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Give us 30 minutes. Transform your cloud costs.
We will show you how to identify your savings opportunities and implement a simple FinOps governance model.
Most organizations start FinOps with optimization: rightsizing, cleanup, commitments. Results come quickly… then fade away. A month later, the cloud bill starts rising again. Why? Because optimization without governance creates one-time savings, not sustainable savings.
FinOps governance is the mechanism that transforms your cloud cost management into a repeatable system:
- clear roles (who is responsible for what),
- short rituals (where the right signals are reviewed),
- explicit decisions (balancing cost vs performance vs time-to-market),
- simple policies (tags, environments, commitments) that prevent a return to chaos.
In this article, you will find a deliberately simple model: structured enough to last over time, yet lightweight enough to avoid becoming a “gas factory.”
Why FinOps governance changes everything
Before diving into the model, let’s clarify what FinOps governance should concretely deliver.
An effective FinOps governance model gives you 4 things
- Actionable visibility: not just “a bill,” but costs allocated by product/team/environment. (This is the foundation of FinOps showback.)
- Accountability: every significant cost has an owner and a ritual where they report on it.
- Trade-offs: explicit decisions balancing cost / performance / risk / delivery speed.
- Repeatability: a weekly + monthly cycle that prevents cost debt from accumulating.
In short: FinOps becomes an operating model, not just an optimization campaign. (Yes: this is exactly the idea behind a FinOps operating model for product teams.)
Good to know
The best FinOps lever is not a tool, but a simple and repeatable decision-making loop.
With a clear RACI, 2 rituals (a 30-minute weekly review + a monthly MBR), and a few policies (tags, non-prod environments, RI/SP), you transform “one-shot” optimization into sustainable savings.
The anti “gas factory” rule: 1 pilot scope, 5 tags maximum, 6 KPIs maximum, 1 single backlog.
RACI: who does what (and who decides)
The biggest accelerator of FinOps maturity is not a tool. It is a clear FinOps RACI, shared and actively used in meetings.
The roles (minimal viable, but complete)
You do not need 10 dedicated people. A strong FinOps governance model can work with:
- IT/Engineering Sponsor (CTO, Head of Engineering, Platform Lead)
owns technical execution, standards (tags, policies), and performance/architecture trade-offs. - Finance Sponsor (FP&A, Controlling, Finance Partner)
owns the budget framework, value perspective, discipline, and business reporting. - FinOps Lead (often attached to Platform, Ops, or a transversal function)
facilitates rituals, consolidates metrics, structures the FinOps backlog, raises alerts, and makes recommendations. - Product / Business Owner
arbitrates spending based on value and prioritizes optimizations versus roadmap initiatives. - Engineering Managers / Tech Leads
execute actions: rightsizing, scheduling, refactoring, adoption of standards. - Cloud/Platform Team
provides guardrails: tagging enforcement, budgets/alerts, tooling, templates, and policies.
A simple FinOps RACI example
Let’s take 8 common activities and the associated RACI logic:
Tagging standards (FinOps tagging policies)
• R: Platform / FinOps Lead
• A: IT Sponsor
• C: Product, Finance
• I: EngineeringFinOps showback (how to implement FinOps showback)
• R: FinOps Lead + Finance
• A: Finance Sponsor
• C: Product, IT
• I: teamsBudgets & alerting
• R: FinOps Lead
• A: IT Sponsor (or Finance depending on the organization)
• C: Product/Engineering
• I: teamsFinOps backlog & prioritization (FinOps backlog quick wins prioritization)
• R: FinOps Lead
• A: IT + Finance Sponsors (joint validation)
• C: Product/Engineering
• I: teamsRightsizing / non-prod scheduling
• R: Engineering / Platform
• A: Engineering Manager of the scope
• C: FinOps Lead
• I: FinanceRI / Savings Plans commitments purchasing (who decides on Savings Plans / RI)
• R: FinOps Lead + Finance
• A: Finance Sponsor (with IT validation)
• C: Platform (capacity), Product (stability)
• I: teamsCost vs performance trade-offs (SLO) (FinOps cost/performance SLO trade-offs)
• R: Product + Engineering
• A: Product Owner / Product Sponsor
• C: FinOps Lead, Platform
• I: FinanceModel evolution (multi-cloud, new business units) (multi-cloud FinOps governance AWS Azure GCP)
• R: FinOps Lead
• A: IT + Finance Sponsors
• C: BU/Product managers
• I: teams
The RACI robustness test
Your RACI is “good” if, when asking “who decides?”, you have an immediate answer for:
- commitments (RI/Savings Plans),
- tagging exceptions,
- opening a new environment,
- increasing a budget,
- “premium performance” requests,
- high-risk actions (refactoring / migration / architecture changes).
