April 17th, 2008
Amazon Web Services gets serious about enterprise
It now seems that Amazon is moving aggressively to make its cloud computing services palatable for enterprise users — not surprising, given that enterprises including The New York Times and Nasdaq are now customers, according to a BusinessWeek report this week. Today it announced two enterprise-class paid support options along with a Service Health Dashboard (screenshot after the jump) that’s clearly modeled on the one pioneered by Salesforce.com a couple of years back. From a business perspective, these new services are even more significant than the new storage options announced earlier this week.
As posted by Amazon Web Services evangelist Jeff Barr today in a blog posting titled May We Help You?, there are two support levels:
If you’re a big user of Amazon Web Services, your support fees are calculated at a base rate of 10 percent on top of your monthly usage fees. Barr’s blog post makes it absolutely clear that the new services are in direct reponse to demand from serious enterprise customers:
“Increasingly, we see that organizations of all sizes are putting AWS to use in new, innovative, and mission-critical ways. These organizations have told us that they need a more direct and more discreet way to request assistance and to report problems.”
That little word “discreet” is the big giveaway — customers want to report problems and get them fixed without the world at large knowing about their involvement. That’s classic large enterprise behavior.
The status dashboard is openly published and will particularly appeal to users who aren’t paying for personalized support, as it mean they’ll no longer be in the dark when Amazon Web Services goes dark (which inevitably will happen, even if only very rarely). According to ReadWriteWeb, “Amazon says that during outages, users can expect to see updates from the team every 15-30 minutes until things are fixed.”
The Service Health Dashboard (screenshot above) gives current status of every Amazon Web Service, plus historical data for the previous 35 days. A couple of clever new embellishments introduced by Amazon:
It’s especially satisfying to see Amazon take this step today after I wrote this in February:
“Sooner or later, it was inevitable that a server outage would expose Amazon’s lack of preparedness for failure. … [Companies that] rely on Amazon will be looking for far better outage management and service level reporting in the future than they’ve tolerated to date … What I can’t understand is, why do providers only understand this after they’ve suffered a major outage? Salesforce.com learnt its lesson two years ago … Why on earth Amazon couldn’t have invested in a similar system to keep customers informed is beyond me …
After all this, do I really think SaaS providers are going to trust cloud infrastructure? I think it keeps the debate open, but I think what today’s outage shows is not that the model is broken but that the execution needs fixing.
Well done, Amazon, for finally fixing it. It’s been a long time coming, but AWS is now starting to look like it could fulfil the role of IT utility to the enterprise.
Phil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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The good stuff just keeps right on coming in the Cloud Computing world. No sooner do we get the Intuit QuickBase announcement than Amazon is piping up with news that they now have Gold and Silver Premium Support Plans. ...
Trackback by smoothspan Blog — April 18, 2008 @ 12:00 am
Amazon Web Services gets serious about enterprise | Software as ...This article describes the new paid support Amazon is offering for AWS services. Amazon Web Services gets serious about enterprise | Software as Services | ZDNet.com: "It%u2019s been a long time coming, but AWS is now starting to look ...
Trackback by Strategic Thinking and Execution — April 18, 2008 @ 12:52 am
Amazon Web Services gets serious about enterpriseIt now seems that Amazon is moving aggressively to make its cloud computing services palatable for enterprise users — not surprising, given that enterprises including The New York Times and Nasdaq are now customers, according to a ...
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Trackback by Vinny Carpenter's blog — April 19, 2008 @ 7:00 am
New & Improved Enterprise Cloud Computing, from Amazon Web ServicesPhil Wainewright, in his “Software As A Service†blog at ZDNet, has a good post on Amazon’s beefed up Web Services, which include a needed dashboard to monitor the services you subscribe to, called a Health Dashboard: Wainewright praises these new monitoring tools, which up service levels, concluding his post with
Trackback by Anonymous — June 27, 2008 @ 3:05 am
Dion Hinchcliffe’s Web 2.0 BlogWeb 2.0 Expo blog: A Preview of Dion Hinchcliffe’s Workshop Jen Pahkla does a very nice write-up of my Web 2.0 Expo session next week. If you’re attending, I do hope you at least stick your head in or say hi if you see me in the halls. Amazon Web Services gets serious about enterprise | Software as Services | ZDNet.com Very interesting, Amazon has been very consistent about getting into different verticals as well as broad horizontals in the Web services business. Now into enterprise support for their Web services/Global SOA offerings.
Trackback by Anonymous — June 27, 2008 @ 3:05 am
New & Improved Enterprise Cloud Computing, from Amazon Web ServicesPhil Wainewright, in his "Software As A Service" blog at ZDNet, has a good post on Amazon's beefed up Web Services, which include a needed...
Trackback by Anonymous — June 28, 2008 @ 3:05 am