Jeremy Bendat & Tolga Tarhan, Onica | AWS Marketplace 2018
(electronic music) >> From the Aria Resort in Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering AWS Marketplace. Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. >> Hey, welcome back everybody Jeff Frick here with theCUBE. We're at AWS re:Invent 2018. I can't wait to get the people count. It's crazy we're kicking off nine days of coverage over the next three days. We've got three sets at four, four sets in three locations. But today we're at the AWS MarketPlace and Service Catalog Experience Hub at the Aria. Come on by here's no wait for drinks over here. We're excited to jump in to really, you know, not necessarily the tech but a lot of the processes behind the tech. We've got first time CUBE guest Tolga Tarhan, he's the CTO of Onica. Welcome. >> Thank you. And with him, Jeremy Bendat, he's the Director of Business Development and Partnerships. Welcome. >> Thank you sir. >> So let's jump into it, what does Onica do before we kind of get into the details? >> Yeah go ahead. >> So Onica is what's called an Amazon Premier Consultancy Partner. So all we do is help customers embrace, become educated, and become empowered on top of AWS. So we work primarily with enterprise customers across North America. We have offices both in the United States and in Canada and we're really excited to be here today. >> And how big is the company? How long have you been around? We're about 300 people. We've been doing AWS for a proximately six years but collectively across our team, we've probably close to a 1000 years of experience. >> Probably. >> So there's so much you know, kind of thud out there about you know, rent versus buy and you know. Do Amazon use to be security? But I think we've heard, you know now security is actually more of a tailwind than a headwind for Amazon. >> Right. >> So you know, let's break it down. First off, clearly Amazon is doing well. You know there's a lot of companies built their business on this platform, you guys have as well. What are some of the things, when you first engage with a customer, just kind of AWS 101. How they need to think about this differently than what they've been buying and racking or stacking in their data center? >> So it's the model's different and it's important to not think of AWS as a data center. It's important to embrace the cloud for the cloud. And so there's a pretty, pretty common saying about pets versus cattle. And I want to break that down just a little bit. So you've got pets that you love and you care for them and you've got cattle that are for a purpose. You raise them and then you use them for milk or food. And in the cloud we want that latter model, we want to be able to spin up an instance, do something and have it go away when we're done. And then be responsive to our demand. You know this isn't, I'm not the first one saying this idea on camera but I think the interesting thing to consider is the evolution. So we went from physical hardware at our data centers to virtual machines at our data centers. And at that leap we got higher capacity, we could pack more VMs onto one physical server than we could in the physical world. And we also got some benefits about reliability and ease of configuration. Then we went to the cloud of those VMs and we got cost benefits, we got performance benefits, we got scale benefits. And now in the last couple of years we've gone from that to containers in the cloud and now we're getting even higher density, even more flexible deployments, even quicker scale up times. And then the last piece of this that's the newest is now we're going to serverless, were we're not even managing the operating system or any of the details behind it. It's just all event driven. So that evolution, you don't have to go to the end, right, it's a journey. But it's important to sort of buy in to that journey on your way to the cloud and not just think of it as a place to park. >> Right. >> Some VMs. >> So I would imagine for a lot of people it's really hard to change their behavior. Not to forward buy additional capacity and to actually turn things off. When their not being used. I mean that's not what they've been doing throughout their careers in kind of traditional IT. >> And that's what we want to talk about those types of things on day one. That security conversation, that optimization conversation, just overall automation of the environment. That conversation is happening the very first time we sit down with a customer typically. Because it's something that we want them to embrace and start off with good habits when it comes to not only how their going to use the cloud but how they should not use the cloud. >> Right, cause I think a lot of them, they just leave it one right they. I went to a great session it was a little application party because I like when people turn us off on the weekends and I'm not making revenue because they don't need us right. >> Right. So the high capacity kind of end of the month you know kind of run job, piece of software and it's so counter intuitive but it's really establishing a different type of relationship then you