Learn everything from hardware to software to support, you get to do it all. Meeting heavy, but you can shorten your week coding instead of participating.
No growth in job paths, must manage to rise. Lack of vision, and that leads to lack of execution.
Which one is better to go into early-in-career? So SAs are more pre-sales and working with AWS sales teams, and ProServ Cloud Architects focus more on implementation and working with partners? ProServ seems like you can develop more technical skills, whereas SAs you can develop more soft skills? ...Read more
I notice Linkedin categorizes Sr. Partner SA at AWS as senior management hires. I always thought Sr. Partner SA are typically L6. But so are many Sr. SAs. So what is the difference between the 2 roles really? #aws
It looks like there are a wide variety of different SA roles available at AWS. Obviously outside of having a different customer focus, are there other differences between them? I've seen global account SA, Enterprise, strategic, partner, and perhaps a few other types of SAs. Is one more prestigious...Read more
I've mostly seen tenured people join the SA organization but I've also seen some junior or fresh out of school join. Currently a Cloud Support Engineer (network) and would like to make some short term and long term goals in becoming an SA. I'm coming from a network heavy background and would like t...Read more
I've been at AWS for about a year now as a Partner Solutions Architect. When I was interviewing, I was told I would have free reign to build solutions and tooling for partners, as long as it clearly enabled them to build products more efficiently/safely/easily on AWS (e.g., things like CLIs, starter...Read more