Ed Macosky, Boomi | AWS re:Invent 2020
>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel, AWS and our community partners. Welcome to the cubes coverage of AWS reinvent 2020. The virtual version. I'm Lisa Martin here with the guests from Bumi. Please welcome Ed Makowski, its head of product of the program and nice to see you today >>I see you, Lisa. >>So here we are in a very socially distant world. But I know a lot about movie, and that movie is really all about connecting people with what they want now. So talk to me before we dig into kind of what's going on with AWS. What's the landscape? That movie like in this year that has had so much change? >>So things have been going really well for us business wise, I think you know, as we've come through this pandemic or we continue to work through the pandemic, we're seeing a lot of our customers accelerating their their migration to the cloud acceleration, accelerating their modernization journeys. Um, in fact, we see the 30% uptick and usage in our platform. You know, in the last several months, as as people just continue to double down on automating, integrating their systems, working through integrated experiences. Toe Really like you said put put data in the hands of the users, the data that they're looking for on the work clothes that they're looking to automate. They're accomplishing that our platform. So things have been good. >>That's good in a year of such uncertainty. So as we kind of look at, you know, you talked about it. We've been talking about it for months now. This acceleration of the digital journey, that Cove it is really catalyzing. Let's get specific with from an integrated experience perspective, I think we're all as consumers, even Mawr demanding oven integrated experience. Now more than ever. How are you working with customers To help them achieve that? >>Sure. So So the way we look at the world through our lenses, data collectivity and user engagement, or are critical pieces to a cloud modernization or a cloud migration journey. So, just like in life, people make connections early on, and as they work through life, they leverage those connections to make advancements, that sort of thing. I did an interview actually a couple of weeks ago with an A list celebrity, where he gave us a bunch of feedback around connectivity where he talked about early on in his life. He made connections that that provided him value later in his career. We think of the same thing for a business, right? If you think about as a business, your customers, your employees, urine users, it's important to take your most strategic asset, which is your data, and and put that toe work for you and make connections with those users, employees, partners, etcetera, eso we look at those is integrated experiences, right, and we we offer a platform that, in a low code way, allows the business to make those connections with users in those integrated experiences. >>Love to know who the A list celebrity was, but I won't ask you to develop that information because we look at that, you know, nowadays we had this massive shift in the last eight months or so where I think as consumers we've been everything's been on demand for a while. We're used to getting what we want. And in the business world there was a big shift and trying to figure out companies well known companies, you know, filing for Chapter 11 and trying to figure out How do we pivot? Not just once, but it's a Siris of pivots, right? So talk to me about From From an integrated experiences perspective, any customers that you kind of think in particular really, really highlight what Bhumi is doing there to allow these customers to have connected integrated experience while you're helping those customers modernized and transform their businesses. >>Yeah, I mean, I could talk to a couple of examples where you know, when when the pandemic hit in the coven situation hit, we had a lot of, you know, I think the world saw there were a lot of mom and pop shops downtown Main Street where they were trying to collect information from industry from from their governments and industries. And they were trying to really relay that information out to, um, their customers and users. And most of them, those small businesses, uh, weren't I t enabled in any way, shape or form, and we tried to figure out what is the business can we do to help solve some of these challenges and a booming for good initiative? And we put out a solution called answers on demand that we gave out to free for free and within I believe it was two weeks. We had only over 2500, you know, customers from all different shops around the country that that registered and basically were ableto themselves stand up a frequently asked question. Ah, site within their Web page chatbots that they were embedded. They were able to bed in the Web page on a low code way, and that was kind of one example. Another from an enterprise example, is you think of things like, Hey, a new employee starts and typically they can walk in the first day. People hand them forms, they walk around, they meet with different departments. How do I get myself on boarded to an organization? Well, in the world today, everybody expects things to be on their mobile. They expect things to be done immediately, and they're not gonna goto 10 different APs in order to onboard themselves to go get swag or sign themselves up for their payroll, etcetera. That's a classic, you know, integrated integrated experiences use case that we help with where it's Hey, we can help with integrating those systems in the back end and provide an integrated experience to your new employees that come on board so they can walk through and be up and running within your company very quickly in a remote way. So we offer all the tooling that businesses can customize. Those make them look like they're, you know, they're color schemes of their business. So on and so forth create custom work flows all again in a low code way because we focus on time to value. It's about getting something done very quickly versus along I t projects That's going to take, you know, 23 years. >>Yeah, I remember. I think it was booming world last year where Chris, your CEO, was talking about, uh, the on boarding experience when he started at Bumi and how massively transformed that is. But to your point right now, there's so many things that we don't have time for. And so when there's obstacles in our way or processes or more convoluted, it just makes everything you know, not function well together or allow customers really maximize their investments in particular technologies. I wanted to get your take on Speaking of maximizing investments, How does booming help have you worked with partner with AWS to help your customers maximize their investments in AWS is technology and services. Sure >>so So we you know, we built our platform first and foremost on top of the AWS platform. So we sit there natively and we take advantage of all of a W s S s services. Behind the scene seems to offer secure platform that customers can work in from a loco development environment. From there you can take advantage. You can take your Bumi integrations and you can run them within three a w your own A w s environment if you'd like to. So we've actually launched a ah Bumi Quick start that allows you to Okay, quickly deploy a run time that spends up in the AWS cloud so you can run your workloads there in a secure way. If you've got your own security set up, you can run within that domain versus going within boonies cloud if you'd like. We're also about to release an elastic version of that That's kubernetes base so that you could, you know, scale that up and down and take advantage of your AWS. Resource is not in a fixed way. But Maurin, a survivalist type capacity. We also have data catalog and prep capabilities now, which we didn't have last year. But we have We've added these so that you can explore your AWS endpoints. You can explore any business and points that you have and kind of look at what data you have that you can, you know, harvest thio, pull together and and offer that make that available to your customers and users. You can run all of that in your AWS environment as well. We put >>a >>bunch of focus and adventure oven architectures so as a you know, as a classic integration scenario, a lot of people focus on pub sub patterns, those types of things. So we're we released connectivity to event bridge, sqs, etcetera. We also support connectivity to red shift so you can handle data warehousing scenarios. So and a lot of investment in the AWS ecosystem in the last year and a half to two years, and we continue, you know, we're going to continue doing that. We're just kind of at the beginning of that. So >>Bumi has over 12,000 customers ranging from, you know, the big guys, nonprofits like American Cancer Society, etcetera. How do you work with customers as head of product toe help them influence the road back to be able to take in the information that they need to. For example, we wanna we wanna be ableto work with me and really modernized but also maximize or a W s investment. What is that customer feedback loop like? >>Sure, So we've got within booming. We have a customer success team that focuses on all of those customers and different tiers. Verticals, um, you know, different horizontal plays, etcetera. But we have success. People that look out, you know, for our customers meet with them on a regular basis. They bring a lot of that feedback back into product. I'm an executive sponsor for a number of our customers where I meet with them directly to understand the projects, use cases. What are they trying to achieve and take? That is input, but but very specifically, we do quarterly webinars for our customers where we get each of our product managers, including myself, do a two hour session where we go through every single detail of here is what we are expecting ourselves that delivered to you as a customer over the next year, and that gives our customers the opportunity to see all those details. We published them online publicly. We then allow them to come back through direct relationships with product or customer success. To request these enhancements. We score them, we go through. We do commit a tely east. 25% of our roadmap to customers specific requests. Um, you know, even the 75% other piece of the road map we're looking at what we feel is the best interest of our customers and what we want to take them in an innovative way. But like I said, the 25% are direct commitment to Hey, customer wants X Y Z feature will put that in the 25% >>That's he, especially right now to be able to be able to. I don't want to be reactive because we often use that as a bad term. But be able to pivot quickly and and take that information in and make the changes needed that will benefit countless others if we go back to integrated experiences, you know, here we are at this virtual aws reinvent. We're so used to being surrounded in Vegas by 45,000 people. But talk to me about how Bhumi is helping AWS customers with their integrated experiences. What are some of the things that you guys are really excited about that you're enabling now? >>So with an integrated experience, you know, again, I go back to the three things that any customer AWS customer specifically need thio think about in order to create an ingrate experience. So data readiness is the first piece. So with a W s, you'll be spinning up a number of the services. You'll be putting data in the cloud so on and so forth. But you need to make sure that that data is of high quality. Um, it's secure. It's understood something like, you know, 60 to 70% of data that you haven't enterprises is unknown, and we help solve some of those challenges through our catalog and prepping tools. So even if you're moving a bunch of your processes and data applications into the cloud, we can help customers with data readiness and making sure it's security of high quality. The second piece is pervasive connectivity. So it is about connecting all of your data sources. So we do have an open platform. You have all your AWS services that we can help you connect to get data from those sources or or transfer them to those sources. But we also allow you to extend out into on Prem or other clouds as well. So as much as we love and work with a W s, we do understand that people need to move things into the cloud out of the cloud, etcetera. You know, we help with all of those connectivity challenges that an organization may face. Uh and then the third is that user engagement engagement piece So you could move data all around all you want. You can understand your data, but unless you're putting it in the hands of the user and allowing them to act on that data in some way, shape or form the tools we have, you know, around workflow and building those in a low code way, you could do all of this in a, you know, a unified platform that we have that you can go in and building a low code way. You don't have to be a pure hardcore Java developer to get things done. We focus on time to value. So you can. You know, we have stories of customers building their first set of integrations or work flows and, you know, minutes or a couple of hours versus some of our competitors who take days, weeks or months. >>So from a local perspective, something I'm just curious about, that's kind of be a facilitator of during the last, you know, eight months of things changing and customers not being able suddenly to get into their data centers air on site, talk to me a little bit about some of the things maybe even anecdotally, that you've heard about Bhumi Loco development platform being facilitator of people that couldn't get to a data center. >>Yeah, so I mean, all of the development even before covert, all all loco development that you did for Bumi was in a Web browser. We've always been that right. So we have that capability. And then from a run time, I was talking earlier about how you can run in a ws cloud. But you can also set your runtime behind a firewall. If it is at a facility, you can put it in. You know, any locations around the world. So when the pandemic hit and folks started needing to work remotely, it was kind of a non event for many of our developer, our local developers, because they can now access the browser from home and still access. All those resource is whether it's on site in a W s or wherever they were then forced to Okay, The rest of the business is saying we need to make data available. We need to actually now put processes in place. And and Bumi became an asset to say, Wait a minute. It's not about just integration behind the scenes, that's plumbing that nobody sees. Our users started becoming heroes in their business by standing up work flows and saying I can quickly because it's low code. Oh, you need to collect information about, you know, in some cases, you know, citizen information that they used to go to. You know, I don't know that I could talk about this government, but citizens used have to go into a building in order to fill out forms and whatnot. We need to collect data live. How can I do that? Okay. This government now just use boom me to start posting these on their website. These work flows in a secure way. You know, that's just, um, examples. I talked about answers on demand before, but but we've seen this pivot of user engagement Mawr out of, you know, bringing middleware and integration out of the shadows of I t into solving real problems as people are now this first around the world at home. So >>solving your problems and probably helping a lot of businesses not just survive the last few months and forward but thrive as well as theirs. We know some things from this will be permanent. Let's question to you just can you give us a sneak peek into some of the solutions and the initiatives that Booby and AWS are working on together? Yes. >>So I talked a little bit about this before, so we are in Advanced Tech Partner were a public sector partner. We run our platform on AWS again, so we continue to work on how we can keep expanding and taking advantage of A W S two services To make things more scalable. Onda were more and more secure. It's always a top priority given the shift to the cloud and a W s is helping us with those we have are quick starts that we're working on again to make things quicker and easier for people to stand up integration workloads in AWS catalog and prep again. All of the connectivity that we have to things like event bridge, sqs Red shift, etcetera. Um, you know, those are all the things we're collaborating on with them. And again through the next year, we'll continue to keep focusing on more and more to just make running your booming environment in AWS more and more seamless. >>Seamless. I'll take it well and thank you so much for sharing what's going on with Louis and AWS in this virtual event. We appreciate your time. >>Yeah. Thank you so much. >>Bread. McCaskey. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cubes coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 A virtual edition
SUMMARY :
its head of product of the program and nice to see you today So talk to me before we dig into kind of what's going on with AWS. So things have been going really well for us business wise, I think you know, as we've you know, you talked about it. If you think about as a business, your customers, Love to know who the A list celebrity was, but I won't ask you to develop that information because we look at that, Yeah, I mean, I could talk to a couple of examples where you know, everything you know, not function well together or allow customers so So we you know, we built our platform first and foremost on top of the AWS platform. We also support connectivity to red shift so you can handle you know, the big guys, nonprofits like American Cancer Society, etcetera. People that look out, you know, for our customers meet with them on a regular What are some of the things that you guys are really excited about that you're enabling now? on that data in some way, shape or form the tools we have, you know, during the last, you know, eight months of things changing and customers not being able suddenly But you can also set your runtime behind a firewall. Let's question to you just can you give us a sneak peek into some of the solutions and the initiatives that Booby and AWS you know, those are all the things we're collaborating on with them. I'll take it well and thank you so much for sharing what's going on with Louis and AWS in this virtual A virtual edition
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Chris | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Ed Makowski | PERSON | 0.99+ |
AWS | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
60 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two weeks | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
American Cancer Society | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Vegas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
two hour | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
second piece | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
30% | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
eight months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
23 years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
45,000 people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Ed Macosky | PERSON | 0.99+ |
first piece | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
75% | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
third | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Lisa | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Intel | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
25% | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
10 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
over 12,000 customers | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
next year | DATE | 0.99+ |
three things | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
two services | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
over 2500 | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
70% | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
pandemic | EVENT | 0.98+ |
first day | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
one example | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
each | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
first set | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Java | TITLE | 0.97+ |
Boomi | PERSON | 0.97+ |
Booby | ORGANIZATION | 0.95+ |
today | DATE | 0.95+ |
Bumi | LOCATION | 0.95+ |
this year | DATE | 0.94+ |
two years | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
Chapter 11 | OTHER | 0.92+ |
McCaskey | PERSON | 0.91+ |
Cube | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.9+ |
couple of weeks ago | DATE | 0.86+ |
Bhumi Loco | ORGANIZATION | 0.86+ |
last eight months | DATE | 0.86+ |
Cove | ORGANIZATION | 0.83+ |
2020 | TITLE | 0.83+ |
Bhumi | PERSON | 0.83+ |
2020 | DATE | 0.82+ |
aws | ORGANIZATION | 0.79+ |
Maurin | PERSON | 0.77+ |
Onda | ORGANIZATION | 0.77+ |
last | DATE | 0.76+ |
Louis | PERSON | 0.75+ |
Invent 2020 | TITLE | 0.72+ |
couple | QUANTITY | 0.71+ |
coven situation | EVENT | 0.69+ |
W | ORGANIZATION | 0.66+ |
three | QUANTITY | 0.65+ |
APs | QUANTITY | 0.65+ |
Gary Cifatte, Candy.com | Boomi World 2019
