May 24, 2022
May 24, 2022
Contributor: Jordan Turner
Make your program successful and sustainable.
Leaders often struggle to establish cost optimization that is scoped for long-term sustainability. According to Gartner research, only 11% of organizations maintain cost savings for three consecutive years. But when done right, you’ll be able to maintain ongoing operations while finding opportunities to be more efficient — allocating savings into areas of the business that require growth, investment or innovation.
“Repetitive cycles of cost cutting are often linked to the lack of a sustainable cost optimization discipline and the failure to demonstrate a clear link to the value delivered,” says Robert Naegle, VP Analyst at Gartner. “True strategic cost optimization programmatically reviews spend, optimizes current resources and shifts savings to investments that deliver greater value to the business."
Download now: Your Guide to Optimizing Costs Strategically, Not Tactically
Track spending at the outcome level to better understand its value to the organization. This increased awareness also helps to assess which expenses to optimize. View your budget in terms of the the following four variables:
Next, examine how your spending compares with that of your peers through external benchmarking. Use this as an ongoing status check and a way to narrow the scope in the search for optimizable costs.
Take note: when increased spending has no demonstrable link to increased business performance, question the expense.
To ensure cost optimization is a long-term initiative, run it as an ongoing discipline with your business unit leaders and infuse it into your organization’s culture. Showing stewardship over a given budget is proactive and warrants less scrutiny if optimizing costs becomes an organization’s proven priority. Plus, ongoing cost optimization efforts allow for investment in the future capabilities demanded by enterprise strategy.
Learn more: To Manage Costs Effectively, Align Around a Shared Framework
Your budget should include costs linked to both supply and demand — analyzing the expenses you’re in control of (supply), as well as expenses your stakeholders or customers are expecting (demand). These categories can help you better value and prioritize your spend:
Discover Gartner BuySmart™: Reduce risk and optimize spend on your next tech purchase.
Every executive leader has a responsibility to evaluate and reevaluate spend. You must reduce and optimize where possible to help fund new initiatives to drive the strategy of the organization. To do this, find a valuable use for savings.
Ask the following critical questions to your functional leaders to discover where your focus, time and money need to be as priorities change over time:
In short:
Join your peers for the unveiling of the latest insights at Gartner conferences.
Recommended resources for Gartner clients*:
5 Rules for Sustainable Cost Optimization Across the Enterprise
How to Realize Value From Cost Optimization
7 Cost Optimization Errors You Cannot Afford to Make
*Note that some documents may not be available to all Gartner clients.