 Hello, everyone. Welcome to theCUBE's special presentation for International Women's Day. I'm John Furrier, host of theCUBE. Jenny Trautman's here, director of products and services in training and certification at AWS and Heather Rudin, director of education programs of training and certification. Thanks for coming on theCUBE for the International Women's Day special program. Thanks so much for having us. So I'll just get out of the way. I'm a big fan of what you guys do. I've been shouting at the top of my lungs. It's free, get cloud training and you'll have a six-figure job pretty much. I mean, I'm over-amplifying, but this is really a big opportunity in the industry, education and the skills gap and the skill velocities that's changing. New roles are coming on around cloud native, cloud native operators, cybersecurity. There's so much excitement going on around the industry and all these open positions and they need new talent. So you can't get a degree for some of these things. So nope, it doesn't matter what school you went to, everyone's kind of level. This is a really big deal. So Heather, share with us your thoughts as well on this topic. Jenny, you too, where are you guys at? Cause this is a big opportunity for women and anyone to level up in the industry. Absolutely. So I'll jump in and then I'll hand it over to Jenny. We're your dream team here. We can talk about both sides of this. So I run a set of programs here at AWS that are really intended to help build the next generation of cloud builders. And we do that with a variety of programs, whether it is targeting young learners from kind of 12 and up. We have AWS Get IT that is designed to get women ambassadors or women mentors in front of girls 12 to 14 and get them curious about a career in STEM. We also have a program that is all digital online. It's available in 11 languages. It's got hundreds of courses that's called AWS Educate that is designed to do exactly what you just talked about. Expose the opportunities and start building cloud skills for learners at age 13 and up. They can go online and register with an email and start learning. We want them to understand not only what the opportunity is for them, but the ways that they can help influence and bring more diversity and more inclusion and into the cloud technology space and just keep building all those amazing builders that we need here for our customers and partners. And those are the programs that I manage, but Jenny also has an amazing program, a set of programs. And so I'll hand it over to her as you get into the professional side of the thing. So Jenny, you're in the product side. You've got the keys to the kingdom on all the materials and shaping it. What's your view on this? Cause this is a huge opportunity and it's always changing. What's the latest and greatest? It is a massive opportunity. And to give you a sense, there was a study in 21 where IT executives said that talent availability is the biggest challenge to emerging tech adoption. 64% of IT executives said that up from only 4% the year before. So the challenge is growing really fast, which for everyone that's ready to go out there and learn and try something new is a massive opportunity. And that's really why I'm here. We provide all kinds of learning experiences for people across different cloud technologies to be able to not only kind of gain the knowledge around cloud, but also the confidence to be able to build in the cloud. And so we look across different learner levels, different roles, different opportunities. And we provide those experiences where people can actually get hands-on in a totally risk-free environment and practice building in the cloud so they can go and be ready to get their certifications, their AWS certifications, give them the credentials to be able to show an employer they can do it and then go out and get these jobs. It's really exciting and we go kind of end-to-end from the very beginning, you know, what is cloud? I want to know what it is all the way through to I can prove that I can build in the cloud and I'm ready for a job. So Jenny, you nailed that confidence work. I think I want to double-click on that. And Heather, you talked about, you're the dream team. You guys, you're the go-to-market, we bring this to the marketplace. Jenny, you get the products, this is the key. But to me, the International Women's Day's angle is, is that what I hear over and over again is that that's too technical, I'm not qualified. It can be scary. We had a guest on who has two doubly degrees in robotics and aerospace and she's hard charging. She almost lost her confidence twice, she said in her career, but she was hard charging. You can be, you can get scary. But also the ability to level up fast is just as good. So if you can break through that confidence and keep the curiosity and be a builder, talk about that dynamic, because you guys are in the middle of it. You're in the industry. How do you handle that? Because I think that's a big thing that comes up over and over again. And confidence is not just women, it's men too. But women can always, that comes up as a theme. It is, it is a big challenge. I mean, I've struggled with it personally and I mentor a lot of women and that is the number one challenge that is holding women back from really being able to advance is the confidence to step out there and show what they can do. And what I love about some of the products we've put out recently is we have AWS Skill Builder. You can go online, you can get all kinds of free core kind of training. And if you want to go deeper, you can go deeper and there's a lot of different options on there. But what it does is not only gives you that base knowledge but you can actually go in, we have something called AWS Labs. You can go in and you can actually practice on the AWS console with the services that people are using in their jobs every day without any risk of doing something that