There are a number of ways to group and arrange your AWS accounts. How you do this is completely up to you, but here are a few examples to consider:
- Business unit (BU) or location: You may wish to allow each BU to work in isolation on their own products or services, on their own schedule, without impacting other parts of the business
- Cost center: Grouping according to cost may help you track spend versus allocated budget
- Environment type: It may make sense to group your development, test, and production environments together in a way which helps you manage the controls across each environment
- Workload type or data classification: Your company may want to isolate workload types from each other, or ensure that particular controls are applied to all accounts containing a particular kind of data
In the following fictitious example, we have isolated the Sitwell Enterprises Account from the rest...