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Google Cloud secures $2.6bn quarterly revenues at 53% growth as Alphabet reveals all for first time

Google Cloud hit $2.6 billion (£2bn) in revenues for the fourth quarter of 2019 with a more than $10bn run rate, as parent company Alphabet divulged various individual business figures for the first time.

The cloud business grew 53% year on year, according to CEO Sundar Pichai, with strong uptake noted in multi-cloud offering Anthos and growth in Google Cloud Platform (GCP) moving faster than the wider cloud business.

“We are very confident that there is an enormous opportunity here that plays to our core strengths,” Alphabet chief financial officer Ruth Porat said in prepared remarks. “We’re pleased with the growth trajectory of GCP, which we see in customer momentum, the growing size of the average contract, and of course, revenues.”

Previously, cloud revenues were tucked in under the ‘other’ revenues bucket. For Q3, this totalled $6.42bn at an increase of 38.5% year over year. This time around, other revenues – not including cloud but including YouTube non-advertising revenues – were at $5.26bn. Combined with Google Cloud, this totals at $7.88bn, with cloud revenues comprising precisely one third of other revenues.

It was this time last year that Pichai noted the number of cloud deals exceeding $1 million had ‘more than doubled’ in the preceding 12 months. 2019 saw calls for Google to divulge specific numbers, with the company insisting the time needed to be right.

So why is the time right now? Responding to analyst questions, Pichai noted the roadmap under CEO Thomas Kurian, focusing on specific industry verticals and strong sales expertise, enabled change. As this publication mused last month, Google is playing a long game in cloud and, much like Microsoft, is trying to attract deeper integrations across infrastructure and, crucially, software.

“I think the progress I’ve seen in our customer focus, with our customer success organisation and the contracting framework, have all been great progress for us,” said Pichai. “Especially in one of these larger deals, [customers] are effectively looking for a technology partner. So differentiation is not just what we bring to the table in terms of cloud, where we have differentiated capabilities, but in many cases, it’s what we bring as Google.”

Google Cloud sees its key industries targeted as retail, healthcare, and financial services, while it sees five areas of differentiation. As Kurian put it this time last year in his first major speaking engagement, these were security and reliability for mission critical applications; hybrid and multi-cloud; AI solutions; ‘vastly different’ capabilities for managing data at scale, and ‘integrating a number of Google’s technology advances with Cloud to deliver industry solutions.’

On the retail side, in what was a very busy quarter for Google, partnerships with Lowe’s and Wayfair were announced at the NRF event. Travel is another industry which Google is targeting; last month the company secured airline Lufthansa, as well as a 10-year contract with Sabre, a provider of software for travel firms. Alongside this, Google Cloud announced a partnership with Indian telco Bharti Airtel in an echo of a deal Microsoft Azure announced with Reliance Jio in 2019, as well as launching a new enterprise support offering, and acquiring VMware specialist CloudSimple.

According to figures published overnight by Synergy Research, the needle has barely moved from the most recent quarterly results. Amazon Web Services (AWS), which recorded $9.95bn revenues in its last quarter, maintains 33% of the overall market, ahead of Microsoft (18%), Google (8%), and IBM (6%). Synergy added that, predominantly due to the growth of AWS and Microsoft, the cloud infrastructure services market had doubled in 2019 compared with 2017.

You can read Alphabet’s full financial report here (pdf).

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IBM CEO Ginni Rometty to step down: Analysing the cloud strategy and in-tray for the new boss

Analysis IBM chief executive Ginni Rometty is to step down in April after more than eight years at the helm, with senior vice president for cloud and cognitive software Arvind Krishna taking over.

Krishna, who was a contributing factor in IBM’s acquisition of Red Hat in 2018, will become only the 10th CEO in the Armonk giant’s 106-year history. Jim Whitehurst, chief executive of Red Hat, will become president, while Rometty will serve as executive chairman until her retirement at the end of the year.