is gonna blow up in your face, right? You're not gonna suddenly get this big AWS bill. You're not gonna break something that's out there running. If you just go in, it's your own little environment that gets wiped when you're done and you can practice. And there's lots of different ways to learn as well. So if you go in there and you're watching a video and to your point, you're like, oh my gosh, this is too technical. I can't understand it. I don't know what I'm gonna go do. You can go another route. There's something called AWS Cloud Quest, it's a game. You go in and it's like you're gaming and it walks you through. You're actually in a virtual world, you're walking through and it's telling you, hey, go build this. And if you need help, here's hints and here's tips. And it continues to build on itself. So you're applying your learning and you're applying practical skills and it's at your own pace. You don't have to watch somebody else talking that is going at a pace that maybe accelerates beyond what you're ready. You can do it at your own pace. You can redo it, you can try it again until you feel confident that you know it and you're really ready to move on to the next thing. Personally, I find that hugely valuable. I go in and do these myself and I sit there and I have a lot of engineers on my team, very smart people. And I have my own imposter syndrome. I get nervous to go talk to them. Like are they gonna think I'm totally lost? And so I go in and I learn some of this myself by experiment and then I feel like, okay, now I can go ask them some intelligent questions and they're not gonna be like, oh gosh, my leader is totally unaware of what we're doing. And so I think that we all struggle with confidence that I think everybody does, but I see it especially in women as I mentor them and that's what I encourage them to do is go and on your own time, practice a bit, get a little bit of experience. And once you feel like you can throw a couple words out there that you know what they mean and suddenly other people look at you like, oh, she knows what she's talking about and you can kind of get past that feeling. Well, Jenny, you nailed it. Heather, she just mentioned she's in the job and she's going and she's still leveling up. That's the end when you're in, but it's also the barrier to entry or lowering. You guys are doing a good job of getting people in, but also growing fast too. So there's two dynamics at play here. How do people do this? What's the playbook? Because I think that's really key. Easy to get in and then once you're in, you can level up fast at your own pace to ride the wave and then there's new stuff coming and every reinvents is 5,000 announcements. So it's like a million new things and AI. I'm sorry, it reinvents a perfect example of that ongoing imposter syndrome or confidence check for all of us. I think that something that Jenny said too is we really try and meet learners where they are and make sure that we have the support, whether it's accessibility requirements or we have the content that is built for the age that we're talking to or we have a workforce development program called Restart that is for people that have very little tech experience and really want to talk about a career in cloud, but they need a little bit more hand holding. They need a combination of instructor led and digital, but then we have AWS Educate, as I mentioned, if you want to be more self-directed, all of these tools are intended to work well together and to be complimentary and to take you on a journey as a learner and the more skills you have, the more you increase your knowledge, the more you can take on more. But meeting folks where they are with a variety of programs, tools, languages and accessibility really helps ensure that we can do that for learners throughout the world. That's awesome, let's get into it. Let's get into the roadmaps of people and their personas. So, and you guys can share the programs that you have and where people could fit in, because this comes up a lot when I talk to folks. There's the young person who's, you know, I'm a gamer or whatever, I want to get a job, I'm in high school or an elementary or I want to tinker around or I'm in college or, you know, I'm learning, I'm an entry level kind of entry. Then you have the re-skilling. I'm going to change my careers, I'm kind of bored, I want to do something compelling, how do I get into the cloud game? And then the advanced re-skillers, I want to get into cyber and AI, and then there's other. Could you break down, did I get that right or did I miss anything? And then what's available for those kind of lanes or those persona lanes? Well, let's see, I could start with maybe high schooler stuff and then we can bring Jenny in as well. I would say, you know, a great place to start for anyone is aws.amazon.com slash training. You know, that's going to give them the full suite of options that they could take on. If you're in high school, you can go on to AWS to educate all you need is an email and if you're 13 years and older, you can start exploring the types of jobs that are available in the cloud. And you could start taking some introductory classes. You can do some of those labs in a safe environment that Jenny mentioned. That's a great place to start. If you are in an environment where you have an educator that is willing to go on this journey with you, we have this AWS Get IT program that is, again, educator led. So it's an after school or it's a program where we match mentors and students up with cloud professionals and they do some real-time experimentation. They build an app, they work on things together and do a presentation at the end. The other thing I would say too is that if you are in a university, I would double check and see if the AWS Academy curriculum is already in your university. And if so, explore some of those classes. There, we have instructor led, educator ready, course