| By Sridhar Vembu | Article Rating: |
|
| October 28, 2008 02:40 PM EDT | Reads: |
2,507 |
Yesterday Microsoft launched its Azure cloud platform, so it is time for another spreadsheet. To properly compare Microsoft, Google and Amazon, I am using the gross profit (instead of revenue) and net profit numbers. Gross profit is, in some sense, the real revenue of a company after paying its outside suppliers; gross profit is what is available to pay its employees, pay the rent, and so on. For a software company, the cost of goods sold is close to zero, so most of the revenue is gross profit. But for a retailer, as much as 70-80% of revenue goes to its suppliers, so gross profit is the better measure of the economic productivity the company achieves. The numbers in the table use rough annualized estimates based on the most recent quarter.
Do you notice the dramatic difference? Google and Microsoft are in another planet altogether compared to Amazon. Google has practically the same headcount as Amazon, yet drives three times the gross profit. The numbers really illustrate Amazon's competitive strategy in cloud computing; to quote Nick Carr:
Bezos goes on to note that Amazon's retailing operation is "a low gross margin business" compared to software and technology businesses, which "tend to have very high margins." The relatively low profitability of the retailing business gave Amazon the incentive to create a highly efficient, highly automated computing system, which in turn could become the foundation for a set of cloud computing services that could be sold at low enough prices to attract a large clientele. It also made a low-margin utility business attractive to the firm in a way that it isn't for a lot of large tech companies who are averse to making big capital investments in new, low-margin businesses.
"On the surface, superficially, [cloud computing] appears to be very different [from our retailing business]," Bezos sums up. "But the fact is we've been running a web-scale application for a long time, and we needed to build this set of infrastructure web services just to be able to manage our own internal house."
Microsoft's announcement is interesting from a technology point of view, but it is hard to see how the economics would work for them against Amazon. It is very hard for companies to go down the value chain for growth, so I am skeptical Microsoft would easily accept Amazon-like margins. On the other hand, for Amazon, cloud services have to deliver only a little higher margin than retail to be well worth the investment. That is not a tough hurdle, because retail is one of the toughest businesses out there.
Published October 28, 2008 Reads 2,507
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Sridhar Vembu
Sridhar Vembu is CEO of ZOHO Corp. (formerly AdventNet Inc.), the company behind the Zoho suite of online applications. Learn more about Zoho at www.zoho.com, follow us on Twitter at @zoho and contact Sridhar at svembu@zohocorp.com.
- The Top 150 Players in Cloud Computing
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- Exclusive Q&A with Rich Marcello - Unisys President, Systems & Technology
- Why IBM’s Server Chief Got Busted
- CIA was Headed to an Enterprise Cloud All Along: Jill Tummler Singer
- Industry Experts Discuss the State of Cloud Computing
- Cloud Computing Expo: Exclusive Q&A with Yahoo! SVP Cloud Computing
- Yahoo! to Present at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- Cloud Computing on Gartner's Top 10 List and SYS-CON Events' 2010 Calendar
- Cloud Expo New York Call for Papers Deadline December 15
- Adaptivity & Cloud Computing: Exclusive Q&A with CEO Tony Bishop
- Ulitzer.com Named Exclusive "New Media" Sponsor of Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
- The Top 150 Players in Cloud Computing
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- Cloud CEOs, CTOs & SVPs to Speak at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- SYS-CON.TV: Cloud Computing Expo Power Panel
- Exclusive Q&A with Rich Marcello - Unisys President, Systems & Technology
- Unisys Named “Platinum Sponsor” of Cloud Computing Expo
- Why IBM’s Server Chief Got Busted
- Vizioncore Named Bronze Sponsor of 4th Virtualization Conference & Expo
- 1st Annual GovIT Expo: Letter from the Technical Chair
- Deputy CIO of the CIA to Keynote 1st Annual GovIT Expo
- CIA was Headed to an Enterprise Cloud All Along: Jill Tummler Singer
- 1st Annual Government IT Conference & Expo: Themes & Topics
- FullArmor GPAnywhere Secures Microsoft Application Virtualization Applications Through Group Policy
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- SYS-CON's Virtualization Conference & Expo: Themes & Topics
- SYS-CON's Virtualization Journal Opens Its "Readers' Choice Awards" Nominations
- Application Virtualization: Instant Migration to Vista, Fast Delivery, Secure Access, Side-by-Side Deployments
- Integration with Windows Vista, Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft Application Virtualization
- "Virtualization Is Now a Key Strategic Theme," Says Citrix CTO
- mValent Extends Automated Application Configuration Management to Virtualization Environments
- Will Microsoft Buy Citrix?
- Has the Technology Bounceback Begun?
- Are you Application vAvailable?
- Virtualization Conference Keynote Webcast Live on SYS-CON.TV

