“Arvind is the right CEO for the next era at IBM,” Rometty said in a statement. “He is a brilliant technologist who has played a significant role in developing our key technologies such as artificial intelligence, cloud, quantum computing, and blockchain. He is well-positioned to lead IBM and its clients into the cloud and cognitive era.”

Rometty’s eight-year tenure oversaw IBM’s entry into the cloud as a serious player and continued leadership in R&D, particularly around emerging technologies; IBM’s run of being awarded the most patents now stretches to 27 consecutive years. In an era where cloud events have become supersized – the last re:Invent attracted 60,000 attendees – Rometty’s oratorial skill will be missed. Yet the storytelling around the entirety of the company did not quite match.

The bottom line will be where many of the think pieces point; IBM only broke a run of 22 straight quarters of declining revenue in January 2018, and it will ensure something of a mixed legacy for Rometty. Comparisons can certainly be made between Krishna’s ascendance and Satya Nadella taking the helm at Microsoft in 2014 – and look what has happened there.

But things are a little more complicated than that.

Speaking to this publication earlier this month, Nick McQuire, senior vice president enterprise at CCS Insight, noted how enterprise organisations were increasingly looking to deeper integrations with Microsoft and Google’s clouds by combining SaaS and other services with infrastructure.

IBM’s different business units, which are legion, do not have quite the same symmetry. Where else for instance explores all kinds of emerging tech, from blockchain to quantum, while still having a thriving mainframe business?

Bill Mew, a 16-year IBM veteran who now heads up cybersecurity consultancy Crisis Team, describes the continued balance sheet decline as a ‘sorry legacy’ for Rometty. Yet this should not be taken personally. Rather, it is indicative of where IBM is today.

“It shouldn’t be taken as a criticism of Rometty herself,” Mew tells CloudTech. “She was an enormously driven person who had a winning mentality, and she did her darnedest to turn the machine around and make it capitalise on some of the opportunities it had – but that didn’t enable her to do so.”

McQuire argues the new leadership team looks good on paper. “The combination is a good start and a good decision in terms of the next phase for IBM,” McQuire tells CloudTech. “It’s a good mix of having an individual [Krishna] who had been instrumental in some of the more important emerging areas of IBM strategy over the last number of years. Equally, having Whitehurst in there, almost an outsider looking in, is also quite valuable.

“It is an important next chapter – the role we’ll see in the market as not only the cloud market changes, but also as IBM changes,” adds McQuire.

As we have already seen, turning a ship the size of IBM around is no easy feat. For Mew, the fact that SoftLayer and Watson were opportunities which fell by the wayside exemplifies that virtually any executive could be placed in charge and they would struggle, although he notes his ‘enormous respect’ for Krishna and Whitehurst, and admits his view may be portrayed as cynical.

“They’ve spent an absolute fortune on Red Hat and it has to start to deliver soon,” says Mew. “You’ve seen growth in one quarter, but a large amount of that was for the latest mainframe. The question still exists about how credible [their] turnaround strategy is, and is the change in leadership going to make much difference?

“I have enormous respect for the guys stepping into her shoes,” Mew adds. “Again they are very capable, but again the question is – is IBM as an organisation going to innovate at the pace of AWS and others? I just don’t see it happening.”

McQuire notes comparing IBM directly to AWS’ mammoth growth, as a way of summarising Rometty’s legacy, is a ‘little bit unfair.’ Yet he does argue SoftLayer was a ‘victim’ of IBM not fully committing to the cloud when it should have done.

As a result, IBM remains firmly a second-tier player, behind the hyperscalers. Yet there are major customers out there. AT&T is an example, although the telecoms giant is also using Microsoft, given the latter stole IBM’s thunder somewhat in July by announcing their partnership within hours of the initial news.

McQuire believes the big-ticket clients will react to the move positively overall, noting the strategy behind the transition. Indeed, listening to Rometty’s keynotes offered a sense of this transition. At Think in February, the message was around the second wave of cloud; one which is open and has hybrid and multi-cloud at its core, but is secured and managed properly.