curriculum that we've designed that help people get to those certifications and get closer to those jobs. And as well as hopefully then lead people right into Skill Builder and all the things that Jenny talked about to help them as they start out in a professional environment. So is the Get IT, is that a instructor led that the person has to find someone for or is this available for them? It is through teachers, it's through educators. We are in, we've reached over 19,000 students more available in eight countries. There are ways for educators to lead this but we want to make sure that we're helping the kids be successful and giving them an educator environment to do that. If they want to do it on their own, then they can absolutely go through AWS Educate or even and to explore kind of where they want to get started. So what about someone who's educated in the middle of their career might want to switch from being a biologist to a cloud cybersecurity guru or a cloud native operator? Yeah, so in that case, AWS Restart is one of the great program for them to explore. We run that program with collaborating organizations in 160 cities and 80 countries throughout the world. That is a multi-week cohort-based program where we do take folks through a very clear path towards certification and job skilling that will help them get into those opportunities. Over 98% of the cohorts, the graduates of those cohorts get an interview and are hopefully on their path to getting a job. So that really has global reach. The partnership with collaborating organizations helps us ensure that we find communities that are often unreached by cloud skills training and we really work to keep a diverse focus on those cohorts and bring those folks into the cloud. Okay, Jenny, you've got the skill builder action here. What's going on on your side because you must have to manage all the change. I mean, AI is hot right now. I'm sure you're cranking away on curriculum and content for SageMaker, large language models, computer vision, cybersecurity. We do, there are a lot of options. How is your world? Tell us about what people can take out of way from your side. Yeah, so a great way to think about it is if they're already out in the workforce or they're entering the workforce, but they have technical skills, is what are the roles that are interesting and the technologies that are interesting? Because the way we put out our training and our certifications is aligned to PAB. So if you're interested in a specific role, if you're interested in architecting a cloud environment or insecurity, as you mentioned, and you want to go deep in security, there are AWS certifications that give you that. If you achieve them, they're very difficult. But if you work to them and achieve them, they give you the credential that you can take to an employer and say, look, I can do this job and they are in very high demand. In fact, that's where if you look at some of the publications that have come out, they talk about what are people making if they have different certifications. What are the most in-demand certifications that are out there? And those are what help people get jobs. And so you identify what is that role or that technology area I want to learn. And then you have multiple options for how you build those skills, depending on how you want to learn. And again, that's really our focus is on providing experiences based on how people learn and making it accessible to them. Because not everybody wants to learn in the same way. And so there is AWS Skill Builder where people can go learn on their own, which that is really great particularly for people who maybe are already working and have to learn in the evenings, on the weekends, people who like to learn at their own pace who just want to be hands-on, but are self-starters. And they can get those whole learning plans through there, all the way aligned to the certification and then they can go get their certification. There's also classroom training. So a lot of people maybe want to do kind of continuous learning through an online, but want to go really deep with an expert in the room and maybe have a more focused period of time if they can go for a couple of days, right? And so they can do classroom training. We provide a lot of classroom training. We have partners all over the globe who provide classroom training. And so there's that. And what we find to be the most powerful is when you couple the two. If you can really get deep, you have an expert, you can ask questions. But first, before you go do that, you get some of that foundational that you've kind of learned on your own. And then after you go back and reinforce, you go back online, you try out things that maybe you learned in the classroom, but you hadn't used it enough yet to quite know how to do it. Now you can go back and actually use it, experiment and play around. And so we really encourage that kind of, figure out what are some areas you're interested in, go learn it and then go, get a job and continue to learn. Because then once you learn that first area, you start to build confidence in it, suddenly other areas become interesting. Because as you said, cloud is growing, it's changing fast. And once you learn a space, first of all, you have to keep going back to stay up on it as it changes. But you quickly find that there are other areas that are really interesting. I've observed that the training side is just like cloud itself is very agile. You can get hands on quickly. You don't need to take a class and then get in weeks later, you're in it like it's real time. So you're immersed in gamification and all kinds of ways to funnel into the either advanced tracks and certifications. So you guys do a great job and I want to give you props for that in a shout out. The question I have for you guys is can you scope the opportunity for these certifications and opportunities for women in particular? What are some of the