If there is hesitation, it means the governance model is not yet fully in place.
Rituals: weekly + monthly (without unnecessary meetings)
Governance is not about “more meetings.” It is about better decision-making loops.
Ritual 1: weekly FinOps committee (30 minutes)
Objective: detect issues quickly, correct them quickly, and maintain discipline.
This is the well-known weekly FinOps committee agenda (and it should fit within 30 minutes).
Participants (minimum)
- FinOps Lead
- Platform/Cloud
- 1–3 Engineering / Product owners (depending on the scope)
- Finance optional (or every other session)
Agenda (simple structure)
- Variations & anomalies (10 min)
• top week-over-week increases
• top “unallocated” costs
• significant alerts (spikes) - Actions & backlog (15 min)
• completed actions + measured savings
• new actions: owner, deadline, risk, estimated savings
• quick decisions (go/no-go) - Friction points (5 min)
• tagging exceptions
• environments drifting out of control
• trade-offs to escalate to the monthly review
Golden rule: if a topic lasts more than 2 minutes, it goes into the backlog or the monthly review.
Ritual 2: monthly review (60 minutes) “FinOps MBR”
Often called the FinOps monthly business review: this is where structural decisions are made.
Participants
- IT + Finance Sponsors
- FinOps Lead
- relevant Product/BU representatives
Agenda (always the same)
- KPI & trends (15 min)
• total scope cost, prod vs non-prod
• % of allocated costs, evolution of “unallocated” costs
• cost per unit of value (if available)
• commitments coverage / utilization - Decisions (30 min)
• performance vs cost trade-offs (SLOs, availability)
• commitments (RI/Savings Plans), budgets
• refactoring / architecture priorities with cost ROI
• expansion of the FinOps scope (new products / accounts) - 30/60/90 plan (15 min)
• what gets industrialized
• what gets stopped
• what gets measured better
The “secret”: a single FinOps backlog
Everything that is not an immediate decision goes into a FinOps backlog, with:
- owner,
- effort,
- risk,
- estimated savings,target date,
- proof of savings (after implementation).
This backlog is what prevents governance from becoming an endless discussion.
Politiques : tags, environnements, RI (les garde-fous utiles)
FinOps policies are not there to “control.” Their purpose is to prevent the organization from automatically falling back into costly behaviors.
Policy 1: tagging (simple, mandatory, measurable)
This is the foundation of FinOps tagging policies.
Recommended minimum convention
- product
- team
- env (prod / preprod / dev)
- owner
- cost_center (if using chargeback)
Best practices
- standardized values (controlled list)
- clear ownership for maintaining the naming convention
- weekly measurement: % tag compliance + unallocated costs
Avoid the “tag war”
Do not aim for perfection. Start with a maximum of 5 tags. It is better to have 90% compliance on 5 tags than 30% on 20 tags.
Policy 2: environments (especially non-prod)
The #1 source of “invisible” cost drift comes from non-production environments running 24/7.
This is the non-prod environments shutdown policy.
Effective guardrails
- naming standards (to identify dev/test/staging)
- “default off” scheduling outside working hours
- limited and justified exceptions (reviewed monthly)
- automated cleanup of orphaned resources
Simple rule: a non-production environment that is “always-on” must have an owner, a justification, and an end date.
Policy 3: commitments (RI / Savings Plans)
Commitments are an ROI accelerator… if you have decision governance in place.
