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Skills and experience

Skills and experience

Skills and experience

What are the top 10 AWS areas candidates are experienced with?

AWS professionals tell us these are the product types they have experience with—if you want to stay competitive in the market, these are the skill sets you’ll most likely need.
1. Compute 61%
2. Database 57%
3. Storage 56%
4. Serverless 50%
5. Containers 47%
6. Networking & Content Delivery 40%
7. Security, Identity, & Compliance 39%
8. Application Integration 34%
9. Developer Tools 34%
10. Migration & Transfer 29%
The three products that our respondents had the least amount of experience with are:
4%
Quantum Technologies
3%
Game Tech
1%
Satellite
Meaning there are less professionals that understand these products, so if you are one of the select few who uses them, you can set yourself apart from other candidates.
The three products that our respondents had the least amount of experience with are:
4%
Quantum Technologies
3%
Game Tech
1%
Satellite
Meaning there are less professionals that understand these products, so if you are one of the select few who uses them, you can set yourself apart from other candidates.

Expert Insight

Credera was the winner of Best AWS Partner To Work For (UK) at the Digital Revolution Awards 2023. We caught up with their AWS Competency and Capability Lead, Peter Kiernan, to learn more about his predictions for AI on AWS after over 15 years of designing and managing the delivery of complex IT solutions for clients across a range of industries.

With AWS now offering a range of generative AI tools, what new opportunities do you expect to arise for professionals?

One of the biggest benefits of generative AI tools is that it opens clients’ minds to the broader capabilities of AI and machine learning. Demand for professionals with a deep understanding of these tools who can incorporate them as part of a well-architected AWS environment is growing.

For professionals, the opportunities to learn and help clients exploit the value of these services are huge, and an AWS professional with this expertise is sure to stand out from the crowd. Very rarely is there an opportunity with new technologies to ‘get in on the ground floor’ – this is one of them.

What’s the best way for AWS professionals to learn and build experience with AI? And how can employers get AI ready by better understanding its features and functions?

Any solution leveraging AWS’ AI services is still highly reliant on a well-architected platform with strong technical and procedural processes. AI services are most effective when they can access a broad set of data points – these must be well-understood and controlled.

For AWS professionals, there is already a wealth of training material available. AWS offers several free courses and local in-person training events aimed at a range of backgrounds, including business and non-technical audiences.

Are there any roles or skill sets within the AWS ecosystem that AI risks making outdated or even obsolete? And how can employers overcome staff hesitancy around AI to maintain a positive work environment?

Enhancements to AI services already mean that elements of certain day-to-day roles are no longer required. For AWS SysAdmins, this might include tasks such as analyzing server logs or monitoring resources. For Data Scientists, Amazon SageMaker already simplifies the process of building and training AI/ML models. Both of these examples still require specialist skills, but manual and repetitive tasks can now be automated.

A positive work environment can be fostered through individuals recognizing the benefits of retraining and learning how to exploit these services. For the professional, they will build relevant and marketable skills, whilst benefiting from all the positives that AI solutions bring to their day-to-day role.

Expert Insight

Credera was the winner of Best AWS Partner To Work For (UK) at the Digital Revolution Awards 2023. We caught up with their AWS Competency and Capability Lead, Peter Kiernan, to learn more about his predictions for AI on AWS after over 15 years of designing and managing the delivery of complex IT solutions for clients across a range of industries.

With AWS now offering a range of generative AI tools, what new opportunities do you expect to arise for professionals?

One of the biggest benefits of generative AI tools is that it opens clients’ minds to the broader capabilities of AI and machine learning. Demand for professionals with a deep understanding of these tools who can incorporate them as part of a well-architected AWS environment is growing.

For professionals, the opportunities to learn and help clients exploit the value of these services are huge, and an AWS professional with this expertise is sure to stand out from the crowd. Very rarely is there an opportunity with new technologies to ‘get in on the ground floor’ – this is one of them.

What’s the best way for AWS professionals to learn and build experience with AI? And how can employers get AI ready by better understanding its features and functions?

Any solution leveraging AWS’ AI services is still highly reliant on a well-architected platform with strong technical and procedural processes. AI services are most effective when they can access a broad set of data points – these must be well-understood and controlled.

For AWS professionals, there is already a wealth of training material available. AWS offers several free courses and local in-person training events aimed at a range of backgrounds, including business and non-technical audiences.

Are there any roles or skill sets within the AWS ecosystem that AI risks making outdated or even obsolete? And how can employers overcome staff hesitancy around AI to maintain a positive work environment?

Enhancements to AI services already mean that elements of certain day-to-day roles are no longer required. For AWS SysAdmins, this might include tasks such as analyzing server logs or monitoring resources. For Data Scientists, Amazon SageMaker already simplifies the process of building and training AI/ML models. Both of these examples still require specialist skills, but manual and repetitive tasks can now be automated.

A positive work environment can be fostered through individuals recognizing the benefits of retraining and learning how to exploit these services. For the professional, they will build relevant and marketable skills, whilst benefiting from all the positives that AI solutions bring to their day-to-day role.

Cross-training

Over half (56%) of those surveyed have cross-trained into AWS, having previously worked with a competitor product.

Top 5 competitor products used before NetSuite:

1. Microsoft Azure
60%
2. Google Cloud
59%
3. WMware
22%
4. Rackspace Technology
18%
5. IBM Cloud
10%

Is a degree necessary for a career in AWS?

Yes
37%
No
53%
Not sure
10%
Our key findings report contains highlights from this year’s Careers and Hiring Guide, plus our salary tables allow you to compare your salary or benchmark your teams’ salaries no matter their role in the AWS ecosystem.
Our key findings report contains highlights from this year’s Careers and Hiring Guide, plus our salary tables allow you to compare your salary or benchmark your teams’ salaries no matter their role in the AWS ecosystem.
Our key findings report contains highlights from this year’s Careers and Hiring Guide, plus our salary tables allow you to compare your salary or benchmark your teams’ salaries no matter their role in the AWS ecosystem.