Showing posts with label webanalytics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label webanalytics. Show all posts

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Ranking Cloud Computing Vendors 2009

With the close of 2009 coming soon, I expect to see a number of “2009 - Cloud Computing in Review” type posts. Let me get a jump on everyone and release mine a few weeks early. Though I am a developer, my Cloud posts have all been analytical in nature and this one is no different. For this post I chose a single data source for stack ranking the Cloud Computing vendors – Google search results. Not terribly scientific, but an approach that produced interesting results.

Google as an Analysis Tool

I have created a number of editions of my Cloud Taxonomy over the last 18 months. The goal of that project was to help newcomers to the market understand what types of solutions are available and who the players are. My hope was that people would find it useful as a launching off point on their journey into the Cloud.

Tonight, on a whim, I decided to see what would happen if a person used Google instead as the start of their exploration of Cloud Computing. It was predictable that a high percentage of results are focused on “intro” or “definition” type pages. A lot of blog posts, tweets, and conference sessions have been devoted to defining what exactly is Cloud Computing. Let’s link to the NIST definition, and speak no more of that here.

What I found interesting was the relative ordering of vendors in the results list – it wasn’t what I expected at all. Given that Google Page Rank arguably orders results according to mind share, I expected certain vendors (e.g. Google, Cisco, GoGrid) to appear high above others. Looking at the results below, that didn’t happen.

To head off the flames, I recognize why this analysis isn’t scientific:

  • It is based off of a single data source – Google Page Rank
  • It is based off of a single search phrase – cloud computing
  • It assumes Page Rank == mind share

But its interesting to me nonetheless, so here we go.

Ranking the Cloud Vendors in 2009 on Mind Share

The table below shows the results. To collect this data, I did the following:

  • Cleared all browser cookies
  • Ensured I was logged out of Google (to avoid personalized results)
  • Navigated to the google.com search page
  • Typed “cloud computing” in the search box

And, here are the results. I first scrubbed anything that wasn’t a vendor or open source product. Then I noted the first time their domain (xxx.com) appeared, even if that listing was not their primary cloud page (sometimes the blog comes first). Google itself is the exception on this – hits on Google Groups/Blogger/etc did not count.

 

Result Page Rank Vendor URL

1

1 Rackspace http://www.rackspacecloud.com/
  2 Sun http://www.sun.com/solutions/cloudcomputing/index.jsp
  3 Salesforce http://www.salesforce.com/cloudcomputing/

2

4 Amazon http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/
  5 VMware http://www.vmware.com/solutions/cloud-computing/
  6 IBM http://www.ibm.com/ibm/cloud/
  7 Canonical/
Ubuntu
http://www.ubuntu.com/cloud

3

8 Dell http://content.dell.com/us/en/enterprise/cloud-computing.aspx

4

9 Oracle http://www.oracle.com/technology/tech/cloud/index.html
  10 RedHat http://www.redhat.com/solutions/cloud/
  11 Rightscale http://blog.rightscale.com/2008/05/26/define-cloud-computing/
  12 Microsoft http://www.microsoft.com/virtualization/en/us/cloud-computing.aspx

5

13 3tera http://www.3tera.com/Cloud-computing/

6

14 HP http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/cloud.html
  15 Yahoo http://labs.yahoo.com/Cloud_Computing
  16 Objectivity http://www.objectivity.com/cloud-computing/default.asp

8

17 Cisco http://blogs.cisco.com/tag/cloud+computing
  18 Enomaly http://www.enomaly.com/

9

19 CA http://www.ca.com/US/insights/topic.aspx?cid=8348

10

20 F5 http://www.f5.com/pdf/reports/cloud-computing-survey-results-2009.pdf

11

21 Appirio http://www.appirio.com/ecosystem/
  22 G.ho.st http://g.ho.st/
  23 Akamai http://www.akamai.com/cloud

12

24 Accenture http://www.accenture.com/Global/Services/Accenture_Technology_Labs/R_and_I/CloudComputing.htm

13

25 GoGrid http://www.gogrid.com/

16

26 Novell http://www.novell.com/cloud/

20

27 Citrix http://www.citrix.com/english/ps2/products/product.asp?contentID=1681633

21

28 Joyent http://www.joyent.com/
  29 Parallels http://www.parallels.com/spp/understandingclouds/

22

30 eyeos http://eyeos.org/
  31 Eucalyptus http://www.eucalyptus.com/

23

32 Appistry http://www.appistry.com/

24

33 Infosys http://wwwinfy.infyweb.akadns.net/cloud-computing/default.asp

25

34 Virtualmin http://www.virtualmin.com/
  35 Nimbus http://workspace.globus.org/

 

Congrats goes to Rackspace, as they topped the list.

