Amazon Web Services just scored a big partner in $50 billion Salesforce

jim bezos, amazon,
jim bezos, amazon,

(David McNew / Getty Images)
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.

Amazon Web Services has just found a big partner to its expanding user list: Salesforce, the $50 billion cloud-software maker.

According to the WSJ, Salesforce will build some parts of its upcoming Internet of Things cloud software on top of AWS, testing its newest initiative on Amazon's cloud-computing service. Salesforce's IoT Cloud, which collects data from connected devices and gives recommended actions to sales and customer-service reps, was first announced last fall but will become available later this year.

Salesforce runs the majority of its service on its own data centers. But it's been running some parts of it on public-cloud providers, like AWS, and Tuesday's news signals that it could migrate more of its workload over to the public cloud.

That would make Salesforce the latest big company to increase its reliance on AWS. From upstarts like Netflix to banks like Capital One, a growing number of big enterprises are finding AWS a viable option to run their services. Even Uber is reported to be contemplating a move to the public cloud, taking bids from the cloud arms of Google, Amazon, and Microsoft.

But given Salesforce's wide-array of customers, including companies with strict regulatory-compliance requirements, it's unlikely that Salesforce will go full-force to the public-cloud providers the way Netflix has. Salesforce's IoT Cloud EVP, Adam Bosworth, told the WSJ that it will be a mix of its own data centers and public-cloud services.

In any case, Salesforce's latest move reflects the growing size of AWS. In its latest quarter, AWS generated $2.6 billion in revenue, with an operating income of $604 million, making it the most profitable business at Amazon. That's a 64% growth from the same period of last year, but some analysts predict that it'll grow even more, as Deutsche Bank recently projected AWS to be a business worth $160 billion.

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