eBay Enterprise Expands Magento Infrastructure with IBM Cloud
Popular e-commerce software services to benefit from IBM's global scale
January 30, 2015
eBay Enterprise has signed with IBM as a cloud infrastructure provider for Magento. Magento, which eBay acquired in 2011, is big in the e-commerce space, helping optimize e-commerce sites for customer interaction, backend sales, and analysis needs. It’s used by close to a quarter of a million retailers.
IBM is one of several hosting partners but stands out as the largest. Others include Rackspace, Peer 1, and Hostway. The addition of IBM is a substantial expansion in scale of the infrastructure available to the company and its customers. IBM has more than 40 cloud data centers around the world.
Its cloud infrastructure expanded substantially since the company acquired SoftLayer in 2013. In December, SoftLayer joined Equinix's Cloud Exchange, giving Equinix customers around the world direct access to IBM cloud services from their colocation facilities.
eBay has substantial data center infrastructure of its own. The company has designed and built some of the most cutting-edge, energy efficient data centers. But eBay Enterprise would not get the kind of scale and flexibility cloud services provide using the company's own facilities.
The e-commerce space is one of the biggest beneficiaries of cloud infrastructure services. Online vendors can have unpredictable traffic patterns, driven by introduction of new products or fluctuating seasonal demand.
"E-commerce is a key vertical business for IBM Cloud," Jim Comfort, general manager of IBM Cloud Services, said in a statement. "Partnering with eBay Enterprise will better position our joint customers to realize their growth goals by leveraging their Magento platform running on IBM's cloud infrastructure, which together will deliver unparalleled performance, automation and global reach."
In January, IBM appointed one of its veterans Robert LeBlanc to run the new dedicated cloud business unit, which oversees SoftLayer. SoftLayer CEO Lance Crosby recently left, 18 months after the $2 billion acquisition.
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