For IBM to succeed in this second wave, the corporate story has to tie together more seamlessly. “Ginni Rometty put some foundations in place – and some of the latest numbers, looking at the services side of the business, specifically around Red Hat as well, you’re starting to see a flywheel effect happening between the hybrid and multi-cloud and Red Hat capabilities that IBM has to market, with the services business,” says McQuire.

“The question there is – how can they create a cohesive vision that combines both the cloud business and the services business?”

Whether you see your glass as half-full or half-empty, the answer to that question is going to be an intriguing one as Krishna sets up for his new role.

Picture credit: Screenshot/IBM

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AWS secures $9.95bn in Q419 revenues to beat expectations – and maintain market share

Amazon Web Services (AWS) posted revenues of $9.95 billion (£7.59bn) in its most recent quarter, beating analyst expectations.

The results represent a 34% increase on Q418, while the full-year figure, of $35bn, are 36.5% up on 2018. The third quarter saw revenues of $8.99bn, with AWS contributing 11% of Amazon’s total pot, a figure remaining conistent with previous quarters.

As with previous quarters, Amazon does not go in for self-aggrandising prepared remarks, with chief financial officer Brian Olsavsky again taking questions. Most of the questions were on the subject of AWS and wider growth patterns.

“As we see it here, we grew from a $30 billion revenue run rate at the end of 2018 to a $40bn revenue run rate at the end of 2019 – so we continue to be happy with our top line growth,” said Olsavsky. “We had a larger dollar increase in revenue both year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter – so we’re very happy with the progress of the revenue and our adoption and acceptance by customers.”

The three letters of AWS saw a grand total of 68 mentions in the press materials. This represented a downturn from 79 this time last year. Many of the quarterly updates came as a result of the releases from re:Invent at the start of December, including new products for machine learning training kit SageMaker, as well as Amazon Braket, a service for developers to experiment with quantum computing facilities.

Alongside this, the general availability of hybrid cloud offering Outposts was announced, as well as a major partnership with Verizon. The latter was seen as a showcase for AWS Wavelength, a service which aims to offer ultra-low latency applications for 5G devices. Primary customers announced this quarter were the Bundesliga, going all-in on AWS and adding to the firm’s cadre of sporting clients, as well as Best Western Hotels, again announced at re:Invent.

The primary news from the past three months, however, was a blow from AWS’ perspective, with the awarding of the $10 billion-rated JEDI government cloud computing contract to Microsoft. AWS has confirmed it is appealing the ruling.

While slowing growth is to be expected given the speed at which AWS rose – and it was a cause for concern for analysts last quarter – Synergy Research argues that at 34% growth, AWS still holds a steady one third of the market. Microsoft, for whom Azure grew 62%, has risen by up to three percentage points year over year, according to Synergy estimates.

You can read the full AWS earnings report here.

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Microsoft posts more strong financials and 62% Azure growth – with differentiation key to success

Microsoft saw its Azure business grow 62% in its most recent quarter after posting total revenues of $36.9 billion (£28.2bn) – yet chief executive Satya Nadella was keen to note the breadth of Azure’s stack as well as the bottom line.

The company’s Q220 figures, as ever divided into three primary revenue buckets, saw its ‘intelligent cloud’ stream increase 26% year over year to $11.8bn. ‘Productivity and business processes’ also hit $11.8bn at a yearly rise of 17%, while the ‘more personal computing’ category saw a negligible 1.6% yearly growth to $13.2bn – although a 19% quarterly rise. Total revenues were up 13% on Q219.

“In terms of the Azure momentum, it’s the sort of thing that we have seen even in the previous quarters,” Nadella said in response to an analyst question. “We have a stack that is, from infrastructure to the PaaS services, fairly differentiated.”

