By Hemang Davé and Reinier Aerdts
One of the inherent challenges of innovation is squaring benefits with the bottom line. This certainly has been the case so far for AI and generative AI.
Although these transformative technologies are changing the way, speed and efficiency with which organizations across sectors operate, research from Kyndryl shows that 36% of leaders view ROI as a barrier to AI adoption. Of the organizations that have implemented AI, only 42% have seen a positive return on their investments.
The implications are clear: AI-related expenditures must create greater business value to justify the technology’s hard and soft costs. FinOps — a discipline that combines technology, best practices and reimagined cross-functional teams — can play a key role as organizations strive to balance the promise of AI with fiscal responsibility.
Why businesses should apply FinOps to AI workloads
Most (75%) of Forbes’ Global 2000 enterprises now use FinOps to rein in cloud and hybrid cloud spending.1 Companies can apply the same methodologies to AI and generative AI workloads to:
- Reduce operating expenses.FinOps provides a structured approach to managing expenses caused by variability in data processing, model training and inference workloads. Teams can also use forecasting tools tailored for AI workloads to project future costs and plan budgets more effectively.
- Improve resource allocation.
FinOps can help improve resource management and boost ROI by optimizing AI workloads. For example, FinOps teams can monitor usage patterns of graphics processing units (GPUs) and implement spot instances or reserved instances to maximize performance.
- Align spending with business value.
FinOps tracks the performance of AI models to determine the business value of AI-related spending. The process involves establishing clear frameworks for measuring AI’s impact on cost efficiency, resilience, user experience, productivity, sustainability and business growth.
- Increase financial accountability.
FinOps promotes greater accountability and helps all stakeholders understand the financial ramifications of their decisions. Finance, engineering and business teams work together to establish governance frameworks, conduct regular cost reviews, optimize resource allocation, and manage expenses.