Microsoft cloud cost is shaped as much by licensing rights as by Azure rate cards: Azure Hybrid Benefit, SQL Server core counting under virtualization and M365 seat mix decide whether you pay twice or once. This page explains the mechanics, then lists the firms that do this work — each with pros and cons, listed, not ranked.
Last reviewed: 5 June 2026
Most of the avoidable money in a Microsoft cloud estate is set by license entitlement, not by the Azure consumption meter. Azure Hybrid Benefit (AHB) lets you apply eligible Windows Server and SQL Server licenses with Software Assurance to Azure compute so you stop paying a second time for the operating system or database. Where AHB is mis-applied — claimed without Software Assurance, double-counted, or never claimed at all — the result is either over-payment or compliance exposure.
SQL Server is the sharpest edge. SQL is licensed per core with a four-core minimum per VM, and virtualization and cloud bursting change how those cores are counted. An estate that is correct on-prem can drift out of compliance the moment workloads move to Azure or a hoster, and the same reconciliation that lowers cost is what makes the estate defensible if Microsoft later opens a SAM engagement.
This page is general information about Microsoft licensing and cloud & saas cost optimization, not legal, financial or licensing advice for your situation. Vendor programs are described factually. Indicative figures, where shown, are labelled indicative.
Listed alphabetically with pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking. Selected for Microsoft coverage plus cloud & saas cost optimization work.
Independent Microsoft, Azure and SPLA specialist with no Microsoft partnership, known for a public, opinionated take on Microsoft licensing and cloud cost.
Independent boutique at the convergence of FinOps, ITAM and licensing, covering Microsoft cloud and SaaS cost optimization across multi-vendor estates.
Independent UK boutique covering multi-vendor SAM and cloud optimization, positioned explicitly as not a reseller.
Microsoft EA procurement and third-party support provider working on Microsoft cost reduction, including Enterprise Agreement negotiation and support alternatives.
Listed alphabetically — not a ranking. Independence is shown as a pro and reseller, Big-Four or vendor-side-audit ties as a con, stated as factual trade-offs for you to weigh. Firm details are compiled from public sources and are unverified (demo) until the verified registry is live.
Indicative — directional patterns from how Microsoft cloud & saas cost optimization work tends to resolve, not a quote or a guarantee. Specific figures are not published until the verified registry is live.
| LEVER | WHAT IT CHANGES | INDICATIVE EFFECT |
|---|---|---|
| Azure Hybrid Benefit | Applies owned Windows/SQL licenses to Azure compute | Indicative: removes double-paid OS and database charges |
| SQL core reconciliation | Counts SQL cores correctly under virtualization | Indicative: often the single largest swing in a SQL estate |
| M365 seat right-sizing | Matches subscription SKUs and add-ons to real use | Indicative: trims dormant and over-specified seats |
| EA / MCA commit shaping | Aligns the Azure commit to actual consumption | Indicative: avoids stranded, over-committed cloud spend |
The common thread is that Microsoft cloud savings come from correct entitlement and SKU mix, not from negotiating a deeper Azure discount. Getting AHB and SQL core counting right is also what keeps the estate defensible if Microsoft runs a SAM engagement, so the optimization and audit-readiness work overlap.
The same Microsoft estate, viewed through the service you need.
The Microsoft audit & negotiation operation →
Responding to a SAM engagement →
Ongoing Microsoft SAM & ITAM →
Licensing by design & AHB →
The service across all vendors →
EA renewal & true-up support →
Yes, when it is applied correctly. Azure Hybrid Benefit lets eligible Windows Server and SQL Server licenses with active Software Assurance be applied to Azure compute so you do not pay a second time. It must be claimed against entitlement you actually hold; claiming AHB without Software Assurance creates a compliance exposure rather than a saving.
SQL Server is licensed per core with a four-core minimum per virtual machine, and virtualization, cloud bursting and failover rights change how those cores are counted. Moving a SQL workload to Azure or a hosting partner without re-modelling the core count is a common way an estate that was compliant on-prem drifts into over-payment or under-licensing.
They overlap but are not the same. A SAM engagement is Microsoft, usually through a partner, reviewing your deployment against entitlement; cost optimization is buyer-side work to right-size seats, apply Azure Hybrid Benefit and shape the commit. The reconciliation that lowers cost is also what makes the estate defensible if a SAM engagement turns into a finding.
No. This is a directory, not a ranking. Firms are listed alphabetically with balanced pros and cons. Independence is shown as a pro and reseller, Big-Four or vendor-side-audit ties as a con, both stated as factual trade-offs for you to weigh.
No. The directory and the matching service are free for buyers. We take no money from software publishers and add no markup, and no vendor ever sees your brief.
Tell us about your Microsoft estate — Azure consumption, M365 seat mix and where Software Assurance stands — and we will route your brief to firms covering Microsoft cloud and SaaS cost optimization. The directory and matching are free for buyers, no vendor ever sees your brief, and we add no markup.
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