Cloud Concepts - 24%
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Define the benefits of the AWS Cloud. |
- Knowledge of:
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Value proposition of the AWS Cloud
- Skills in:
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Understanding the economies of scale (for example, cost savings)
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Understanding the benefits of global infrastructure (for example, speed of deployment, global reach)
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Understanding the advantages of high availability, elasticity, and agility
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Identify design principles of the AWS Cloud. |
- Knowledge of:
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AWS Well-Architected Framework
- Skills in:
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Understanding the pillars of the Well-Architected Framework (for example, operational excellence, security, reliability, performance efficiency, cost optimization, sustainability)
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Identifying differences between the pillars of the Well-Architected Framework
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Understand the benefits of and strategies for migration to the AWS Cloud.
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- Knowledge of:
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Cloud adoption strategies
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Resources to support the cloud migration journey
- Skills in:
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Understanding the benefits of the AWS Cloud Adoption Framework (AWS CAF) (for example, reduced business risk; improved environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance; increased revenue; increased operational efficiency)
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Identifying appropriate migration strategies (for example, database replication, use of AWS Snowball)
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Understand concepts of cloud economics. |
- Knowledge of:
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Aspects of cloud economics
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Cost savings of moving to the cloud
- Skills in:
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Understanding the role of fixed costs compared with variable costs
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Understanding costs that are associated with on-premises environments
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Understanding the differences between licensing strategies (for example, Bring Your Own License [BYOL] model compared with included licenses)
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Understanding the concept of rightsizing
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Identifying benefits of automation (for example, provisioning and configuration management with AWS CloudFormation)
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Identifying managed AWS services (for example, Amazon RDS, Amazon Elastic Container Service [Amazon ECS], Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service [Amazon EKS], Amazon DynamoDB)
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Security and Compliance - 30%
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Understand the AWS shared responsibility model. |
- Knowledge of:
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AWS shared responsibility model
- Skills in:
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Recognizing the components of the AWS shared responsibility model
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Describing the customer’s responsibilities on AWS
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Describing AWS responsibilities
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Describing responsibilities that the customer and AWS share
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Describing how AWS responsibilities and customer responsibilities can shift, depending on the service used (for example, Amazon RDS, AWS Lambda, Amazon EC2)
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Understand AWS Cloud security, governance, and compliance concepts.
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- Knowledge of:
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AWS compliance and governance concepts
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Benefits of cloud security (for example, encryption)
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Where to capture and locate logs that are associated with cloud security
- Skills in:
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Identifying where to find AWS compliance information (for example, AWS Artifact)
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Understanding compliance needs among geographic locations or industries (for example, AWS Compliance)
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Describing how customers secure resources on AWS (for example, Amazon Inspector, AWS Security Hub, Amazon GuardDuty, AWS Shield)
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Identifying different encryption options (for example, encryption in transit, encryption at rest)
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Recognizing services that aid in governance and compliance (for example, monitoring with Amazon CloudWatch; auditing with AWS CloudTrail, AWS Audit Manager, and AWS Config; reporting with access reports)
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Recognizing compliance requirements that vary among AWS services
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Identify AWS access management capabilities. |
- Knowledge of:
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Identity and access management (for example, AWS Identity and Access Management [IAM])
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Importance of protecting the AWS root user account
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Principle of least privilege
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AWS IAM Identity Center (AWS Single Sign-On)
- Skills in:
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Understanding access keys, password policies, and credential storage (for example, AWS Secrets Manager, AWS Systems Manager)
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Identifying authentication methods in AWS (for example, multi-factor authentication [MFA], IAM Identity Center, cross-account IAM roles)
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Defining groups, users, custom policies, and managed policies in compliance with the principle of least privilege
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Identifying tasks that only the account root user can perform
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Understanding which methods can achieve root user protection
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Understanding the types of identity management (for example, federated)
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Identify components and resources for security.
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- Knowledge of:
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Security capabilities that AWS provides
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Security-related documentation that AWS provides
- Skills in:
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Describing AWS security features and services (for example, security groups, network ACLs, AWS WAF)
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Understanding that third-party security products are available from AWS Marketplace
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Identifying where AWS security information is available (for example, AWS Knowledge Center, AWS Security Center, AWS Security Blog)
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Understanding the use of AWS services for identifying security issues (for example, AWS Trusted Advisor)
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Cloud Technology and Services - 34%
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Define methods of deploying and operating in the AWS Cloud. |
- Knowledge of:
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Different ways of provisioning and operating in the AWS Cloud
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Different ways to access AWS services
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Types of cloud deployment models
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Connectivity options
- Skills in:
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Deciding between options such as programmatic access (for example, APIs, SDKs, CLI), the AWS Management Console, and infrastructure as code (IaC)
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Evaluating requirements to determine whether to use one-time operations or repeatable processes
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Identifying different deployment models (for example, cloud, hybrid, onpremises)
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Identifying connectivity options (for example, AWS VPN, AWS Direct Connect, public internet)
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Define the AWS global infrastructure. |
- Knowledge of:
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AWS Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations
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High availability
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Use of multiple Regions
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Benefits of edge locations
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AWS Wavelength Zones and AWS Local Zones
- Skills in:
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Describing relationships among Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations
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Describing how to achieve high availability by using multiple Availability Zones
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Recognizing that Availability Zones do not share single points of failure
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Describing when to use multiple Regions (for example, disaster recovery, business continuity, low latency for end users, data sovereignty)
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Describing at a high level the benefits of edge locations (for example, Amazon CloudFront, AWS Global Accelerator)
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Identify AWS compute services.
