AWS Cost Management

Launch: AWS Budgets Actions

Imagine you can put some real teeth to your AWS Budgets.  Rather than warning you of a forecasted or actual cost overage, AWS can act on your behalf and stop the activities that caused the overage. We are pleased to announce that this came to a reality with the launch of AWS Budget Actions. Our […]

Read More

Cost Allocation Blog Series #5: Building an AWS cost allocation strategy with Apptio Cloudability

This blog post is contributed by Scott Kellish, Partner Solutions Architect at AWS, and Andrew Midgley, Senior Technical Product Marketing Manager at Apptio As you establish and implement your cost allocation model, AWS equips you with tools and resources to organize accounts and resources (e.g. AWS Organizations), improve visibility into detailed cost and usage data […]

Read More

Preview: Anomaly Detection and alerting now available in AWS Cost Management

The democratization of cloud technology brings autonomy and agility to end users, who can access and spin up resources quickly.  Builders get to experiment ideas, develop applications, and deploy products globally to meet local customers’ needs.  Organization leaders want to unleash the team’s creativity and accelerate the time-to-market, while keeping the cloud cost within limits. […]

Read More

Cost Allocation Blog Series #4: Visualize Data Transfer Costs with Cost and Usage Reports, Athena, and QuickSight

The blog post is contributed by Daniel Yu, Senior Technical Account Manager of AWS Enterprise Support, and Vishal Srivastava, Associate Technical Account Manager Organizations tend to overlook shared costs, such as, data transfer costs, as it can be difficult to identify owners and enforce necessary actions.  However, as we recommended in the blog “Cost Allocation […]

Read More

Launch: Daily Cost and Usage Budgets

AWS Budgets allows you to stay informed of your cost and usage based on the custom budget limits.  You will receive alerts if your cost and usage exceed or are forecasted to exceed these monthly, quarterly, and/or annual budget thresholds you set yourselves.  The best way to leverage AWS Budgets is to set your expected […]

Read More
Enforce and Validate AWS Resource Tags

Cost Allocation Blog Series #3: Enforce and Validate AWS Resource Tags

This blog post is contributed by Roberto Meda, Senior Consultant of High Performance Computing, AWS As I shared in the blog “Cost Allocation Basics That You Need to Know”, tagging is one of the most foundational steps that you need to take in order to establish a meaningful cost allocation model.  Tags can also control […]

Read More

Cost Allocation Blog Series #2: AWS-Generated vs. User-Defined Cost Allocation Tag

This blog post is contributed by Harsh Patel, Associate Cloud Developer In my last blog “Cost Allocation Basics That You Need to Know”, I shared three foundational elements 1) account structure, 2) tagging, and 3) reporting on shared costs, you need to establish before you can implement a successful cost allocation model that meets your […]

Read More

Cost Allocation Blog Series #1: Cost Allocation Basics That You Need to Know

If it’s Everyone’s job, it’s No One’s job. On our team, we take this lesson to heart and always make sure there is a clear owner for everything we do.  This helps ensure everyone is responsible for specific tasks or goals, and will not be bystanders, assuming someone else will pick up the work. The […]

Read More
Update: Elastic Load Balancing Code Change

Update: Elastic Load Balancing Code Change

Elastic Load Balancing is a service that automatically distributes incoming application traffic across multiple targets, such as Amazon EC2 instances, containers, IP addresses, and Lambda functions.  It helps customers achieve fault tolerance for any application by ensuring scalability, performance, and security. Starting August 1, Elastic Load Balancing cost and usage information will start showing up […]

Read More
Preview: AWS Purchase Order Management

Preview: AWS Purchase Order Management

As part of the procure-to-pay process, many AWS customers use Purchase Orders (“POs”) to procure AWS services and approve invoices for payment. Customers have told us that they want to use separate POs for different types of purchases and need the ability to track their PO information to ensure that valid POs are used for their invoices.

Read More