How Akamai regained control of its runaway cloud bills
Akamai Technologies headquarters building in Cambridge, Massachusetts, pictured on Nov. 11, 2023. The company clamped down on runaway cloud costs last year. · CIO Dive · JHVEPhoto via Getty Images

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There are dozens of great reasons for leveraging public cloud but there are costs, too. Scalability and easy access to best-in-class platform solutions come at a price that may not be fully visible until the bills start rolling in.

Akamai’s been down that path. The technology company was years into its public cloud journey when executives felt the sting of escalating costs and realized it was time to pull back some workloads, reconfigure others and make better decisions moving forward.

“What started organically had ballooned to hundreds of millions of dollars in spend,” Akamai SVP and CIO Kate Prouty told CIO Dive. “We were running lots of workloads in the cloud but there wasn't a lot of oversight.”

Like many organizations committed to modernization, Akamai latched onto the benefits of hyperscale compute to drive in-house innovation. Along the way, the company added to native deployments through acquisitions.

“We acquired companies born in the cloud, they brought cloud with them and our engineers leveraged it,” said Prouty, who’s held leadership roles at Akamai since 1999 and rose to her current position in 2021. “It’s a great playground for engineers, especially those who are really forward-thinking.”

The company’s 2022 acquisition of cloud platform Linode triggered a reassessment that snowballed into an enterprisewide strategic overhaul dubbed Project Cirrus.

Linode provided a landing spot for repatriated workloads within Akamai’s ecosystem.

“When we started thinking about moving our workloads onto Linode it put a spotlight onto just how much we were leveraging hyperscalers and the cost associated with that,” Prouty said.

The optimization plan didn’t sever Akamai’s hyperscaler relationships, but it reduced the company’s public cloud footprint and the related costs. Akamai saved 40% in the first year of Project Cirrus, Ari Weil, VP of cloud computing and delivery product marketing at Akamai, said in an August blog post.

Having Linode solutions to leverage as part of Akamai's cloud portfolio helped, Prouty acknowledged, but the process also uncovered deeper inefficiencies endemic to cloud’s pay-as-you-go billing structure.

“We were overprovisioning and, as we dug into it, we quickly realized that a lot of workloads hadn’t been looked at since they were deployed,” Prouty said.