This article was published on June 14, 2013

Microsoft announces Windows Azure is now used by over 50% of Fortune 500 companies


Microsoft announces Windows Azure is now used by over 50% of Fortune 500 companies

Microsoft today announced a notable Windows Azure milestone: more than 50 percent of the Fortune 500 are now using the service. That’s impressive if you remember that Windows Azure was released just over three years ago on February 1, 2010.

The company also noted that in just a year, Windows Azure’s customer base has doubled to more than 250,000 at an average of 1,000 new customers per day. Yet we’ve seen those figures before, so the big focus here is the Fortune 500.

In October 2012, cloud storage service Box revealed it had signed up 140,000 businesses and was seeing a 92 percent penetration for Fortune 500 companies. Both those statistics have likely grown since then as all companies in the space have been pushing very hard as of late.

Windows Azure is of course very different than Box, but what this shows is that large enterprises are perfectly content with cloud-based solutions. In other words, Microsoft has plenty of room to grow its relatively new offering.

Microsoft also shared some more interesting figures to further put its situation into perspective:

This growth tells the story of Windows Azure’s durability, staying power, and value across the globe. But so does the increase in usage. With over four trillion objects in Windows Azure and an average of 270,000 requests per second, customer requirements grow and are met daily. In peak periods, demand can grow to a staggering 880,000 requests per second.

Before the end of the year, it’s easy to see how Windows Azure could pass 5 trillion objects, 300,000 requests per second, and 1 million requests per second during peak periods. Along the way, it will continue to be a massive cash cow for Microsoft.

See also – Microsoft’s Azure passes $1B in annual revenue, as subscriptions grow 48% in 6 months and Microsoft beefs up Windows Azure with optional multi-factor verification via mobile app, phone call, or SMS

Top Image Credit: Robert Scoble

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