Among the products Nadella brought into focus were Azure Sentinel, a cloud-native security information and event management (SIEM) tool, and Azure Synapse Analytics, formerly Azure SQL Data Warehouse and rebadged in November. Maersk and Vodafone were cited as key of the more than 3,500 Sentinel customers – “recent CIO surveys affirm our leadership and strong structural position”, Nadella said – while Synapse was praised as a ‘very competitive product’.

Microsoft has had a very busy three months. On the product side, the launch of Azure Arc at MS Ignite in November took the headlines, following on from AWS Outposts and Google Anthos. At the time the company noted hybrid cloud capabilities ‘must enable apps to run seamlessly across on-premises, multi-cloud and edge devices.’

Hence emphasis on the breadth of portfolio. “The fact that we have a control plane for hybrid computing that is multi-cloud, multi-edge… that’s a pretty differentiated aspect of it,” said Nadella, answering a question on Azure momentum. “The data side, both on the transactions, on the OLTP (online transaction processing) side, as well as on the analytics side, we now have cloud-native databases… that’s what you see play out in terms of customer adoption and the growth there.”

On the partnership side, three deals stood out. In October, Microsoft and SAP struck an agreement featuring SAP’s Embrace project, which aims to help customers become ‘intelligent enterprises’ by utilising the hyperscaler public clouds. It was written as a ‘preferred cloud’ deal, signifying a big win for Microsoft; Nadella described it in the earnings call as ‘exclusive’. A month later, Microsoft expanded upon its partnership with AT&T, running Azure services on AT&T’s burgeoning 5G network, while Salesforce said it was migrating various suites in another ‘preferred cloud’ tie-up.

With regard to customers, the announcement in October that Microsoft had secured the $10bn JEDI government contract – pending AWS’ appeal – was the natural standout. Nadella referenced it alongside the SAP partnership as an example of winning customers through the ‘differentiated approach across the cloud and edge.’

Speaking with Nick McQuire, VP enterprise at analyst firm CCS Insight, earlier this month, it was evident how Microsoft’s wider strategy was beginning to blossom. Microsoft’s decision to not publish specific cloud revenues – alongside Google – was previously a sign of weakness; now, while the obfuscation may frustrate the financial analysts, many accept the wider strategy at play.

“You see companies, typically from the CEO down, that are all-in on transformation, seeing the workplace environment and internal side of the house as part of that,” McQuire told CloudTech at the time. “That’s typically where you will see companies go a little bit deeper with a Google or Microsoft; they will embed the entirety of their SaaS applications capabilities in and around decision making for their infrastructure as a service as well. That approach very much favours Microsoft.”

You can view the full Q220 financial results here.

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SAP announces solid Q419 revenues – but decline in new cloud bookings causes concern

SAP announced solid cloud revenues for its most recent quarter and noted it hit all of its revenue targets in 2019 – yet a quarterly downturn in new cloud customers caused some concern.

For Q4 2019, cloud revenue was at €1.90bn, up 35% from this time last year. Combined cloud and software revenues were €6.85bn, up 8% from Q418, while total revenues, of €8.04bn, also rose 8% year on year.

Yet while new cloud bookings rose 19% in Q4 to €878 million, it represented a significant decline from 39% the previous quarter. Alongside this, just over half of the rise in Q4 was attributed to a significant on-premises customer committing to move the majority of its SAP portfolio to the cloud over the coming three years.

This is one potential area of interest going forward. As this publication reported in October, SAP announced it was going with Microsoft Azure for a ‘preferred cloud’ partnership. This related to the launch of Embrace, SAP’s blueprint to help customers become ‘intelligent enterprises’ by utilising the hyperscaler clouds. At the time of the Microsoft partnership, and while Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google Cloud were noted, Microsoft was the only beneficiary of this extended partnership. The cloud to which this on-prem customer was migrating was, naturally, Azure.

