

For the first decade of Amazon Web Services — call it AWS 1.0 — Amazon.com Inc. devoted much of its time to proving the cloud could work. The companies that fully embraced AWS as a platform tended to be startups in technology and media, which had the business models, processing requirements and skills that aligned perfectly with AWS’s platform. But for the majority of enterprises, AWS was the Costco of computing, where you went for bulk storage or bulk compute for application development and testing, or dev/test.
Wikibon attended AWS re:Invent 2016 in Las Vegas last week in some force. Our take? It’s AWS 2.0. AWS proved the cloud can work for your enterprise: Your workloads. Your big data. Your complex business problems. We encountered a thriving ecosystem that, while still relatively adolescent in its structure, is poised to make AWS an increasingly attractive option for even the most rigid, demanding shops. AWS 2.0 will continue to expand as an industry force because:
Future Wikibon research will explore the limits to AWS’s growth in some detail. Here, we’ll note a few of the challenges that not surprisingly didn’t make it onto to the agenda at AWS re:Invent this year, but will powerfully shape enterprise IT decisions going forward:
One final thought:
The show floor of this year’s re:Invent was dominated by a central AWS pavilion (above) that was unlike any I’ve seen at a trade show before. It was a two-story building, built inside the Sands Convention Center, that featured seating all around the periphery of the second level. People could be seen peering down upon the show floor, intently watching the proceeding of the customers and partners below. At times, it cast a benevolent presence: the new captains of the tech industry, steering us through the cloud transformation. At other times, the AWS folk looked like guards, ironically dressed in orange, constantly monitoring the yard.
That last metaphor may sound harsh, so let me explain. AWS’s quest for scale and speed is delivering significant customer benefits, especially in the form of customer cost savings and simplified delivery of IT infrastructure capabilities. But the quest for scale sometimes has the effect of limiting options. As digital becomes a more significant feature of customer experience, some partners and customers that we spoke with at re:Invent were starting to worry about AWS subsuming their technology segment or value proposition. Real or imagined, it’s a concern that AWS will have to address.
For example, AWS collects huge volumes of operational data. It uses that data to make impressively good business, design and service development decisions, among others. How will it share that data with partners and customers? Will they get operational data that can help with decisions about loads, service consumption and other mainly operational issues, like they do today? Or in time will they get deeper insights that could lead to superior business opportunities?
At AWS re:Invent 2016, AWS picked up the mantle of industry leadership. As IBM Corp., Microsoft and others have learned, leadership in the tech world doesn’t come without cost. Followers are demanding, especially regarding something as important as their digital capabilities. What will AWS’s leadership challenge be? Not all partners and customers can move with the same alacrity as AWS. As the company’s community gets more diverse, AWS’s approaches to partnership will have to become more nuanced.
We bet that will be an important element of AWS re:Invent 2017.
Wikibon analyst Stu Miniman, SiliconANGLE Media Co-Chief Executive John Furrier, and Jeff Frick, general manager of theCUBE, provided their take on AWS on the last day of re:Invent:
(* Disclosure: TheCUBE was a paid media partner for the show. Neither Amazon nor other sponsors has editorial influence on content on theCUBE or SiliconANGLE.)
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