Categories: Web and IT News

AWS and Azure Cloud Pricing Moving in Different Directions, as Shown by Liftr Insights Data

Liftr Insights data highlights increases in AWS prices while Microsoft Azure prices have been decreasing.

Liftr Insights, a pioneer in market intelligence driven by unique data, reveals a trend in increasing prices for AWS while Microsoft Azure has gone in the opposite direction over 4 years.

Over the past year, there has been a 23.0% increase in average prices of on-demand compute instances at AWS. Liftr Insights data show that not only did AWS increase their average prices in 2020, 2021, and 2022, but the increases have been higher each year since 2019.

In comparison, Liftr Insights data show a decline of 9.1% for Azure on-demand compute prices in 2022. While Azure price increases in 2020 were higher than those of AWS, Azure’s increases were lower than AWS in 2021 and now show a net decrease for 2022.

Marketing Technology News: MarTech Interview with Mona Popli, Vice President of Product Marketing at Heap

“Finding trends like this is a key value-prop,” says Tab Schadt, CEO of Liftr Insights. “We got into this business of tracking data because the cloud providers are opaque. These are objective insights that are hard to find elsewhere.”

Across the cloud providers tracked by Liftr Insights, representing over 75% of the public cloud market, average prices for on-demand instances increased 2.5%. This means that AWS has been a driving factor in those higher prices.

Many factors influence average price changes, including new regions, new products, different types of products, such as high-performance instances and instances with higher core counts, which both tend to carry higher price tags.

Marketing Technology News: Top 4 Trends Advertisers Should Expect for the Streaming Ecosystem in 2023

Despite all these increases and decreases in prices, Azure prices have been higher (on average) than AWS prices for three years. These data points provide more insights into cloud providers strategies.

“Our data provides the ability for market intelligence analysts to drill down to see what is driving these changes,” says Schadt. “But, the areas of change are not always what was expected. Finding unexpected changes and driving factors is not only interesting, it’s invaluable.”

The post AWS and Azure Cloud Pricing Moving in Different Directions, as Shown by Liftr Insights Data appeared first on MarTech Series.

The post AWS and Azure Cloud Pricing Moving in Different Directions, as Shown by Liftr Insights Data first appeared on PressRelease.cc.

AWS and Azure Cloud Pricing Moving in Different Directions, as Shown by Liftr Insights Data first appeared on Web and IT News.

awnewsor

Recent Posts

OnviSource Launches OmVista Engage™ – A Closed-Loop, Conversational AI Learning Platform for Real-Time Workforce Performance and Outcome Optimization

New solution integrates real-time agent guidance and engagement, pre- and post-interaction analytics, automation, and AI-Native…

43 minutes ago

CentralCast Delivers Breakthrough Efficiencies to Public Broadcasting Stations with Harmonic

Harmonic’s XOS Media Processor Delivers Exceptional Video Quality to More than Half of U.S. Public…

44 minutes ago

RETRANSMISSION: RZOLV Reports Approximately 97.0% Gold Recovery on Complex Copper-Gold Ore Without Pretreatment, Highlighting Potential to Simplify Flowsheets Versus Cyanide

RETRANSMISSION: RZOLV Reports Approximately 97.0% Gold Recovery on Complex Copper-Gold Ore Without Pretreatment, Highlighting Potential…

44 minutes ago

Acceleware Announces Closing of Second Tranche of Issuance of Replacement Debentures

Acceleware Announces Closing of Second Tranche of Issuance of Replacement Debentures Calgary, Alberta–(Newsfile Corp. –…

45 minutes ago

The Quiet Death of the Dumb Terminal: Why Claude’s New Computer Use Is the Real AI Interface War

Anthropic just made its AI agent permanently resident on your desktop. Not as a chatbot…

19 hours ago

The Billionaire Who Says Your Kids Should Learn to Code Like They Learn to Read — And Why Wall Street Should Listen

Jack Clark thinks coding is the new literacy. Not in the vague, aspirational way that…

19 hours ago

This website uses cookies.