A $1 billion investment in the cloud sounds like a game-changer, but it's not
China's Alibaba Group Holding last week said it would invest $1 billion
into its Aliyun cloud computing arm to challenge Amazon Web Services.
This move kicks off what could become a global battle between the two
e-commerce giants. Also, it could change the dynamics in the cloud
market now dominated by AWS, Google, IBM, and Microsoft.
What's the deal with Alibaba's day-late-and-a-dollar-short
strategy -- or is it actually five years late and about $4 billion
short?
I don't believe that Alibaba will have much of a
chance to duke it out against AWS in the United States -- or against
Microsoft, Google, or IBM, for that matter. This will be another
provider that most U.S. enterprises will consider too late to the party,
without the features and functions they need.
That
said, I doubt that Alibaba's focus will be the United States. The Asian
market is exploding right now. If Alibaba decides to invest in points
of presence in Asia, companies in that market may find Alibaba more
appealing. Of course, the major cloud providers (interestingly, all
American companies) already have data centers in Asia. Even there
Alibaba will be up against established providers.
Although
I don't believe the major cloud providers will need to worry about
Alibaba's cloud investment for the next several years, I see a day when
non-American cloud providers will offer cheap versions of premium
clouds, much like Asian companies do with durable goods.
If
I were on the management team at Alibaba, I would keep away from AWS,
Google, IBM, and Microsoft, and not declare war on them. Alibaba's
strategy should be to add value where those cloud providers don't, such
as dominance in Asia. Otherwise, Alibaba could find its cloud investment
quickly ignored.
Source: http://www.infoworld.com
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