Cloud Wars
  • Home
  • Top 10
  • CW Minute
  • CW Podcast
  • Categories
    • AI and Copilots
    • Innovation & Leadership
    • Cybersecurity
    • Data
  • Member Resources
    • Cloud Wars AI Agent
    • Digital Summits
    • Guidebooks
    • Reports
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Tech Analysts
    • Marketing Services
  • Summit NA
  • Dynamics Communities
  • Ask Copilot
Twitter Instagram
  • Summit NA
  • Dynamics Communities
  • AI Copilot Summit NA
  • Ask Cloud Wars
Twitter LinkedIn
Cloud Wars
  • Home
  • Top 10
  • CW Minute
  • CW Podcast
  • Categories
    • AI and CopilotsWelcome to the Acceleration Economy AI Index, a weekly segment where we cover the most important recent news in AI innovation, funding, and solutions in under 10 minutes. Our goal is to get you up to speed – the same speed AI innovation is taking place nowadays – and prepare you for that upcoming customer call, board meeting, or conversation with your colleague.
    • Innovation & Leadership
    • CybersecurityThe practice of defending computers, servers, mobile devices, electronic systems, networks, and data from malicious attacks.
    • Data
  • Member Resources
    • Cloud Wars AI Agent
    • Digital Summits
    • Guidebooks
    • Reports
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Tech Analysts
    • Marketing Services
    • Login / Register
Cloud Wars
    • Login / Register
Home » Do You Trust Gartner?
Cloud

Do You Trust Gartner?

Bob EvansBy Bob EvansJune 29, 2021Updated:April 13, 20236 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Photo of Nintext CEO with text, "Leadership Insight Series"

nintex

Since Gartner, the big dog in IT research and advisory services, has just released its guesses regarding 2020 worldwide IaaS public-cloud market shares for Amazon, Microsoft, Google and others, I’d like to share some of their guesswork and ask a few questions.

The first of those questions is posed in the headline: do you trust Gartner? I’ve been hearing more and more people answer that either in the negative or with a qualified “sometimes.”

But regardless of how much or how little credibility you feel Gartner deserves, there is no denying that Gartner has hammered its way to the top of the heap among IT analyst firms and wields significant influence on some buying decisions. So clearly, there are still a lot of businesspeople who either trust Gartner or who feel that Gartner’s value as a CYA bucker-upper is worth an annual contract.

No doubt Gartner has some terrific people, and I’m sure some of its work is stellar. But in a world that’s moving and changing and evolving faster than ever before, it seems to me that Gartner frequently resembles Elmer Fudd trying to keep up with Bugs Bunny: overmatched, out of its depth, unable or unwilling to adapt to modern times and clinging to a past that is wholly incompatible with the present and the future.

To back up that claim, please allow me to present Exhibit A: in its June 28 press release announcing its IaaS market-share findings for 2020, Gartner begins a sentence with this assertion: “While the cloud market will continue to grow, …” Now, I’m not sure what possible follow-on blockbuster revelation in the second half of that sentence could ever justify that preposterously silly opener—“While the cloud market will continue to grow.” But I will say that if I were a CIO or CFO or some other high-level decision-maker, I’d have to wonder why the hell I’m paying this outfit hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars a year to tell me that the sun’s gonna rise in the East tomorrow!!

For cripe’s sake, the enterprise cloud is only the greatest sustained growth market the world has ever known! And Gartners’s big divination is that—wait for it!—“the cloud market will continue to grow.”

But to me, that captures the Gartner mindset: belabor the obvious, fall back on the inarguable and above all don’t look too closely at what’s really going on in today’s madcap world because doing so could force some Gartner leaders to actually have to drive change—big changes—within their company and their business model.

However, in spite of myself, I looked at the Gartner press release about the IaaS numbers. And yes, I know, I know, the press release offers only tiny morsels of what’s in the big fat report Gartner’s hawking, so I didn’t really expect the press release to lay bare the future of the enterprise-tech business.

But here are a few things that press release did say.

  1. Gartner’s guess: “While the cloud market will continue to grow,…” Now, I might have mentioned this already, but it’s such a reality-rattler that I’m not sure so I wanted to build in some business-continuity redundancy.
  2. Gartner’s guess: Amazon had 2020 IaaS public-cloud revenue of $26.2 billion. Who knows—Gartner’s guess might be fairly close to being on target. And for the heck of it, let’s say it is. That would mean that public-cloud IaaS revenue accounted for 57.8% of AWS’s total 2020 revenue of $45.3 billion. And that means that AWS had “other” cloud revenue in 2020 totaling $19.1 billion. Would’ve been nice for Gartner to share its guess on what that $19.1 billion consisted of: databases, integration services, AI services, analytics??

Gartner table showing 2020 IaaS revenue for Microsoft and Amazon

But that type of 360 thinking isn’t how Gartner operates. The press release is about public-cloud IaaS revenue, dang-git, so stay focused on the one-dimensional thinking we’re offering you!!