top jobs pulling down? Scope out the opportunity because I think when people hear that they really fall out of their chair, they go, wow, I didn't know I could make $200,000 doing cybersecurity. Well, yeah, or maybe more. And I'm just being the number of, I don't actually know, but I know people do make that much in cyber. But there are huge financial opportunities with certifications and education. Can you scope that order of magnitude? Can you share any data? Yeah, so in the US, they certainly are certifications on average, aligned to six digit type jobs. And if you go out and do a search, there are research studies out there that are refreshed every year that say, what are the top IT industry certifications and how much money do they make? And the reason I don't put a number out there is because it's constantly changing and in fact, it's going up. It's going up, not going down. But I would encourage people to do that quick search. What are the top IT industry certifications? Again, based on the country you're in, it makes a difference, but if you're US, there's a lot of data out there for the US and then there is some for other countries as well around how much on average people make. Do you list like the higher level certifications, stack rank them in terms of order, like say I'm a type A personnel, I want to climb Mount Everest, I want to get the highest level certification. How do I know that? Is it like laddered up or is like, how do you guys present that? Yeah, so we have different types of certifications. There is a foundational, which we call the cloud practitioner. That one is more about just, showing that you know something about cloud. It's not aligned to a specific job role, but then we have what we call associate level certifications, which are aligned to roles. So there's the solutions architect, cloud developer, so developer operations. And so you can tell by the role and associate is kind of that next level. And then the roles often have a professional level, which is even more advanced and basically that's saying you're, you're kind of an Uber expert at that point. And then there are technology specialties, which are less about a specific role, although some would argue a security technology specialty might align very well to a security role, but they're more about showing the technology. And so typically when you, so it goes foundational advanced professional, and then the specialties are more on the side, they're not aligned, but they're deep, they're deep within that area. So you can go, you can pick your deep dive and jump into where you're comfortable. Heather, talk about the commitment in terms of dollars. No Amazons flaunted some numbers, like 30 million or something, people they want to have trained, hundreds of millions of dollars in investment. This is key. Obviously more people train on cloud, more operators, more cloud usage. Obviously I see the business connection. What's the, what's the women relationship to the numbers? Can you, or what the experience is, how do you guys see that? Obviously International Women's Day, get the confidence, got the curiosity, you're a builder, you're in, right? It's that easy, right? It doesn't always feel that way, I'm sure to everybody, but we'd like to think that it is, you know, Amazon and AWS do invest hundreds of millions of dollars in free training every year that is accessible to everyone out there. You know, I think that the, sometimes the hardest obstacles to get overcome are getting started and we try and make it as easy as possible to get started with the tools that we've talked about already today. You know, we run into plenty of cohorts of women as part of our restart program that are really grateful for the opportunity to, you know, see something, see a new way of thinking, see a new opportunity for them. We don't necessarily break out our funding by women versus men. We want to make sure that we are open and diverse for everybody to come in and get the training that they need to, but we definitely want to make sure that we are accessible and available to women and all genders outside of the US and inside the US. Well, I know the numbers a lot lower than they should be and that's obviously why we're promoting this heavily. There's a lot more interest I see in techs. So digital transformation is, you know, gender neutral. I mean, it's like the world eats software and uses software, uses the cloud. So it has to get 50-50 in my opinion. So you guys do a great job. Now that we're done kind of promoting Amazon, which I wanted to do, because I think it's super important, let's talk about you guys. What got you guys involved in tech? What was the inspiration and share some stories about your experiences and advice for folks watching? So I've always been in traditionally male-dominated roles. I actually started in aviation and then moved to tech. And what I found was I got a mentor early on, a woman who was a senior to me and who was kind of who I saw as the smartest person out there. She was incredibly smart. She was incredibly kind and she was always lifting women up. And I kind of latched onto her and followed her around. And she was such an amazing mentor. She brought me from throughout tech from company to company, job to job, was always positioning me in front of other people as the go-to person. And I realized, wow, I want to be like her. And so that's been my focus as well in tech, is you can be deeply technical in tech or you can be not deeply technical and be in tech and you can be successful both ways. But the way you're gonna be most successful is if you find other people, build them up and help put them out in front. And so I personally love to mentor women and to put them in places where they can feel comfortable being out in front of people. And that's really been my career. I have tried to model her approach as much as I can. You know, that's a really interesting observation. It's a