AWS Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) Certification Training | Emigo
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AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02)

Certification is designed to validate foundational knowledge of AWS cloud services and their basic architecture. It is ideal for individuals in non-technical roles who want to understand the core conc

AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02)

The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) certification is designed to validate foundational knowledge of AWS cloud services and their basic architecture. It is ideal for individuals in non-technical roles who want to understand the core concepts of cloud computing on AWS.

Course Overview

Emigo Networks offers comprehensive training for the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) certification, ideal for individuals seeking foundational cloud knowledge. This entry-level course covers essential AWS Cloud concepts, global infrastructure, pricing models, security, and support services. Designed for non-technical professionals, beginners, and those transitioning to cloud roles, this training equips learners with the confidence to engage in AWS projects or pursue advanced certifications. Gain real-world insights and hands-on exposure with Emigo Networks’ expert-led sessions.

The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF C02) course by Emigo Networks provides essential foundational knowledge of AWS Cloud concepts across four key domains: Cloud Concepts, Security & Compliance, Cloud Technology and Services, and Billing, Pricing & Support. It prepares learners for real-world roles and exam readiness through hands-on labs, interactive discussions, and practical insights. This course is ideal for professionals seeking broad AWS cloud literacy, including non technical business users and decision makers.

What You'll Learn

  • Fundamentals of AWS Cloud and its global infrastructure, including regions, availability zones, elasticity, agility, and AWS economics
  • Core security principles, the Shared Responsibility Model, and governance with AWS services such as IAM, CloudTrail, and encryption
  • Overview of AWS compute, storage, database, networking, and analytics services for common use cases
  • AWS pricing models, billing, cost management tools, and available support plans, including Best Practices and cost optimization strategies

Syllabus Summary

Domain 1. Cloud Concepts

Task Statement 1.1: Define the benefits of the AWS Cloud. 

Knowledge of: 

  • Value proposition of the AWS Cloud 

Skills in: 

  • Understanding the economies of scale (for example, cost savings) 
  • Understanding the benefits of global infrastructure (for example, speed of deployment, global reach) 
  • Understanding the advantages of high availability, elasticity, and agility 

Task Statement 1.2: Identify design principles of the AWS Cloud. 

Knowledge of: 

  • AWS Well-Architected Framework 

Skills in: 

  • Understanding the pillars of the Well-Architected Framework (for example, operational excellence, security, reliability, performance efficiency, cost optimization, sustainability) 
  • Identifying differences between the pillars of the Well-Architected Framework 

Task Statement 1.3: Understand the benefits of and strategies for migration to the AWS Cloud. 

Knowledge of: 

  • Cloud adoption strategies 
  • Resources to support the cloud migration journey 

Skills in: 

  • 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) 
  • Identifying appropriate migration strategies (for example, database replication, use of AWS Snowball)

Task Statement 1.4: Understand concepts of cloud economics. 

Knowledge of: 

  • Aspects of cloud economics 
  • Cost savings of moving to the cloud 

Skills in: 

  • Understanding the role of fixed costs compared with variable costs 
  • Understanding costs that are associated with on-premises environments 
  • Understanding the differences between licensing strategies (for example, Bring Your Own License [BYOL] model compared with included licenses) 
  • Understanding the concept of rightsizing 
  • Identifying benefits of automation (for example, provisioning and configuration management with AWS CloudFormation) 
  • Identifying managed AWS services (for example, Amazon RDS, Amazon Elastic Container Service [Amazon ECS], Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service [Amazon EKS], Amazon DynamoDB) 
Domain 2: Security and Compliance

Task Statement 2.1: Understand the AWS shared responsibility model. 

Knowledge of: 

  • AWS shared responsibility model 

Skills in: 

  • Recognizing the components of the AWS shared responsibility model 
  • Describing the customer’s responsibilities on AWS 
  • Describing AWS responsibilities 
  • Describing responsibilities that the customer and AWS share 
  • Describing how AWS responsibilities and customer responsibilities can shift, depending on the service used (for example, Amazon RDS, AWS Lambda, Amazon EC2)

Task Statement 2.2: Understand AWS Cloud security, governance, and compliance concepts. 

Knowledge of: 

  • AWS compliance and governance concepts 
  • Benefits of cloud security (for example, encryption) 
  • Where to capture and locate logs that are associated with cloud security 

Skills in: 

  • Identifying where to find AWS compliance information (for example, AWS Artifact) 
  • Understanding compliance needs among geographic locations or industries (for example, AWS Compliance) 
  • Describing how customers secure resources on AWS (for example, Amazon Inspector, AWS Security Hub, Amazon GuardDuty, AWS Shield) 
  • Identifying different encryption options (for example, encryption in transit, encryption at rest) 
  • 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) 
  • Recognizing compliance requirements that vary among AWS services 

Task Statement 2.3: Identify AWS access management capabilities. 