Key customers SAP cited in this quarter were Deutsche Telekom, Ford and Lockheed Martin, who all went live on ERP behemoth S/4HANA. Ford was noted as a customer with no previous SAP experience replacing competitors’ software at scale, alongside British Telecom and Tech Mahindra.

Vodafone, meanwhile, was singled out for special mention as it went live on a single global instance. Co-CEO Christian Klein noted the case study was a ‘perfect example of a hybrid landscape… licensing and operating a combination of on-premise and cloud technology, allowing them to gradually transition to cloud at their own speed.’

As regular industry watchers will know, SAP insisted the journey from moving on-prem revenues to cloud would be a long one. There were other benefits noted: Klein said capex had dropped 45% in spite of supporting a much larger cloud ecosystem.

Plans for 2020, Klein noted, included integrating acquired cloud assets, sustainability, as well as vertical-centric solutions. It was ‘a big lever to further accelerate ERP market share gains’, he added. One such recent example of movement in this area was a partnership with Accenture to cover cloud for utilities. Klein added the estimated market size for vertical cloud solutions would be more than €150 billion by 2023.

You can read the full financial report here.

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More sensitive data moves to the enterprise cloud – but the security risk widens with it

Enterprises continue to feed their clouds with increasingly sensitive information, yet according to McAfee’s latest report the security issues are building alongside this trend.

The study, titled ‘Enterprise Supernova: The Data Dispersion Cloud Adoption and Risk Report’, polled 1,000 enterprises across 11 countries, as well as logging anonymous data from 30 million enterprise cloud users.

More than a quarter (26%) of the files analysed in the cloud now contain sensitive data, a rise of 23% year over year. Yet security is yet to catch up. 91% of cloud services analysed do not encrypt data at rest, while one in five respondents said they lacked visibility into what data resides in their cloud applications.

Enterprises are utilising initiatives such as data loss protection (DLP); indeed, on average companies polled saw more than 45,000 incidents per month. Yet only a third (37%) say they are utilising DLP. Almost four in five (79%) of those polled said they allowed access to enterprise-approved cloud services from personal devices. A quarter of companies admitted they had sensitive data downloaded from the cloud to an unmanaged personal device.

This is the situation at many organisations and is, to not put too fine a point on it, a mess. “Security and risk management professionals are left with a patchwork of controls at the device, network, and cloud – with significant gaps in visibility to their data,” the report noted. “Living with these gaps and the patchwork of security born out of the network is an open invitation to breach attempts and non-compliance.”

93% of CISOs surveyed do agree that it is their responsibility to secure data in the cloud. Three in 10 respondents, however, admit they lack the staff with the skills to secure their SaaS applications. The latter figure is up 33% from the year before, with the report noting technology and training continues to be outpaced by cloud’s aggressive enterprise growth.

“The force of the cloud is unstoppable, and the dispersion of data creates new opportunities for both growth and risk,” said Rajiv Gupta, senior vice president for cloud security at McAfee. “Security that is data-centric, creating a spectrum of controls from the device, through the web, into the cloud, and within the cloud provides the opportunity to break the paradigm of yesterday’s network-centric protection that is not sufficient for today’s cloud-first needs.”

McAfee’s recent reports have been a mix of the gloom-laden and optimistic. In November, the company noted how 40% of large UK businesses expected to be cloud-only by 2021, but noted the gaps in security and responsibility between the haves and have-nots. In June, the company’s Cloud and Risk Adoption Report, again based on the responses of 1,000 enterprises, found organisations with cloud access security brokers (CASBs) were over 35% more likely to launch new products and gain quicker time to market.

