Cost Optimisation Strategies ============================ Slide 1: Cost Optimisation Strategies Narration Anna: This section sets up Cost Optimisation Strategies. Treat it as the frame for the decisions, handoffs, and evidence that appear in the next slides. Greg: The practical question is simple: by the end, what should a junior IT professional be able to explain, check, or document in a real workplace? On-screen text Cost Optimisation Strategies Getting the most from vendor spend Slide 2: Why cost management matters Narration Anna: Software licences are easy to add and hard to remove once nobody owns the review. Greg: Surveys suggest ten to twenty percent of IT budgets pay for tools no one uses—what finance calls shelfware. Anna: Over‑provisioning is another culprit: paying for more capacity than you need just in case. Greg: Even a ten-person startup can uncover savings with a simple spreadsheet sweep. Anna: Cost optimisation pulls finance, procurement and IT ops into the same conversation so those leaks get spotted early. Greg: A quarterly review keeps renewals from creeping up unnoticed. Anna: And a little humour helps when you ask, "Do we really need 300 video meeting seats when half the team still thinks the cloud is weather?" Greg: Redirecting that wasted spend funds projects that actually matter. On-screen text Why cost management matters Unwatched subscriptions and idle cloud resources quietly drain budgets. Software licences are easy to add and hard to remove once nobody owns the review. Benchmarks change by market, but the pattern is stable: unused tools and oversized capacity become serious money when they renew every month. Definitions help: “shelfware” is software bought but never used, and “over‑provisioning” is paying for more capacity than required. By reviewing spend quarterly, finance, procurement and IT ops keep the budget aligned with actual value and avoid nasty surprises at renewal time. Slide 3: Usage analysis Narration Anna: Start by pulling usage reports for every major service. Greg: If you pay for one hundred Office 365 licences but only sixty accounts show activity, that's forty cancellations waiting to happen. Anna: Engineers call this over‑provisioning—paying for capacity you never touch. Greg: Shelfware is software bought but never used at all. Anna: A simple spreadsheet with columns for licence count, cost, owner and last login date reveals both problems quickly. Greg: Review it at least quarterly and share highlights with finance and procurement. Anna: Those numbers become your negotiation superpower because they show exactly where spend doesn't match value. Greg: Without data you are guessing; with data you steer the conversation. On-screen text Usage analysis Start with the basics: how many licences did you pay for and how many people actually logged in? If you have 100 Office 365 seats but only 60 active users, that’s forty potential cancellations. Pull cloud consumption reports to spot over‑provisioned virtual machines or forgotten storage. A simple spreadsheet with columns for cost, owner and last login date can reveal shelfware instantly. Those numbers become your negotiation superpower—without data you’re guessing, with data you control the conversation. Slide 4: Common cost traps Narration Anna: Once you start digging, common cost traps pop up everywhere. Greg: Auto‑escalating pricing clauses bump rates a few percent every year without anyone noticing. Anna: Paying per user instead of per active user leaves phantom licences attached to people who left months ago. Greg: Teams might be running Slack, Teams and Discord simultaneously because no one made a decision. Anna: I've also seen three different monitoring dashboards all watching the same servers. Greg: My favourite discovery is the test environment scaled like production and humming away every night and all weekend. Anna: Each issue looks tiny on its own but multiplies quickly. Greg: A simple quarterly checklist—prices, active users, duplicate tools and idle servers—keeps these traps from draining the budget. Anna: Fixing them is often as easy as an email or a shutdown script. On-screen text Common cost traps Many budgets leak through small oversights. Auto‑escalating pricing clauses quietly raise rates each year. Per‑user pricing, when only a fraction of accounts are active, wastes money and leaves phantom licences for departed staff. Teams often juggle Slack, Teams and Discord simultaneously, run overlapping monitoring tools or keep development environments scaled for production loads and running 24/7. Each issue seems minor until multiplied across months. A friendly quarterly audit with a checklist for these traps keeps them from snowballing and frees cash for strategic projects instead of needless subscriptions. Slide 5: Renegotiation timing Narration Anna: Vendors love auto‑renewals because they lock in last year's price without a fight. Greg: Set calendar reminders ninety days before renewal so you have time to gather data and options. Anna: Show up with specifics: "Our usage dropped thirty percent since remote work ended, so we're downgrading a tier." Greg: Ask about discount brackets, bundling services or paying per active user. Anna: Remember, account managers have quotas too—they want to keep you as a customer. Greg: Sometimes offering a longer commitment trades flexibility for lower cost, which is fine if forecasts are stable. Anna: You're not begging for a favour; you're aligning spend with reality. Greg: And if the vendor won't budge, you still have time to explore alternatives before the auto‑renewal kicks in. On-screen