>>live from Washington, D. C. >>It's the Cube >>covering Bumi World 19. Do you buy movie? >>Hey, welcome back to the Cube. We've got candy. That's right. I am Lisa Martin in Washington, D. C. At booming World 19 with John Ferrier and John and I are excited to be talking next with a chief technology officer of candy dot com. Gary, welcome to the Cube. >>Thank you for having me great to be here. >>So tell our audience about candy dot com Guinea all that you want dot com cool stuff. >>It is cool stuff. It is the endless. I'll just like going to the supermarket and never runs. Oh, it's absolutely perfect. That's actually how we started knowing that there was so much candy out there that people wanted in the lines just weren't long enough to put him in, no matter where you checked out, and we started off being the online candy store, which was a foot in the door, but it was a very small opening at that time. >>One of the things you said when I met you today whilst eating candy that you guys brought thank you very much for that was very appropriate. Um, was that candy? Is recession proof? >>It is. It's it's ah, you know, good times, bad times. You know, people are gonna have birthday parties. People get married holidays. They're going to come. You know, you've had a really great day. It's a candy bar. You know, you've had a really bad day. It's the candy bar. That's just it's an impulse buy, but it's an impulse buy with your favorite. I mean, it's something to comfort more than anything else, actually. And the technology side talk about how you guys were organized. What? Some of the challenges and how does Bumi fit in? Take us through the journey. Sure, when we started out, we thought, How hard could it be doing? Data entry will get the orders. They'll come across, we'll have some people. Instrument to the system will start filling up, you know, and then everything else will take care of itself. And within about a few minutes, we realized that that was probably not going to work. It was not scalable because first of all, data entry is air pro. You know, if you have someone actually trying to do with their, it's not gonna work for us. So we realized that there was a mechanism out there with Edie I and we went to 1/3 party provider to help us with the FBI. And that's how we started with the first couple of integrations and it was good. It got us off the ground and got us further into that door. >>So you started with, um, how many different partners trading partners take us back to kind of the last 10 years of candy dot com and how that Trading Partner Network has grown. >>Oh, it's like the journey. It's still we starts with the first step. We had one that was interested, one that wanted to work with Austin, and we started to do the work with them and figure out how to handle it. But they had multiple divisions, so, you know, there was only one that was 32 actual integrations that had to be done on being a traditional brick and mortar. It's very competitive. So once the word got out that they were work with us, there was a couple other. So we had six pretty big ones lined up early on that we needed to have integrated in up and running very quickly. >>And from a digital perspective, what were some of the initial system's applications that you implemented just start being able to manage and track those trading partner interactions to ensure that you're able to deliver? You know what? The candy, the candy demand that you need to fill? >>It was, sadly, a lot of C S V. A lot of email, a lot of phone calls back and forth. There was a lot of hours, and it was one those ones where we would really just bring in temps and try to keep up with it did not really have a repeatable process or a good technical footprint of what we needed to d'oh way didn't know what we didn't know when we started, and we very rapidly came to become aware of what we needed to do. >>So starting with air P Net sweet brought net Sweden two years ago. Tell us about that and what you thought was gonna solve all of our problems. Well, that's why it's >>a great package because it brought us both order management and it brought us here. Pee in. There were so many models and so much technology behind it and they have a warehouse module. There's, like all we could grow forever With this, it will never be bounded. This is gonna be fantastic. But what we forgot is that it was only as good as the data in there. And if we're using as a manual data entry, it's not going to meet our needs. We needed to come up with a better way in a more efficient way to get the data in. And this was still back in the day when we're trying to fulfill something within a week, much less where we're at today. >>Okay, so where does Bumi fit into play? >>We realized, unfortunately that even when you have an integration up and running and as good as the integration is, some of your trading partners will have changes. They're going to give you a different reference number. They're gonna give you a different requirement. They're gonna make something that was optional now mandatory. So we had problems because it wasn't just also that was impacting everyone that was doing an integration with that trading partner had it. So if I had outsourced it and there was 100 people that had that map. We were one of 100. Sometimes we were one, and sometimes we were as far away from one is possible and you understand that, and you appreciate it because there's only a finite number of hours to get things done. So we understood that to be really profitable and get to the level of service we needed to control the data. And that's when we decided that we needed to bring the E. D I and house. >>So when you were looking for the right integration partner, what was it about Bhumi from a technology perspective and a business perspective that really differentiated it. >>First and foremost, the number one requirement had to talk to nets. We had a have a native nets. We'd integration if it did not talk to net sweet. It wasn't gonna make it onto our plate because we weren't gonna spend the time to reinvent the wheel when obviously the wheel was out there. We had actually done that once before, and it was successful but painful. And there's people out there who build a connection and work to silver partners like blooming in the platinum partners that can go out and they can actually keep up with the release before it comes out. And you're being proactive by the reactive from a business need. It was We can't drop data. We need to be efficient. We need to be timely. We need visibility. And looking at Bumi, it met all those needs. We had a connection into nets. We had a reporting tool. We had error messages coming back. We had everything that we needed to manage our own world and take control of it. Or so we thought >>that look. Okay, so get this implemented. What sort of opportunities is the start opening up? You talked about control there, or so we thought. What have you been able to unlock where control is concerned? In the last few years, >>what we didn't realize with what we were doing is that way. We're just basically turning on everything and trying to run this efficiently and fast as possible. And that was really the wrong approach to take what we needed to do it as some governance to it as some logic to it, too, you know, not compete with jobs. There's there's a finite number of avenues into the back end system, you need to utilize it. But there was also tools that we found out inside this system that handled things like error trapping and retrial, logic and time outs and stuff like that. And as we worked with the subject matter experts at Boom, as we worked with the people at Nets, we in our account managers who would show us things and help us long. We learned a lot more about him. When we went live back in February of 2016 we were very excited. We did 1000 orders into our system and one day and we thought, How phenomenal is this? I mean, 1000 orders. How many more orders could you actually look for? And we very soon realized that there was a lot more orders willing to come into our system if we could handle it. >>So what? So when you first started with Bhumi went from some number 2 1000 orders today. What was that original number that you guys were able to handle when it was more of a manual process? >>It depend on how many attempts we could hire that sometimes it was 100 orders we got in. Sometimes it was 100% dependent on people. Also depend on someone, Remember, understands the spreadsheet. >>The Sun's painful, >>painful and not really easy to plan for. >>But you discovered pretty quickly you went from I won't say 0 to 1000. But somewhere in between that realized tha the capabilities, though of this system was gonna allow you to get 20,000 orders per day. Where was the demand coming from? Was it coming from trading partners was coming from their customers? Was it coming from your internal team seeing Hey, guys, I think there's a lot more power here than we originally thought. >>Well, success begets success because we were able to get an order in now in a timely fashion and ship it out there. All of a sudden, I realized we were shipping orders within 48 to 72 hours. It wasn't taking 10 days anymore, so we had repeat customers, which obviously makes your numbers go up. And then, as you know, your experience is good and you share it because social media is the weight of the world All the sudden, you know if if you tell two friends and they tell two friends we start getting more volume. Damn white starts happening is someone realizes they're losing market share of their brick and mortar website. And who was fulfilling the orders for them if they're doing so well and we're losing business and they start knocking on the door saying what? We'd like to work with you as well. And the other thing, too, is just timing. In the United States, it's pretty warm between April and October, and the bulk of perishable and heat sensitive product will ship through one of our warehouses because we have the thermal controls in the programs in place to give a good experience to make sure the product arrives the way it's supposed to be treated. >>Yeah, you were mentioning that when you were on stage this morning with Mandy Dolly Well, Mami CMO and Jason Maynard from Net Sweet that there are obviously, if you order some chocolate. I wanted to get there in the exact state in which I saw it online, right? But there's you've gotta have a lot of access, invisibility and systems to be able to help you facilitate that temperature control, depending on the type of product. >>Absolutely. So we're very proud of the fact that, you know, we're temperature controlled where humidity controlled were suf certified. We've done everything the right way to make sure that what we do is gonna be the best experience that your food is safe. Because, Paramount, the last thing we ever want to do is to keep a product of someone's gonna make your child sex because, you know, you don't want anyone to get sick. But the worst feeling is apparent is when your kid doesn't feel well. So we understand that Andi have a phenomenal staff. Are Q A team will go through and we have ways to test the product to get to the melting point. And we know different products melted different temperatures, and we determine what those temperatures are. We build those thresholds we do calls out to get the weather. No, I'm shipping it from my location to you. What's the temperature of my It doesn't matter if it's cold at your place. It is 90 where I'm shipping it from. So we look at what is it now? Where is it going? What's it gonna be the next few days? How big is it? You know how much product is in there with that? That isn't heat sensitive. And we have a pretty complex algorithm that we put in place That has really enabled us to handle the summer months and give a good product because, I mean a lot of people like s'mores, but they don't want the pre melted chocolate showing up at their house. >>Would agree. That takes the fun out of the bonfire part, right? Exactly. So let's talk about the people transformation because you were saying your 100% dependent on manual Somebody even sending the spreadsheet little into star inputting data to process X number of orders per day went from almost 0 to 1000 overnight with Bhumi, then saw this capacity for 20,000. How have has your team has other business units within candy like finance? How are they benefiting from all of this? What a presume is massive workforce productivity gains that you're giving everybody? >>Absolutely. It was a great problem tohave because as we got bigger and we started getting more and more orders than we got more and more invoices and you know, we got more and more checks in which we always think it's a good thing, but those checks need to be reconciled. They have to be reconciled against the transaction Inside the Nets week. It's no exaggeration that we would have pages printed out with a ruler going down and highlighting one by one on the invoice to make sure nothing was omitted. And we were spending an individual spent an eight hour day, three days a week, just going through direct missile. One invoice that was coming in and we would get two or three a week from them. So it was painful and again also error prone. And these people are very creative, very smart, and they offer so much more to the business that it was a waste of their time in a waste of their intellect. S o del. Booming, we found out, is not just any eyes phenomenal, Aditi, I but it has all these other tools and won. The tools we had was to be able to take the remittance file from the financial institution, reconcile it against the invoice is in the system and create a C S V import that would run that we have a script for that created a cash payment in our system that would actually close out the invoices and be paid so that we don't take care of it. It was done, and finance would basically get the file and e mail to us. We would file it back and they'd run an import. So instead of 250 hours a week, it was five minutes of file. >>That's a dramatics saving hundreds of hours a month, but also faster time to revenue recognition. >>That's a big one, you know, because when you try to get people discounts or give them brakes or if your terms are out there, it's nice to get it in there and keep your system's clean, because you also have to answer to the end of the month. You know you want to close the books and everything in manual processes. Air one the few things that you can't just throw more horsepower at. >>I'm glad you brought up, though from a resource kind of reallocation. Perspective is, these folks, in particular areas of the business, have value that they're not able before weren't able to really unlock and deliver. Now, with the technology in place, they're able to probably focus on more strategic areas of the business or more strategic projects. I also imagine your sales. We said faster time to revenue in revenue recognition, but big boost to candy dot comes sales. Since you've implemented the technology >>direct, I mean the sales numbers have just grown. I mean, as much as we do. No do are forecasting and think where it's going to go. Wee wee drastically underestimated this year. The summer was very, very good to us. Our first year under booming, we ran for 11 months. We did a little over 600,000 orders for that first year. In comparison, in June, July and August this year, we did over a 1,000,000 orders. That's a lot of chocolate. So a >>lot of candy, >>most certainly >>busier time, period. I mean Halloweens in a few weeks, Christmas is coming. How does that compare in terms of like the Flux >>way? Have a peek? Obviously, Halloween Halloween is obviously the time, of course. November 1st, our orders are zero because everyone walks in with a pillowcase of candy from their kids to the office, so it literally goes from a 1,000,000 miles an hour or two nothing, and it's it's kind of eerie. But throughout the summer we stay very, very busy because a lot of the market places don't have the facility and listen, they're great, you know, it's one stop shopping. They have everything, but everything is in a warehouse in that entire warehouse is not properly controlled to handle food products. So they decided it was an advantageous for them to ship, you know, during the summer, and it's poorly monitored as a summer Shipp program. But it's really more of a heat sensitive program because we'll add the thermal product to protect the thermal packaging to protect the product, even in February. I mean, there's some spots in Florida in Texas at a pretty one that you want to protect the item. So it's a heat sensitive program that we're very proud of, and we keep advancing and we keep growing. And, you know, I have. I'm very fortunate. I have a great team. I mean, we're not gonna call out, you know, like Jim and Scott, because that would be wrong to deal with. These guys have been with me from the start, and they put the E. T. I in place. They put the scripting in place that the guys were just, you know, rock stars on. Do I look good because of their effort? And I'm very, very proud of the team we've assembled that does this to make sure that you're and satisfaction is always met. >>Awesome story. So I imagine you know, when we hear like, four out of five dentists recommend this kind of bet. Is the fifth dentist recommending candy dot com? Is that where that guy's been? >>Yeah, he's got four kids >>going through college and >>everything, so he figures candy dot com to go. Way to make the money to make sure those tuition skip. >>All right. Well, Gary, it's been a pleasure to have you on the keys. Thank you for sharing what you're doing with bhumi at candy dot com. We appreciate and thanks for all the candy. >>Oh, our pleasure. Thank you very much for having been a great couple of days. I'm glad to be part of it. >>All right. Our pleasure for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube from Bhumi World 19. Thanks for watching
SUMMARY :
and John and I are excited to be talking next with a chief technology officer of candy dot So tell our audience about candy dot com Guinea all that you want dot com in the lines just weren't long enough to put him in, no matter where you checked out, One of the things you said when I met you today whilst eating candy that you guys brought And the technology side talk about how you guys were organized. So you started with, um, how many different partners trading We had one that was interested, one that wanted to work with Austin, and we very rapidly came to become aware of what we needed to do. Tell us about that and what you thought was gonna solve all of our problems. We needed to come up with a better way in a more efficient way to get the data in. Sometimes we were one, and sometimes we were as far away from one is possible and you So when you were looking for the right integration partner, We had everything that we needed to manage our own world and take control of it. What have you been able to it as some governance to it as some logic to it, too, you know, not compete with jobs. What was that original number that you guys were able to handle when it was more of a manual process? It depend on how many attempts we could hire that sometimes it was 100 orders we got in. though of this system was gonna allow you to get 20,000 orders per day. And then, as you know, your experience is good and you share it because social media is the weight of the world Yeah, you were mentioning that when you were on stage this morning with Mandy Dolly Well, So we're very proud of the fact that, you know, we're temperature controlled where humidity Somebody even sending the spreadsheet little into star inputting data to process X number orders than we got more and more invoices and you know, time to revenue recognition. That's a big one, you know, because when you try to get people discounts or give them brakes or if your terms We said faster time to revenue in revenue recognition, I mean, as much as we do. How does that compare in terms of like the Flux They put the scripting in place that the guys were just, you know, rock stars on. So I imagine you know, when we hear like, four out of five dentists recommend this kind Way to make the money to make sure those tuition skip. Well, Gary, it's been a pleasure to have you on the keys. Thank you very much for having been a great couple of days. All right.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John Ferrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jim | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Gary | PERSON | 0.99+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
10 days | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
February of 2016 | DATE | 0.99+ |
Jason Maynard | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Florida | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
100% | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Scott | PERSON | 0.99+ |
20,000 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two friends | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
11 months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
100 orders | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Gary Cifatte | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Washington, D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
five minutes | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
February | DATE | 0.99+ |
FBI | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
1000 orders | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
November 1st | DATE | 0.99+ |
20,000 orders | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Texas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
June | DATE | 0.99+ |
four kids | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
100 people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
four | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
three | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
90 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
fifth dentist | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
One invoice | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Net Sweet | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
72 hours | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
First | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
zero | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
United States | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
100 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
first step | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Andi | PERSON | 0.99+ |
July | DATE | 0.99+ |
October | DATE | 0.98+ |
Christmas | EVENT | 0.98+ |
two years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
this year | DATE | 0.98+ |
Boom | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
three days a week | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
first couple | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
1000 | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
bhumi | PERSON | 0.98+ |
April | DATE | 0.98+ |
250 hours a week | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
over 600,000 orders | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
48 | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
five dentists | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
first year | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Bhumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
candy dot com | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
32 actual integrations | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
0 | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
Cube | TITLE | 0.95+ |
a week | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
hundreds of hours a month | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
1,000,000 miles an hour | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
Mandy Dolly Well | PERSON | 0.93+ |
Halloween | EVENT | 0.93+ |
one day | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
Trading Partner Network | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
Mami CMO | PERSON | 0.92+ |
Candy.com | ORGANIZATION | 0.9+ |
Steve Wood, Boomi & Jeff Emerson, Accenture | Boomi World 2019