The company had three recommendations based on its current report findings:

  • Evaluate your data protection strategy for devices and the cloud: Consider the difference between a disparate set of technologies at each control point and the advantages of merging them for a single set of policies, workflows, and results
  • Investigate the breadth and risk of shadow IT: Determine your scope of cloud use, with a focus on high-risk services; then move to enabling your approved services and restricting access to those which might put data at risk
  • Plan for the future of unified security for your data: Context about devices improves security of data in the cloud, and context about the risk of cloud services improves access policy through the web. Many more efficiencies apply, while some are yet to be discovered. These control points are merging to deliver the future of data security

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Data centre M&A broke the 100 deal barrier in 2019 – driven by private equity

2019 saw a bumper year of data centre merger and acquisition deals with the total number passing 100 for the first time, according to Synergy Research.

The record number has come about following a dramatic swing in private versus public deals, with 50% in private equity and a 45% downturn for sales closed by public companies.

The number of billion-dollar deals declined again in 2019, with 2017 remaining the benchmark for deal value due to three multi-billion-dollar transactions and a further three rated at over a billion dollars.

One deal which did not quite make the end-of-year cut was Digital Realty’s proposed blockbuster acquisition of Interxion for $8.4 billion. The biggest data centre deal of all time is expected to close later this year, with no closer schedule noted. Aside from that, Synergy noted that Digital Realty and Equinix, the two largest colocation providers by market share, have been ‘by far’ the largest investors over the past five years.

The significant rise in private equity deals can be seen as evidence of the importance of prime data centre space, according to John Dinsdale, a chief analyst at Synergy Research. “The aggressive growth of cloud services and outsourcing trends more generally are fuelling a drive for scale and geographic reach among data centre operators, which in turn is stimulating data centre M&A activities,” said Dinsdale. “This has been attracting an ever-increasing level of private equity activity as investors seek to benefit from high-value and strategically important data centre assets.

“It is also notable that even the biggest publicly traded data centre operators are increasingly turning to joint ventures with external investors to help fund growth and protect balance sheets,” Dinsdale added.

The private deals, although receiving fewer headlines generally, have comprised 57% of deal volume since 2015, according to Synergy’s figures. Among those in the past year have included AMP Capital’s acquisition of US data centre firm Expedient in October, and Shagang Group acquiring the remaining 24% stake of Global Switch for £1.8 billion in September.

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CloudKnox raises $12 million in funding to further continuous cloud security mission

CloudKnox, a provider of identity authorisation for hybrid and multi-cloud environments, has secured $12 million (£9.17m) in a funding round to accelerate product and go-to-market plans.

The company has a cloud security offering based around continuous decision making, monitoring, adapting and responding to identity and access management (IAM) risks in real-time. Its intriguingly-named Privilege Creep Index (PCI) as part of its dashboard helps organisations assess and improve their risk posture.

CloudKnox has an established partnership with Amazon Web Services (AWS), as an advanced technology partner, as well as with VMware. The company announced in August the launch of its cloud security platform for the hybrid VMware Cloud on AWS offering.

This makes for interesting reading when compared with recent usage research; according to a study from AllCloud – another primarily AWS-centric partner – almost three quarters of enterprise private workloads analysed from 150 IT decision makers were using VMware, with the trend set to increase.

“We’ve seen exceptional growth from customers and prospects looking to address the number one risk in their cloud infrastructure,” said Balaji Parimi, CloudKnox CEO and founder in a statement. “This positioned us to pre-emptively secure another round of funding to leverage strong market adoption and accelerate our customer expansion.”

Among the cast to join CloudKnox’s board are Stephen Ward, CISO at The Home Depot and Suresh Batchu, co-founder and CTO at enterprise mobility management (EMM) provider MobileIron. Ward noted that CloudKnox had a ‘compelling’ vision around continuous detection and proactive measurement for cloud security.

The round was led by Sorenson Ventures with participation from various early investors, including ClearSky Security, Dell Technologies Capital and Foundation Capital.

Elsewhere Sysdig, a provider of secure operations for DevOps environments, has raised $70 million in series E funding. The company includes Goldman Sachs among its customers – VP merchant banking Soumya Rajamani sits on Sysdig’s board – and aims to help enterprises remove doubt over their Kubernetes deployments.