had before. >> That's right, it's that sort of, it's that friendly consumption model alright. Use what you need, pay for what you use, no long term log in. And that applies I think, not just to AWS but to the ecosystem they've built. So now you're seeing SAS vendors, you're seeing partner ecosystems folks adopt that same model. >> Right clearly 60000 plus, whatever a year it's a whole lot of Amazon people but a whole lot of ecosystems people. >> Right. >> So when you approach a customer and they're starting this journey. First of, how many of your customers are just kind of getting started and they're smart enough to know I need to go to a Pro versus how many who got started and unfortunately let the lights on and the Amazon bill is coming up. Wait, wait, wait, you know, this is not what I expected. I'm not been able to manage it. What's kind of the shift of the customers and then we'll get into the each one. >> We see a real healthy mix across the board. >> Yeah. >> We've had the opportunity to work with start ups that have been purchased for over a billion dollars. We've also had the opportunity to work with traditional enterprise shops were it's their very first cloud project and they want to make sure they're setting things up the right way. And what we find is that we'll actually do something that's incredibly advanced for them. Doing a serverless project, for example and that then becomes the referenceable architecture for all future innovative projects that they end up doing. So because of that spread, we see this incredibly wide spread of different projects, different types of customer challenges. And we're able to collectively take that experience and then help individual customers embrace their specific challenges and point them in the right direction and help accelerate that. >> Yeah on that note, it's cloud adoption isn't like a one, a one track journey. Not every company should adopt it the same way. I think the unique value the experience partners bring to the ecosystem, is helping customers find the right path for them. >> Right. >> Not shove them into the one path that we know. >> And how many of them, how many of them grasp this, do most of them come in really on the cost savings side? You know they see an opportunity to be more efficient in their spend on infrastructure? Or how many of them are coming in, saying I see really speed, speed, speed, speed, speed, speed and this is an innovation engine, oh by the way hopefully I'll save a few bucks versus you know running a 50% utilization on my data center. What kind of. >> I think it's all of the above. >> All the above? >> It's all the above. Everyone wants speed and they also want to do it cheaply. And that's why they come to us. And that's why the ecosystem for partners is actually so big. It's because they know there's a better way of doing things and through that collective experience that we bring or that companies on the Marketplace bring, they know they're going to jump start that initiative and end up doing it the right way. Yeah, another big thing I think, probably you guys are making good hay on this opportunity, but you know Andy is going to stand up on Thursday and he's going to speak for a couple of hours. And he's going to have some mega slides, right. He has those mega slides. He's going to have a mega slide on startups that are running on AWS. He's going to have a mega slide on about enterprises that are running on AWS and then he's going to have a mega, mega slide, lord knows how many new services are going to be introduced, with just this sea of services. And I always look for S3. >> (laughs) >> Like where is the little S3 logo on the site. From a consumption point of view. From a customer point of view, yes it's great to have options and yes there's probably a service that can satisfy my need but how am I supposed to know where to go? I mean imagine that's got to be a huge part of your guys value add to help people navigate what is really a giant, you know, selection process opportunity. >> I think most customers understand the basics now, like most customers understand how to do compute on AWS, at least at a starting point. But you're right there's a 100 other services that look and feel they can help you. And our job as partners is to help you identify the right ones for your requirements. The flexibility that AWS provides is part of the value but it also means you have to be responsible and educated about how to use it. Right, what's the biggest, just foil 101, like you know they're all going to, they're all going to step into it, they all do it when people are just kind of getting started on this journey? >> Don't leave your instances on and walk away. (laughs) The amounts of times we've seen that, just because you do pay for what you use. >> Right. >> And so we want to make sure that we're starting off with good habits. And we're building that automation to turn things off if they're not being used. Or that we have those guardrails built in for a customer that hey, is enabling access for a team of people that haven't had access to their own infrastructure previously. >> Right. >> Yeah, it's