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- Knowledge of:
- Skills in:
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Recognizing the appropriate use of different EC2 instance types (for example, compute optimized, storage optimized)
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Recognizing the appropriate use of different container options (for example, Amazon ECS, Amazon EKS)
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Recognizing the appropriate use of different serverless compute options (for example, AWS Fargate, Lambda)
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Recognizing that auto scaling provides elasticity
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Identifying the purposes of load balancers
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Identify AWS database services.
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- Knowledge of:
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AWS database services
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Database migration
- Skills in:
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Deciding when to use EC2 hosted databases or AWS managed databases
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Identifying relational databases (for example, Amazon RDS, Amazon Aurora)
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Identifying NoSQL databases (for example, DynamoDB)
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Identifying memory-based databases
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Identifying database migration tools (for example AWS Database Migration Service [AWS DMS], AWS Schema Conversion Tool [AWS SCT])
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Identify AWS network services. |
- Knowledge of:
- Skills in:
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Identifying the components of a VPC (for example, subnets, gateways)
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Understanding security in a VPC (for example, network ACLs, security groups)
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Understanding the purpose of Amazon Route 53
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Identifying edge services (for example, CloudFront, Global Accelerator)
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Identifying network connectivity options to AWS (for example AWS VPN, Direct Connect)
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Identify AWS storage services. |
- Knowledge of:
- Skills in:
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Identifying the uses for object storage
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Recognizing the differences in Amazon S3 storage classes
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Identifying block storage solutions (for example, Amazon Elastic Block Store [Amazon EBS], instance store)
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Identifying file services (for example, Amazon Elastic File System [Amazon EFS], Amazon FSx)
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Identifying cached file systems (for example, AWS Storage Gateway)
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Understanding use cases for lifecycle policies
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Understanding use cases for AWS Backup
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Identify AWS artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) services and analytics services.
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- Knowledge of:
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AWS AI/ML services
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AWS analytics services
- Skills in:
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Understanding the different AI/ML services and the tasks that they accomplish (for example, Amazon SageMaker, Amazon Lex, Amazon Kendra)
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Identifying the services for data analytics (for example, Amazon Athena, Amazon Kinesis, AWS Glue, Amazon QuickSight)
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Identify services from other in-scope AWS service categories. |
- Knowledge of:
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Application integration services of Amazon EventBridge, Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS), and Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS)
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Business application services of Amazon Connect and Amazon Simple Email Service (Amazon SES)
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Customer engagement services of AWS Activate for Startups, AWS IQ, AWS Managed Services (AMS), and AWS Support
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Developer tool services and capabilities of AWS AppConfig, AWS Cloud9, AWS CloudShell, AWS CodeArtifact, AWS CodeBuild, AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodeDeploy, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeStar, and AWS X-Ray
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End-user computing services of Amazon AppStream 2.0, Amazon WorkSpaces, and Amazon WorkSpaces Web
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Frontend web and mobile services of AWS Amplify and AWS AppSync
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IoT services of AWS IoT Core and AWS IoT Greengrass
- Skills in:
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Choosing the appropriate service to deliver messages and to send alerts and notifications
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Choosing the appropriate service to meet business application needs
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Choosing the appropriate service for AWS customer support
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Choosing the appropriate option for business support assistance
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Identifying the tools to develop, deploy, and troubleshoot applications
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Identifying the services that can present the output of virtual machines (VMs) on end-user machines
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Identifying the services that can create and deploy frontend and mobile services
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Identifying the services that manage IoT devices
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Billing, Pricing, and Support - 12%
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Compare AWS pricing models. |
- Knowledge of:
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Compute purchasing options (for example, On-Demand Instances, Reserved Instances, Spot Instances, Savings Plans, Dedicated Hosts, Dedicated Instances, Capacity Reservations)
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Data transfer charges
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Storage options and tiers
- Skills in:
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Identifying and comparing when to use various compute purchasing options
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Describing Reserved Instance flexibility
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Describing Reserved Instance behavior in AWS Organizations
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Understanding incoming data transfer costs and outgoing data transfer costs (for example, from one Region to another Region, within the same Region)
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Understanding different pricing options for various storage options and tiers
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Understand resources for billing, budget, and cost management. |
- Knowledge of:
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Billing support and information
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Pricing information for AWS services
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AWS Organizations
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AWS cost allocation tags
- Skills in:
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Understanding the appropriate uses and capabilities of AWS Budgets, AWS Cost Explorer, and AWS Billing Conductor
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Understanding the appropriate uses and capabilities of AWS Pricing Calculator
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Understanding AWS Organizations consolidated billing and allocation of costs
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Understanding various types of cost allocation tags and their relation to billing reports (for example, AWS Cost and Usage Report)
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Identify AWS technical resources and AWS Support options. |
- Knowledge of:
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Resources and documentation available on official AWS websites
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AWS Support plans
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Role of the AWS Partner Network, including independent software vendors and system integrators
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AWS Support Center
- Skills in:
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Locating AWS whitepapers, blogs, and documentation on official AWS websites
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Identifying and locating AWS technical resources (for example AWS Prescriptive Guidance, AWS Knowledge Center, AWS re:Post)
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Identifying AWS Support options for AWS customers (for example, customer service and communities, AWS Developer Support, AWS Business Support, AWS Enterprise On-Ramp Support, AWS Enterprise Support)
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Identifying the role of Trusted Advisor, AWS Health Dashboard, and the AWS Health API to help manage and monitor environments for cost optimization
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Identifying the role of the AWS Trust and Safety team to report abuse of AWS resources
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Understanding the role of AWS Partners (for example AWS Marketplace, independent software vendors, system integrators)
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Identifying the benefits of being an AWS Partner (for example, partner training and certification, partner events, partner volume discounts)
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Identifying the key services that AWS Marketplace offers (for example, cost management, governance and entitlement)
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Identifying technical assistance options available at AWS (for example, AWS Professional Services, AWS Solutions Architects)
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