>>live from Washington, D. C. It's the Cube covering Bumi World 19 Do you buy movie? >>Welcome back to the Cubes. Coverage of Bumi World 19 I'm Lisa Martin with John Ferrier. John and I have a couple of gents joining us. To my right is Jeff Emerson, the global managing director for Custom Application Engineering Ethics Center. Hey, just hey, welcome. Thank you were glad to tell you, and we've got Steve would back with us. The CPO up. Hey, Steve, >>Hayley says. Ages >>minutes. You sticking into some research about that? The history of Bumi and Ipads and just looking at how the consumer ization effect has infected by a bad word has really infiltrated has that every industry organizations went from having enterprise applications. Legacy applications, cloud applications, custom applications. Let's talk about custom applications. What are you seeing in the customer marketplace for the demand for having this level of customization, whether it's a retail or or, you know, utilities company, >>it really doesn't matter what industry it is these days. Custom applications were going through a renaissance. It is. It is truly the renaissance of custom, where there was once a swing towards enterprise applications and the packages and so on. And now it's realized that oh gosh t separate ourselves from our competition. We have two great something that doesn't exist well, that is, by its nature, a custom application. And so these air coming up, Maura and Maur across the industry, and it's really starting to dominate the value chain for software. >>You were here in D. C. And public sector is going through a modernization as well. He looked at government procurement. I mean, essentially with data, everything's instrumental. You have unlimited resource with cloud computing. So essentially personalization. Hot trend. So applications air being personalized. They're customized. So every app should be not general purpose unless it's either under the covers. So this is the country's We've been having you guys. Bumi has a platform. You enable APS? You guys are deploying it. How are customers responded to this? Because to me they might go Will custom haps me, feels expensive. It feels one off the old adage. It's a one off, but it seems to be coming back. >>It does end. Fact is, you're able to do things so much more quickly today than you ever have been able to in the fast in the past and three ability to create new experiences quickly and react in an agile fashion to how those applications are being received in the marketplace. React to the data that is generated both as the primary data and the data exhaust from those systems to determine what your customers need, what they want, how they're going to act, what they're going to buy. All of those things are things that we can pull together so much more quickly today than we could ever in the past. And so it's great. >>Steve, We were talking earlier about how the data's real big part of the equation. Now everything about the application world it used to be the infrastructure would dictate what you could build. Yeah, now you have application developers saying, This is what I want now the infrastructures so programmable it's kind of flipped around that they're dictating kind of terms. >>Well, there's suddenly being this sort of emergence of these low code platforms to kind of help manage that. I mean, and they're kind of taking care of a lot of the infrastructure so you can kind of skill them is needed, but yeah, I mean, there's been a him. It's been a huge birthday. I couldn't agree more. There's like the demand for applications. We're seeing a lot. Sure there's the mega applications. We tend to leave those to our sister company Pivotal toe code those with this whole other ecosystem of applications everywhere. The personalization sze of the line of business needs to improve. Their business processes were going after that layer. We have to do it in the right way to make it super easy to do on the infrastructure that people expected to be with the architecture they expect to see. So they're highly customizable, so get exactly what they want. >>Jeff, you know, we always talk on the industry joke on the Cube, and the game is changed, but it's still the same. And every time a new trend comes, you know it's the death of something. A meteorite media to say something's dying when something new starts right. But nothing really changes everything about applications. It's the same gain just with a different twist. Do it with cloud. How are customers were spouting this? Because obviously his benefits business benefits cost benefits lot of mount up line with how they're attacking the application development. Then they got a data tsunami happening. But they gotta build APS, right, Not anything, right? >>It was once said that absolute in the world, and now it's really that data is feeding the world right? And so the amount of data that's out there and accessible and usable within applications is absolutely incredible. And so, with the emergence of the cloud in order, Thio support those massive amounts of data and Dr Rapid Development and then lo code to make that development much easier. These things all time come together, and you talked about the death of X, y or Z. We talk now about living systems, right on living systems are things that are easy to modify, their absolutely attainable and usable and expandable for for any kind of use and ultimately adaptable. >>So John mentioned the word one off a minute ago, and it reminded me of something where, you know, whatever industry that you're in, Not too long ago it was customers got some one off. Whether it's an application or part of the infrastructure, that's expensive, and it's not something that can be monetized but down to your point it's it's really custom. Applications are a big part of a business. Is competitive advantage. So what is it about the customized app? Is it Is it the fact that it's driven by an A P I? That's programmable that allows it to be customized at scale toe, where it's not a one off from a support perspective, it's something that really a company can use as that competitive leg up. >>Right in the this livings living systems world. We really have agile engineering, agile methods and so that we're doing development quickly. And we're doing this in an engineering fashion that has micro service's and small pieces of functionality that could be grabbed and plugged and played together. Thio great, different experiences. And so that granular ization of software is something that drives his flexibility and enables us to make modifications and updates quickly. >>Actually, ive your customer example that it was something we'd done, which is absence of term it like how the oil and gas industry saved nurses in Africa are saved people in Africa, which is we built, a solution that allowed them nurses in sub Saharan Africa to visit patients out in the field. They built it on a loco pa from witches. Flow part of me connected through a P eyes connected to all the infrastructure. But a lot of the work was on, uh, android tablets offline. So with the loco PA from that could deliver this solution with all offline capabilities, all the connectivity, all the integration, all built in without writing. Really any code? The only code there rose to customize the look and feel so looked exactly what they want. They delivered that on early version of our offline framework and then latterly the oil and gas industry origin energy deployed a similar solution to their rigs. The lot of you seem really complicated things of form, validation and better validation rules and better data synchronization that really forced us to improve our offline framework to something which is a Steve a big jump ahead of where it was before. And then lo and behold, the nurses nafta came back to us and said, Well, actually went up, Did or are we gonna run on desktops as well as ipads? Funnily enough, and we're like, Well, good news. We've actually already added that support. And so literally from three days of that phone call to them going live within our laptops and ipads. That was all it took. They didn't have to write any CO. They literally We just give them access to the new you. I will find framework. They installed it, turn off the wet. And that's kind of the power of this kind of next gen of up building that for this kind of line of business applications where you just need to innovate, how you work, you don't have to spend three years rebuilding those for iPad and >>Jeff houses. That dynamic, which is pretty much, I think, consisted a lot of these new APS. How's it changed your business? Because you know the theme that we've been identifying the mega trend is that there's more project work going on fast time to value, agile. You guys been doing exceptional work there and following Madu Center's been doing talking to Paul Doherty amongst others. Get a huge data science team you guys are on. I know you guys have transformed but big project and now a bunch of little projects going on, so it's kind of have to make you guys more agile as a practice because you've got to go out and solve the business problems with the customers. How is this dynamic changed? >>You're right. We absolutely do. And we have to assume muchas anything. It's helping our customers get into that mode of thinking as well. What was once a six months of gathering and documenting requirements is now done in a handful of ours. At first to get the first small bit of what's gonna be valuable functionality to put out there. And you keep doing that irritably. Overtime is instead of in a six month period, but then gets thrown over the wall. Thio have other people do this for another build stuff for six or nine >>months. I mean, the federation and getting those winds early gets proof points, gets mo mentum validation. You're not waiting for a gestation period. >>You make good decisions about what to do next on DDE. What to not do that you were planning on doing but turns out, doesn't mean >>I want to get your thoughts on something important you mentioned humanization. We see that big trend because Avery people centric and you're thinking at Bumi and we've had this debate in the queue we? We didn't come in on either side yet, but you know it orations great, great, fast. But the old days of software was a lot of craftsmanship involved, you know, crafting the product, getting it right now it's ship be embarrassed, ship it fast and then injury, which is great for efficiency. But there's a trend coming back to crafting product. They're absolutely. What is your thoughts on this? Because craft Manship is now design thinking. Would it be calling in different names? But this is a new thing. It's happening all the time. >>That software software craftsmanship is something that is more important today than it ever has been. Because you're going fast. And because you're putting things out into the market very quickly, you can't afford to make big mistakes, right? You could make functional decision mistakes, right? Oh, that wasn't the right thing for the customer, but having it not work or creating it bad experiences, right? Very bad, right? And so that craftsmanship building in all the Dev Ops pipelines and the error check in the testing and gateways and security checking all that happens automatically every time you check in code that is critical and it drives that craftsmanship back to the developer, right? Pushing left so that you make a mistake. You fix it within minutes, as opposed to >>you. Run private engineering, Smile on your face. Come on, What's your angle on this >>time? And craftsmanship is obviously huge mean? When we thought about like Bumi, we kind of wanted to make sure that yeah, that way we used to talk a little bit. No code platforms. And I think that what they did was they left out the craftsmanship that developers could do. And I've kind of thought it was like, Hey, if you can put like the business or the person who really understands the process of the application into the beating heart of the creation process so they could be on the right side of the soft waiting the world like they could be a creator and producer as much as they could be a consumer of applications, you allow them to do that and then let developers have radiate that that out with new engage with models, coding out new experiences that really hyper specific to the EU's case of the user. That's kind of the ultimate you get the core business value, and then you get the craftsmanship of the engineers together, I think, >>and I'm glad you said that because there's so many cases where here, we want to push it so that we don't even need software engineers for our software. And that's an interesting idea. Yeah, but it's actually not a good idea. Ll know or idea, Yes, simply because you there's an important aspect of software and and how I t runs that even if you have low coach, uh, components in order to drive the functionality right, these things that have to be done. But frankly, professional software engineers know how to do. >>It's better and faster and easier to do it that way. >>I think the federation certainly makes the problem that you're trying to solve. Solvable, right? Don't take your eye off the main ball, which is saw the problem, but get it elegantly designed all right, but I think that's a good This is a big discussion. You're seeing a lot with loco. So again, this is back. The custom maps custom APS just means a targeted app that solves a specific problem because it is a unique problem and it's different than the other one, right? That's the speed game. It's a speed game to nose in it that fast, fast, fast. >>And the engineering methods have changed really over the last couple of decades. While I've been doing this. Where way talked a moment about ago about the waterfall ways and then the agile ways. And the simple fact of the matter is that you're developing small pieces of software to get out into the market quickly, and you can do this in a matter of days and weeks. A supposed to months and quarters >>right, which many businesses don't have that time for company competitors gonna get in there. I'm curious as the development methods have changed so dramatically have the customer conversations like Are you guys talking more with business leaders vs You know the Guys and Girls and Dev Ops is that is this movie business little conversation that a CEO CFO, a CEO is involved in? >>So from our perspective at Accenture that the technology is always there to drive a business need, and so that conversation is first with the business owners, and that was true 20 years ago as well. The a CZ much as we do. I t transformation. It's a business lead. I transformation and, more often, technology supported business transformation. >>Excellent. Well, guys, thank you for joining John and me on the program today. Talking about all the things that you guys are seeing out in the field. Exciting stuff. >>Thanks for having us. >>We appreciate your time. Thank you for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube from Bhumi World 19. Thanks for watching.
SUMMARY :
Bumi World 19 Do you buy movie? Welcome back to the Cubes. The history of Bumi and Ipads and just looking at how the Maura and Maur across the industry, and it's really starting to dominate the value chain So this is the country's We've been having you guys. and the data exhaust from those systems to determine what your customers need, Now everything about the application world it used to be the infrastructure would dictate what you could build. The personalization sze of the line of business needs to improve. And every time a new trend comes, you know it's the death of something. And so the amount of data that's out there and accessible and usable and it's not something that can be monetized but down to your point it's it's really And so that granular days of that phone call to them going live within our laptops and ipads. so it's kind of have to make you guys more agile as a practice because you've got to go out and solve the business problems with the customers. And you keep doing that irritably. I mean, the federation and getting those winds early gets proof points, gets mo mentum What to not do that you were planning on doing but turns out, But the old days of software was a lot of craftsmanship involved, you know, crafting the product, and gateways and security checking all that happens automatically every time you check in code Run private engineering, Smile on your face. That's kind of the ultimate you get the core business value, how I t runs that even if you have low coach, uh, components in order It's a speed game to nose in it that fast, fast, fast. out into the market quickly, and you can do this in a matter of days and weeks. and Girls and Dev Ops is that is this movie business little conversation that a CEO So from our perspective at Accenture that the technology is always there to that you guys are seeing out in the field. Thank you for John Ferrier.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Steve | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jeff Emerson | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Hayley | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Paul Doherty | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John Ferrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
six | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Washington, D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Steve Wood | PERSON | 0.99+ |
iPad | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.99+ |
Jeff | PERSON | 0.99+ |
nine | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Accenture | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
six month | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Africa | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Custom Application Engineering Ethics Center | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
three days | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Maura | PERSON | 0.98+ |
D. C. | LOCATION | 0.98+ |
three years | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Maur | PERSON | 0.98+ |
today | DATE | 0.98+ |
android | TITLE | 0.98+ |
Madu Center | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
sub Saharan Africa | LOCATION | 0.97+ |
ipads | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.97+ |
Bumi World | TITLE | 0.97+ |
2019 | DATE | 0.97+ |
20 years ago | DATE | 0.97+ |
six months | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
last couple of decades | DATE | 0.94+ |
Boomi | PERSON | 0.94+ |
EU | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
Cube | TITLE | 0.9+ |
Cube | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.9+ |
nafta | ORGANIZATION | 0.89+ |
Boomi World | TITLE | 0.89+ |
Bhumi World 19 | TITLE | 0.86+ |
You know the Guys and Girls and Dev Ops | TITLE | 0.83+ |
a minute ago | DATE | 0.81+ |
Pivotal | ORGANIZATION | 0.8+ |
couple | QUANTITY | 0.77+ |
Ages | QUANTITY | 0.75+ |
Jeff houses | PERSON | 0.72+ |
first small | QUANTITY | 0.71+ |
Ipads | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.69+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.68+ |
three ability | QUANTITY | 0.62+ |
DDE | ORGANIZATION | 0.57+ |
agile | TITLE | 0.54+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.51+ |
Thio | ORGANIZATION | 0.43+ |
months | QUANTITY | 0.4+ |
Steve Wood, Boomi | Boomi World 2019
>>live from Washington D. C. It's the Cube covering Bumi World 19 to Bide Movie. >>Hey, welcome back to the Cubes Coverage of Bumi World 19 from Washington D. C. I'm Lisa Martin with John Ferrier and John and I have a Cube alumni sitting with us. We have the chief product officer off. Del blew me. Steve would Steve, Welcome back. >>Thank you. It's great to be back. I could see again. John. Great must meet you >>back. Wise Enjoyed your keynote this morning, Man. There were so many nuggets and there I couldn't type faster. But one of my favorite things that you said is that no one is asking for less data. Slower? >>Yes, OK did I like kind of like saying because it frames things very clearly. It's just because it's clearly a prole. Every relates to him in the audience, but it was kind of amusing, so they've really got it immediately as I get that, that's a fair statement, so >>so like, and then you kind of took us the audience back. Thio 11 months ago at Bumi World 18. Some of the things that you guys said this is what we're going to be really focused on redefining the eye and I pass to be intelligent. Give her audience who wasn't able to see your keynote A little bit of that historical from 11 months ago. So what you guys are delivering today what the Bumi platform looks like today? >>Yeah, sure. So I mean, a lot of showed last Army, we kind of owe. Then we feel like we is like craters. The industry have to kind of try lead it. Where? Where is it going next? That's our big kind of duty, I guess. And so it's been taken over when we had the founder of booming attend, which was nice, but yes, so the big thing we should Last year was kind of the next generation, which is really a unified look and feel super easy to build applications that spend all of the portfolio and art in our that we offer our customers. We wanted to make it very collaborative, so users of business or business analysts or quick technical people can work together and use. Our platform is a collaboration space of the right controls in place. Eso stuff like that was really good to show that our new solutions. Overview. We've been definitely encouraging partners to put Maur intellectual property into our platform to excel, help accelerate their customers. Helping our customers just get people on board as quickly as possible. In fact, actually owned boarding employees on boarding was the solution we showed last year. >>That was fantastic. I couldn't believe how complex that was at Bumi. And when you guys said, We've got to change this huge improvements. >>Yeah, well, it was sort of a discovery that came up from one of our cells. Engineers got Andy Tiller did a fantastic job. He didn't enjoy his, um, his own boarding experience abuse me and then sort of building a solution. And we're like, we like we can actually do this way better on the platform. But what was amazing was that even for a company the size of Bumi, which is about 1000 people, we have, like, nearly 100 integration points and systems had to be coordinated to on board a single employee 100. Yeah, it's a lot, you know. So it became a really connectivity problem, actually, on >>boarding >>bits relatively easy. It's just, like connected all these systems. That's the hard bit. So yeah, we're excited to show that I think we got a kick out of seeing you together than we give progress on how we're moving that forward with various demos >>you don't want to ask you. Last year we asked the chief operating officer and the CEO Bumi what their investment priorities were going into the next year. And they said Number one was product. So that was a key thing. First and foremost go to market and then customer equation. But a product has been a big focus. That continues to be. What >>is >>the problem? Does it mean product when your chief product officer, what do you overseeing? Talk about What is the product? What is the platform And is there a difference? >>Yeah, I mean, so we we talk about the problem because we're in the product group, but we definitely see it as a platform. The investment in product is great. It means I get to spend lots of money like about my new converse. I won't try to show them, but way, but yeah, I mean, the investment partners being that we know that as we get Maur is this is this economy keeps building of integration and connective iti wanna continue to hold our leadership. We need to invest in product to make it easier. The expectations of our users is that they get a really premium experience when they're on board it onto the platform. We have to make sure we keep up to date with all of that effort. So a lot of what we talked about, it's how one is that we break our product up into discreet service is to allow us to move faster from an engineering perspective. And there's a lot of stuff that goes on there to think about ourselves as a platform to make sure we're fully extensible on. Then providing Maura Maura service is that people can build on our platform. So a lot of that investment just driving those >>activity. Rick was on yesterday talking about the big bets they made early on that are paying off. One of them was Aussie Cloud. On seeing that as you look at the architecture of this kind of new era of clobbering cloud to point, are we calling it? There's new requirements. It's the glue layers being built out. You need data to be accessible on addressable and available in real time, and you have multiple systems to talk to hence the integration you guys are doing. But this new mega trends happening is event driven architectures, which you guys talk about. There's a P I's just going from rest ful to state. And so you have micro service is here. So these air new dynamics Can >>you take >>a minute displaying like what all this means And what is event driven infrastructure? >>Yeah, a venture of architecture. But yeah, that's well, that's what we've been calling it. But yeah, I mean, it's basically that we're going to models where we're responding in real time to things that are happening out there on that revolt that involves a whole new level of scale. But, you know, we're also getting to things like streaming soas. Data come comes in, it's coming in, not in these packets, but it's constantly being fed to you, sir, constantly having to process it. You know, before in the integration space, it was like what? You'd set up a schedule you'd say, move that data at midnight from there to there and then it got faster and booming, provided real time, which was a request response that you send it personally, require a response back. But now it's like we're not going to just send it to you as a discreet thing. We're going to send it to you constantly, so event driven architectures. But how do you handle this continuous influx of data? And it's not getting any less. So how do you kind of manage this? We're being pulled in. Both ends were being pulled. There's never been more data that you never wanted to have faster. So it's like, How do you manage that? So for Bhumi, you know, that's why we're investing so heavily. >>Used to be in the old days when things were slower, events were like a trigger in a network management software alarm notification. Now they're happening. All the time is more and more events and paying attention to what events becomes a non human thing. Yeah, it's