For good reason, people, capital, and infrastructure are known as the pillars that hold up organisations. Now comes a modern pillar that is just as important: connectivity.
Nobody would deny the need for extensive financial oversight in monitoring spending on people, capital, and infrastructure. But does connectivity receive a fraction of this budgetary attention? The answer is a resounding no.
Yet connectivity underpins nearly every critical operation, from customer transactions to cloud platforms to global collaboration. Telecommunications spend, the driver of connectivity, remains one of the lowest priorities in financial governance and cost control.
It isn’t as if telecoms spend can’t be measured. Kelly Battles, chief financial officer of Quora, says: “FP&A used to hold all the cards… Nowadays, valuable data resides across the business.” There is no good reason for such a glaring blind spot to persist.
As ICT complexity grows, telecom expense management should feed directly into the CFO’s wheelhouse when it comes to financial governance and cost control.
With real-time visibility, telecom shouldn’t remain a reactive expense, but rather, a controllable, strategic spend category.
Telecom is No Longer Just a Cost Centre
The ability to be connected is now mission-critical for every modern business. Telecoms spend was once a minor line item, a necessary cost centre, but rarely scrutinised, and often managed in the background. That era is over.
True, telecom spend once evolved faster than the systems designed to manage it, leading to a fragmented web of carriers, contracts, devices, and service layers whose actual cost couldn’t be measured. But with technology expense management tools, that lack of management doesn’t have to persist.
That’s why telecom financial governance is a strategic opportunity. The reliance on distributed networks, vendor-managed services, and mobile workforces has continued to accelerate. Today, connectivity is more than just voice or data lines; it is the very foundation for product delivery, uptime, and competitive agility. Within this once-neglected pillar, the room for spend optimisation is vast.
Real-Time Expense Visibility is the New Governance Standard
Old-fashioned approaches to telecom expense management, such as quarterly reconciliations, retrospective reporting, and manual spreadsheets, no longer meet the demands of modern finance.
Not when there are tools to provide us with the visibility needed to enable oversight of budgeting, financial planning, internal controls, risk management, regulatory compliance, and accountability for financial decisions.
As ICT environments grow more complex, the time lag between spend and visibility creates real financial risk. Left unchecked, these problems present:
- Fragmented contracts and shadow costs – Runaway contracts, overlapping services, and undocumented changes lead to hidden costs that accumulate quietly.
- Missed optimisation opportunities – By not using consolidated, real-time data, finance teams miss opportunities to optimise spend, benchmark supplier performance, or renegotiate contracts based on accurate usage.
- Inability to forecast accurately – Being unable to forecast telecom costs with precision undermines broader financial planning and adds volatility to operational budgets.
That’s why leading finance teams now treat ICT spend with the same rigour as any other strategic supplier category.
But they cannot do it without real-time visibility, which is really the new governance gold standard. It provides the prerequisite for governance, cost control, and operational resilience. Without it, organisations remain exposed to waste, inefficiency, and damaging supplier lock-in.
The Hidden Risks: Vendor Lock-in and Opaque SLAs
But what happens if organisations ignore their telecoms spend patterns? In that case, complexity grows quietly, with new carriers, evolving contracts, bundled services, and global coverage requirements all adding layers of operational dependency.
Ignoring such a pressing issue is dereliction. In sports, it’s called an “unforced error”: an avoidable mistake that could have been swerved with better execution. Here are some of the costs to be paid:
- Wasteful and unused services – Services go unused but remain billed. Organisations overcommit to long-term contracts without fully understanding current needs or usage patterns.
- Opaque agreements – Businesses sign SLAs, but few have the data to monitor whether suppliers are consistently meeting performance thresholds.
- Being unable to benchmark performance – Without accurate, real-time expense and performance data, benchmarking supplier value becomes a matter of guesswork. This blind spot limits Finance and Procurement teams in two critical areas: negotiating from a position of strength and holding vendors accountable to agreed terms.
Finance, IT, and Procurement: Why Collaboration is Non-Negotiable
Telecom costs sit at the intersection of finance, technology, and supplier management; yet, they’re often governed in silos.
Finance tracks the spend after the fact. IT manages performance and technical requirements. Procurement negotiates contracts, often without complete visibility into ongoing costs or usage. Each department is barely aware of what the other is doing.
This fragmented approach limits each team’s ability to manage risk, control costs, or optimise service levels.
A different model is needed, one that is shared, data-driven, and transparent in its governance.
That’s why collaboration is so important. Each team can bring its strengths. Finance brings the discipline of cost control and accountability. IT understands the technical dependencies that underpin operations. Procurement applies commercial rigour to negotiations and supplier oversight.
It’s obvious that these teams need to talk to each other, but they can’t do so without unified, real-time data, a shared view of spend, performance, and supplier contracts.
How OneView Transforms Telecom Cost Management
For many organisations, telecom spend remains a fragmented blind spot. It’s clear that this negative situation can be avoided with the right tools.
Technology expense management tools, such as OneView, change that.
OneView provides a unified platform for real-time visibility, control, and optimisation of telecom costs. It brings together data from across organisations’ carrier landscape, consolidating usage, contracts, and billing information into a single, accessible view.
The Bottom Line
Telecom is a critical operational expense that directly impacts financial performance, resilience, and risk exposure. Yet, for many companies, it still operates in the margins, disconnected from core financial governance.
That approach is no longer sustainable.
However, without accurate, real-time data on telecom costs and supplier performance, finance leaders cannot course correct.