As enterprises deepen their reliance on cloud infrastructure, they also inherit growing complexity, an unseen sprawl of services, configurations, and dependencies that often results in costly inefficiencies. These hidden issues, ranging from idle compute instances to overprovisioned databases, continue to drain budgets and drag down performance across industries.
PointFive, a company dedicated to cloud efficiency and continuous optimization, has taken a bold step in addressing this challenge. They’ve launched the Cloud Efficiency Hub, a unique public knowledge base and collaborative platform. Unlike other resources, the Hub is designed to help organizations not only identify and understand but also eliminate wasteful cloud practices. It achieves this by leveraging the collective insights of individuals who are deeply involved in infrastructure daily.
With over 200 documented cloud inefficiencies and contributions from more than 70 practitioners across leading enterprises, the Hub is already becoming an anchor in the emerging discipline of Cloud Efficiency Posture Management (CEPM).
CEPM: Moving Beyond Traditional Cost Management
For years, cloud cost management tools have attempted to rein in ballooning cloud bills through reactive reporting and post-hoc analysis. But as cloud operations become integral to core business functions, this fragmented, after-the-fact approach is no longer enough.
That’s where Cloud Efficiency Posture Management (CEPM) comes in. CEPM emphasizes continuous optimization, embedded remediation, and team-wide visibility, and the Cloud Efficiency Hub brings these principles to life. By collecting and openly sharing real-world inefficiencies, the Hub enables teams to shift from patchwork fixes to a posture of ongoing improvement.
“The Hub is centralizing knowledge around cloud inefficiencies in a way that hasn’t been done before,” said Matt Walls, FinOps Engineer at NBCUniversal and a Founding Contributor. “It’s given me the chance to learn from global experts and share my experiences optimizing cloud environments.”
The Hub serves as both a reference library and a practical toolkit, covering a range of topics from underutilized databases to excessive network transfer costs. For engineers and FinOps professionals alike, it transforms optimization into a daily, collaborative process rather than a quarterly scramble.
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At the heart of the Cloud Efficiency Hub is its community. More than 70 contributors, representing a cross-section of roles from infrastructure engineers to FinOps analysts, have helped identify and document inefficiencies that often go unnoticed but have a measurable impact.
Each entry in the Hub is more than a warning; it’s a practical case study. The inefficiencies it covers are not theoretical, but real-world issues that practitioners face daily. They span all layers of cloud infrastructure, from forgotten development environments left running over weekends to improperly configured storage classes and autoscaling rules that misalign with traffic patterns.
“I was immediately drawn to the Cloud Efficiency Hub because it directly addressed a need I recognized in my work,” said Christine Oji, Cloud FinOps Engineer and Founding Contributor. “By documenting common waste patterns and their drivers, the Hub reinforces the tremendous value of collective knowledge.”
The Hub is also governed by a lightweight yet structured model, with roles for Contributors, Maintainers, and a Governing Board to ensure transparency and maintain content quality. This open governance helps the Hub stay relevant, accurate, and aligned with the needs of practitioners on the ground.
Shifting Culture Alongside Infrastructure
Beyond the technical insights, the Cloud Efficiency Hub represents a cultural shift in how teams approach cloud operations. In most organizations, optimization efforts remain siloed. Cost responsibility resides with finance, while infrastructure choices are the purview of engineering.
The Hub bridges that divide. It fosters a shared language and mutual visibility, enabling teams to collaborate and reduce waste, enhance sustainability, and optimize performance.
It also serves as a training resource. New engineers can learn from patterns identified across dozens of environments, and seasoned practitioners can benchmark their practices against those of their industry peers. This type of open exchange fosters accountability, efficiency, and innovation without requiring the addition of new tools or overhead.
A Living Resource for the Future of Cloud
The Cloud Efficiency Hub isn’t just a static database; it’s a living, evolving project that grows with every contribution. As more inefficiencies are introduced and new contributors join, the Hub has the potential to establish a new standard for evaluating and improving cloud posture.
By helping organizations operationalize CEPM principles, it brings clarity and structure to a space that has long lacked them, and does so in a way that is free, transparent, and community-aligned.
“The Hub empowers engineers and FinOps professionals to improve cloud environments with context and confidence,” said Oji. “It’s about making cloud efficiency part of the day-to-day, not just an afterthought.”
Teams interested in exploring the Hub or becoming contributors can do so at hub.pointfive.co.
About the Cloud Efficiency Hub
The Cloud Efficiency Hub is an open-source, community-driven project aimed at identifying and eliminating cloud inefficiencies. Built collaboratively by cloud practitioners for practitioners, it provides actionable insights and best practices to optimize cloud infrastructure efficiency. The project is developed and maintained by PointFive.