The 5 rules that prevent mistakes
- Only commit on a stable baseline (predictable workloads)
- Start cautiously (progressive coverage), avoid going “all-in”
- Track coverage / utilization / waste every month
- Define a decision-maker (Finance Sponsor + IT validation)
- Document the purchasing logic (assumptions, duration, risks)
This is exactly the “who decides on Savings Plans / RI” topic: without this rule, purchases are made based on instinct.
Trade-offs: the core of FinOps decisions
Mature FinOps is not just about saving money. It is about making trade-offs.
The 4 most common FinOps trade-offs
- Cost vs performance (SLO)
Typical example: “We want to move from 99.9% to 99.95% availability.”
FinOps decision: what is the additional cost, what is the business impact, what is the priority?
This is the FinOps cost/performance SLO trade-off: it must be explicit, not implicit.
- Optimization vs product roadmap
A refactor may reduce cloud costs, but delay a feature release.
Governance exists to decide: what brings the most value right now? - Standardization vs team autonomy
More guardrails (policies) reduce chaos, but can create frustration.
The goal is minimal policies, with controlled exceptions. - Showback vs chargebackµ
Many companies wonder about the difference between FinOps showback and chargeback.
Showback: costs are made visible, without recharging them.
Chargeback: costs are recharged (or budget-allocated) to the team/BU.
Pragmatic advice: start with showback. Chargeback comes later, once your allocation model is reliable and the organization is ready.
Which KPIs should be tracked to manage governance?
Without indicators, governance becomes a debate of opinions. With too many indicators, nobody follows them.
Here is a solid FinOps governance KPI baseline (6 maximum to start with):
- % of allocated costs (and share of “unallocated” costs)
- Prod vs non-prod costs (and trends)
- Top variations (weekly/monthly): where costs are changing and why
- Measured savings (before/after, not just estimates)
- Commitments coverage & utilization (RI/Savings Plans)
- Cost per unit of value (transaction, active user, order…) whenever possible
The most “transformational” KPI is often the cost per unit of value: it reconnects cloud spending to the business and supports better trade-off decisions.
The “simple” model in practice: where to start
If you are launching FinOps governance, you can follow this sequence (highly operational):
- RACI + owners: who decides what (1 workshop)
- 30-minute weekly ritual: variations + backlog + quick decisions
- Minimal tagging: 5 tags, measured compliance
- Non-prod policies: scheduler + controlled exceptions
- Monthly MBR: KPIs + commitments + trade-offs
- FinOps backlog: one single prioritized and tracked list
This is exactly what a “simple FinOps governance model” should be: nothing more.
FAQ
To avoid an overly complex FinOps governance model, it is recommended to start with a simple setup:
- one pilot scope,
- a maximum of 2 rituals (weekly and monthly),
- 5 key tags,
- a maximum of 6 KPIs,
- one single FinOps backlog.
The goal is to structure cloud cost management without slowing teams down.
In an effective FinOps governance model, decisions are clearly distributed:
- Finance decides on budgets and commitments (RI, Savings Plans),
- IT defines standards and policies (tags, environments),
- Product and Engineering arbitrate between cost, performance, and roadmap priorities,
- the FinOps Lead coordinates and structures decision-making.
A clear RACI helps avoid grey areas and accelerates trade-offs.
An effective FinOps governance model relies on two main rituals:
- a weekly committee (30 minutes) to monitor variations, anomalies, and actions,
- a monthly review (FinOps MBR) to manage KPIs, commitments, and structural decisions.
These rituals help maintain cost management discipline without multiplying meetings.
The essential FinOps policies focus on:
- tagging (costs allocated by product, team, environment),
- management of non-production environments (automatic shutdowns, controlled exceptions),
- cloud commitments (RI, Savings Plans) with clear decision-making rules.
These guardrails help prevent cloud cost overruns from returning after optimizations.
Without FinOps governance, cloud optimizations remain temporary and costs eventually rise again.
Governance helps establish a sustainable model based on visibility, accountability, regular rituals, and explicit decision-making.
It transforms cloud cost management into a managed system, rather than a series of isolated actions.