack proactive
strategies at the earlier architecture level.
Just six percent of decision makers report their cloud cost remediation
strategies are as proactive as possible, and only four in 10 say they
contain costs at the solution architecture stage. While organizations
are aware that they could optimize cloud costs at the solution
architecture level, less than half of companies have the strategy in
place to resolve perennial problems, such as excessive storage (52%),
lack of integration strategy (44%) and overconsumption of bandwidth
(42%).
"We believe the findings are a clear example of integration being left
out of the cloud cost equation," said Ed Macosky, Chief Product &
Technology Officer at Boomi. "When systems are disconnected and data is
siloed, companies are only seeing part of their organizations' cloud
cost picture, and this lack of visibility impacts tracking and decision
making."
When asked how difficult it is to track areas of cloud spend with the
CCMO tooling currently in place, leaders stated data management as the
most difficult undertaking, followed by egress charges (e.g., fees for
moving data in and out of the cloud), with time and resources needed to
build and maintain app integrations as the third most difficult area to
track.
"More than half (56%) believe their CCMO recommendations are only as
good as the data their company can provide. Yet 40% are struggling to
fix the root problem of their wasteful cloud spend. The problem is
integration is being viewed as a separate entity, when it actually has
significant potential to act as a control layer in the reckoning of
cloud costs," said Macosky.
Further key findings from the study include:
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More cloud complexity to come: Cloud workloads and costs will
increase even more rapidly over the next two years, with decision makers
expecting applications in IT ops (54%), hybrid work (50%), software
creation platforms and tools (45%), and digital experiences (44%) to
rise at the fastest rates.
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FinOps practices are also being hit: Similar to CCMO tooling,
emerging FinOps practices are not spared the challenges associated with
reactive cloud cost remediation strategies. Almost half of respondents
(46%) stated visibility into costs associated with FinOps roles remains
elusive. Meanwhile, a lack of cloud architecture that supports cost
containment at the integration level prevents leaders (35%) from
advancing their FinOps cost control initiatives.
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Cost mitigation to improve with early integration: Respondents
agree (67%) an integration platform that connects apps, data, and people
is a game changer for improving cloud efficiencies and reducing overall
cloud spend from the solution architecture stage. Among those using
integration platform as a service (iPaaS) solutions, 59% report
experiencing more effective cloud cost management, 56% report increased
data visibility and reporting capabilities across stakeholders, and 50%
report improving cloud spend governance.
In December 2023, Forrester Consulting conducted the online survey with
420 cloud and real-time data decision-makers at companies across the
globe. The respondent base spanned multiple industries, business sizes,
and geographies, including North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific.
To learn more about the findings, download the full ‘Cloud Costs Are Out Of Control: Integration and Modernization Can Help Rein Them In' report, here.