What Is Amazon Web Services and Why Is It So Successful?
Amazon Web Services (AWS), the cloud platform offered by Amazon.com Inc, has become a giant component of the e-commerce giant’s business portfolio. AWS is a frontrunner to other cloud computing platforms such as competitor Microsoft Azure.
So what is AWS and why is it so lucrative and successful for Amazon?
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- As the lead cloud computing platform, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the primary profit driver for Amazon.
- AWS provides servers, storage, networking, remote computing, email, mobile development, and security.
- Amazon controls more than a third of the cloud market, almost twice its next closest competitor.
What Is AWS Exactly?
AWS is made up of many different cloud computing products and services. The highly profitable division of Amazon provides servers, storage, networking, remote computing, email, mobile development, and security. AWS can be broken into three main products: EC2, Amazon’s virtual machine service, Glacier, a low-cost cloud storage service, and S3, Amazon’s storage system.
AWS is so large and present in the computing world that it’s far outpaced its competitors. One independent analyst reports AWS has over a third of the market at 32.4%, with Azure following behind at 20%, and Google Cloud at 9%.
Scalable and Adaptable
Since AWS’s cost is modified based on the customers’ usage, start-ups and small businesses can see the obvious benefits of using Amazon for their computing needs. In fact, AWS is great for building a business from the bottom as it provides all the tools necessary for companies to start up with the cloud. For existing companies, Amazon provides low-cost migration services so that your existing infrastructure can be seamlessly moved over to AWS.
As a company grows, AWS provides resources to aid in expansion. As the business model allows for flexible usage, customers will never need to spend time thinking about whether or not they need to reexamine their computing usage. In fact, aside from budgetary reasons, companies could realistically “set and forget” all their computing needs.
Security and Reliability
Arguably, Amazon Web Services is much more secure than a company hosting its own website or storage. AWS currently has dozens of data centers across the globe that are continuously monitored and strictly maintained. The diversification of the data centers ensures that a disaster striking one region doesn’t cause permanent data loss worldwide. Imagine if Netflix were to have all of its personnel files, content, and backed-up data centralized on-site on the eve of a hurricane. Chaos would ensue.
In fact, localizing data in an easily identifiable location and where hundreds of people can realistically obtain access is unwise. AWS has tried to keep its data centers as hidden as possible, locating them in out-of-the-way locations and allowing access only on an essential basis.
The data centers and all the data contained therein are safe from intrusions, and, with Amazon’s experience in cloud services, outages and potential attacks can be quickly identified and easily remedied, 24 hours a day. The same can’t be said for a small company whose computing is handled by a single IT specialist working out of a large office.
Criticism of AWS
While the success of AWS is unquestionable, critics of the service say Amazon is abusing its control of the market share by engaging in anticompetitive behavior. This criticism has come from open-source database makers who claim Amazon is copying and integrating software that was originally created by other tech companies.
One such company, Elastic, filed a lawsuit against Amazon for allegedly violating trademark laws. A statement released by the company claims “Amazon’s behavior is inconsistent with the norms and values that are especially important in the open-source ecosystem.”
Conclusion
Amazon Web Services is a cash cow for Amazon. The services are shaking up the computing world in the same way that Amazon is changing America’s retail space. By pricing its cloud products extremely cheaply, Amazon can provide affordable and scalable services to everyone from the newest start-up to a Fortune 500 company.