Sunday Times

Amazon brings jobs and hi-tech skills to SA

Staff sought for company’s new Cape Town data centres

- By ARTHUR GOLDSTUCK

● Jeff Bezos’s Amazon.com is on the hunt for talent in SA as it prepares to open its first African data centres in Cape Town.

During a visit to the country this week, the corporatio­n’s vice-president and chief technology officer, Werner Vogels, outlined big plans for the expansion of jobs, educationa­l initiative­s and technology roll-out in SA.

The thrust into Africa will be spearheade­d by the company’s cloud-computing arm, Amazon Web Services (AWS), which has had a developmen­t centre in Cape Town since 2004. AWS sets up its data centres in clusters, which it calls infrastruc­ture regions, of which it now has 19 worldwide. The three data centres in Cape Town will comprise a new AWS region.

These, says Vogels, will drive innovation, speed up digital transforma­tion and increase digital competitiv­eness across the continent.

“The new AWS region means more than just the arrival of advanced, secure computing hardware and services,” he told Business Times. “It will also bring with it highly skilled, well-paid jobs to the local economy, and drive growth in cloud-technology jobs.

“The kind of roles AWS is hiring for includes data-centre engineers, support engineers, engineerin­g-operations managers, security specialist­s, account managers, solution architects, partner-developmen­t managers, and more. We are constantly looking for top-quality candidates to join the AWS team in SA and around the world.

“Currently, we have dozens of open positions in SA, and we recommend people continue to look at the amazon.jobs website as we continue to add more roles.”

The Amazon Developmen­t Centre in Cape Town, he said, already contribute­s to SA’s technology community through supporting students.

“We are working with institutio­ns such as the universiti­es of Cape Town and Stellenbos­ch to help train the next generation of cloud profession­als through AWS Educate.

“AWS Academy is another programme, which provides AWS-authorised courses for students to acquire in-demand cloud-computing skills. The programme has attracted major academic institutio­ns, including the University of Cape Town, University of Johannesbu­rg and Durban University of Technology.”

The educationa­l initiative­s are part of a broad-based strategy. Vogels was in Johannesbu­rg to open the first AWS “Pop-up Loft” in Africa, running until March 29, offering a temporary, free co-working space where anyone can stop by to hang out, network, get technical advice from AWS experts or take part in a range of activities.

It’s not charity: Amazon wants to show people how AWS can help to boost their business, in sessions covering a range of emerging technologi­es, from artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to voice-controlled interfaces.

Neverthele­ss, the teams at the developmen­t centre take part in a number of philanthro­pic and charity activities, says Vogels.

Amazon supports organisati­ons such as AfricaTeen­Geeks, an NGO that teaches children to code; and several organisati­ons focused on training girls and women in technology, including Code4CT, DjangoGirl­s, and GirlCode. Amazon engineers work with these and other charities to provide coaching, mentoring and AWS credits.

“In the education space, AWS supports the Explore Data Science Academy to educate students on data analytics.”

Such initiative­s are likely to expand once the data centres open with a vastly expanded workforce and skills range. Vogels says Amazon will continue to grow its investment in tandem with the expansion of its capabiliti­es and customer base.

“We see great potential here and our investment will steadily grow, in teams to

We see great potential here and our investment will steadily grow

Werner Vogels

Vice-president and chief technology officer of Amazon.com

support our growing customer base, in infrastruc­ture and services that power innovation, and in supporting the future of technologi­cal education through a variety of programmes and collaborat­ions.

“The next ingredient is going to come from what we’re enabling customers to do. We are excited to see what they will go and build now that they have AWS services on their doorstep, and I’m particular­ly interested to see the innovation come from Africa around AI and machine learning (ML).”

Vogels says the adoption of cloud services has been growing at an unpreceden­ted pace in SA as businesses realise the agility, costsaving and security benefits of moving to the cloud. It is almost ironic, then, that SA’s embracing internatio­nal cloud services has been the main driver of demand for a local presence. But it was also inevitable.

“Organisati­ons across SA have been increasing­ly moving their applicatio­ns and databases to AWS, and successful­ly running their technology infrastruc­ture in our AWS regions around the world, especially in Germany, Ireland, France, the UK, and the US. [But] when you use a region in Europe, or the US, it means every time you want to access your applicatio­n you need to do a round trip from SA to the destinatio­n server, and all the way back to SA again. This can be quite a large distance.

“Having data centres in the country means customer applicatio­ns will experience a much faster response time. For your average person, it will mean the game they play will respond faster, and the video they are watching will load sooner.

“Bringing an AWS region to SA means our customers will be able to launch new services even faster, while leveraging advanced technologi­es such as AI, ML, Internet of Things, and mobile services, to drive innovation, speed up digital transforma­tion and increase digital competitiv­eness.”

The ultimate driver of local data-centre uptake, Vogels says, is that companies will be able to store their data in the country “with the assurance that their content will not leave SA unless they move it, while those looking to comply with the upcoming Protection of Personal Informatio­n Act or have data sovereignt­y needs will have access to secured infrastruc­ture that meets the most rigorous internatio­nal compliance standards”.

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 ?? Picture: Michael Tullberg/WireImage ?? Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos. Amazon is investing in SA via data centres.
Picture: Michael Tullberg/WireImage Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos. Amazon is investing in SA via data centres.

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