Airlines operate on the finest details and clockwork precision. The flight schedules are based on safety protocols, and observance of every rule is done with standards that are specifically designed to ensure the safety of both passengers and operations. Nevertheless, in the area of technology, particularly cloud adoption, governance has frequently been conversely viewed as a stiff bureaucratic obstacle that drags the pace of change under the weight of compliance.
That tension between speed and safety defined the challenge Goutham Bandapati walked into as Principal Product Manager – Cloud and Engineering Platforms, Technology and Transformation at one of the world’s largest airlines. His task was deceptively simple: help the company embrace the cloud at scale. The reality, however, was far more complex.
Conventional governance models were reactive in nature. They depended on manual checks, audits, and approval cycles, all of which would slow down developers and business teams. The outcome was predictable: the pace of innovation either slowed down significantly or governance was bypassed, yielding security and cost issues. A recent study points out that almost 70% of organizations have governance-related problems when migrating to the cloud. They also report that the most prominent issues are the overruns of costs and the failures of compliance.
Goutham’s breakthrough was to rethink governance not as a rigid checkpoint but as a flexible, on-demand capability; what he calls Governance as a Service. By embedding policies and automated guardrails into everyday workflows, governance became a service that teams could consume effortlessly. Instead of managing infrastructure or chasing approvals, teams focused on outcomes, while the system ensured compliance, security, and cost control in the background. This approach turned governance from a complex, manual process into a smooth, manageable experience that scaled with the organization’s cloud footprint.
Governance-as-a-Service enables agility, scalability, and focus by embedding policy-driven oversight directly into workflows. Instead of reactive audits, it offers proactive guardrails that evolve with the organization’s cloud footprint. Compliance, security, and cost management happen automatically, without slowing innovation.
Providing Governance as a Service
The heart of this transformation was the Enterprise Policy-as-Code Framework. In less than a year, Goutham and his team scaled it from zero to more than 50 enforceable policies. These weren’t theoretical rules buried in manuals. They were automated guardrails embedded directly into the development lifecycle.
The effects were visible straightaway and could be measured. A company that had limited region selection avoided unplanned expenses resulting from unauthorized or highly priced services. By adopting policies that favored cloud-native and platform-as-a-service over traditional infrastructure, technical debt decreased, resulting in millions saved over time.
Equally important, Goutham created Infrastructure-as-Code modules that developers could reuse. Instead of slowing migrations down, governance accelerated them. Within months, more than a fifth of the company’s applications had moved to the cloud in record time.
Then, an absolute innovation came true: Exceptions as Code. In the majority of enterprises, exception handling is a complicated, human-based operation. The approvals are given not in hours but in days, sometimes even weeks. Expiry dates are not remembered. Exceptions become larger in number, and covertly, they turn into the new standard. Goutham automated the whole cycle. His mechanism shortened the approval time from days to hours, open exceptions were cut by half, and he made sure each request had a remediation plan that was part of the backlog and hence prioritized. What was the administration’s nightmare turned into a transparent, self-healing process.
Extending the Philosophy
It is not only the technology that made these innovations outstanding, but also the philosophy that they had. Goutham brought the process of administration “in” the system; thus, he changed the nature of the “governance” from a barrier to a facilitator. The developers did not have to waste their time seeking permissions or be apprehensive about the results of their requests. They were, in fact, operating under a system that was leading them effortlessly to solutions that were not only in compliance with the laws but also efficient and secure.
This shift also changed organizational culture. Teams began to see governance as part of their own toolkit rather than an external mandate. Business units trusted IT not just to enforce rules but to enable innovation. The conversations moved away from “why can’t we?” to “how can we?”
Redefining the Role of Governance
Taken together, these innovations represent more than a set of projects. They mark a fundamental shift in how governance is understood and practiced.
Traditionally, governance has been reactive: wait for a problem, write a policy, and enforce it manually. Goutham inverted that model. His approach is proactive, automated, and seamless. Policies don’t live in binders; they live in code. Guardrails don’t block; they guide. Exceptions aren’t forgotten; they expire. Costs aren’t a surprise; they’re forecasted.
The metaphor of invisible seatbelts captures it best. In a car, seatbelts don’t slow you down. They allow you to move faster, knowing you’re protected. For Goutham, governance works the same way in the cloud. By embedding trust into the path of work, teams gain the freedom to innovate without fear.
A Model for the Future
The impact of this work is felt not just within the airline but across the industry. Case studies, partnerships, and public recognition have highlighted how governance can be more than a compliance checkbox. It can be a driver of cost savings, security, and cultural change.
However, the bigger achievement is conceptual. By reframing governance from “slow and restrictive” to “fast and enabling,” Goutham has challenged one of the most stubborn paradigms in enterprise IT. His approach shows that governance can be as much about imagination and design as about enforcement and control.
Cloud transformation is often discussed in terms of scale, speed, and savings. But what Goutham Bandapati’s journey shows is that the real breakthrough lies in trust. Trust that systems are secure. Trust that costs are controlled. Trust that innovation can move quickly without breaking rules. Governance, in his vision, is not a brake on progress. It is the quiet force that makes speed sustainable. Like the seatbelts on every flight, he helps keep you in the air; you barely notice it’s there until the moment you need it most.