These things surprised me:

  • Google? Where are you?
  • Amazon was not listed as the top result, and Rackspace was
  • Canonical/Ubuntu faired extremely well, given how new their enterprise cloud solution is
  • Cisco listed lower than expected at page 8, given how active they are in the blogging community

CloudFutures 2009 (Dec 7-8, San Jose)

In closing, this is a short plug for the CloudFutures conference coming up on Monday. I will be speaking on “The Real Cloud Players”. See you there!

Monday, September 15, 2008

Comparing Cloud Computing Mindshare Levels Between the U.S., Europe, and Asia

Would you believe that the U.S. has 4 times more people interested in cloud computing than Europe? How about 5 times more people so interested than Asia? It is impossible to derive irrefutable evidence to validate those statements, but this blog entry offers one concrete data source that indicates those statements are true.

There have been various studies on cloud adoption and mindshare. For a young industry, it is an important metric to understand. Just this week, Chris Marino started a cloud adoption topic thread on the Cloud Google Group. He cited the Pew's report on American adoption of cloud applications.

This blog entry provides more data for that discussion. However, it focuses not on the adoption rate within the U.S., but the relative interest in cloud computing topics across continents. It uses traffic data from my blog as the input into the analysis.

Aggressive Extrapolation

Just to give you fair warning, I am about to draw sizable conclusions from a single source of data. This data source, traffic to my blog, cannot be proven to be a meaningful measurement. But I am writing this blog entry anyway because I think it is an interesting topic and the data might be meaningful. Also, I find there is an absence of information on this topic out on the net, so I hope this is a good starting point for other studies.

Here are a couple of assumptions I am making during this analysis:

  • Given that blog access is location independent, there is an equal opportunity across regions for any cloud computing enthusiast to read my cloud blog entries
  • Given equal opportunity, the readership of my cloud blog entries roughly matches interest level in each region for the topic of cloud computing in general

You could certainly argue that my blog does not generate enough traffic to be a significant measure. You could also argue that the level of blog readership in general isn't consistent across the regions.

You could also probably find about ten other reasons why this study is not conclusive. Once again, I hope this is a starting point for others to contribute meaningful data, and so this blog entry will be published despite the possible objections.

The Raw Data:  Blog Readership Numbers

I will first introduce the raw visitor numbers of a handful of blog entries, as captured by Google Analytics. Later sections will explain the data and what to look for in these numbers.

Blog Entry Cat
gory
Visits U.S. % Europe % Asia %
Cloud Taxonomy V2 Cloud 1631 67 17 13
Cloud Taxonomy V1 Cloud 1172 63 20 15
SaaS Taxonomy SaaS 207 54 18 26
SaaS for IBM, ORCL... SaaS 191 40 32 25
SaaS Contract Analysis SaaS 196 69 22 8
Control 1 Ctrl 131 51 27 16
Control 2 Ctrl 363 53 24 21

 

A few words on the data collection gathered from Google Analytics:

  • These numbers reflect visits between July 1, 2008 and September 14th 2008
  • Some of the entries were not available during the entire collection period.
  • They do not include RSS readers, as my feed exposes the entire entry
  • Some of the older entries started life on a different blog system before being migrated to this blogspot account in May. Some clicks may have gone to the older blog system for those entries and were not captured.
  • Visits are unique visitors, which each may account for one or more pageviews
  • The numbers don't add up to 100% due to hits coming from places outside the three regions

Primary Evidence: Cloud Computing Visual Map Entry

The primary piece of evidence, and the one from which I drew the main conclusions, is an entry made on September 8th 2008. It is titled "Cloud Taxonomy V2" in the table above. The blog entry contains the second version of  a vendor map I have drawn that visualizes the cloud computing industry. I pick this entry as the primary evidence for the following reasons:

  • It is very recent, and therefore very "clean" in terms of tracking actual human users reading the entry
  • It is an entry with general appeal - it covers the industry as a whole. It therefore should represent a broad measurement of interest.
  • It has enough visitors (1631) to make for a good sample size

The evidence reveals the following distribution:

image

It is from this data that the main conclusions are drawn:

  • U.S. interest in the topic of cloud computing is 4 times greater than in Europe
  • U.S. interest in the topic of cloud computing is 5 times greater than in Asia

Look also at the numbers associated with the blog entry listed as "Cloud Taxonomy V1". That was the first version, released in May of this year. It is comforting to see that the V1 numbers roughly match the V2 numbers.

What About the SaaS Numbers?

You will notice that the SaaS themed blog enties don't carry the same distribution as the cloud entries. This is odd, as SaaS is a subset of cloud computing (see the referenced taxonomy diagram if you want to see why).

Specifically, look at the first two SaaS blog entries, found here and here. See how the U.S. has a lower share of the readership than with the cloud taxonomy entries:

image

One fabricated explanation - its about early adopters?

  • The U.S. contains a higher percentage of early adopters (hypothesis)
  • The overall cloud computing industry is still quite young , and dominated by early adopters. Therefore, the U.S. has a greater share of the readership of the general cloud taxonomy entries.
  • SaaS is further along in adoption than the overall cloud computing industry. Therefore, you will see more balance in the interest levels.