Knowledge of: 

  • Identity and access management (for example, AWS Identity and Access Management [IAM]) 
  • Importance of protecting the AWS root user account 
  • Principle of least privilege 
  • AWS IAM Identity Center (AWS Single Sign-On)

Skills in: 

  • Understanding access keys, password policies, and credential storage (for example, AWS Secrets Manager, AWS Systems Manager) 
  • Identifying authentication methods in AWS (for example, multi-factor authentication [MFA], IAM Identity Center, cross-account IAM roles) 
  • Defining groups, users, custom policies, and managed policies in compliance with the principle of least privilege 
  • Identifying tasks that only the account root user can perform 
  • Understanding which methods can achieve root user protection
  • Understanding the types of identity management (for example, federated) 

Task Statement 2.4: Identify components and resources for security. 

Knowledge of: 

  • Security capabilities that AWS provides 
  • Security-related documentation that AWS provides 

Skills in: 

  • Describing AWS security features and services (for example, security groups, network ACLs, AWS WAF) 
  • Understanding that third-party security products are available from AWS Marketplace 
  • Identifying where AWS security information is available (for example, AWS Knowledge Center, AWS Security Center, AWS Security Blog) 
  • Understanding the use of AWS services for identifying security issues (for example, AWS Trusted Advisor) 
Domain 3: Cloud Technology and Services

Task Statement 3.1: Define methods of deploying and operating in the AWS Cloud. 

Knowledge of: 

Different ways of provisioning and operating in the AWS Cloud 

Different ways to access AWS services 

Types of cloud deployment models 

Connectivity options

Skills in: 

Deciding between options such as programmatic access (for example, APIs, SDKs, CLI), the AWS Management Console, and infrastructure as code (IaC) 

Evaluating requirements to determine whether to use one-time operations or repeatable processes 

Identifying different deployment models (for example, cloud, hybrid, onpremises) 

Identifying connectivity options (for example, AWS VPN, AWS Direct Connect, public internet) 

Task Statement 3.2: Define the AWS global infrastructure. 

Knowledge of: 

AWS Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations 

High availability 

Use of multiple Regions 

Benefits of edge locations 

AWS Wavelength Zones and AWS Local Zones 

Skills in: 

Describing relationships among Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations 

Describing how to achieve high availability by using multiple Availability Zones 

Recognizing that Availability Zones do not share single points of failure 

Describing when to use multiple Regions (for example, disaster recovery, business continuity, low latency for end users, data sovereignty) 

Describing at a high level the benefits of edge locations (for example, Amazon CloudFront, AWS Global Accelerator) 

Task Statement 3.3: Identify AWS compute services.

Knowledge of: 

AWS compute services

Skills in: 

Recognizing the appropriate use of different EC2 instance types (for example, compute optimized, storage optimized) 

Recognizing the appropriate use of different container options (for example, Amazon ECS, Amazon EKS) 

Recognizing the appropriate use of different serverless compute options (for example, AWS Fargate, Lambda) 

Recognizing that auto scaling provides elasticity 

Identifying the purposes of load balancers 

Task Statement 3.4: Identify AWS database services. 

Knowledge of: 

AWS database services 

Database migration 

Skills in: 

Deciding when to use EC2 hosted databases or AWS managed databases 

Identifying relational databases (for example, Amazon RDS, Amazon Aurora) 

Identifying NoSQL databases (for example, DynamoDB) 

Identifying memory-based databases 

Identifying database migration tools (for example AWS Database Migration Service [AWS DMS], AWS Schema Conversion Tool [AWS SCT]) 

Task Statement 3.5: Identify AWS network services. 

Knowledge of: 

AWS network services 

Skills in: 

Identifying the components of a VPC (for example, subnets, gateways) 

Understanding security in a VPC (for example, network ACLs, security groups) 

Understanding the purpose of Amazon Route 53 

Identifying edge services (for example, CloudFront, Global Accelerator) 

Identifying network connectivity options to AWS (for example AWS VPN, Direct Connect)

Task Statement 3.6: Identify AWS storage services. 

Knowledge of: 

AWS storage services 

Skills in: 

Identifying the uses for object storage 

Recognizing the differences in Amazon S3 storage classes 

Identifying block storage solutions (for example, Amazon Elastic Block Store [Amazon EBS], instance store) 

Identifying file services (for example, Amazon Elastic File System [Amazon EFS], Amazon FSx) 

Identifying cached file systems (for example, AWS Storage Gateway) 

Understanding use cases for lifecycle policies 

Understanding use cases for AWS Backup 

Task Statement 3.7: Identify AWS artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) services and analytics services. 

