Which is that companies do not procure individual AWS services but rather AWS itself. Meaning that whenever AWS releases a new tool it is instantly approved and available for use across the company (baring internal processes e.g. security hardening).
Compare this with a startup which has to go through a 6 month long procurement process complete with vendor bake-offs in order to sell their similar tool.
If AWS continues to move into the application space they will surely dominate the enterprise because of this.
Just yesterday I selected SNS for a project instead of a local provider because AWS put it through the security audits we care about and we don't win prizes for spending time on these decisions.
-- AWS advertises the tool via the console and preintegrates it from both directions
-- IT+Procurement already approved AWS for projects, so PMs can skip vendor/tool approval+onboarding dances and focus on the budget one
True of not just AWS but Azure + GCP too
Startups can compete, but gets into stuff like deep tech or cross-vendor integrations, where the visibility and integration advantages don't apply as much to the cloud vendors so they rather go after easier targets until they can't. (Folks here posted about UI, but for b2b, I disagree for most cases, unless there's something deeply technical about it that a 20 person team can't copy.)
The exception is open source software. Free Software's biggest risk to the org is patent and license encumbrance. If we can develop an easy way to detect such things in Free Software, and we develop communities where enterprises can freely contribute to them (to make them more Enterprsey), then it has a chance to replace incumbent managed solutions.
- Historically, OSS seems to be free product dev for big cloud (... cue AWS's paid PR people to say otherwise ... ). Their integration, advertising, and procurement advantages makes it MUCH easier to win contracts before the OSS devs may even know it is being used and without
a bid process. For a fraction of the effort and contribution, they are switching it to a model of monopoly channel owners vs content producers and and driving the sw margins to 0 on the content side. That's why anti-big-cloud LGPL-when-SaaS style licenses are emerging. There are always exceptions, but it's not the axis to compete on unless you do such a license..
- I agree about the community aspect, indirectly. If the software, in addition to being OSS, relies somehow on community and its steward -- not just source code -- and participation in it is somehow what's paying for the OSS dev, yes. For example, maybe the community is also a social network (Slack/Teams across orgs), or generating threat intel -- the software (post-scale) matters less post-scale, so forking is ok.
Which is that companies do not procure individual AWS services but rather AWS itself. Meaning that whenever AWS releases a new tool it is instantly approved and available for use across the company (baring internal processes e.g. security hardening).
Compare this with a startup which has to go through a 6 month long procurement process complete with vendor bake-offs in order to sell their similar tool.
If AWS continues to move into the application space they will surely dominate the enterprise because of this.