
In our latest Pulse study, we surveyed 510 Global 2000 enterprises. We found that a significant percentage of enterprises are experiencing some level of buyer’s remorse with their hyper-scaler contracts. The primary sources of frustration are high switching costs due to vendor lock-in and unexpected cost overruns. These issues highlight a critical need for enterprises to re-evaluate their approach to hyperscaler partnerships and ensure better alignment with their strategic goals. The key takeaways of this situation are:
- Vendor lock-in limits flexibility: The leading cause of buyer’s remorse, reported by 34% of enterprises, is vendor lock-in. High switching costs for moving data or workloads off a hyperscaler’s platform can limit an organization’s agility and ability to adapt to new opportunities or technological advancements. To avoid being locked in, enterprises should prioritize contract negotiations that include exit clauses, consider multi-cloud strategies, and minimize single-provider dependencies from the outset.
- Unanticipated cloud costs reduce confidence in hyperscalers: Cloud costs exceeding initial expectations are the second-most common issue, with 29% of respondents citing this as a pain point. The variability and complexity of cloud pricing can lead to financial surprises that strain budgets and undermine trust in the hyperscaler partnership. Enterprises can mitigate this by setting up detailed cost-tracking mechanisms, investing in FinOps, negotiating for better provider transparency, and conducting regular reviews to adjust resources.
The Bottom Line: Effectively managing hyperscaler relationships is needed to reduce the risk of vendor lock-in and keep cloud costs predictable. Focusing on strategic contract terms and proactive cost management can turn buyer’s remorse into long-term value creation.