Knowledge of: 

AWS AI/ML services 

AWS analytics services 

Skills in: 

Understanding the different AI/ML services and the tasks that they accomplish (for example, Amazon SageMaker, Amazon Lex, Amazon Kendra) 

Identifying the services for data analytics (for example, Amazon Athena, Amazon Kinesis, AWS Glue, Amazon QuickSight)

Task Statement 3.8: Identify services from other in-scope AWS service categories. 

Knowledge of: 

Application integration services of Amazon EventBridge, Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS), and Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS) 

Business application services of Amazon Connect and Amazon Simple Email Service (Amazon SES) 

Customer engagement services of AWS Activate for Startups, AWS IQ, AWS Managed Services (AMS), and AWS Support 

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 

End-user computing services of Amazon AppStream 2.0, Amazon WorkSpaces, and Amazon WorkSpaces Web 

Frontend web and mobile services of AWS Amplify and AWS AppSync 

IoT services of AWS IoT Core and AWS IoT Greengrass 

Skills in: 

Choosing the appropriate service to deliver messages and to send alerts and notifications 

Choosing the appropriate service to meet business application needs 

Choosing the appropriate service for AWS customer support 

Choosing the appropriate option for business support assistance 

Identifying the tools to develop, deploy, and troubleshoot applications 

Identifying the services that can present the output of virtual machines (VMs) on end-user machines 

Identifying the services that can create and deploy frontend and mobile services 

Identifying the services that manage IoT devices

Domain 4: Billing, Pricing, and Support

Task Statement 4.1: Compare AWS pricing models. 

Knowledge of: 

Compute purchasing options (for example, On-Demand Instances, Reserved Instances, Spot Instances, Savings Plans, Dedicated Hosts, Dedicated Instances, Capacity Reservations) 

Data transfer charges 

Storage options and tiers 

Skills in: 

Identifying and comparing when to use various compute purchasing options 

Describing Reserved Instance flexibility 

Describing Reserved Instance behavior in AWS Organizations 

Understanding incoming data transfer costs and outgoing data transfer costs (for example, from one Region to another Region, within the same Region) 

Understanding different pricing options for various storage options and tiers 

Task Statement 4.2: Understand resources for billing, budget, and cost management. 

Knowledge of: 

Billing support and information 

Pricing information for AWS services 

AWS Organizations 

AWS cost allocation tags 

Skills in: 

Understanding the appropriate uses and capabilities of AWS Budgets, AWS Cost Explorer, and AWS Billing Conductor 

Understanding the appropriate uses and capabilities of AWS Pricing Calculator 

Understanding AWS Organizations consolidated billing and allocation of costs 

Understanding various types of cost allocation tags and their relation to billing reports (for example, AWS Cost and Usage Report)

Task Statement 4.3: Identify AWS technical resources and AWS Support options. 

Knowledge of: 

Resources and documentation available on official AWS websites 

AWS Support plans 

Role of the AWS Partner Network, including independent software vendors and system integrators 

AWS Support Center 

Skills in: 

Locating AWS whitepapers, blogs, and documentation on official AWS websites 

Identifying and locating AWS technical resources (for example AWS Prescriptive Guidance, AWS Knowledge Center, AWS re:Post) 

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) 

Identifying the role of Trusted Advisor, AWS Health Dashboard, and the AWS Health API to help manage and monitor environments for cost optimization 

Identifying the role of the AWS Trust and Safety team to report abuse of AWS resources 

Understanding the role of AWS Partners (for example AWS Marketplace, independent software vendors, system integrators) 

Identifying the benefits of being an AWS Partner (for example, partner training and certification, partner events, partner volume discounts) 

Identifying the key services that AWS Marketplace offers (for example, cost management, governance and entitlement) 

Identifying technical assistance options available at AWS (for example, AWS Professional Services, AWS Solutions Architects)


Pre-requisites

  • No technical experience required.
  • Basic understanding of IT services and their uses in the AWS Cloud.
  • Six months of AWS Cloud exposure is recommended but not mandatory.

Required Exams

  • Exam Code: CLF-C02
  • Duration: 90 minutes
  • Cost: $100 USD (Check AWS website for current pricing).

Who Should Attend

  • Individuals new to cloud computing, including non IT professionals in roles like product, project management, finance, sales, or operations
  • Entry-level IT staff and students exploring cloud careers
  • Decision-makers and stakeholders who interact with technical teams and need to build AWS cloud literacy
  • Anyone seeking to validate a high-level understanding of AWS services, without requiring deep technical background

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