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Cloudaware

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User industry
  1. Banking and insurance
  2. Professional services (engineering, legal, consulting, etc.)
  3. Information technology and software

What is Cloudaware

Cloudaware is a cloud management and security platform that provides visibility, governance, and compliance monitoring across public cloud environments. It is used by cloud operations, security, and compliance teams to inventory assets, assess configuration risk, and track remediation activities. The product combines CSPM-style controls with operational capabilities such as CMDB-style asset modeling and workflow/ticketing integrations to support continuous monitoring and audit preparation.

pros

Broad cloud asset visibility

Cloudaware maintains an inventory of cloud resources and related metadata to support governance and security use cases. This helps teams understand what is deployed across accounts/subscriptions and how assets relate to each other. The asset-centric approach supports reporting for compliance and operational ownership. It can reduce reliance on ad hoc scripts for inventory and tagging validation.

Compliance and audit reporting

The platform supports compliance-oriented assessments and reporting that map cloud configurations to control requirements. This is useful for organizations that need repeatable evidence collection for audits and internal risk reviews. Reporting can be scheduled and shared with stakeholders outside the security team. The focus on evidence and governance aligns with regulated environments.

Workflow and ITSM integration

Cloudaware is commonly positioned to connect findings to remediation workflows through integrations with ticketing/ITSM tools. This helps operationalize posture findings by assigning owners, tracking status, and documenting remediation. The workflow orientation can improve closure rates compared with tools that stop at detection. It also supports collaboration between security and cloud operations teams.

cons

Less focus on runtime protection

Compared with platforms centered on workload runtime detection and response, Cloudaware’s core value is posture, governance, and compliance monitoring. Organizations needing deep runtime telemetry (process, network, behavioral signals) may require additional tooling. This can increase overall toolchain complexity for teams seeking a single consolidated runtime security layer. Fit depends on whether the priority is configuration risk or active threat detection.

Rule tuning and noise management

CSPM-style tools can generate large volumes of findings, especially in complex multi-account environments. Teams may need time to tune policies, suppress acceptable risk, and align checks to internal standards. Without governance around exceptions, alert fatigue can slow remediation. Successful adoption typically requires clear ownership and prioritization processes.

Implementation requires data hygiene

Accurate posture and compliance reporting depends on consistent tagging, account structure, and identity/role design in the underlying cloud environments. Organizations with fragmented cloud governance may need upfront normalization to get reliable results. Integrations (e.g., ITSM, CMDB, SSO) also add configuration effort. This can lengthen time-to-value for smaller teams without dedicated platform engineering support.

Plan & Pricing

Pricing model: Usage-based subscription billed by number of Configuration Items (CIs) / servers.

Free tier/trial: 30-day free trial available (no credit card required).

Minimum package / minimums: Subscription packages for CMDB and Change Management start from 50 servers and 1 user.

Example costs / published examples (from Cloudaware official site):

  • CMDB: Cloudaware’s documentation/blog posts state a published per‑CI guidance of about $0.008 per configuration item (CI) per month (vendor example calculations appear on multiple official Cloudaware blog posts).
  • Example calculation (official blog): 100 cloud servers ≈ $400/month for the CMDB module (Cloudaware uses this as an illustrative example on its official blog).
  • FinOps module (add‑on): described on Cloudaware’s official blog as an additional ~20% of CMDB spend in the vendor’s example (i.e., +20% of the CMDB cost).
  • Vulnerability Scanning (add‑on): vendor documentation states “low, predictable pricing starting at $1.25 per instance per month.”

How to buy / discounts: The vendor provides an online pricing calculator for CMDB on its official pricing page and requests customers contact sales for custom quotes and pricing for additional modules or enterprise/large‑inventory discounts.

Notes & caveats: Cloudaware’s public pricing page requires entering server counts into an interactive calculator to obtain definitive quotes; several official Cloudaware blog and docs pages provide illustrative per‑CI guidance and examples rather than a single flat list price for every module.

Seller details

Cloudaware, Inc.
Private
https://cloudaware.com/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/cloudaware/

Tools by Cloudaware, Inc.

Cloudaware

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