a software thing. Is that kind of where this is going? >>Yeah, well, I >>mean, we've been thinking >>a lot about that, like we sort of feel it. One is that we're gonna grow up from being on iPods to more of a data management vendor. We think that, like where the data manager in the future will come from an I pass, that we will be managing your data across like all of these systems from the catalogue and preparation to the, you know, actually integration and surfacing it up in real time and all that kind of streaming side. So I know it's Ah yeah, it's an evolving field for sure. >>One final point on this topic of product AP eyes have been great. They really made the market. Going back to the original Web service is in early two thousands to cloud. Where does a P I go? A A p I to dot or whatever you call it. What's the next Gen Place for AP? Eyes? >>Well, so it's interesting course. So we >>have >>a slightly different view of a pie management. That may be the typical AP management space, which is one thing to declare openly. But I think I >>want to >>go with that. Were right in the sense that cause I would think that because I'm a product, >>it's a good thing for a product. I don't think so Go >>and we're more than a little opinionated. So >>it is here, >>but yeah. Is that like sure. I mean, with a p I You need a gateway you need for the proxy ap eyes. Wherever they may be, wherever they may be developed. Other you build him and Bumi or you code them yourself when you told him, Manage those and throttle and scale and add policies and, you know, have developers registered to use them and monitor their usage and cut them off and have quotas. All that kind of that is old, fantastically good stuff. You know, there's lots of understeer doing a lot of that. We're adding Maur Mork capabilities there. But for us, a p I is really about AP enabling absolutely everything like we're in this world where you got refrigerators, two autonomous vehicles to cloud infrastructure to pivotal to all these different environments. And you have to have a tool that how do you How do you manage a P I across this incredibly disparate landscape of tools, technologies, things, infrastructure and it's one thing to say. OK, we could manage a P eyes and you install our software. Well, that's not good enough because, you know, with our customer like Jack in the box. They have 2200 plus retail locations. Nice have joked in my keynote that it's like painting Golden Gate Bridge. If you had to upgrade your gateway every time there was enough grade needed. It's like pain the Golden Gate Bridge to get to the end and you start all over again. That's 2200 plus retail locations. You know, I work for Dow. Ultimately is the holy owner of our business. He put five billion P seas on the planet. What if you had a gateway on five billion peces like, How do you manage that from a single control plane in the cloud? And that's what we're after. How do you do that huge scale AP enabling literally everything. >>And this was kind of under the concept of run anywhere that waas Yes, >>yes, yeah, and that was because we wanted to emphasize that it was about running Ap eyes and a pen, enabling things wherever they may be. That's why we put it under the run anywhere Banner. >>What's the biggest thing that you guys have done this year from last movie world that you're proud of? In terms of product or technology or something that could be of some obscure something prominent. What do you do? You proud of? What's the big thing? >>Yeah, well, for a point of perspective, it would be the AP I side for sure, because that was that was a big lift. There was a lot of work involved. We kind of moved ourselves forward very, very quickly in our capabilities on a p I with Gateway portal proxy, you know, literally within the span of just over a year. So that was Ah, big left. But I would, you know, because I also run engineering. So I feel like I need to, like, geek out a little bit. I mean, one of my proud things is, actually, we started wrestling and wrangling that 30 terabytes plus of metadata and starting to see what's in there. And like, anything in data science, you know, you're kind of like looking at weaken start. We started seeing all sorts of cool new things. Now I'm not gonna talk about it the inside side, But you start to see new things. We start to see ways that that meditated can be applied. So we built the infrastructure It's huge scale, massive scale they might have meditated, were ingesting and then analyzing eyes helping us, you know, improve productivity across the platforms. We talk a lot about being more efficient, more effective, so you'll see more of that in the pub. >>Can you clear up the just the commentary around the definition around single tenant instance? And when customers do multi tenant, because the benefit of the single tenants what the main core value proposition with the data, the unification of data? That's awesome. But there's also potential opportunities with customs. Might want have a roll run through things. So you have flexibility. Is that true? Is that the definite Take us through what the difference when, when multi tenant kicks in and what's >>well, so on our platform multi tendencies s. So if you think about the build experience when you're your dragon dropping, pointing, clicking, building your work flows or your processes for managing your data, you do that in the cloud, and then you can decide where you wanna put that. So where is that actually gonna be executed? And you can put it in our cloud, which is our multi tenant cloud, and then you. Could we manage it all for you? And that's fantastic. You can point or manage. Cloud service is if you have very specific requirements, usually around security, Sometimes around hyper scale. Well may put you in a manage cloud service environment. But then, if you have very sensitive data, you may want to run that workload and then stole our little run time. Adam, you know behind your firewall so we never see the data. So it's super sensitive. We don't see it. We >>see how >>it's running and we manage it. We have grade that that infrastructure for you, but we never see your data, so it kind of gives you the best of both worlds. You could be a cloud first, cloud only vendor, and you can be a traditional on perimeter. You could be a hybrid of both >>is not a requirement. The product. It's a customer choice. >>It's a total customer choice. I think that's pretty cool. Yeah, and I think actually we're one of the few that does it the way we've been doing for a long time. And it's hard, by the way, because it's like maintaining that compatibility For 10 plus years, is quite difficult to make sure everything works every time. We have, like 9000 >>customers and 80 plus countries. But on the the 30 plus terabytes of anonymous metadata, you are very clear this morning and saying that it's just the metadata that's not the actual have any any, you know, private information from any of our customers. But in terms of leveraging that data for those insights where some of the things that from last spoon me world to this one, that that access to all that data has what some are. Some of the announcements, maybe that came out today that you guys looked at saying, It's these are some of the nuggets that were able to pull out because we have the access to this musing. Maybe it's a I or what not gonna give you >>some examples in one was the the suggested filters. And it was a simple thing. I did sort of like that joke of It's one small step for Bhumi customers, but a giant leap for booming engineering. But because we rebuild a whole bunch of infrastructure to dio but suggested filters just making it easier to query information of various systems. And it is cool because it literally is looking your system, comparing it with other customers systems based on how you've configured in this case Attilio environment and then working out actually, based on what people are doing. This is kind of what the filter might look like for you, which is very, very personalized to the user. Based on intelligence. We have more That's on the bill tight. We have more on the deployment side because you can show you, actually hey, few of built in a p. I do want to deploy it out, too. A raspberry pie will. Actually, you probably want to configure the AP. I like this where you may find you see some issues here, and that's not static information that's evolving from the metadata. We can see the performance of your systems against the Oxy. All right, In that environment, I do it a bit like this. Or if you deploy to say, I Jules, we might make recommendations based on that process of that, a p I or that data quality hub that you wantto excess just make your systems run like this. So it's kind of predicting how you deployed >>I was about to say, Are you helping customers get predicted with us? >>Yes. And there's lots we can do there. I mean, like, so we'll do Maura. Maura. But we can automatically optimize your deployment. So if it's in our cloud, that that'll happens automatically. So helps us, too. But for customers, it's also making just go. Okay, we'll deploy it. And then the leverage that community to so see what works best. The most successful deployment, the most successful architecture and the way you've deployed it is was what you'll be matched with. And then the same with the run time. With monitoring, we can start to look at things and see will. Well, not slowing down a little bit. Actually, it's Linden the string error. A little bit, actually, based on what we've seen before, that system may be about to fall over, so you might want to get all not before completely does what it's gonna do. >>Well, we got you here. I want to get your definition of cloud two point. Oh, on We've been riffing on this. Been more of a takeoff on Web two point. Oh, because cloud one daughter was anything Amazon you know storage. Compute some networking, but it's Amazon that working. But you scale up start ups will go there. It's beautiful thing, but now it's enterprise. Start to embrace cloud with hybrid on premises and deal with all these hard problems and challenges. Crazy opportunity. An operating model for on premises Cloud Club one Dato Amazon. Really easy to work with. Scales are beautiful. Cloud to point is different. I got things to deal with. Observe, abilities, a hot thing you got kubernetes containers you got. How would you define what cloud? Two pointers for Enterprise? >>We'll think because we're all about the data cloud 2.0, is really like for us. Ah, data problem. I mean, it's just like E think before I mean, I was part of cells force for a while. Is this whole idea of like earlier data in the cloud will manageable for you. But when you're getting into the kind of environments were seeing, say, there's just too much data like you, it's not feasible. I mean, give you an example. Bumi itself. We moved our infrastructure customers was transplanted customers from Rackspace to eight of us Last year it was a big engineering lift to do. You can imagine moving 9000 plus customers over on our cloud Ah, design surface that but so we did that, but actually to move the data, it was so much it was actually faster to put the disk drives in the back of a van. No mobile moving over snowball using the wheel network, you know, the engine motor e one and then put the hard drives in. And then we did our sink to bring them back up so that we have the same data in both locations. And that's just an example of the kind of customer data that customers are routinely struggling with. And cloud wasn't set up for that. But that's becoming day to day now, so you need a highly distributed architecture. It was probably why we announced the Adam Fabric, which is really a fabric of connectivity, as much as is a fabric of data, so we don't need to move your data around. You can leave it where it is. We can do some analysis on it as part of an end to end >>Program Cube alumni that I was on the cube a couple weeks ago, he said. Data is the new software, data and software. What's your reaction to that when you hear that? >>To some extent, >>I think that's a CZ, A bit of a business process geek. I think you know this process around data for sure. But But I do think I've heard similar things with, like, actually, applications come and go. Business processes come and go, but the data remains so I think maybe in some respects, your date is the new software Could be a term I I could buy into a Well, >>Steve, it's been great having you on the Cube with John and me sharing all of the things that you guys have done in the last 11 months. I can't wait to see how everything becomes a P. I enabled. Still, next Bumi World, you gotta come back. Yeah, All right. Our pleasure for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube from Bhumi World 19. Thanks for watching
SUMMARY :
Bumi World 19 to Bide Movie. We have the chief product officer off. Great must meet you But one of my favorite things that you said is that no one Every relates to him in the audience, but it was kind of amusing, Some of the things that you guys said this is what we're going to be really focused on redefining So I mean, a lot of showed last Army, we kind of owe. And when you guys said, Yeah, it's a lot, you know. So yeah, we're excited to show that I think we got a kick out of seeing you together than we give progress on how you don't want to ask you. We have to make sure we keep up And so you have micro service is We're going to send it to you constantly, Used to be in the old days when things were slower, events were like a trigger in a network management software alarm to the, you know, actually integration and surfacing it up in real time and all that kind A A p I to dot or whatever you call it. So we But I think I Were right in the sense that cause I would think that because I'm a product, I don't think so Go So It's like pain the Golden Gate Bridge to get to the end and you start all enabling things wherever they may be. What's the biggest thing that you guys have done this year from last movie world that you're proud of? But I would, you know, So you have flexibility. But then, if you have very sensitive data, you may want to run that workload and then stole our little run time. so it kind of gives you the best of both worlds. It's a customer choice. And it's hard, by the way, because it's like maintaining Some of the announcements, maybe that came out today that you guys looked at saying, We have more on the deployment side because you can show you, actually hey, few of built in a p. so you might want to get all not before completely does what it's gonna do. Well, we got you here. day to day now, so you need a highly distributed architecture. Program Cube alumni that I was on the cube a couple weeks ago, he said. I think you know this process around Steve, it's been great having you on the Cube with John and me sharing all of the things that you guys have done in the last 11
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Andy Tiller | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Steve | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Adam | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Rick | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
John Ferrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
10 plus years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
30 terabytes | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
9000 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
next year | DATE | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
Del | PERSON | 0.99+ |
eight | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
First | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
11 months ago | DATE | 0.99+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
iPods | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.99+ |
80 plus countries | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Golden Gate Bridge | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
30 plus terabytes | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Boomi World | TITLE | 0.99+ |
Washington D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Adam Fabric | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
converse | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
Maura | PERSON | 0.98+ |
five billion peces | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
this year | DATE | 0.98+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Cube | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
both locations | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
single | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
about 1000 people | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
two autonomous vehicles | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Two pointers | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
9000 plus customers | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Program Cube | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
both worlds | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
one thing | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Jules | PERSON | 0.95+ |
Dow | ORGANIZATION | 0.95+ |
One final point | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
five billion P | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
Both ends | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
Washington D. C. | LOCATION | 0.93+ |
over a year | QUANTITY | 0.92+ |
2200 plus retail locations | QUANTITY | 0.91+ |
one small step | QUANTITY | 0.9+ |
two thousands | QUANTITY | 0.89+ |
Cloud Club | ORGANIZATION | 0.86+ |
Bumi World | TITLE | 0.86+ |
this morning | DATE | 0.86+ |
nearly 100 integration points | QUANTITY | 0.86+ |
last 11 months | DATE | 0.85+ |
Bumi World 19 | TITLE | 0.83+ |
Thio | PERSON | 0.82+ |
raspberry | ORGANIZATION | 0.81+ |
Rackspace | ORGANIZATION | 0.81+ |
couple weeks ago | DATE | 0.81+ |
18 | EVENT | 0.8+ |
Bhumi World 19 | TITLE | 0.78+ |
Steve Wood | PERSON | 0.76+ |
Jack | PERSON | 0.76+ |
Cube | TITLE | 0.75+ |
Bumi | LOCATION | 0.74+ |
Aussie | OTHER | 0.74+ |
Will Corkery & Mandy Dhaliwal, Boomi | Boomi World 2019
>>live from Washington, D. C. It's the Cube covering Bumi World >>19 Do you buy movie? >>Welcome to the Cube of Leader in live tech coverage on Lisa Martin John for years with me were a Bumi World in d. C this year Excited to have there could be four really chatty people in this segment warning you now we've got Mandy Dollar while the cmo abou me Anibal Corker s V p of sales guys welcome thistles been in Austin. This is day one of the main event partner event started yesterday Partner Summit One of the things that is always very resonant with Bhumi events as you get this sense of collaboration with your partners with your customers and it's very symbiotic. So some of the numbers that came out today I wanted to kind of geek out on numbers because last boom, the world was on the 11 months ago, and I think the numbers we were talking about where 7500 customers adding five new a day. Now it's over 9000 in over 80 countries. Your partner program is blowing up 580 partners, incredible growth. And Chris McNab told Jonah me earlier today. This event? Actually, no, he said in the keynote five x What? It was the first event. Wow. You guys all look very refreshed for being this busy facade. Mandy, talk to us about what's going on. Abou me from your perspective. The new branding is really cool to have that represent what booby is delivering. We're at a >>growth trajectory and we had to refresh our brand to put a new face on this business so we could accelerate our growth. This is a whole new boo me to the world. When I stood up, it sails kick off earlier this year. In February, we reposition the company and focused ourselves on selling solutions. And as a part of that strategy, to start to amplify this brand to really become more of a known entity in the market, it was time for us to polish the brand up. You know, we had tremendous product market fit for many years. We just forgot to tell the world. So when I came on board, I can't keep a secret. Here I am Brandy. Look and feel. Lots of new customer stories. We're accelerating outcomes. >>Very clean. Logo queen branding. What's the brand promise. Where do you want to take the brand? What's next? Where's this going? Take us through the vision. >>Great question. The vision for the business Is that why we exist? We went through and, you know, we deliver a connected business experience that the real reason why we exist is to accelerate business outcomes for our customers. That is our vision, all right. We're connecting and unifying everything in a ditch. Digital ecosystem. The world has gone digital. No longer is software eating the world digital. Is the new game in town gloomy as well. Poised to go do that? That is the vision. And it's all about the customer and sharing their stories and the winds that they have worthy, enabling technology that drives that outcome faster and better than anybody else >>we had on earlier the founder of Bumi sharing early successes, Lisa asked him the background behind all started, and he said, we made a big bet and self aware Founder said We got lucky and he got lucky. Made a big bet on cloud. Now you guys have 9000 customers. Last year, your number one number one priority was customer success equation then the keynote again this year. You guys are crazy about customer outcomes. What >>is >>that mean? You hear customer success equation? What is the equation? Because the math equation isn't like, is it? What? What is the formula? >>Well, I think it entails a couple of key things. It starts with the product right, and it doing exactly what people are looking for it to do. And the reality is most people come in and they have an idea that they want to do X, and they really end up doing X plus y Times E. And and that becomes that's a big part of it. So getting to understand the platform and then showing them, you know that we really care about their success, that in fact it's either win, win relationship or lose lose, we have to make them successful. We have a tremendous muscle when it comes to customer success and our support efforts and those types of things. So just making sure that they're on the right journey, that they're leveraging the platform that's doing what they wanted to do. And again, we're seeing so many customers come back in now because of that and thinking that they can solve so many more problems than what they originally anticipate >>talking on our opening around. Um, you're successful business model like you talk more about that. But in contrast to what we've been reporting on our sites and silken angle in the Cube is Wall Street sees we work pulled their I p o uber, all these big companies, they buy market share, get a position, and then they try to crank the monetization. They're not being looked upon favorably right now, because that entails extracts from the customer. You guys are more on the other side, the Cloud SAS model, which is provide value if you need more, buy more, lower price fits increased. That's an Amazon like flywheel. Yeah, So you guys are on the positive side of the SAS formula as you have that first you guys agree with that's happening. But what do you say to customers who is booming? Because now you're you have leverage software business. Yeah, we have the professional service is what does this mean for customers? >>We'll get I would say that what it means is that they can come in and solve a problem so much faster than they ever thought they could solve it before. They're thinking they want to go on a journey. Everyone talks about the journey right, and it all. It comes in about 1000 different shapes and sizes. And with Bumi having a layer like this to be able to connect, what you need to connect when you need to connect it, how you need to connect it, that's and doing that in such in a fashion that no one ever really thought. And again. You said you had Rick Nucci and in the Founder where they thought I just talked to a minute ago. And I always say he was talking