The Engagement Lifecycle Nobody Talks About
Your VP of Finance approved a $180,000 cloud cost optimization engagement with a consulting firm. The proposal promised "15-30% savings identification across your AWS, Azure, and GCP footprint, with actionable recommendations and an implementation roadmap."
Here's what actually happens over the next 8 weeks:
Week 1: The Kickoff. A partner and a senior manager fly in. PowerPoint slides about methodology. Impressive credentials on screen. Promises of "deep-dive analysis" and "proprietary frameworks." You leave the meeting feeling good about the spend.
Week 2-3: Discovery. Two or three analysts — most of them 1-2 years out of school — get read-only access to your cloud accounts. They log into AWS Cost Explorer. They export CSVs. They run the same CLI commands you could run yourself. They take screenshots of your billing dashboard.
Week 4-6: Analysis. The analysts build a spreadsheet. They categorize your spend by service. They identify idle EC2 instances, unattached EBS volumes, and over-provisioned RDS instances. They check your Reserved Instance coverage. They note that your NAT Gateway data processing charges are high.
Week 7: The Deliverable. A 90-page PowerPoint deck. Executive summary on slide 3. Bar charts of your spend by service. A list of "optimization opportunities" with estimated savings. Most of the recommendations are right-sizing suggestions and "consider purchasing Reserved Instances."
Week 8: Handoff. A 2-hour readout with your leadership team. The partner is back for this one. Questions are answered with "we can scope a Phase 2 implementation engagement to address that."
Total elapsed time: 8 weeks. Total cost: $180,000. Total recommendations you couldn't have found with a $200/month SaaS tool: approximately zero.
The Billing Arbitrage
The economics of a consulting engagement are not complicated. They're just never explained to the client.
| Role | What they bill you | What they do | Time on your project |
|---|---|---|---|
| Partner | $500-800/hr | Sells the engagement, attends kickoff and readout | ~10 hours |
| Senior Manager | $350-500/hr | Oversees the project, reviews the deck | ~40 hours |
| Analysts (2-3) | $250-400/hr each | Do all the actual work | ~300 hours combined |
The analysts — the people who actually log into your cloud accounts, run the queries, build the spreadsheets, and write the recommendations — are typically compensated at $45-75/hr internally. You're billed $250-400/hr for their time. That's a 4-6x markup.
I want to be clear about something: I am not criticizing the analysts. They are smart, they work hard, and every senior engineer was a junior once. These engagements are how they learn. The cloud industry needs junior engineers to become senior engineers, and consulting firms provide a structured path for that development.
What I am criticizing is the opacity of the model. The client believes they're getting $400/hr expertise. They're getting $50/hr labor at $400/hr pricing, supervised by someone billing $500/hr who checks in twice a week. That's not a value proposition — it's an information asymmetry.
What They Actually Find
After 8 weeks of analysis, the typical cloud cost optimization report identifies a predictable set of findings. I know because I've seen dozens of these reports from clients who then evaluated CLARITY:
- Idle and stopped resources — EC2 instances at 0% CPU, RDS instances with 0 connections, Lambda functions with 0 invocations
- Unattached storage — EBS volumes not attached to any instance, old snapshots, S3 lifecycle policies missing
- Over-provisioned compute — instances running at 10-20% average CPU for 30+ days
- Reserved Instance / Savings Plan coverage gaps — on-demand spend that should be committed
- NAT Gateway data processing — traffic routing through NAT that could go through free VPC endpoints
- Untagged resources — 15-35% of spend with no team attribution
Every single one of these is detectable by an automated tool in under 5 minutes. Not approximately. Not with caveats. In under 5 minutes, with dollar amounts attached.
The consulting firm doesn't have a proprietary algorithm. They have AWS Cost Explorer, the same CLI you have, and a spreadsheet template they've refined over dozens of engagements. The "methodology" is pattern recognition applied by humans who happen to be junior.
The Conflict Nobody Mentions
Most consulting firms that offer cloud cost optimization also hold partnership agreements with the cloud providers themselves. They're AWS Advanced Consulting Partners, or Azure Expert MSPs, or Google Cloud Premier Partners.
Think about what that means: the firm you hired to objectively audit your cloud spend has a financial relationship with the company sending you the bill.
This creates predictable blind spots:
- They won't recommend migrating workloads to a cheaper provider (that would hurt their partnership status)
- They won't question whether you need the provider's premium support tier (they may get referral credit for it)
- They'll recommend the provider's native cost management tools over independent alternatives (alignment with partner program incentives)
An independent SaaS tool has no provider partnership. It treats AWS, Azure, and GCP as equals. It recommends whatever saves you the most money, regardless of which provider loses the workload.
Point-in-Time vs. Continuous
Here's the deepest structural problem with the consulting model: it's a snapshot.
Your cloud environment changes every day. Engineers deploy new services, scale up for load tests, spin up clusters for POCs, forget to delete staging environments. The 90-page report from Week 7 starts decaying the moment it's delivered.
