![]() ![]() It can’t be something that we work on for a few months and then turn our attention elsewhere. I know a lot of companies are, but I think the important thing for us all to realize is that this does not get solved in a few months. “The reality is, for the last several hundred years, the way we treated black people in this country is disgraceful and something that has to change. “If you live in the United States, it’s also pretty hard to not be struck by the murders of Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor and George Floyd and realize the sobering thought that we have so far to go in this country in how we treat black people,” Jassy said. Jassy started his presentation by speaking about the killings this year of three African-Americans that sparked protests and calls for police reform by the Black Lives Matter movement and others: Ahmaud Arbery, an unarmed 25-year-old black man allegedly fatally shot by a white assailant while jogging in Georgia Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old allegedly fatally shot by police in her Louisville, Ky., apartment in March and George Floyd, a 46-year-old who died while in police custody in Minneapolis in May. Here’s a look at some of Jassy’s boldest statements during his keynote address for what will be a three-week re:Invent experience this year. “So the rate of growth at AWS continues to accelerate,” he said. While it took AWS just more than 10 years to grow to a $10 billion business, it took only 23 months to then grow to $20 billion in revenue, 13 months to move to $30 billion and just 12 months to get to $40 billion, according to Jassy. That is much larger than you’ll see elsewhere in the cloud” ![]() ![]() “To grow to a $46 billion dollar revenue run rate with 29 percent year-over-year growth meant we had to grow an incremental $10 billion in the last 12 months to get there. “You can have a higher year-over-year growth rate but be growing at a much lower absolute rate if you have a much lower base of revenue,” Jassy said. That growth rate mirrored AWS’ results from the previous quarter, when it dropped below 30 percent for the first time since parent company Amazon started breaking out its cloud financials in April of 2015. ![]() 30 – up 29 percent year over year for a $46.4 billion annual revenue run rate. AWS posted revenue of $11.6 billion for the latest quarter that ended Sept. Jassy also defended AWS’ slowing growth rate compared to other cloud providers, noting that year-over-year growth only matters as it relates to a company’s base revenue. “Jassy pounded home the need to address culture, focus on customers, reduce complexity and the importance of speed,” Kavis said. Livestreaming from Seattle, Jassy took the stage to open the ninth annual AWS partner and customer conference – the first to be held virtually – to share his cloud computing insights and how AWS is reinventing cloud technologies.Ī big takeaway from Jassy’s keynote address is that digital transformation is mostly about leadership, not about technology, according to Mike Kavis, chief cloud architect for Deloitte Consulting. “Some of it is building the right reinvention culture, and some of it is knowing what technology is available to you and jumping on it to make that reinvention happen.” “You want to be reinventing all the time,” Jassy said in his keynote address for the start of the AWS re:Invent 2020 conference today. Constant reinvention is the key to building a long-term, sustainable business, and organizations should be reinventing while they’re healthy and developing products and services that solve customer problems, not for their coolness factor, according to Amazon Web Services CEO Andy Jassy. ![]()
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