text Renegotiation timing Vendors love auto‑renewals because they lock in last year’s price without questions. Set calendar reminders ninety days before each contract anniversary so you steer the discussion. Bring concrete examples such as “Our usage dropped 30% since remote work ended, so we’d like to downgrade from Enterprise to Standard tier.” Ask about discount levels, bundle options and payment per active user. Remember, account managers have quotas too—they want to keep you as a customer. Negotiations become a normal business conversation when backed by usage data rather than a desperate plea at the last minute. Slide 6: Tactics and frameworks Narration Anna: Beyond timing, a toolbox of tactics keeps spending in check. Greg: Begin each quarter with a checklist covering licence counts, usage trends, upcoming renewals and any overlapping tools. Anna: Keep a template of negotiation questions like, "What discount tiers exist?" or "Do you offer per active user pricing?" Greg: For a quick ROI calculation divide the cost of the tool by the hours saved and multiply by the hourly rate. Anna: Cloud bills shrink when you schedule batch jobs for off‑peak hours and purchase reserved instances, which are prepaid blocks of capacity cheaper than on demand. Greg: Practised together, these habits turn cost optimisation into a repeatable business process instead of a once-a-year scramble. On-screen text Tactics and frameworks A repeatable playbook prevents surprises. Use a quarterly review checklist covering licence counts, usage trends, upcoming renewals and overlapping tools. Template negotiation questions include: “What discount tiers exist?”, “Can we commit longer for better rates?” and “Do you offer per‑active‑user pricing?” For a quick ROI check, divide the cost of a tool by the hours saved and multiply by the hourly rate. Cloud bills fall when batch jobs run in off‑peak hours and when you buy “reserved instances”—prepaid capacity cheaper than on‑demand. Slide 7: Practical exercise: case study Narration Anna: Let's practise with a simple case. Greg: Imagine a startup paying for Slack, Teams and Discord while half its test servers run all weekend. Anna: Estimate how much is wasted each month: maybe a thousand dollars on chat apps and another thousand on idle compute. Greg: Could consolidating tools or scheduling nightly shutdown scripts recapture that spend? Anna: Write down two actions you'd take and which teams you'd involve—IT ops for automation, finance for the numbers, procurement for contract changes. Greg: Exercises like this build the muscle of spotting waste and rallying the right people to fix it before budgets get cut. On-screen text Practical exercise: case study Consider a startup paying for Slack, Teams and Discord while half its test servers run all weekend. Estimate the wasted monthly cost, then draft two actions to fix it. Could consolidating to a single chat platform save a thousand dollars a month? Would a simple script shutting down test machines at night halve the cloud bill? Use this scenario to practise reading usage reports, calculating savings and deciding which teams—IT ops, finance or procurement—you’d pull into the conversation. Slide 8: Careers in cost optimisation Narration Anna: Who actually owns cost optimisation in a company? Greg: It's shared across procurement analysts who negotiate contracts, IT operations staff who track usage and FinOps specialists who blend finance with technical know-how. Anna: Entry level roles might start with licence audits or cleansing billing data. Greg: With experience you can move into vendor manager, cloud economist or IT finance manager positions. Anna: Useful skills include spreadsheet fluency, a curiosity about how systems work and the confidence to challenge a vendor's pricing. Greg: If you're the person friends ask to split the dinner bill, you might enjoy turning those instincts into a career. On-screen text Careers in cost optimisation Cost control isn’t just a finance chore. Procurement analysts negotiate terms, IT operations monitor usage and FinOps specialists blend technical and financial skills to tame cloud bills. Entry‑level analysts might start with licence audits or data cleanup and progress into vendor manager or IT finance roles. Core skills include spreadsheet fluency, curiosity about how services work and the confidence to challenge pricing. The demand for people who can translate between tech and money continues to grow. Slide 9: Key takeaway Narration Anna: Costs rarely stay flat without effort. Greg: Even a small business can find savings; retiring two unused apps might cover the team lunch budget. Anna: Regular reviews, awareness of common traps and a simple negotiation playbook keep budgets under control. Greg: Treat vendor spend like any other investment—measure, question and adjust. Anna: Keep a sense of humour too; you might discover you're paying for five hundred licences when half the office thinks the cloud is just weather. Greg: Savings from these audits can fund security upgrades or that innovation project you've been pitching. Anna: Cost optimisation isn't about being cheap; it's about making sure every dollar pulls its weight. On-screen text Key takeaway Optimising vendor spend is an ongoing process, not a one‑off audit. Regular reviews, awareness of common traps and a clear negotiation playbook keep budgets lean without harming service quality. Whether you’re a five‑person startup or a global enterprise, the discipline is the same. The savings you uncover can fund security work, support capacity or new projects instead of unused licences.