Cloud computing is fundamentally changing how IT services are invented, developed, deployed, scaled, updated, maintained, and paid for.4 According to Synergy Research Group, during the period Q4 2014 to Q3 2015 cloud vendor revenues reached $110 billion, an increase of 28% from the previous year.5 This led Synergy Research to declare 2015 as “the year when cloud became mainstream.” With cloud services now in the mainstream, enterprises are experimenting with and adopting a diverse set of cloud services built by and supported by an array of cloud service providers.6 Consequently, executives and IT managers are faced with tasks such as organizing and understanding a variety of cloud service contracts, keeping track of multiple data streams, and building and sustaining numerous vendor relationships.7 Unfortunately, executives are reporting that they are feeling overwhelmed, unprepared and ill guided when it comes to