Table 1. Worldwide IaaS Public Cloud Services Market Share, 2020-2021 (Millions of U.S. Dollars)
Company |
2021 |
2021 Market |
2020 |
2020 Market |
2020-2021
|
Amazon |
35,380 |
38.9 |
26,201 |
40.8 |
35.0 |
Microsoft |
19,153 |
21.1 |
12,659 |
19.7 |
51.3 |
Alibaba |
8,679 |
9.5 |
6,117 |
9.5 |
41.9 |
6,436 |
7.1 |
3,932 |
6.1 |
63.7 |
|
Huawei |
4,190 |
4.6 |
2,681 |
4.2 |
56.3 |
Others |
17,056 |
18.8 |
12,697 |
19.8 |
34.3 |
Total |
90,894 |
100.0 |
64,286 |
100.0 |
41.4 |
Source: Gartner (June 2022)
Microsoft followed in the No. 2 position with 21.1% share and above-market growth, reaching over $19 billion in IaaS revenue in 2021. With many organizations already relying on Microsoft’s enterprise software and services, Azure has been positioned to capture opportunities across nearly every vertical market.
Alibaba was again the No. 3 IaaS public cloud provider worldwide with 9.5% market share and revenue of $8.7 billion for 2021. While Alibaba continues to lead the Chinese cloud market, it is also poised to be the leading regional provider in Indonesia, Malaysia, and other emerging cloud markets, given its local market understanding and ability to serve as a bridge to digital commerce.
“Regional cloud ecosystems are becoming increasingly important amidst growing geopolitical fragmentation and emerging regulatory and compliance requirements, presenting an opportunity for providers with a strong regional presence,” said Nag.
Google
Cloud saw the highest
growth rate of the top
five IaaS vendors,
growing 63.7% in 2021 to
reach $6.4 billion in
revenue. This growth was
driven by steadily
increased adoption for
traditional enterprise
workloads as well as
Google’s innovation in
more cutting-edge
capabilities such as
artificial intelligence
and Kubernetes container
technologies, supported
by an expansion of their
partner ecosystem to
reach a wider customer
base.
While Huawei’s growth tempered in 2021 after two straight years of over 200% growth, it still maintained the No. 5 market share position with $4.2 billion in revenue. Huawei has made significant investments in its IaaS ecosystem in the past two years, and through an enhanced strategy of open hardware, open-source software and partner enablement it has been able to provide expanded offerings for universities, developers and startups.
“The next phase of IaaS growth will be driven by customer experience, digital outcomes and the virtual-first world,” said Nag. “Emerging technologies that can help businesses bring experiences closer to their customers, such as the metaverse, chatbots and digital twins, will require hyperscale infrastructure to meet growing demands for compute and storage power.”