By the time your team gets to recommendation #15 on the list, recommendations #1-5 may have already shifted — the idle instance was terminated, but three new ones appeared. The RI coverage gap was addressed, but the team migrated to a different instance family.
A SaaS tool doesn't produce a report once. It monitors continuously. New idle resources are flagged within 24 hours. Cost anomalies trigger alerts the day they happen. Commitment coverage is tracked in real time as workloads change.
The difference between a consulting engagement and a FinOps platform is the difference between a photograph and a video feed. Both show you the same room. Only one tells you when someone walks in.
The Real Cost Comparison
| Dimension | Consulting engagement | SaaS FinOps platform |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | $150K-$500K | $0 (free trial) |
| Ongoing cost | $0 (they leave after 8 weeks) | $1,200-$6,000/month |
| Annual cost | $150K-$500K per engagement | $14K-$72K/year |
| Time to first finding | 2-3 weeks | Under 5 minutes |
| Monitoring cadence | Once (point-in-time) | Continuous (daily refresh) |
| Methodology transparency | Black box — you get a PDF | Full access — you see every query, every threshold, every calculation |
| Provider bias | Partnership agreements with providers | Independent — no provider relationships |
| Who does the work | Junior analysts at senior rates | Algorithms at algorithm rates |
| Reproduceability | Can't verify findings independently | Every number is clickable — trace to the resource, the date, the cost record |
When Consulting Does Make Sense
I'm not arguing that consulting firms have no value. They do — in specific contexts:
- Cloud architecture advisory — deciding whether to go multi-region, choosing between EKS and ECS, designing a data platform. This requires experience and judgment that no tool replaces.
- Organizational FinOps maturity — building a FinOps practice, defining roles, establishing processes for cost accountability. This is change management, not technical analysis.
- Negotiation leverage — renegotiating an Enterprise Discount Program or Private Pricing Agreement with AWS/Azure/GCP. The big firms have benchmark data and relationships that matter at $10M+ annual spend.
- Compliance and governance frameworks — implementing tagging standards, cost allocation policies, and financial controls that map to SOC 2 / ISO 27001 requirements.
Notice what's not on that list: "finding idle EC2 instances." That's tool work, not advisory work. The mistake most organizations make is paying advisory rates for tool work.
Hire a consultant for strategic advice on your cloud architecture. Don't hire one to run Cost Explorer.
What the Alternative Looks Like
A modern FinOps platform connects to your cloud accounts via read-only API credentials. Within minutes, it:
- Discovers every resource across AWS, Azure, and GCP
- Calculates per-resource cost from billing data (not estimates)
- Identifies idle, stopped, and underutilized resources with dollar amounts
- Detects commitment coverage gaps and models savings from RIs/SPs/CUDs
- Surfaces untagged spend and governance violations
- Decomposes Kubernetes costs into control plane, worker compute, and support
- Generates anomaly alerts when spending deviates from baseline
- Produces the same report the consulting firm would deliver — except it updates daily
Every finding is transparent. Click a number and you see the resource, the date range, the cost calculation. No black box. No "proprietary methodology." No PDF you can't reproduce.
The tool doesn't leave after 8 weeks. It runs continuously. When a new idle cluster appears on Tuesday, you know about it on Wednesday — not in the next quarterly engagement.
See What $180K of Consulting Finds — in 5 Minutes
Connect your cloud account with read-only credentials. CLARITY surfaces idle resources, commitment gaps, untagged spend, and Kubernetes cost breakdowns — with dollar amounts on every finding. No agents. No consultants. No black box.
Start Free TrialThe Bottom Line
The cloud cost optimization consulting market exists because of an information asymmetry: organizations don't know what questions to ask about their cloud spend, and consulting firms charge premium rates to ask those questions on their behalf using the same tools the organization already has access to.
That asymmetry is closing. SaaS FinOps platforms now automate 90% of what a consulting engagement delivers, at less than 10% of the cost, with full transparency into methodology and findings.
The remaining 10% — strategic advisory, organizational change management, vendor negotiation — is genuinely valuable and worth paying for. But it's advisory work, not analysis work. And it doesn't take 8 weeks and $180K.
The question isn't whether to optimize your cloud spend. The question is whether the person doing it should be an algorithm that runs 24/7 for $200/month, or a team of analysts who are gone in 8 weeks for $180K.
For most organizations, the math is obvious. The hard part is admitting that the last engagement could have been a subscription.
For a deeper look at how automated tools compare to manual analysis for Kubernetes cost management, see Kubernetes Cost Management: How CLARITY Compares to Kubecost, Vantage, CloudZero, and Harness CCM. For why native cloud billing dashboards create a false sense of security, read Why Your FinOps Dashboard Is Lying to You.
See what $180K of consulting finds — in 5 minutes
CLARITY surfaces idle resources, commitment gaps, untagged spend, and Kubernetes cost breakdowns — with dollar amounts on every finding. No agents. No consultants. No black box.
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