that whole Dev Ops mentality so go into your cloud journey with a Dev Ops mindset, I know that word has become complicated. But what I mean by that is think about how you're going to automate deployment, think about how you're going to deliver code from where ever it comes to production in a automated way early in the process. Because if you spin up a giant environment, kind of manually and haphazardly, that's when this kind of cost runaway stuff. >> Right. >> Starts to show it's ugly head. >> So we're here in the Marketplace and Service Catalog area here at the Aria so I'm just curious to get your take on working with Amazon as a partner. You guys are different than maybe some of the solution providers or some of the component software people I've been talking to earlier in the day. But as a services company how are they to work with? How do you guys play with the Marketplace and I imagine the Services Catalog is probably big way that you deliver your services to your clients is to teach them how to manage that thing. >> Absolutely, so we recently become one of the launch partners that's on the consulting side that's able to, not only recommend, but also resell products from the AWS Marketplace. And so what that means is we actually get early access or sometimes even private pricing access to Marketplace items and then can offer those to our customers to help accelerate their initiative. One of the cool things that we've done, is we've actually set up direct partnerships with some of the SAS providers that offer their services on Marketplace to help to strategically drop in or offer that within a Service Catalog to our end customers. So they win because of price, they also win because help to vet some of those products. And we're helping to, a lot of the times, accelerate that initiative. >> Yeah there's also the actual SAS providers themselves, so those are actually customers we work with a lot as well. They need to integrate their SAS products with the Marketplace API's but when they do that they get access to purchasing base of AWS. All of a sudden Amazon customers can buy from you with no contracts, no legal paperwork needed. >> Right, right. >> It's already covered by their Amazon agreement. >> So enabling that and taking your SAS product, offering it for sale on Marketplace is another big area that we help customers. >> And that's kind of the ugly backing stuff that you got to, they got to work on right? >> Right. >> All that kind of administration which is really what that Service Catalog is all about actually not just talking about it but deploying it at scale. >> Yeah. >> That's right. >> It fast tracks that procurement cycle they would otherwise have to go through all those legal docs. So if we can, at the click of a button, enable one of our customers to adopt a product or even you know, POC it in a very short period of time, and turn it off, again pay-as-you-go model, the Marketplace open up a ton of doors for these customers. >> Just pay-as-you-go, just pay for what you use, don't leave the lights on. Could be very expensive. (all laughs) >> Well Jeremy, Tolga thanks for a taking a few minutes of your day and have a great show. I'm sure, leave extra time to get to wherever your next appointment is. >> Thank you. >> We can't thank you enough for being here and we're so excited for re:Invent 2018. >> Yeah, thanks a lot. >> Thanks. >> Alright he's Tolga, he's Jeremy, I'm Jeff. You're watching theCUBE, we are at the AWS Marketplace and Services Catalog Experience here at the Aria. Thanks for watching. (electronic music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. and Service Catalog Experience Hub at the Aria. he's the Director of Business Development and Partnerships. So we work primarily with enterprise customers And how big is the company? So there's so much you know, kind of thud out there How they need to think about this differently And in the cloud we want that latter model, and to actually turn things off. Because it's something that we want them to embrace and I'm not making revenue because they don't need us right. So the high capacity kind of end of the month you know And that applies I think, not just to AWS but a whole lot of ecosystems people. and they're smart enough to know I need to go to a Pro and that then becomes the referenceable architecture bring to the ecosystem, You know they see an opportunity to be more efficient all of the above. and then he's going to have a mega, mega slide, I mean imagine that's got to be a huge part of your guys And our job as partners is to help you identify just because you do pay for what you use. And so we want to make sure Yeah, it's that whole Dev Ops mentality But as a services company how are they to work with? One of the cool things that we've done, they get access to purchasing base of AWS. is another big area that we help customers. All that of our customers to adopt a product or even you know, don't leave the lights on. to get to wherever your next appointment is. and we're so excited for re:Invent 2018. and Services Catalog Experience here at the Aria.
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