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Microsoft to launch cloud data centre region in Israel

Microsoft has announced the launch of a new cloud data centre region in Israel, bringing the total number of countries served by Azure to 21.

The region is expected to go live in 2021, starting with Azure and with Office 365 to follow. The move represents another EMEA expansion, following recent launches in Germany and Switzerland.

Among the list of customers using Microsoft's cloud in Israel are Sheba Hospital and the Tel Aviv Municipality, as well as cryptocurrency firm eToro and DevOps provider Jfrog. 

"When I speak to customers across EMEA, it is clear that the power of the cloud is essential for their competitiveness," said Michel van der Bel, president of Microsoft Europe, Middle East and Africa in a statement. "Offering Microsoft Azure and Office 365 from a data centre region in Israel forms a key part of our investment and involvement in the startup nation, as infrastructure is an essential block for the tech intensity that public sector entities and businesses need to embrace."

The 'tech intensity' marketing message continues to resonate. Anyone who has watched a Microsoft event, or read any promotional material would have happened upon the phrase, first referenced by CEO Satya Nadella at the 2018 Ignite conference. At the end of last year, the company issued a State of Tech Intensity study, polling 700 executives, which explored the emerging technologies organisations saw as critical to their future growth. Machine learning, the Internet of Things, and artificial intelligence were the most frequently cited.

You can read the full announcement here.

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The war rages on for AWS, Azure and Google Cloud: Exploring the battlefield and strategy for 2020

The hyperscale cloud providers – Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform, with other pretenders occasionally cited – naturally generate the vast majority of revenues and, with it, the headlines.

According to figures from Synergy Research in December, one third of data centre spend in Q3 ended up in hyperscalers’ pockets. The company’s most recent market share analysis, again for Q3, found that for public infrastructure (IaaS) and platform as a service (PaaS), AWS held almost two fifths (39%) of the market, well ahead of Microsoft (19%) and Google (9%).

For those who say the race has long since been won, however, the course has gradually been changing as organisations explored hybrid and multi-cloud workflows, as well as tying infrastructure and platform together with software portfolios.

European outlook

In Europe, the battleground is shifting rapidly. Each provider has planted their flag variously, aside from the hubs of London, Frankfurt et al. Google Cloud launched in Poland and Switzerland in 2019 making seven European locations in total, while Microsoft unveiled plans to launch Azure in Germany and Switzerland, also taking its European locations to seven. AWS, meanwhile, has six with two of these regions, Italy and Spain, due in early 2020 and 2023 respectively.

Companies are going deeper with Google and Microsoft when they embed the entirety of their SaaS capability around decision making for infrastructure as well

Nick McQuire, VP enterprise at CCS Insight, says that the competitive environment has ‘obviously turned up a notch’ over the past 12 months. “Even if you rewind 12 months, you’re starting to see the significant gap that AWS had, particularly in the core infrastructure as a service, compute, storage, just slightly become minimised,” he tells CloudTech. “Obviously AWS is still very much a front runner, depending on how you define it – but this is always part of the challenge in the industry.”

Talk to any number of people and you will get any number of definitions as to who is doing what and where. This obfuscation is somewhat encouraged by the hyperscalers themselves. AWS discloses its specific revenues – $8.99 billion for Q319 – while Microsoft and Google do not.

Microsoft directs its financial reporting into three buckets; productivity and business processes ($11bn in Q120), intelligent cloud ($10.8bn), and more personal computing ($11.1bn). Azure growth percentages are wheeled out, but a specific figure is not; the overall figure lies somewhere in the first two categories. According to Jay Vleeschhouwer of Griffin Securities, per CNBC, Azure’s most recent quarter was estimated at $4.3bn. Google, meanwhile, puts its cloud operation as one part of its ‘other revenues’ tag, which was $6.42bn last quarter. Analysts have been asking the company whether it will cut free the specific revenues, only to get a committed non-committal in response.