  1. Gartner’s guess: Microsoft had 2020 public-cloud IaaS revenue of $12.7 billion. Again, let’s play along and assume Gartner’s guess is close to being accurate. Then, to determine what percentage of Microsoft’s overall cloud business that represents, we use the primary revenue category that Microsoft uses every quarter to define its overall cloud business—commercial cloud revenue—and add up those quarterly figures for calendar 2020. Those numbers are Q1 $13.3 billion, Q2 $14.3 billion, Q3 $15.2 billion and Q4 $16.7 billion for a calendar-2020 total of $59.5 billion in commercial-cloud revenue. That means that if we use Gartner’s guess, then public-cloud IaaS revenue accounted for 21.3% of Microsoft’s total commercial-cloud revenue. It also would indicate that, outside of public-cloud IaaS revenue, Microsoft generated 2020 commercial-cloud revenue of a whopping $46.8 billion, which is more than $1 billion larger than AWS’s total cloud revenue for 2020.

It would have been compelling to have seen what the big brains at Gartner might have had to say about these and other issues: 

  • What the heck is in that $12.7 billion in public-cloud infrastructure revenue, and what is in the almost-4X-as-big $46.8 billion?
  • What do the disparities in percentages of non-IaaS revenue—42.2% for Amazon and 78.7% for Microsoft—have to say about each company’s preparedness and capabilities to take business customers swiftly and successfully into the digital economy?
  • Microsoft’s public-cloud IaaS revenue might be only half the size of Amazon’s but Microsoft’s is growing more than twice as fast—59.2% versus 28.7%. What does that say about the future of this hyper-dynamic marketplace?

But, that would have required some fresh thinking, and perhaps Gartner doesn’t have a 3-ring binder from 2007 that offers that answer—so it’s better to avoid those types of questions.

And it’s safer to drop brain-busters like this: “While the cloud market will continue to grow.”

RECOMMENDED READING

Google Squeezed Out by Amazon & Microsoft in Battle for Salesforce Love

Oracle Challenges SAP, Microsoft, Salesforce over Industry-Cloud Suites

Is Salesforce Going to War with Oracle, Workday, SAP in HR?

The Marc Benioff Show: Inside Salesforce’s Greatest Quarter Ever

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella Is World’s #1 CEO: 5 Reasons Why

Oracle CEO Safra Catz More Bullish Than I’ve Ever Seen: 10 Examples

Larry Ellison Shows His Cards: Oracle ERP Revenue Could Reach $30B

Meet Google Cloud’s Secret Weapon: OCTO

Salesforce Targets ServiceNow: Slack Delivers “Human Workflow”

SAP Buries the Past: Calls Out Legacy ERP, Welcomes Modular Cloud ERP

Subscribe to the Industry Cloud Newsletter, a free biweekly update on the booming demand from business leaders for industry-specific cloud applications. 

 

Cloud Wars is on YouTube! Keep up with our latest podcast episodes, daily Cloud Wars Minute commentary, and interviews shedding light on the greatest growth market the world has ever known.

Amazon Cloud Wars Cloud Wars Archive IaaS Latest Articles Microsoft
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
Founderuser

Bob Evans

Founder
Cloud Wars

Areas of Expertise
  • AI
  • Cloud
  • Digital Business
  • Innovation
  • Leadership
  • LinkedIn

Cloud Wars Founder Bob Evans actively analyzes the Cloud and AI categories through video reports, in-depth analyses, and interviews with the Cloud and AI market’s leaders and innovators. He’s also the creator of the Cloud Wars Top 10, a ranking and ongoing analysis of the world's most influential tech companies driving digital business and the digital economy. Bob is recognized as a world-class strategic communicator focused on emerging business strategy, disruptive innovation, and forward-looking leadership.

  Contact Bob Evans ...

Related Posts

Workday Empowers Digital Workforce with Agent System of Record and Global Partnerships

June 13, 2025

AWS Launches MCP Servers to Supercharge AI-Assisted App Development

June 13, 2025

Oracle Surges on AI Boom as FY26 Cloud Growth to Blow Past 40%

June 12, 2025

Cognizant and ServiceNow Unite to Centralize IT, HR, and Customer Service with AI

June 12, 2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Recent Posts
  • Workday Empowers Digital Workforce with Agent System of Record and Global Partnerships
  • AWS Launches MCP Servers to Supercharge AI-Assisted App Development
  • Oracle Surges on AI Boom as FY26 Cloud Growth to Blow Past 40%
  • Cognizant and ServiceNow Unite to Centralize IT, HR, and Customer Service with AI
  • AI Agent Security: Red Teaming Emerges as Solution to Broad Range of Threat Categories

  • Ask Cloud Wars AI Agent
  • Tech Guidebooks
  • Industry Reports
  • Newsletters

Join Today

Most Popular Guidebooks

Accelerating GenAI Impact: From POC to Production Success

November 1, 2024

ExFlow from SignUp Software: Streamlining Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations and Business Central with AP Automation

September 10, 2024

Delivering on the Promise of Multicloud | How to Realize Multicloud’s Full Potential While Addressing Challenges

July 19, 2024

Zero Trust Network Access | A CISO Guidebook

February 1, 2024

Advertisement
Cloud Wars
Twitter LinkedIn
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
  • Marketing Services
  • Do not sell my information
© 2025 Cloud Wars.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

  • Login
Forgot Password?
Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email.