about how he was listening to some of the customers success stories. And I looked at him. I said You didn't think they were ever going to do all this stuff, that they could do all these things And he said, You know what? We didn't anticipate. It really didn't and so getting them to do that. But the key, to be honest, a big part of our growth, although we're acquiring lots of new logo. Certainly, as you mentioned, let's new customers a huge part of our growth is that again people are going, man. OK, I I brought in a new SAS application service now, or something like that. Okay, that's good. But I've got all these FTP problems and I've got this database issue and I need to be able to leverage this existing on Premiere P. And now I'm going to work Day and I have to be able to, and it's just it's just we see them just starting to get very creative about how they're leveraging the fact >>it's opening up. You say, you know, from a marketing perspective, unlocking potential. But it's really true. I I saw yesterday first and the manifestation of the Bumi fandom. That's rial. I was talking to one of your customers who integrated use integration for a particular opportunity. I thought there might be some, you know? Wow, there's gonna be a lot of data coming out. What can we do with this? And all of the, um, kind of side benefits that came from that they couldn't have predicted. Neither could have Rick Nucci, but how they're able to become even, you know, as a transportation logistics provider, trusted advisors to the carriers and the shippers that work with them. And then they're realizing, Oh, actually what we're doing, you know, under the hood with Bhumi is making a carrier more productive because the workload is less less clicks, etcetera. So it's really it shows the transformation doesn't just stay within your customer, their customers as well. The sort of this snowball effect. It really got that resoundingly yesterday from summer combo, >>where we see the people, the customers figure out if this becomes a common data layer for their monetization journey, right. So now they have control of all this data, no matter where it is and how it's going out in public cloud private clouds, public's ask, whatever it is, and then they now they've got control. They can become creative with the data. Now they can provide new service is to customers and suppliers and partners and internal stakeholders, whatever it might be. And I think that's that's it. Haven't clicked for us a couple years ago, and Mandy has been great about making that really how we send the message and it's really seen takeoff. >>We really speak about transformation, right? That's business processes. That's customer experience. How do you take that data and build upon it using our flow capabilities and take thes wrote processes and start to have them automated in a way that you're driving new customer experiences. Right? Employees on boarding is one that we use internally. We talked about it before our MPs went from a negative. I don't know, two incredibly positive, right? That's what this technology can do. Once you have that data layer in, we become that enabling technology to to go drive these additional >>out. And he has net promoter score for the folks at the jargon that this piece of a good point with the new branding we saw, it resonates. Well, it's gonna create a lot of brand impressions. I know you've done a great job of getting it out there. It's only gonna get better. But you get the brain of pressure. Then I want to know who is booming. If they know Bhumi, who what's the new room? We're gonna be like, What's the plan? How we're going to scale up the messaging? How you gonna take it? The market with the brand, There >>s O. Our core strategic initiatives are really what's on top of mind for Cee Io's right connection is important. That the stuff that will talked about in terms of on Prem and multi hybrid cloud scenarios right modernization, right? Getting stuff off of legacy Fed has a massive opportunity in terms of modernization. We're seeing that already. You know, we were Fed RAM certified in August. We've already got her for stealing the door. Congratulations. A fantastic opportunity on modernization, transformation. The stuff I spoke about customer experience, the one I'm particularly excited about. This is the marketing strategy coming through the innovation layer. We have a quick serve retailer that is now taking facial recognition. When I go through a drive thru triangulating my data with Maya vehicle license plate, making me on the spot loyalty offers and also saying, Oh, Mandy, would you like your regular breath breakfast sandwich Order That is the artist >>or not, you're in a good mood or Rolls Express. Oh, >>yes, >>minutes late today she's going to storm through here, right? Like that level of sentiment analysis based on my voice. The other stuff we heard this morning, right? We're triangulating all of that to go Dr whole new ways of doing business. So that's what I find hard. Your >>ecosystem is a key part of any growth strategy. I have to get the customer equation I loved. Loved the business model. You know, a big fan Disclose that everyone knows that. But be successful. You guys have a challenge. You have to grow the brand. You had to build the ecosystem, build the community with education pieces again. They're these >>air >>real blocking and tackling things. What? You guys, what's your opinion? What do you guys gonna do with that? Give us the playbook. >>We've brought it all together under one brand now, right Community saw this morning the boom Evers. The >>asked 1000 people in that community manager. >>Absolutely. And now we are ready for exponential growth, right? We have a way to game. If I We have a way to certify and train more people are partners. Demand it. There's a skills gap in the market in technology. That's a known fact for many years. So how do we quickly enable intelligence around the Bumi platform and mind trust and share? So that's something that's gonna happen. So we're creating this in waves were creating a viral ality component to our community right, all under the Bumi brand. So it all becomes additive. And that was important for us, as far as a growing up as a business is. Well, we're We're on this fast growth trajectory and everybody's off doing their thing. So I came in and said, All right, guys, let's let's build some cohesion here and that is going to help us as we scale this business >>will. On the sales side, you're gonna get a lot of pull now from the marketing Digital's. A lot of organic stuff goes on digital. We know we do a lot of cubes that we see the data. You guys still get the lead. You got too close sale cycles. This is kind of the business side of it. How's that going? What's that? What's an engagement looked like? How fast do Customs committees that word of mouth they talk to each other? What if some of the dynamics in the field? >>Well, we're seeing some of those times shrink. It's weird. I've been here seven years, so it's, you know, my team then was like 10. Now it's 470 or something, and so we've grown very fast, but it's on. We came in before. It was kind of like a connection deal. Last minute I thought, you know Oh gosh, I got an immigration problem. But now, a couple years later, it started really extending because it became a little more strategic. But now we're starting to see it shrink because people realize they're bringing it in, and they know that it's something that's key to what they have to do. What we're seeing is, is it's it's It's something that all of our partners are partners air so critical to helping us with the journey because we're really still just talking about one little piece of that larger pie. And so they come in and become with Come in with us every single time and we're globalizing as you mentioned all the countries that we're doing this in. But you know, France and Germany, or big efforts for Japan, the Fed those were like four areas. If I could pick that partners and how we're going to those markets >>are credible. Follow up on that. Just as you guys are getting these deals. Whats When does a customer know they have a Bumi opportunity? What is their problems? or a moment Is that a certain use cases? It like, Wow, I got integration problem. Is it integration? Problem called Boo me. What's that? What's the success pattern that you're seeing for the winds? >>You know, I'm gonna go back to the four that we talked about because, you know, part of part of my challenges, the sales leader for seven years was I've said this is the most organic technology I've ever I've ever dealt with. Representative. Because when we walked in, it could go anywhere. People wanted to do Data Analytics. They wanted to solve that TP problem. They wanted to do front. And you heard Olive from Sky. And she's thinking front end customer support stuff. So it really could go anywhere now is always always about managing data and collecting it. But, I mean, it really was. It comes from so many places, and the sale cycle has been, you know, has changed because of it. >>So as the marketing and the brand have evolved since Mandy spent on board, how much are you time? Are you still spending describing? Okay. So Bumi is how much more brand awareness and recognition do you have now? And how is that making the job easier? Because the attention the renewal rate is really high. 97%. >>Yeah, what's actually almost 99% from our field customers, and then we get over AM customers as well, about 97%. So how do we How do we keep the customers >>in terms of brand awareness, all the recognition? How much if you compared to seven years ago, when you were having to say, Well, buoy is now with Chris, McNall said, Hey, there's gonna be 100 different mentions of customer stories at this event alone. How much easier is your job? Enough sense? Because people are now much more aware of Bloomie's capability. >>I think people realize they need. This is what I say to all of our partners and even we're talking Deltek people. Every single customer will invest in this type of technology over the next several years. It might be a very tactical thing to do, but but call it a night pass. Call it a simpler way to connect and manage and access your data. So, yes, we're proud we're over that bridge to say OK, this is what was legitimate I think we're still having conversations about how strategic it is. But again, that's typically an interpretive process. We weigh very rarely come in and say Someone says, Oh, I'm going to replace all of this So it is. It's I'm going to solve this problem And then they go, Oh, all right now And its architects and leaders are going, Oh, well, we could solve all of these other problems that we've had >>Well, and if I may, they say, normally it would have taken me months to do this and you did it in days. Yes, we're interested. So that's that's the value. Proper >>the equation. Accelerate, right? >>Well, they were. The thing that we're observing is that the projects are increasing, not decreasing, and the number of project because they could be little things. That's right. That time to value is the proof points versus the long monolith proposal. It's up and running, and the jet states for months and months. >>Well, you talk about the integrators that we have so many integrators that we work with. We were worried at first years ago. Are we taking their business from them a little bit right? Because they have a lot of folks who are focused on that. But what they found is they're solving problems faster. But they're just doing the time. More problems, right? There's that there's this. Projects are growing. >>What I love about your business model is that the trend that we're covering is it's not I t setting the pace of projects. It's the projects themselves that then dictate to the cloud scale. And so I think you guys are tipping on this new we call Cloud to point out, which is it's completely flipped around anyone. If it's a mission based organization or for profit, there's a project to do something valid. You That's right. I t is just has to support it, not dictate terms. So this is a whole different level of thinking. Having the SAS business model >>well and layer in the usability of the product, right? The interface We go after citizen integrators lines of business. I can go build something for my marketing text back that's powerful, >>and the veterans examples of great one of the key No. Two people have to get done and they make a difference. They create value, >>absolutely speaking of value, this event is five x bigger then it was two years ago. Mandy, congratulations on everything that you guys have done. The voices of your customers are couldn't be stronger. That's the best friend validation that you can get. We're excited to be here. We've had a great day. One can't wait for day two tomorrow. >>Yeah. What are you doing? The product. >>Yes, I do. And more customers as well. We could all live on from sky, for example. Jillian is on. I think candy dot com hopefully is gonna bring in some candy. >>Yes, they well, two ton can. Absolutely. There's candy right back >>here. Awesome, guys. Thank you, Will and Mandy. So much for having the cube here and joining with us today. >>Thank you for your support. It's always great to chat with you about >>our pleasure. See, I told you it's gonna be chatty. John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube from Bhumi World 2019. Thanks for watching
SUMMARY :
live from Washington, D. C. It's the Cube covering that is always very resonant with Bhumi events as you get this sense of collaboration with And as a part of that strategy, to start to amplify this brand to really become What's the brand promise. And it's all about the customer and sharing their stories and the winds that they have worthy, Now you guys have 9000 customers. And the reality is most people You guys are more on the other side, the Cloud SAS model, which is provide value if you need more, But the key, to be honest, a big part of our growth, And then they're realizing, Oh, actually what we're doing, you know, and Mandy has been great about making that really how we send the message and it's really seen takeoff. Once you have that data layer in, we become that enabling technology And he has net promoter score for the folks at the jargon that this piece of a good and also saying, Oh, Mandy, would you like your regular breath breakfast sandwich Order That is the artist or not, you're in a good mood or Rolls Express. So that's what I find hard. I have to get the customer equation I loved. What do you guys gonna do with that? We've brought it all together under one brand now, right Community saw this morning the boom Evers. All right, guys, let's let's build some cohesion here and that is going to help us as we scale this business This is kind of the business side of it. bringing it in, and they know that it's something that's key to what they have to do. What's the success pattern that you're seeing for the winds? You know, I'm gonna go back to the four that we talked about because, you know, part of part of my challenges, And how is that making the job easier? So how do we How do we keep the customers in terms of brand awareness, all the recognition? over the next several years. Well, and if I may, they say, normally it would have taken me months to do this and you did it in days. the equation. not decreasing, and the number of project because they could be little things. Well, you talk about the integrators that we have so many integrators that we work with. It's the projects themselves that then dictate to the cloud I can go build something for my marketing text back that's powerful, and the veterans examples of great one of the key No. That's the best friend validation that you can get. The product. And more customers as well. Yes, they well, two ton can. So much for having the cube here and joining with It's always great to chat with you about See, I told you it's gonna be chatty.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Chris McNab | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John Ferrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Will | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Mandy | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jillian | PERSON | 0.99+ |
August | DATE | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
February | DATE | 0.99+ |
Austin | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Chris | PERSON | 0.99+ |
580 partners | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
seven years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Washington, D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
Fed | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
9000 customers | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
7500 customers | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Rick Nucci | PERSON | 0.99+ |
97% | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Mandy Dollar | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Deltek | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
tomorrow | DATE | 0.99+ |
Mandy Dhaliwal | PERSON | 0.99+ |
1000 people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
first event | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
five | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
two ton | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Two people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
first years ago | DATE | 0.99+ |
this year | DATE | 0.99+ |
over 80 countries | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
uber | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
seven years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
Will Corkery | PERSON | 0.98+ |
Bhumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
two years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
10 | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
over 9000 | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Bloomie | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
McNall | PERSON | 0.97+ |
Lisa Martin John | PERSON | 0.97+ |
about 97% | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
11 months ago | DATE | 0.97+ |
almost 99% | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
flywheel | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
Rolls Express | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
100 different mentions | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
470 | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
d. C | LOCATION | 0.96+ |
day two | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
a couple years later | DATE | 0.95+ |
Boomi World | TITLE | 0.95+ |
Olive | PERSON | 0.94+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
one little piece | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
candy dot com | ORGANIZATION | 0.93+ |
four | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
earlier this year | DATE | 0.93+ |
Bhumi World | TITLE | 0.93+ |
this morning | DATE | 0.93+ |
Maya | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
five new a day | QUANTITY | 0.92+ |
Brandy | ORGANIZATION | 0.91+ |
SAS | ORGANIZATION | 0.9+ |
19 | QUANTITY | 0.9+ |
2019 | DATE | 0.9+ |
a minute ago | DATE | 0.9+ |
earlier today | DATE | 0.89+ |
four areas | QUANTITY | 0.89+ |
Sky | ORGANIZATION | 0.88+ |
about 1000 different shapes | QUANTITY | 0.87+ |
Anibal Corker | PERSON | 0.87+ |
Kenny Oxler, American Cancer Society | Boomi World 2019
>>live from Washington, D. C. It's the Cube covering Bumi World 19. >>Do you buy movie? >>Welcome to the Cube. I'm Lisa Martin at Bumi World 2019 in Washington, D. C. Been here all day. Had some great conversations. One of my favorite things about movie is how impactful they are making their customers. And I'm very pleased to welcome the CEO off American Cancer Society. Kenny Ocular Kenny, Welcome to the Cube. >>Thank you. Happy to be here. >>Really? Enjoyed your keynote this morning on stage with Chris McNab. You know, the American Cancer Society is one of those organizations. I think that that impacts every single person on this planet in some way or another. We've all been touched by cancer, and it's so it's so interesting to look at it as how is technology fueling the American Cancer Society? Your CEO talk to us a little bit about what you guys are doing with booming. How Bhumi is really helping you guys two integrate all these different systems so that an agency is old and historic as a C s is is really transforming to be a modern kind of cloud driven organization. >>Yeah, I think all organizations now are becoming I t organizations. It's their heart, and it's important for us to the American Cancer Society to interact with. Our constituents are volunteers. Our patients are staff right in a digital way. So it is critically important that we are right there with everybody else, uh, interacting with them. And so, whether they're on the go and doing it on their mobile phone or, you know, at the doctor's office talking with their doctor about treatment options that were there to help them get them what they need, an information for their best chance to beat the beat the disease. >>So talk to me first about the business transformation that the American Cancer Society winter before your time there. But first it was. We have all these different organizations different leadership, different I t infrastructure, different financial operations model. Talk to us about first powdered it transform from a business like process perspective and then start looking at digital transformation. >>So some of it happened at the same time the organization made the decision back in about 2012 to consolidate other organizations. We were we kind of run ran regionally at the time and each independent, different region. There were 13 different regions kind of ran independently with their own I T systems. There were some shared technologies that we had of the organization, starting in about 2012 decided that no, we wanted to centralize our model and come together. We thought it was a more efficient manner and allowed us, in essence, to doom or for our mission, which is the ultimate goal. So there was a lot of consolidation around people on organization. Some of the processes I will say, God, God consolidated. Some are still going through some of that transformation. So after we kind of keep brought the organization's together and some of the people together, we kind of looked at Where are we with our technology and how do we move forward into the 21st century and do that effectively? And so at the time, we did kind of an analysis of our current state. As I mentioned in the keynote, we had a lot of technologies >>that were just older, had kind of run their course for >>end of life or just become that, you know, over change over a decade of changes and just being a monstrous the e meth or systems. That way, we're really struggling to keep up right both in terms of change and enhancement and delivering those capabilities back to our constituents. So we decided that no, it's time for us to move to a new and technology modernization effort, and we really wanted to be on the cloud first strategy. So we were looking at our cloud vendors and everything else. And one of the big selections was, as we chose Salesforce's R C R M platform we chose. Net Suite is our financially rp platform that we we could consolidate all those. And then as a part of that, we were looking at all of the leftover processes that weren't standardized, that we were still doing differently, that we could simplify. So taking stuff from 21 steps down to six steps if we could, you know, et cetera, and bringing that along with the transformation just to create more efficiencies for us and then, at the end of the day, driving a better end user experience with your volunteer, your staff, your patient, et cetera, >>it's a tremendous amount of data just in a serum like cells fours and Oracle Net Sweet. What was the thought and the opportunity to actually put an integration platform to enable that data to be shared between the