Yet therein lies the rub. Where do these revenues come from and how does it compare across the rest of the stack? As Paul Miller, senior analyst at Forrester, told this publication in February, the real value for Google, among others, is to assemble and reassemble various parts of its offerings to customers, from software, to infrastructure, and platform. “That should be the story, not whether their revenue in a specific category is growing 2x, 3x, or 10x.”

For McQuire’s part, this is the differentiation between Google and Microsoft compared with AWS. “The alternative approach is where you see companies, typically from the CEO down, that are all-in on transformation, and seeing the workplace environment and internal side of the house as part of that,” he says. “That’s typically where you will see companies go a little bit deeper with a Google or Microsoft; they will embed the entirety of their SaaS applications capabilities in and around decision making for their infrastructure as a service as well.

“That approach very much favours Microsoft, and we’ve seen more and more companies in the context of Microsoft’s big announcements last year.”

The preferred cloud and avoiding lock-in

With this in mind, McQuire sees the rise of the ‘preferred cloud’, as the marketing spiel would put it. AT&T and Salesforce were two relatively recent Microsoft customers whose migrations were illustrated by this word. It doesn’t mean all-in, but neither does it really mean multi-cloud. “Companies will start to entrench themselves around one strategic provider, as opposed to having one multiple cloud, and [being] not necessarily embedded business-wise into a strategic provider,” says McQuire.

This represents a fascinating move with regards to the industry’s progression. Part of the reason why many industries did little more than tip their toes into the cloud in the early days was down to the worry of vendor lock-in. Multi-cloud and hybrid changed that up, so should organisations be fearful again now? McQuire notes Microsoft has been doing a lot to change its previous image, yet a caveat remains.

“There’s always going to be that pre-perceived notion among companies out there that they have to careful with going all-in with Microsoft around this,” he admits. “You see companies navigate through those complexities… [but] I feel that there’s a growing set of customers, particularly globally, and if they’re going with Azure they’re going heavily and quite deep with Microsoft across the piece, as opposed to taking a workload by workload Azure model.”

While Google Cloud is seeing areas of success, particularly among high level services around machine learning, there’s a longer game at play

According to a recent study from Goldman Sachs, more organisations polled were using Azure for cloud infrastructure versus AWS. It’s worth noting that the twice-annual survey polls only 100 IT executives, but they are at Global 2000 companies. Per CNBC again, 56 execs polled used Azure, compared with 48 for AWS.

This again shows the wider strength of the ecosystem, according to McQuire. “For the companies that are making more investments in the infrastructure as a service for Microsoft, they’re doing it with a complete picture in mind around the strength of these higher level services, particularly as you shift into SaaS applications and, more important, a lot of security and management capabilities,” he says. McQuire adds that Microsoft has had success with Azure in the UK, for instance from the number of firms who have moved to Office 365 over the past few years.

What next for Google?

Google Cloud, meanwhile, has had a particularly interesting 12 months. In terms of making noise, under the leadership of Thomas Kurian, the company has been especially vociferous. Its acquisitions – from Looker to Alooma, from Elastifile to CloudSimple – stood out, and even this year a raft of news has come through, from retail customers to storage and enterprise updates.

Expect more acquisitions to come out of Google Cloud in the coming year in what is going to be a long game. Despite the various moves made in terms of recruitment and acquisitions in beefing up Google’s marketing and sales presence, plenty more is to come. “Whilst clearly I think the focus is on improving Google Cloud and targeting very key areas – and they’re seeing areas of success, particularly among high level services around machine learning – there’s a longer game at play,” says McQuire. “The question is: how much time do they have in this arena?

“They’re going to have to focus more and more on some of those higher-level services, as opposed to the commodity infrastructure as a service market,” McQuire adds. “I think it’s going to be an ongoing battle for Google for awareness in the industry, in the market, and more importantly, I think there is still a large number of customers who are just not that well educated on what Google is doing in this space.”

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