Now look at the third SaaS entry - the one titled SaaS Contract Analysis. This one actually shows a higher distribution for the U.S. relative to the cloud taxonomy entries. Why?

image

Once again, a totally fabricated explanation - does this show Adoption as opposed to Mindshare?

  • The SaaS Contract blog entry contains an analysis of SaaS contract terms, and suggested terms to avoid as a customer.
  • This is not an entry for future thinkers or those just kicking the tires. This entry is primarily useful for those actually implementing SaaS and who need to review contracts with vendors. Perhaps this may show actual adoption, while the data for other entries show mindshare/interest?

Seeking a Control: My Non-Cloud/SaaS Blog Entries

While in recent times I have focused my external writing on Cloud Computing and SaaS topics, I also have written on topics such as mashups and Java security. To help shed more light on the numbers revealed above, I offer two of those blog entries as a control for this analysis. These may indicate what bias already exists in my blog readership.

Or they may not - most of my readers find my blog via search engines, not because they are regular subscribers. Therefore I would argue that these other blog entries don't offer much insight. But they are included anyway for your review.

Other Data Points on Cloud Mindshare and Adoption

There are other publicly available surveys on various adoption rates and mindshare. I would contend that none of these provide data for the specific discussion above, but they are interesting all the same:

Call for Collaboration

This analysis would be helped immensely by having access to more data sources. Cloud bloggers - what are you seeing? Cloud vendors, what can you say about your customers? Please reveal!

Also, the raw spreadsheet data from Google Analytics for my cloud v2 entry is here. If you would like a different export of the data, let me know.

Thursday, February 1, 2007

Google Analytics informs me that I am fluent in Chinese

It is well known that Google Analytics is a nice technology, but I would have never guessed that it could reveal a useful skill that I didn't know I had - the ability to write fluent chinese. Well, that isn't exactly true, but in effect it has done that. Let me explain...

NOTE: this blog entry was originally posted February 2nd, 2007 on my previous blogging system (dev2dev.bea.com).

wlp.bea.com

In my various writings on dev2dev, I have provided links back to the demo site I work on - wlp.bea.com. That site contains a number of demos running on WebLogic Portal 9.2 related to Enterprise Mashups, Ajax, Drag and Drop, and Google Gadget technology. If you have read my stuff, you will see the code name Adrenaline, which is a part of the WLP Mashup story. The demos for Adrenaline are on wlp.bea.com. The site is a great way for WLP product engineers like myself to demonstrate new WLP features, or new uses of the existing WLP product.

Google Analytics

Many web admins know of Google Analytics - it is a free service provided by the mother ship. It provides a set of great features for answering questions like:

  • How many people have visited my website?
  • How many page views do I have per day?
  • What Google Search terms drive people to my site?
  • Where are my visitors from?

Not only is it useful, it is really easy to implement. You simply need to add a javascript snippet in every page on your site. Google does the rest. About a month ago, I implemented Google Analytics for wlp.bea.com so we can understand better how popular the demo site was, and what people liked looking at. Although we are all technical people who work on it, the business concept of ROI (investment being our time) is important to us.

dev2dev.bea.com.cn

I took a look at my Google Analytics console for wlp.bea.com today and saw something strange. See the image below.

The fact that Adrenaline is not a big hit in Africa and Greenland is not what I found strange. I would like to see more Canadians visiting, but that isn't entirely strange either. What was strange is that a new website became a significant referrer - see the pie chart on the right*. For the first time, dev2dev showed up twice as a top referrer. Why?

Although the UI cuts off the suffix, I could see that the second dev2dev is none other than dev2dev.bea.com.cn. OK, that must be the sister site for dev2dev in China. That made sense, but something didn't. Who is driving traffic to wlp.bea.com from the Chinese dev2dev?

The Skill I Never Knew I Had

Curious, I did a search on dev2dev.bea.com.cn for wlp.bea.com - and it is at this point that I discovered my latent skill. I can write in Chinese! My dev2dev.bea.com article on Adrenaline is also on dev2dev.bea.com.cn, but translated into Chinese. I had a native speaker take a look, and it is no babelfish hack job - it is a real translation. I didn't know I could do that! Well, ok, the real story is we must be employing chinese translators for dev2dev. I didn't know this, but I think it's a great idea.

But what I really like is how Google Analytics revealed an unexpected use of wlp.bea.com. That is what analytics is all about - finding illuminating patterns in the behavior of customers. In this case, Google delivered. Now we have data that can drive a business decision: do we hire a translator for wlp.bea.com?

And to my anonymous translator: thank you!

* the pie chart shows a blurred entry. It appears to be a mail server from Japan, but since I don't why it is showing up, I blurred it. It may somehow identify a BEA customer, and so I played it safe and obscured it.

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