Technical advice

Oil Companies could be Leaving 80% of Potential Cloud Savings on the Table

Written by Danny Quilton | Apr 23, 2020 10:39:41 AM

With a massive mismatch between supply and demand, the price of oil has collapsed to record lows. In its wake, oil & gas companies are having a tough time and will be looking to reduce their cost base, including IT.

We have seen cloud spend represent 20-30% of IT budgets. Oil & gas organisations will have significant cloud footprints across their systems in upstream, downstream and trading.

Typically teams will implement cost reduction using the FinOps model. But in our experience these will only achieve 20% of the potential savings.   

80% of potential cloud savings are left on the table - even when you have great technical teams internally

Yes, 80%. Take a look at the data from a recent cloud optimisation engagement:

That's because these require advanced optimisation techniques that go way beyond FinOps approaches such as right-sizing, negotiation, savings-plans and cost management tools.

Don't get me wrong, FinOps techniques are perfect in technology-as-usual situations but not in the crisis that the Oil industry faces today.

The trouble is, it is hard to win that 80% of saving, even when you have great technical teams.... 

 

Advanced optimisations are difficult to achieve in most organisations for three reasons:

  1. Lack of methodology & detailed insight to understand how efficiently applications consume cloud resources.
  2. Staff responsible for cloud cost tend to be naturally conservative and risk-averse.
  3. Lack executive sponsorship means nobody is driving change.

The first point is only possible when you have a highly specialised knowledge base and depth of experience. Something which most organisations don't have and therefore find it hard to comprehend why such massive savings are possible. If you are interested in finding out more, take a look at this webinar.

In our experience, the staff responsible for implementing cost improvements are naturally concerned that any change will adversely impact the stability of the applications. Those who operate FinOps do not have the depth of expertise to assess the trade-off between performance and capacity. With the right methodology and insight, concerns around application stability can be tackled.  

Finally, to achieve the 80%, it is crucial to have executive sponsorship to go after the more difficult  optimisations. Understandably, in the past this was not priority.

But now should be the time to commit the resources and time needed.