applications and enabled whether it's providers or as you said volunteers, and we'll talk about that? And second, to be ableto have an experience that allows them to get whatever is that they're looking for. Talk to us about integration and sort of that driving kind of hub centralized hub aspect. >>Yeah. I mean, with any business data is key. And historically, we had our data was was >>spread out across multiple systems but then didn't always sync up. So you'd have you know you'd pull a report out of one system and say something different than when you looked at another system. So one of the key foundational tenets with the transformation was is we wanted our data to be in sync. We >>wanted to be able to see the same things no matter where you were looking. At that way, we we were all looking at the same information and basically a single source of truth. Yes, and boom. He was a critical component of that, right? With their integration platform, they were going to be our integration hub that is going >>to keep everything in sync. So we knew we had over, Um well, we had 100 and 20 applications that ultimately were a part of it. There were probably 20 major ones that had most of our data in there. And then boom. He is integrating all of those. So when information's coming across, whether it's coming in from, ah, donation made or an event participants or a patient referral form, all of that data comes in, comes in through Bumi, and it's propagated, orchestrated across the systems as it needs to be to make sure that it has all of the right information in it, that the data is as clean as we can make it, and it's all in sync. At the end of the day, >>that's critical. Having the data is great, but if you actually can't utilize an extract values from that, it's I don't want a worthless, but it's clearly the value, and they're you know, >>it's a lot harder to make good business decisions without good data, >>right? And when we're talking about something like patients dealing with with very, very scary situations, being able to Matt, whether it's matching a volunteer with ah mentor with a patient is going through something similar that could be game changing in lives and really kind of propagate. Talk to me about this service match that you guys have built with Bhumi. I think it's such a great service that you guys are delivering. Tell us about that. What it's enabling. >>So service matches an application that is part of our road to recovery program, where we provide rides for cancer patients to and from cancer treatment So often when you're getting chemo therapy, driving after chemotherapy is not an option. And ah, lot of a patient's have trouble with caregivers and family, always helping them. So the American Cancer Society provides this program to provide those rides free of charge for cancer patients. And the service match application is about connecting those patients to volunteers for the rides. So if if a patient calls in, they say, I need a ride, this is what time I'm going etcetera. They can do that now online as well, and we can connect them with a volunteer. So then that goes out to our volunteer community and somebody can say I can do that. I can help this person out, connects them up so that they can get to their treatments on time. >>That's so fantastic. And such a impact that you guys could make isn't something where you guys were integrating on the background with, like, a rideshare service or these just folks like Hey, I've got a car that seats five I want to help is it is available. It is. It is available to anybody. Anybody can >>volunteer, and most of the rides are handled volunteers If we cannot find a volunteer, we have a lot of great partners that worked with the American Cancer Society. They can provide those rideshare opportunities, so we'll make it happen and and get the patient to their treatment >>to talk to me about the ability to do that. That's a one great application of what you guys are doing with Bhumi. What was the actual building? That application? How long did it take to be able to say, Hey, we had this idea? We can connect these systems. We can facilitate something that's critical in the care of the patients. What was that kind of build an implementation like because when we talked a lot about time to value. And we've talked about that a lot today. So talk to me about it through that lens >>eso for us. We started on we're all on spreadsheets, right and paper. And yeah, it was it was about a 12 months process actually build some of the the service match application itself. The bony implementation came in as part of our transformation to make sure that all of the systems were integrated with that. So as people are requesting rides or whether that's through the call center or going through the website, that that information is there, that they can help patients with it. So if they need to change the schedule or do something different, that those all take place and that everybody has the latest information, it also enables us has were as changes are happening or even the rides are taking place. Notifications air going back out and back and forth so that everybody is up to date on all of the activity that's taking place. >>And to date, you guys have helped with service match alone Nearly 30,000 patients. >>Yeah, we we service. I think It's 30,000 patients a year. >>Wow. >>On the on the platform, we, uh, over 500,000 rides have been delivered since its inception. >>And And when was that inception? >>I'd have to look at the date. I don't >>know. A couple years ago were in the last. >>It's been It's probably been in over a decade now. >>Okay, that's awesome. So another thing. I'm curious. Four volunteers who want to do to raise funds to support the American Cancer Society is integration kind of essential component. You're smiling. So I think the answer is I think I know the answer. Talk to us about how, um, Bhumi is helping a CS to deliver, you know, a more seamless, a better fundraising experience for anybody that wants to actually go out and do that. >>Yeah. So we have a lot of donation processing systems that that that we leverage As for the American Cancer Society, because part of what we want to do is make it easy for people to raise money and raise it in their way. Right? So we have multiple systems, both from all the events that we do, whether it's the relay for life, for the making strides against breast cancer, which are two of our major event platforms. But we also have raised your way platforms. So if you want to do it yourself and you want to host a wine front razer with your friends and raise some money, we can absolutely help you do that as well. And what we do is we take all that information from all of that that from those events, and then bring that into the system so that we know what happened when who you were, so we can properly thank you. You can also get your tax credits and and all of the other things that go along with it. So >>that's awesome. So I want to ask you from a CEO's perspective, Bumi being a A single instance multi tenant cloud application delivered as a service to you and your previous role before you came to the American Cancer Society was insurance. Talk to me about that as a differentiator. What is that as a. C s continues to scale on, offer more programs and have more data to integrate roomies architecture and your perspective is that something that gives the A. C. S really a leg up to be able to do more, more. >>Absolutely. I think boonies, low code development strategy is is a differentiated for anybody that's using the platform it. We have been able to deliver Maur integrations in a shorter amount of time with our transformation than I've done in the past with other integration platforms or just developing it. I'll say the old fashioned way with Java or C sharp. So I think I think it's an integration platform. It's it's It's a real game changer in terms of what enterprises can do in terms of delivering, uh, faster and with Maur stability and performance than in the past, >>which is critical for many businesses that obviously yours included. They also take a look back at your previous role in a different industry. How is the role of the CEO changing in your perspective as things are moving to the cloud? But there's the explosion of edge and this consume arised implementation, right or influence because as consumers, we have access to everything and we want to be able to transact anything, whether it's signing up to be a volunteer or an actual patient needing to have access to records or a ride? How How is that consumers ation effect changing the role of the CEO, opening up more opportunities? >>Yeah, that's a big question. >>Sorry. It's >>okay. Um, yeah, I think the role of C I. O. Is changing significantly in terms of they are required to be more of a business leader are as much as a business leader as as any of the other C suite executives. And it is justice critical for them to understand the business where it's going be a part of the strategy with it and helped drive. From that perspective, The consumer ization component is actually in some ways, I think, making the c i o in the i t. Job a little bit harder. There's, um there's a lot that goes into making sure that what we're doing is secure on, performs well and sometimes just the overall consumer ization of technology. It looks so easy sometimes, and sometimes it's easy to underestimate some of the the complex nature of what we're doing and the level of security that needs to be applied to make sure that were protecting our constituents and making sure that their data is safe and secure. >>How does Boonmee help facilitate doctors? You right? We talk about security all the time. In any industry. How is what you're doing with Louis giving you maybe that peace of mind or or the confidence that what's being moved around as data and applications migrate, that you've got a secure, safe environment? That data? >>Yeah, I think Bumi does several things. First off, they've got a lot of security certifications is a part of their program. They make it relatively easy to to leverage that they allow us to deploy the the atoms where we need to. So whether that's on Prem or in our own tenants, behind our firewalls, all of those things will allow us to deploy it in whatever method we feel is most secure based on the data that we're trying to move >>except Well, Kenny, it's been a pleasure having you on the Cube just really quickly. Where can we go if we want to become a volunteered to help patients >>san sir dot org's >>cancer dot org's Awesome Kenny has been a pleasure. Thank you so much. Thank congratulations on the massive impact that A C S is making not just with Bhumi, but in the lives of many, many people. We appreciate your time. >>We're very excited and happy. We can help. >>All right. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube from Bhumi World 2019. Thanks for watching.
SUMMARY :
live from Washington, D. C. It's the Cube covering Kenny Ocular Kenny, Welcome to the Cube. Happy to be here. Your CEO talk to us a little bit about what you guys are doing with booming. So it is critically important that we are right there with everybody else, So talk to me first about the business transformation that the American Cancer Society winter before the people together, we kind of looked at Where are we with our technology and how down to six steps if we could, you know, et cetera, and bringing that along with the transformation Talk to us about integration and sort of that driving kind of hub centralized hub we had our data was was So one of the key foundational tenets with the transformation was is we wanted our data to be we we were all looking at the same information and basically a single source of truth. and it's propagated, orchestrated across the systems as it needs to be to make sure that it has all Having the data is great, but if you actually can't utilize an extract values Talk to me about this service match that you guys have built with Bhumi. So service matches an application that is part of our road to recovery program, And such a impact that you guys could make isn't something we have a lot of great partners that worked with the American Cancer Society. How long did it take to be able to say, Hey, we had this idea? So if they need to change the schedule or do something different, that those all take place and Yeah, we we service. On the on the platform, we, uh, over 500,000 rides I'd have to look at the date. Talk to us about how, um, Bhumi is helping a CS to deliver, systems, both from all the events that we do, whether it's the relay for life, for the making strides against breast cancer, delivered as a service to you and your previous role before you came to the American Cancer Society was insurance. I'll say the old fashioned way with Java or C sharp. How How is that consumers ation effect changing the role of It's security that needs to be applied to make sure that were protecting our constituents maybe that peace of mind or or the confidence that what's being moved around as is most secure based on the data that we're trying to move Where can we go if we want to become impact that A C S is making not just with Bhumi, but in the lives of many, many people. We can help. Thanks for watching.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Chris McNab | PERSON | 0.99+ |
American Cancer Society | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Kenny Oxler | PERSON | 0.99+ |
American Cancer Society | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
100 | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
30,000 patients | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
six steps | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
21st century | DATE | 0.99+ |
20 applications | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Kenny | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Washington, D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Washington, D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
21 steps | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
Matt | PERSON | 0.99+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Java | TITLE | 0.99+ |
Four volunteers | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
second | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
over 500,000 rides | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
one system | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
First | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
13 different regions | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Bhumi | PERSON | 0.98+ |
Bhumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
five | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Salesforce | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
single | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
each | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
first strategy | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Nearly 30,000 patients | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
C sharp | TITLE | 0.95+ |
single source | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
20 major | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
2019 | DATE | 0.92+ |
2012 | DATE | 0.9+ |
12 months | QUANTITY | 0.88+ |
Kenny Ocular Kenny | PERSON | 0.86+ |
couple years ago | DATE | 0.85+ |
a year | QUANTITY | 0.8+ |
over a decade | QUANTITY | 0.79+ |
this morning | DATE | 0.78+ |
every single person | QUANTITY | 0.78+ |
Cube | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.78+ |
Boonmee | ORGANIZATION | 0.77+ |
God | PERSON | 0.76+ |
Net Suite | TITLE | 0.73+ |
C S | ORGANIZATION | 0.71+ |
Cube from | TITLE | 0.71+ |
Boomi World | TITLE | 0.7+ |
Bumi World 2019 | EVENT | 0.61+ |
Bhumi World | TITLE | 0.61+ |
Prem | ORGANIZATION | 0.6+ |
C. S | TITLE | 0.57+ |
racle Net Sweet | ORGANIZATION | 0.57+ |
major event platforms | QUANTITY | 0.57+ |
cancer dot org | OTHER | 0.56+ |
about | QUANTITY | 0.55+ |
Louis | PERSON | 0.49+ |
Bumi World 19 | TITLE | 0.47+ |
org | OTHER | 0.4+ |
Keynote Analysis | Boomi World 2019
live from Washington DC it's the cube covering booby world 19 to you by booby welcome to the cubes coverage of boomy world 2019 I'm Lisa Martin with John Fourier John it's great to be back hosting gloomy world with you in DC this year last year in Vegas this year in DC a lot of government business a lot of public sector a lot of tech for good going on in the keynotes we will be continuing to take their culture expanding this cloud mindset and service model low code data integration unified platforms boomy verts a new introduction a lot of great announcements a great company I like I'm like I like gloomy I do too the energy here is great you know Lumi world 2018 was only 11 months ago John you mentioned we were in Vegas and they have added another 1500 plus new customers now there are over nine thousand customers in 80 countries 580 partners and customers are crossing every industry I had a great opportunity to speak with about a dozen boomy customers in the last week and their Bhoomi fandom it sounds kind of silly but it's really true what they have enabled their customers to achieve like this morning we heard from American Cancer Society for example Gilead leading hotels of the world is really enabling businesses to transform yeah you know day Volante and i we started covering the big data world in 2010 when we first started the cube you know one of the things that they observe and the research was that the value was going to be created and captured by practitioners not so much the vendor selling product at that point but it was cloud computing you know the theme of Bumi is business outcomes accelerated and the big trend that's driving it is that practitioners who are launching projects of either aanchal in the cloud or on-premise premises they're the ones who are getting the value out of it so what's happening is you're seeing with the ability to start projects quickly small projects and the number of projects a company has in their digital transformation is increasing this is the mega trend and from those projects whether it's a mobile app or a SAS solution or anything it's thrown off data so what's happening is you have this trend trend of more projects with the need to get them up and running fast getting to value and that is where Bumi's kind of hit their sweet spot because they got a platform that allows people to launch projects fast small medium or large projects and get them done quickly and that's throwing off value but from the value not only is the doubling down on those projects it's the data so the unification of the data and integrating it in it really kind of is Nirvana for a business owner a developer or an application because the platform allows that to happen and that's where this new world of Cloud 2.0 is kind of hitting its stride right now and that's why companies are getting the profitability and the old model of you know get growth at all costs and losses like we see on the public markets we work in other unicorns they're just investing to take territory and the profits aren't there because they're not enabling those kinds of outcomes so I think Bumi's in a nice spot I think is a nice portfolio for Dell to have this company I think this is gonna be the next pivotal I think what pivotal did with JAL technologies was a big part of their growth I think that and they were very successful in public then they ended up getting bought back by VMware and Dell technologies I think Bumi's the next rising star in the Dell technologies portfolio they won't say that publicly they won't say it on the record they won't even admit it privately but that's kind of what's going on well when we were at Dell technology's world Jon covering the cube with two sets for three days Michael talked about Michael Dell talked about Bumi as the number one cloud integration platform and as the iPad market has evolved in the last ten years you know it's gone from needing to connect cloud to on-prem unprimed edge and Bumi's uniquely positioned as this single instance multi-tenant cloud application delivered as a service and as Chris McNab CEO of Bhumi says who will be on momentarily with us our unfair advantage is our customers and the customers are all leveraging the platforms we just talked about the outcomes with the projects but here's the other advantage that bloomie has they have a anonymized data model where they get the benefit of the collective customer base so the collective data can give them better insights and companies that are successful that have gone public recently coppa software and others these guys are using the data create more advantage for their customers again this is one of those again nuance points but that's where the value is the value is in the day to date is the new software and this is where the advantage is interesting Michael Dell is interested in Bhumi I asked him around 2014 you know outside of VMware the crown jewel of Dell I said what are you interested in and he said pivotal and he was geeking out on pivotal because he saw the value of pivotal last year I asked Michael Dell what do you want sitting down and he said Bhumi I think he sees Bhumi as a key element in that bringing the glue together for the overall dealt with technology platform well there's a great story how when Dell was acquiring many companies not too long ago Gumi was really the center of that universe for facilitating these integrations you talk about data we talk about it John at every show customers do as well whether you're calling it the new oil gold the lifeblood currency of an organization if it is siloed in hundreds of applications and a business cannot trust where's my single source of truth its value cannot be harnessed and one of the things Bhoomi does really well with master data hub is to allow I think they said there they can connect now with over 1500 endpoints like Salesforce NetSuite for example allowing customers to synchronize data between applications dramatically transforming everything from customer our employee onboarding to a call center experience yeah I mean I think the digital transformation is a topic that's been talking about ad nauseam it's been kicked around become a cliche but we look at digital transformation it's people process and technologies and the process and technology side people have good visibility and what the options are out they get cloud you've got on-premise got a lot of software software-defined stuff but the people equation is interesting we were just at Red Hat's ansible Fest last week and in the automation space on the DevOps side the people are actually getting the outcomes that they need and that value piece and we were talking about that's the third leg of the stool of digital transformation so Dell tech Gee's has boomy which hits that spot directly the people here are achieving their outcomes that they want in their projects they're getting that value that energizes the people component and helps the cultural shift on digital transformation so I think the people aspect of what boom he's doing is super critical that is the the final chapter of digital transformation people process technology processes are up being automated the technology's there it's the people equation and they're doing it you're right they are doing it and that's hard a number of customers have Bumi's that I spoke with yesterday I talked about one of the main I always say to customers what were the business differentiators what were the technical differentiators and a lot of them will talk about Bumi's cultural alignment with their own culture as really standing out considerably against their peers you and I were talking before we went live about just the atmosphere in the keynote sort of some of the the tongue-in-cheek they are really people helping other people and you get that feeling but customers are talking as well about dramatic transformations to their productivity that they actually didn't even expect to get when they said we need to integrate a sales force with a transport management system