IT budgets are under pressure from every direction. Cloud sprawl, licensing complexity, underutilized infrastructure the costs pile up quietly until someone in finance asks an uncomfortable question. That's where the FTI Cost Optimizer becomes genuinely useful.
This isn't about slashing budgets blindly.It’s about knowing exactly where your money is going, seeing what is wasted and making conscious choices about what to keep.
What Is the FTI Cost Optimizer?
FTI Cost Optimizer is a framework and toolset that analyzes IT spending on infrastructure, software and operations and surface actionable reduction opportunities without impacting system performance or business continuity.
It’s a structured way for co...
IT budgets are under pressure from every direction. Cloud sprawl, licensing complexity, underutilized infrastructure the costs pile up quietly until someone in finance asks an uncomfortable question. That's where the FTI Cost Optimizer becomes genuinely useful.
This isn't about slashing budgets blindly.It’s about knowing exactly where your money is going, seeing what is wasted and making conscious choices about what to keep.
What Is the FTI Cost Optimizer?
FTI Cost Optimizer is a framework and toolset that analyzes IT spending on infrastructure, software and operations and surface actionable reduction opportunities without impacting system performance or business continuity.
It’s a structured way for cost governance, not ad hoc cuts.” IT managers, procurement heads and CIOs use it. The approach works across industries, but it's particularly effective in manufacturing, engineering, and software-intensive environments where technology spending is both high and complex.
If your organization runs PLM tools, simulation platforms, or enterprise software stacks, the optimization potential is often significant. Companies running platforms like PTC Windchill or MSC Adams which are discussed in detail at Creotek India's engineering software resource center frequently find that license costs alone represent 30–40% of their total IT spend.
Why IT Cost Optimization Is More Urgent Than Ever
Three things have made this harder to ignore.
Cloud costs grew faster than expected: Most organizations underestimated ongoing operational costs when they migrated workloads. Pay-as-you-go pricing seemed manageable until the usage patterns got messy.
Software licensing is harder to track: Enterprise agreements get renewed on autopilot. Modules that nobody uses still appear on invoices. Usage-based licensing sounds efficient but creates unpredictable bills.
IT teams are stretched: Teams are busy delivering and supporting, and there is seldom time to analyze costs. Optimization is delayed.
That’s where the FTI Cost Optimizer comes in. It provides teams a structured audit process, unlike having to constantly monitor manually.
Cost Optimization Framework within FTI Core Strategies
1. Rightsize Infrastructure
Rightsizing should be about matching compute and storage with what workloads actually need, not theoretical peaks from three years ago.
Steps to be taken:
Collect 90-day usage data for servers, VMs and cloud instances
List processes using less than 20 percent of CPU or memory
Consolidate or downsize where work patterns justify
Set up auto-scaling policies to meet actual peak loads, not to permanently meet peak loads
Organizations often find that 15-25% of their cloud spend is in oversized instances that no one has a reason to give back.
2. License Harvesting and Reallocation
Software licenses that aren't being used aren't neutral they're a cost. License harvesting is the process of identifying unused or underused seats and either reclaiming them, reallocating them, or flagging them for non-renewal.
This applies particularly to:
Engineering simulation tools with named-user or concurrent licensing
PLM platforms with module-level billing
Productivity suites where only 60–70% of licensed users are active
If your team uses Creotek India's PLM implementation and optimization services, this kind of license audit is often part of the initial engagement because the savings can be immediate.
3. Cloud Cost Governance
The practical version of governance is simple: no resource gets provisioned without a tag, an owner, and a scheduled review date.
Implement mandatory tagging at provisioning project, team, environment
Use Reserved Instances or Savings Plans for predictable workloads
Review spot and preemptible instance opportunities for batch and non-critical jobs
Shut down development and test environments outside business hours
A tagging policy alone can dramatically improve cost attribution. When teams can see their own spend, they make better decisions.
4. Vendor Renegotiation
Most IT vendor contracts are more negotiable than procurement teams realize especially at renewal time. The FTI Cost Optimizer recommends building a renegotiation calendar that gives teams 90–120 days of advance notice before any major contract renewal.
Useful leverage points:
• Competitive alternatives, even ones you don't plan to use
• Usage data showing you're paying for more than you consume
• Multi-year commit in exchange for per-unit pricing reductions
• Volume consolidation across business units
5. Technical Debt Reduction
Legacy systems require disproportionate maintenance effort, resist automation, and often require expensive specialist skills to support. The FTI Cost Optimizer includes a debt prioritization matrix that scores legacy systems on maintenance cost, business risk, and replacement feasibility.
Systems with high maintenance cost and low business risk become decommissioning candidates. Decommissioning one legacy system can sometimes fund two years of a modern replacement.
How to Deploy FTI Cost Optimizer in Your Organization
Implementation is based on a 4 phase model:
Discovery (Weeks 1-4): Take stock of all IT assets, licenses and cloud resources. Receive actual usage data, not estimations.
Analysis (Weeks 5-8) :Conduct the cost optimization analysis. 3. Rank results by savings opportunity and ease of implementation. License harvesting and rightsizing are quick wins, often delivering results before Phase 2 is complete.
Execution (Weeks 9-20): Implement changes in priority order. Monitor progress against baseline Announce changes early to the teams that will be affected to avoid disruption.
Governance (Ongoing) : Monthly cost reviews, alerting on anomalies, quarterly license audits. If the governance is not valid, the optimization is not.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Cost optimization projects fail in predictable ways.
Cutting without data : Arbitrary percentage reduction targets lead to cutting the wrong things and creating operational problems that cost more to fix.
Ignoring the human side: Teams resist changes they don't understand. Brief people on what's changing and why before it happens.
One-and-done thinking : IT costs drift back toward waste without ongoing governance. Build the review process into operations, not just a project plan.
Conclusion
IT spending inefficiency rarely looks dramatic from the outside. It accumulates quietly a forgotten license here, an oversized server there, a cloud instance that's been running since a project that wrapped up 18 months ago. The FTI Cost Optimizer gives organizations a method for finding and fixing these systematically rather than reactively.
If your team runs complex engineering software or PLM platforms and you want to understand where your software spend actually goes, Creotek India can help you structure that analysis.