pattern we've been seeing in all these interviews for the past two years of doing the International Women's Day is that networking, mentoring and sponsorship are one thing. Right, so it's all one thing. It's not just mentoring. It's like people think, oh, it was just mentoring. What does that mean, advice? No, it's sponsorship. It's pull lifting people up, creating a Curitsu, creating networks. Really important. Had it with your experience. Yeah, I'm sort of the example of somebody who never thought they'd be in tech, but I happened to graduate from college in the Silicon Valley in the early 90s. And next thing you know, it's more than a couple of years later and I'm deeply in tech. And I think when we were having the conversation about confidence and willingness to learn and try, that really spoke to me as well. I think I had to get out of my own way sometimes and just be willing to not be the smartest person in the room and just be willing to ask a lot of questions. And with every opportunity to ask questions, I think somebody, I ended up with good mentors, male and female, that saw the willingness to ask questions and the willingness to kind of be humble in my approach to learning. And that really helped. I'm also very aware that nobody's journey is the same. And I need to create an environment on my team and I need to be a role model within AWS and Amazon for allowing people to show up in the way that they're gonna be most successful. And sometimes that will mean giving them learning opportunities. Sometimes that will be hooking them up with a mentor. Sometimes that will be giving them the freedom to do what they need for their family or their personal life. And modeling that behavior regardless of gender has always been kind of how I choose to show up and what I ask my leaders to do. And the more we can do that, I've seen the team kind of been able to grow and flourish in that way and support our entire team. I love that story. You also have a great leader in Maureen Launergan who I've met many conversations with. But also it starts with the top Andy Jassy who can come across, he's kind of technical, he's dirty, you know, he's a builder mentality. He has first principles and you're bringing up this first principles concept and whether that's passing it forward, what you've learned, having first principles helps in an organization. Can you guys talk about what that's like at your company? Because everyone's different. And sometimes, and I sometimes I worry about what I say but I also have my first principles. So talk about how principles matter and how you guys interface with others and letting people be their authentic self. Yeah, I'll jump in, Jenny, and then you can. And the Amazon leadership principles are super important to how we interact with each other and it really does provide a set of guidelines for how we work with each other and how we work for our customers and with our partners. But most of all, it gives us a common language and a common set of expectations. And I will be honest, they're not always easy. You know, when you come from an environment that tends to be less open to feedback and less open to direct conversations than you find at Amazon, it could take a while to get used to that. But it's for me at least, it was extremely kind of empowering to have those tools and those principles as guidance for how to operate and to gain the confidence in using them. I've also been able to participate in hundreds and hundreds of interviews in the time that I've been here as part of an interview team of barraisers. I think that really helps us understand whether or not folks are gonna be successful at AWS and at Amazon and helps them understand if they're gonna be able to be successful. Barrazing is an Amazon term and it's gender-neutral, right, Jenny? It is gender-neutral. Bar is a bar, you know, it raises. That's right. And it's funny, we say that our culture here is peculiar and when I started, I came from, I had been in consulting for several years. So I worked with a lot of different companies and tech. And so I thought I'd seen everything and I came here and I went, I see what they mean by peculiar. It is very different environment. In the fullness of time, it'll all work out. That's right. That's right. Well, and it is, it's funny because when you first started, it's a lot to figure out how to operate in an environment where people do use 16 leadership principles, right? I've worked at a lot of companies with three or four core values and nobody can state those. We could state all 16 leadership principles and we use them in our regular everyday dialogue. That is an awkward thing when you first come to have people saying, oh, I'm going to use bias for action in this situation and I'm going to go move fast. And they're actually used in everyday conversations but after a couple of years, suddenly you realize, oh, I'm doing that. And maybe even sometimes at the dinner table, I'm doing that, which can get to be a bit much. But it is, it creates an environment where we can all be different. We can all think differently. We can all have different ways of doing things but we have a common kind of overall approach to what we're trying to achieve. And that's really, it gives us a good framework for that. Jan has great insight. Heather, thank you so much for sharing your stories. We're going to do this not once a year. We're going to continue this women in tech program every quarter. We'll check in with you guys and find out what's new and thank you for what you do. We appreciate that getting the word out and really is an opportunity for everyone with education and cloud. And it's only going to get more opportunities at the edge and AI and so much more tech. Thank you for coming on the program. Yeah, thank you for having us. We need more members. Thank you. That's the International Women's Day segment here with leaders from AWS. I'm John Furrier. Thanks for watching.