Firstly, I don't think the overall subject of your question was off-topic. Rather it's the broad scope of potential answers that causes problems.
I'm certainly more tolerant than others in terms of the subject domains acceptable on SO. However, that doesn't mean any question on a suitable topic, even within the context of software development, belongs on SO.
The title of your question ("What are specific benefits of AWS for a SaaS product?") looks fine to me (but could be improved because it can be rather broad, the word "benefit" is not great). I don't mind product-specific questions, and asking what makes a specific product different from others in the same field can be relevant and have a clear answer.
The problems arise in the body of the question itself. The bullet points are effectively a number of sub-questions, some of which are very subjective.
What are the specific benefits of using Amazon Web Services as a
server-side backend for a SaaS product line? What are the
differentiating features that make it beneficial compared to other
hosting services?
As an introduction, that could be OK...
Cost : Is the price per GB lower than the industry average of $20 per GB making it ideal for large data files?
Surely, if you already know that the cost is lower than the industry average, no point asking whether it's advantageous for large files. If you have to handle large files, from development point of you, you could ask instead whether there are known limitations for large files (e.g. 4GB size limit or that sort of thing).
Speed : Faster than competitors? Faster upload/download speeds? More parellel threads per file?
Transfer speeds are often subjective depending on where you want to send your data. The number of parallel threads is a more relevant angle. I suppose you could have a good an clear answer with a comprehensive benchmark of transfer speeds, but that's unlikely (and if anything, it could be disputed by competitors).
Reliability : Better reliability due to Amazon network? No data loss? No server instance restarts?
A better aspect of this sub-question would be to ask which exact reliability mechanisms are in place.
Brand : A service backed by AWS is much more likely to impress big-name clients due to Amazon brand?
That's completely subjective.
Elastic : Ability to scale billing with usage? Does this actually work or is it a marketing gimmick?
That's asking for a number of distinct user experiences.
Accessibility : Any advantages with the Amazon network/worldwide coverage over other providers?
Knowing about the network coverage can be directly relevant to the development of your application, fair enough. This can be factual too. Comparing with other providers is difficult in general, though.
Management : Better management toolset or great access control? Better data/server security?
"Better" is almost always subjective. Asking what is provided with the toolset can be answered with facts. Whether it's better than others will depend on what you're trying to do and whether you may or may not need those tools.
Support : I heard their tech support is the worst in the industry so no questions in this dept.
You're saying "no questions in this dept.", but you're effectively asking for comments on the subject. Judging a support service will almost always be subjective unfortunately.
Overall, this question is a mix of "too broad" and "subjective" (and also a mix of sub-questions), even if the subject can be interesting.
The problem with these questions isn't so much that their subject is or isn't off-topic, rather it's the fact that they can't really work in the SO model. The SO model is heavily Q&A centred, with the concept of a single accepted answer. I'm all in favour of having multiple answers that offer different solutions to the question, but it's hard from this particular question to imagine that there could potentially be that one answer that you will choose as a solution to your problem.
I sometimes wish that it was possible to ask questions more open to recommendations or feedback and experiences (still using a Q&A model, with votes), but the fact there must potentially be a single accepted answer means that this would never work. It's certainly a good thing to encourage precise questions anyway.