for example and whoa suddenly we are saving whatever it's X number of clicks that really starts to snowball in terms of hours saved per person per month per year yeah I think what's interesting from the keynote today is there it builds on last year's boomy where we asked Chris port the CE OS variety and the CEO as well what their what their strategy was what they're investing in they said we're investing in the product and they continue to invest in the product and now with AI and The Voice integration voice enabled our voice accessible data sets you're starting to see that integration piece go another level I think that's interesting that sets the table for the AI stuff that they're doing and I think that's gonna be again leveraging that unified data set that to me is a big deal I think that's the top story here is that you starting to see a product focus using the data having those data integration points with voice and other mediums and if they can get that right then that's a nice automation layer that's gonna be where the next level of value for bloom he's gonna be created you know and their challenge is their small team they hired 750 people in q2 of this year they're hiring more people so can they kind of keep the rocket ship going on the customer growth and again it's a SAS business model it's a unified data set so I like this I like their their fundamentals so you talk about AI and one of the big announcements came out this morning that Chris McNabb CEO talked about with Accenture is what they're doing to partner together to enable conversational AI and one of the women from eccentric who was on stage will be joining us later today and I loved how she and Chris we're talking about you know we all interact with AI whether we're calling an ISP or some sort of call center and you're screaming agent into the phone because it's really starting to frustrate you one of the things that I had a mind shift on earlier this year while covering a show for the cube was hey that's actually our opportunity as regular folks on the street to help the models learn and train and what they showed today on that fun demo was how they're actually talking to be the boom I bought about looking at you know for example employee onboarding what percent complete is that what needs to be done and how can I actually use voice recognition to get other processes within the organization across business units done I do though think what about somebody like Meryl Streep who can do all these different accents when conversational AI comes up and it's gonna recognize your voices the footprint that was one thing I thought about these people that you know that have great ability to mimic accents gonna do well and they're as big as Amazon they can get the celebrities Amazon just kept Alexa as now the voices from celebrities I think it's pretty cool I think one of the things that I think is important to talk about in this keynote was the key my key takeaway was they hit the core themes unified data set which is their value multi-cloud global customers ecosystem partners low code developer environments are changing and developing fast and data integration this is the key areas of topics and what they announced here on stage was the voice accessible data services that secure and scalable more low code conversations projects are being deployed faster and this transformation journey and I think if I look at blew me outside of those strengths I just mentioned I think they're challenged lisa is going to be can they foster the ecosystem can they build those blocking and tackling things that they need to get done in the marketplace on the go to market how see the customer growth is there can they develop that ecosystem once that ecosystem is developed then you're gonna see more more action there but it's still small then they got to do some more work I think the momentum is there and we should definitely point out that we are in DC which is symbolic for a be me just a few weeks ago in August they announced FedRAMP authorization they are one of not the first but one of the first iPad vendors in the a in the FedRAMP marketplace but something that that Chris McNabb and look at my notes here said this morning was they were the first iPads vendor to get certified in five months and their competitor I have a feeling I know who it is took 18 months so they're proud of that that really but he also said in something that we can unpack with Chris McNabb a little bit later today is that the federal certification the availability in the marketplace opens up even more opportunities not just for federal from a security from a privacy perspective yeah this is a big this is a big story I think this is gonna be a subtext because they're well they're another announcements but that FedRAMP certification in record time as you pointed out it's significant for a couple of reasons we've been following the government transformation since the CIA deal of AWS and the recent jedi contract which we've been talking a lot about really points to the modernization of the government and the procurement and the government is going through its own transformation and the ones that are being successful the ones that have all the attributes that boom he has cloud-based unified data sets security built in these are the fast track to the modern infrastructure that's what the government's doing so I'm expecting a lot of DC business I think it's kind of not a flu that they're in DC here for a reason they're here to do some business they're doing work with the veterans they're doing work with American Cancer Society other things but the government I think they're gonna do a lot of government business because once they get that certification that's going to open up a ton of business and we've seen the government is leaning towards modern architectures not the old-school Oracle's of the world so you know that is definitely changing and I think they're in a good position you brought up American Cancer Society and veterans two things that we're nearing dear to my heart and it was great see one how boomy is working with American Cancer Society their CIO was on stage he will be joining you and I this afternoon about how they are leveraging Bhumi for I think they call it service match to match cancer patients with uber and lyft drivers to get people to their treatment in back and how that was enabled by Bhumi I just thought was was the story that will resonate with every single person regardless of where you live what industry that you're in that's transformative and that's such a service that is so critical well that's that points to the validation of the trend we were just talking about that at the beginning was the trend about getting projects off the ground isn't about some IT department it could come from someone who sees an opportunity to solve a problem in the business or their mission in this case your example this is huge because the time to value is faster so it's not an IT lead thing it's a business or mission driven outcome so throwing an app together and and mashing up you know GPS and other things to provide value that's where the action is that's why there's so much action in cloud that's why boom he's doing so well because they're hitting that mark right there doesn't it's not hard to do you know time to value can be one of those as a marketer how do you actually measure that but we're seeing roles exactly it works seeing that in so many different use cases of themI in so many different industries whether it's American Cancer Society or Sky powering Internet and services for customers elisa listen this is this is a big thing that people always whitewash and they try to hide the ball on and we're now living in a transparent era of a modern infrastructure and these applications you cannot hide the ball on success it's either has value or a dozen as valuating throwing off revenue because people pay for value and if it's being used from a mission standpoint that's undeniable so what's happening now is that the new kpi's our success can be defined and you you haven't helped KPIs and dashboards and say hey are people paying for it boom top-line revenue bottom line profit usage on apps so there's no more you know people fudging the numbers or trying to hide the ball on whether a project was successful that this is a gonna change the landscape significantly it is and we're gonna unpack all of that today John we've got a whole bunch of the booming on today some partners and some customers as well so guys stick with us John and I have a grateful day packed Lisa Martin with John Fourier you're watching the cube from booming world 19
SUMMARY :
Oracle's of the world so you know that
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
American Cancer Society | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Chris McNab | PERSON | 0.99+ |
American Cancer Society | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Chris McNabb | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
American Cancer Society | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
2010 | DATE | 0.99+ |
Michael Dell | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Vegas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Chris McNabb | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Chris | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John Fourier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
AWS | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
John Fourier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
DC | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Michael | PERSON | 0.99+ |
CIA | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Washington DC | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
580 partners | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Accenture | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
five months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
750 people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
hundreds of applications | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
iPad | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.99+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
Dell | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
over nine thousand customers | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
last week | DATE | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
80 countries | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
18 months | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
August | DATE | 0.98+ |
three days | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
over 1500 endpoints | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
uber | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
this year | DATE | 0.97+ |
VMware | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Alexa | TITLE | 0.97+ |
Meryl Streep | PERSON | 0.97+ |
third leg | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Cloud 2.0 | TITLE | 0.97+ |
two things | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
this year | DATE | 0.97+ |
2019 | DATE | 0.97+ |
Red Hat | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
Gumi | PERSON | 0.96+ |
iPads | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.96+ |
11 months ago | DATE | 0.96+ |
two sets | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Bhumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
1500 plus new customers | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Oracle | ORGANIZATION | 0.95+ |
2018 | DATE | 0.94+ |
about a dozen boomy customers | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
Jon | PERSON | 0.94+ |
Joe Batista, Dell Technologies | WTG Transform 2019
>> Boston, Massachusetts. It's the queue covering W T G transformed 2019 Accio by Winslow Technology Group. >> Hi, I'm Stew Minutemen And this is the Cubes. Third year at W. T. G. Transform 2019 which is the Window Technologies Group, Their user conference. Longtime compelling customer, of course. Compelling, bought by Del del Body M. C. So it's now the deli emcee user event and to help me kick off a day of content where we're gonna be talking. Toa some of the W T G executive some of their customers and some of their partners is first time guests on the program. Joe Batista, Who's a Creek and easy chief creative, apologised at Del Technologies. Joe Appreciate you making it all the way in from the suburbs to come here to downtown Boston in the shadow of Fenway. >> It was a long haul this morning with no traffic of 5 30 35 minutes in. >> Yeah, a Zeiss safe for the people. Adele. It's about the distant from Boston Towe where we live as it is to go from Austin to Round Rock. So >> there we go, >> you know, similar types of things. So I have to start create apologised. A song. You know, I did a little bit of reading and, you know, having watched Aquino, it's, you know, sparking that creativity. So I love the idea of it. You've had this title for quite a while since before you Riddell just give us a little bit about background of you know what you do, and you know why you're qualified to do it. >> Well, it was quite a fight. It's a fun brand, but literally. It sits at the nexus of business and technology, and my job's simply is to help it re image the business, because now every company's a technology company. So what does that look like? So I get involved Also, it's a really cool problems, opportunities that customers are facing by re imaging it >> well, it's funny that you say re image, because when I did my history, the oldest thing I found some article from the nineties talking about somebody from Polaroid that that title and I was actually talking to some of the young people in the office there, like everybody's using Polaroids. There's these days, it's cool. It's true. They're doing it. So what's old is new again. You know everything come back together. So luckily, you know our industry. I mean, nothing changes, right? You know, it's the same now as it was 10 years ago, 100 years ago. You know, I'll just go into the factory and pumping things out now. >> Still, you know, I've been a referee a long time, and in the old days we had swim lengths, right? You know, you thought about certain vendors. They were in swim lanes. Now, today, with the influx of cash, as I was talking about, and the level of it of even innovation cycle time and how the industry's become more fragmented with lots of products, the complexity index has increased exponentially, and the velocity around that complexity is even more accelerate. So, no, it hasn't gotten easier. It's gotten more difficult. >> Yeah, fascinating. Actually. I just heard a segment on our national public radio station here in Boston talking about that. One of the biggest changes and how people think over the last few decades is we're better at recognizing patterns. Used to be, we could be an expert on something and do our thing, you know. We know the old trope is well, you know. My grandfather, you know, worked at a company for 30 years and did his same thing today. Things are changing constantly. You know, we didn't have, you know, the power of a supercomputer in our pocket, you know, 10 years ago, you know, let alone even older. So, you know, this is a user conference. So you know what air they did do. I mean, if if I understand, if I'm, you know, making a decision today for my business. And oftentimes that decision is something I need to live with for a while. How do I make sure that I'm making the right decisions That's going to keep me, you know, you know, keeping up with the competition and keeping my business moving forward as things constantly change. >> Yeah. So there is no easy answer to that question. There's a couple of thoughts and hasn't said in the presentation. You gotta look at these vectors that impacted trajectory of the thinking. And I love the Peter Drucker coat. Right. If he using yesterday's logic probably gonna get in trouble, you have to rethink the logic. In the example I gave you was the high jumper and how we did high jumping before and after 1960. So? So the question becomes one of those vectors, and I went through some of those vectors to help people think about, Okay, I do. My analysis on technology, that's all good. And, uh, tell technology you got a huge portfolio of technology. But how do you think about the perimeter? About how those things change over depreciation cycle. So is trying to add a little bit more color in there, thought processes. And I got a lot of post questions afterwards and a lot of engagements. So it seemed to resonate with the field. And I'll tell you what. The thing that they like the most was the business conversation off. They're like, you know, we don't do that enough. >> Yeah, right. I mean, you know, when we look at the successful companies today, it is not, You know, we've been talking for years, you know? Does it matter? Is it just a cost center? And it needs to be if it isn't helping the business drive forward and responding to what the business needs, uh, you know, could be replaced. That's where we got. Shadow it. It's It can't be the nowhere the slow needs to be. When the business says we need to go, you know, get on board and drive. I love one of the analogies you used is, you know, in this world of complexity, there's so many things out there, You know, when I've worked with, you know, enterprises and small cos you look at their environments and it's like, Oh my God, it's this Hedorah genius mess, you know? How do we standardize things? How do we make things easier? You had a fun little analogy talking about space. Maybe, maybe. >> Okay, that was good. I always try to use visuals as much as possible. So high, high, high light with challenges. So the challenge was, Oh, actually have it in my pocket. So they pulled this out and basically what it is. If you look at the international space shuttle, that's the only thing that they need to fix anything on Specialist 7/16 inch socket or the millimeter version of it. I can't read. Excited my glasses on to fix anything. So imagine if I had one tool to fix anything that's Nirvana. That's not reality. I have to fatigue. So I need to get to that simplicity. Its glasses law remember, every 25% increase in function shin is 100% increase in complexity. And that's public enemy number one for us. >> All right, so So you hopped on board the Dell family relatively recently, when most people think, Adele, it's well, you know, Delpy sees, you know, talk to my you know, my parents. They're like they know Dell computers. They've used them forever. You're talking most people, you know, Del servant. Like you talked a lot about your presentation software is eating the world. Give give us how you know where Del fits in that software was eating the world picture. >> Well, what I can tell you, though, is I was absolutely amazed when I did my due diligence about all the innovation that happens in this company. Phenomenal not only about the hardware but the soft. And I think actually, Jeff said it best. I think we have more software engineers now that we have heart hardware engineers. So the pivots there, we're pivoting our talent, the software, but it's the innovation that's in this company. And I think I kind of rattled off a couple of statistics by how much we spend the quantity of I p that we have. And I think customers are amazed at that innovation. But the supercharger on is okay. How does the innovation apply to the business mechanics of the company? And what value do you extract from it? And that's where the whole language and conversation usually happens with us. I will tell you, though, I'm really excited that Del Technologies kind of doubling down on business outcomes. They're really trying to change the culture and helping customers understand what the technology >> means. Yeah, one of things that struck me. I've been to this event now for a couple of years, and, you know, there's a lot of product discussion here, you know, when you get down to the channel, it's like, Okay, great. You know, I'm doing a server refresh. I'm looking to things like hyper convert, you know? What am I doing in my network? You know, when you up level things a little bit, You know, when I went to del World, it's like, you know, we hear about the venture, you know, activity that's happening around and things like coyote coming down the pipe. But How does that trickle down to the customers? That talking event here? It's great to talk about innovation, but, you know, I got to run my business. You know what? You know. Where does Del fit in that picture >> for you? Got it? Well, it's a custom you got to do both, right? So this has got to be a shift, because now I have to think differently, right? I know how to do feature analysis and benefit analysis of a point in time product, but what's the periphery of activities that inspecting, impacting that decision? Does that architectures scale? What are the economics around that? So you need to think about all those things. And I think it's just a journey for not only us as a vendor, but also for customers as well. >> Okay, so you're relatively new in today. L I want to ask you You gave a great quote in your presentation from from Jack Welch. Er said if the rate of change outside the company is greater than inside the company, the end is near. >> I would say the post. >> So, you know, explain to us the pace of change inside of del technologies. >> Well, you know, that's That's a That's a big question. I mean, piece of change varies by organization by business unit I really can't comment on your individual business units, but I will say, though there's a definite desire toe. Understand? We're customers interested. He is there. So what's the customer trying to dio? And then how do we satisfy the customer request? It's a matter of fact. I don't know if you know this and it was amazing because that's what the customer the other day, you know, Stevie Awards. Which a customer satisfaction, which we double down on customer satisfaction. We have a customer chief customer officer was Karen, and we just won 15 Stevie Awards, which is about customer satisfaction. So I think there's a slow shift, but there's a real focus on customer Central City. For us, the velocity will get there. But if you put the customer at the center like we do, that's a winning strategy. >> Yeah, well, yeah, we know Karen Kim does quite well, you know, culture and working with customers. You know, quite dio you talked about the portfolio of companies and l We know Del Bhumi quite well. We've done their event in the team were well, and you know, VM wears no slouch in the industry. I've had one of the pleasures of my careers. You know, I started working with him. Where when they were, like, 100 person company. No, watch them grow and pack. El Singer, I think was just named like the number one number two, you know, CEO work for employees by employees from glass doors. So, you know No, no slouch on the the venture family. So congratulations, toe Dale family on all that. >> Thank you very much are exciting. >> Joe Batista. Thank you so much for joining me here at the W T. G. Transformed 2019. Pleasure to catch up with you. Appreciate the opportunity. All right, so we're here with customers, the executives, and digging into all the industry trends. Of course. Check out the cute dot net for where we will be. And, uh, I think it was always for watching the cube
SUMMARY :
It's the queue covering W T G Joe Appreciate you making it all the way in from the suburbs Yeah, a Zeiss safe for the people. You know, I did a little bit of reading and, you know, having watched Aquino, So I get involved Also, it's a really cool problems, opportunities that customers So luckily, you know our industry. Still, you know, I've been a referee a long time, and in the old days we had swim lengths, We know the old trope is well, you know. In the example I gave you was the high jumper and how we did I love one of the analogies you used is, you know, If you look at the international space shuttle, that's the only when most people think, Adele, it's well, you know, Delpy sees, you know, talk to my you know, And what value do you extract you know, there's a lot of product discussion here, you know, when you get down to the channel, it's like, Okay, great. So you need to think about all those things. L I want to ask you You gave a great quote the customer the other day, you know, Stevie Awards. El Singer, I think was just named like the number one number two, you know, CEO work for employees Thank you so much for joining me here at the W T. G.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Karen | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jeff | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Joe Batista | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Adele | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Austin | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Karen Kim | PERSON | 0.99+ |
100% | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Boston | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Round Rock | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Window Technologies Group | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Dell | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Del Bhumi | PERSON | 0.99+ |
30 years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Delpy | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jack Welch | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Winslow Technology Group | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Boston Towe | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Polaroid | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Boston, Massachusetts | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Third year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Joe | PERSON | 0.99+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Fenway | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
El Singer | PERSON | 0.99+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
100 person | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
10 years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
Del | PERSON | 0.98+ |
today | DATE | 0.98+ |
Dell Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
Polaroids | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
first time | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
100 years ago | DATE | 0.97+ |
one tool | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
7/16 inch | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
15 | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Peter Drucker | PERSON | 0.96+ |
1960 | DATE | 0.95+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
5 30 35 minutes | QUANTITY | 0.91+ |
Riddell | PERSON | 0.9+ |
Er | PERSON | 0.88+ |
Aquino | TITLE | 0.87+ |
Del | ORGANIZATION | 0.87+ |
Stevie Awards | EVENT | 0.87+ |
2019 | DATE | 0.85+ |
Del del Body | ORGANIZATION | 0.83+ |
this morning | DATE | 0.82+ |
W T G | ORGANIZATION | 0.81+ |
last few decades | DATE | 0.79+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.79+ |
every 25% | QUANTITY | 0.74+ |
W. T. G. | EVENT | 0.72+ |
Zeiss | PERSON | 0.72+ |
Stevie Awards | TITLE | 0.71+ |
Dale | PERSON | 0.7+ |
del World | LOCATION | 0.69+ |
Stew Minutemen | PERSON | 0.67+ |
nineties | DATE | 0.66+ |
W T. G. Transformed 2019 | EVENT | 0.66+ |
W T G | EVENT | 0.63+ |
years | QUANTITY | 0.59+ |
2019 Accio | EVENT | 0.55+ |
M. C. | PERSON | 0.48+ |
WTG | EVENT | 0.46+ |
Nirvana | ORGANIZATION | 0.45+ |
Michael Dell, Dell Technologies | Dell Technologies World 2019
>> live from Las Vegas. It's the queue covering del Technologies. World twenty nineteen, brought to you by Del Technologies and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back to the cubes. Live coverage here, Adele. Technology rule in Las Vegas. I'm John for Developed, a special guest. Michael Dell, Chairman, CEO, Del Technologies Cube. Alumni. Great to see you again. Yearly pilgrimage. People can come on the Cube. Good to see you again. Thanks. May always >> Great to be with you guys. >> All right, So I gotta ask you because, you know, Dave and I were talking on yesterday's kickoff on our intro about the conversation we had. I think six years ago we saw you standing there in Austin, but still a public company didn't go private yet. And then the series of moves going private and we're like, That's great. Get behind the curtain. Get things reset. Look at the cash flows. Looking good. You had the clear plan as the founder and CEO is kind of a new kind of reset, if you will. And then up to now the execution in just the series of moves. When you look back now where you are today, where you were then how do you feel? What's absurd? What did you learn? What's some of the highlights for you? >> Well, look, we feel great, You know, our business is really grown tremendously. It's all the things we've been doing has been resonating with customers have been ableto, I would say, restored the origins of the entrepreneurial dream and success of the company and reintroduce, uh, innovation and risk taking into, ah, now ninety one billion dollars company growing in double digits last year and certainly the set of capabilities. That way, we've been able to build organically and in organically on DH with set of alliances. We have the trust that customers have given us, you know, super happy about the position that we're in and the opportunities going forward. As I've said, you know, a zay said Mikey. No, yesterday. I think all this is really just the pregame show. Tow what's ahead for our industry and for the role that technology is going to play in the world. >> And the role of data you mentioned also used to quote you Yes, that you said data a CZ the life, blood of digital transformation of the heartbeat, visual transformation and It's also revitalizing all the other components of what looked like a consolidated market is now actually being reborn the PC, technology, infrastructure, fabrics and other software opportunity. So Data has kind of brought in a whole nother level of kind of revitalisation and the industry, which is actually causing more investment in what looked like older category of you know it and computers whatnot. This's been a big, big tailwind for you guys. >> Well, data has always been at the centre of you know how the technology industry works and now we just have a tsunami explosion of data. And of course, now we have this new computer science that allows us Teo reason over the data in real time and create much better results in outcomes and that combined with the computing power, all organizations have to reimagine themselves, given all these technologies and certainly the infrastructure requirements in terms of the network, you know, the storage, that computer bill out of the edge, tons of new requirements, and we're super well positioned to go address all that. >> I enjoyed your keynote, Michael. So I thought it was excellent. One of your better ones and you painted a picture of tech for good. Uh, really life changing things that you guys and your customers are doing. You gave some examples that be an example of example was great Draper Labs. But you also paid a picture. You need a platform for this digital transformation. We've seen the numbers. Eighty percent of the workloads are still on Prem. What do you think that looks like ten years down the road? What do you What's your vision say? >> Well, the surprise outcome ten years from now is they'LL be something much bigger than the private cloud and Public Cloud. It's the edge and actually think that would be way more computer data on the edge in ten years than any of the, you know, derivatives of cloud that we want to talk about. So that's a ten year prediction. Yeah, that's that's That's kind of what I see. And maybe maybe nobody's predicting that this yet, But, you know, let's come back in ten years and see what it looks like. >> So I like to do that hybrid hybrid. Klaus been around for a while, but talked about. It's been kind of operating, Ma. We see that multi cloud is really kind of surged in importance in conversations because I think people wake up and go. Hey, I got multiple clouds. I got azure over here for ofthis three sixty five. I got some Amazon over here. I got some home grown stuff over here. I got a data center so that people kind of generally Khun, Khun, relate to the reality of multi cloud hybrid. Live it more of a different kind of twist, but certainly relevant. But multi cloud has got everyone's attention and you guys launched Del Cloud. Is that a multi cloud, or is that a cloud to multiple clouds? Explain your view on that and where this goes. >> So really, what we're doing is we're bringing to customers. All the resource is they need to operate in the hybrid, multi cloud world. And first, you have to recognize that the workloads want to move around and to say that they're all going to be here, or there is in some sense, missing the point because they're going to move back and forth. And, uh, you know, you've got regulation cost security performance late and see all sorts of new requirements that air coming at you and they're not going to just sit, sit in one place. Now, as you know, with via Work Cloud Foundation, we have the ability to move these workloads seamlessly across. Now, essentially all the public clouds, right. Forty, two hundred partners out there infrastructure on premise built and tuned specifically for the VM wear platform and empowered also for the edge and a love. This together is the Del Technologies Cloud. We have obviously great, uh, capabilities from our Delhi emcee infrastructure solutions and all the great innovations that Veum where coming together >> scale has been a topic. We talked on the Cube many years. We saw Amazon get scale with public cloud scales of competitive advantage is now becoming kind of table stakes both for customers trying to figure out how to operate a digital scale, speed a life. You guys have a scale level now that's pretty impressive. What you guys done with the puzzle pieces, You cut puzzle pieces, you know, cos capabilities now across the board, as you guys look at scale is a competitive advantage, which it is, and we talked about this before. You now have to integrate seamlessly in these pieces. So as you compose as customers compose the variety of capabilities. It's gotta be frictionless. That's a goal. How do you look at that? How do you talk to your team's about this on DH? What's your view on scale? And is this something you guys talk about inside the company? >> Well, inside the business, you know, the first priority was to get each of the individual pieces working well. But then we saw that the real opportunity was in the scenes on how we could more deeply integrate all the aspects of what we're doing together. And you saw that on stage, you know, in vivid form yesterday with Pat and Jeff and Sasha and even more today again. And there's more to do. There's, although there's always more to do. Were working on how we build a gate, a platform bringing together all of our capabilities with Bhumi and data protection on DH bm wear, and this is all going to be super important way. Enter this A I enabled age of the future. >> Michael, you got a track record of creating shareholder value. We're big fans of, you know, we'LL have CNBC on in the office and Michael's on everybody coming across, right? Davos? Picky, Quick. We're also big fans have asked you to sort of knocked down to three criticisms. And sure, it was really a conversation about stock price, you know? And you Did you knock down the debt structure? The low margin business, the ownership structure, its center. But you never came backto stock price, so it looks like a couple of ways to invest. Now VM wear directly. Also looks like Veum where you could you could buy cheaply through Del What your thoughts on on that? You know where Dell sits in the market today? Its value. >> I think. You know, investors are increasingly understanding that we've created an incredible business here and certainly, you know, if we look at the additional coverage that we have and you know, they're they're a CZ their understanding, the business, you know, some of the analysts are starting to say, Hey, this doesn't really feel like a conglomerate. Direct quote. Okay. And, uh, if you think about what we demonstrated today, yesterday and we'LL demonstrate the future, you know, we're not like Berkshire Hathaway or, uh you know, uh, this is not a railroad that owns a chain of restaurants. This is one integrated business that fits together incredibly well, and you know it's generating substantial cash flows. And, you know, I think investors overtime are figuring out value. That's intrinsic. Teo, the overall Del Technologies family now wave Got lots of ways to invest, right? Get, Be aware. SecureWorks pivotal. And, of course, the overall Del Technologies. >> Yeah, and just a follow up on that. I mean, I've observed on the margin side I mean, when del went private, it was around nineteen percent gross margins. Now you're in gross margin heaven, you know, absorbing the emcee. And it seems to be headed in the right right direction. So it's a nice mix >> know, in our in our cloud, an infrastructure group, almost ninety percent of the engineers are software engineers. And so you think aboutthe innovations you saw in states today with power Macs and Unity, X T and our power protect platform. You know, basically all software running on power power it surfers and platforms that we've created. >> What's on your plate now, Michael? As you come out, come out of Del Technologies world. You got business to take care of what your goals what's on your plate. What's your object? Is what you trying to accomplish in the next year? >> Well, certainly continuing to execute for our customers growing faster than the industry. You know, maintaining and improving our customer NPS levels and keeping the innovation engine cranked up on high. You saw a lot today on DH yesterday. Stay tuned, Veum. World's coming in in August and they'LL be much, much more way Continue toe innovate together Lucy with Veum where so we've got we've got lots more in the cube >> and you got cash will come in, which means your suppliers to a lot of customers Congratulations. I want to get your final thought on my final question on the Tech for good One of the things I saw yesterday on the Kino that you gave was that popped out wass. It wasn't about the speeds and feeds around, you know, the performances get great performance on the tech side. You gotta be, you know, the infrastructure level Scott be performing, but it's about solving problems. And I think this is a direction that you're taking the company saying there's outcomes out there. The problems that can be solved with tech We're hearing a whole tech for bad narrative in the media these days. Tax evil text. Bad. But there are awesome spots where technology is creating great things for society. This is a theme for you. Can you share? Why that focus? And when some of the highlights >> it's right. I mean, if you if you step back from the what happened in the last twenty four hours, twenty four days and even twenty four months, you start looking at, you know, twenty four years you start to see is thie. Outcomes for humanity have gotten dramatically better, and technologies played an enormous role in that. I'm massively optimistic that in the next three decades they're going to be really miracles. In terms of how do you dress things like deafness and blindness and paralysis with a I and embedded technology inside the body. The, you know, things were able to do now with sequencing the genome and using all this data to create personalized medicine solutions. Yes, technology can be used for bad, but the vast majority of it is used for good by people that have good in their hearts. Right. And and, uh, you know, uh, it goes beyond making great businesses and making people more productive. It's actually changing lives and very positive ways, >> while the other big narrative in the pressure here is automation and taking away jobs. And it's a serious concern. However, you know there's no reason to protect the past from from the future and this great opportunities ahead education and someone, even you and Susan but big supporters of that, obviously. So we're optimistic for the future. I know I know you are. The best is yet to come. As I'd like to say >> Absolutely, we agree. >> Once an entrepreneur, always an entrepreneur, you great entrepreneurial track record you celebrate thirty five years from the original dorm room. So some of your Facebook posts now here he took a business that you knew T mature couple players. This is a trend we're seeing. Zoom communication just went public. They took video streaming and holding meetings and completely when cloud base and disrupted it. You saw >> runs on Dell EMC by the way >> runs on Dell, did not know that it's only a lot of Michael great, but this is an entre. I want to get your advice to other articles that might be watching us because you now, with the technology with data and cloud and tech, you, Khun, go into existing markets that don't look good on paper that people might dismiss as that's over. That's a mature market You've certainly taken Del Technology's got all the pieces and are executing at a home of the level. Zoom did it for video on the cloud. There are zillions of these opportunities out there that entrepreneurs. So the advice don't be discouraged by what looks like a big fat market. So your what's your advice? >> and I I feel something is coming. That's quite significant. And right now you mentioned this new wave of companies that air coming public and they were built on a foundation of technology infrastructure capabilities. You know that was established, Let's say, ten years ago. Okay, well, right now we're just at the kind of beginning of five G and A II technology, and all these embedded sensors and low latent see communications, and there will be a whole another wave of cos I suspect many, many more across all industries that, you know, just unlock all kinds of new capabilities and an opportunity. So I'm super excited about that. Andi, I think I think it's it's just going to get more interesting. >> It's amazing to think of the tools you had thirty five years ago, when you started and how you've transformed. So congratulations. >> Thank you. Spend the time again. Thanks for having us again here. Tenth year, Del Technologies. Well, thanks for having us. And great to have a conversation. >> Thank you. And the rest of the cube team for all your great coverage. >> Thank you very much. Michael Dell, Chairman, CEO, Dell Technology here. David Velante myself, John Furrier. Stay tuned for more day to coverage. We got two sets here. It's a cube canon of content blown out. The content here, Adele Technology, world Check out Dell's hashtag del tech world for all the highlights will be right back after this short break.
SUMMARY :
World twenty nineteen, brought to you by Del Technologies Great to see you again. Great to be with you I think six years ago we saw you standing there in Austin, have given us, you know, super happy about the position that we're in And the role of data you mentioned also used to quote you Yes, that you said data a CZ the life, in terms of the network, you know, the storage, that computer bill out of the edge, that you guys and your customers are doing. predicting that this yet, But, you know, let's come back in ten years and see what it looks like. But multi cloud has got everyone's attention and you guys launched And first, you have to recognize that the workloads want to move around the board, as you guys look at scale is a competitive advantage, which it is, and we talked about this before. Well, inside the business, you know, the first priority was to get each of the individual Also looks like Veum where you could you could buy cheaply through Del What your thoughts on on that? the business, you know, some of the analysts are starting to say, Hey, this doesn't really feel like a conglomerate. I mean, I've observed on the margin side I mean, when del went private, And so you think aboutthe innovations you saw in states today with power Is what you trying to accomplish in the next year? keeping the innovation engine cranked up on high. You gotta be, you know, the infrastructure level Scott be performing, you know, twenty four years you start to see is thie. and someone, even you and Susan but big supporters of that, obviously. Once an entrepreneur, always an entrepreneur, you great entrepreneurial track record you celebrate thirty five years from So the advice And right now you mentioned this new wave of companies that air coming public and It's amazing to think of the tools you had thirty five years ago, when you started and how you've transformed. Spend the time again. And the rest of the cube team for all your great coverage. Thank you very much.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Michael Dell | PERSON | 0.99+ |
David Velante | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Michael | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Dave | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Susan | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Pat | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Sasha | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Austin | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
John Furrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Forty | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Dell Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Las Vegas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Draper Labs | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
ten year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Jeff | PERSON | 0.99+ |
ten years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
thirty five years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
August | DATE | 0.99+ |
Dell | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Tenth year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
twenty four years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
ninety one billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
next year | DATE | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
twenty four days | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
two sets | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
twenty four months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Scott | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Adele | PERSON | 0.99+ |
six years ago | DATE | 0.99+ |
Lucy | PERSON | 0.99+ |
CNBC | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Del Technology | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Dell Technology | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Delhi | LOCATION | 0.98+ |
Eighty percent | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
ten years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
thirty five years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Work Cloud Foundation | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
each | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
John | PERSON | 0.97+ |
Mikey | PERSON | 0.96+ |
Bhumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
del | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ | |
One | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
SecureWorks | ORGANIZATION | 0.95+ |
around nineteen percent | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
Adele Technology | ORGANIZATION | 0.94+ |
zillions | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
Dell EMC | ORGANIZATION | 0.94+ |
Teo | PERSON | 0.94+ |
Del Technologies Cube | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
Veum | ORGANIZATION | 0.91+ |
Klaus | PERSON | 0.89+ |
two hundred partners | QUANTITY | 0.89+ |
first priority | QUANTITY | 0.88+ |
Unity | ORGANIZATION | 0.87+ |
Berkshire Hathaway | ORGANIZATION | 0.86+ |
Yearly | QUANTITY | 0.82+ |
next three decades | DATE | 0.82+ |
Del Cloud | TITLE | 0.81+ |
almost ninety percent | QUANTITY | 0.8+ |
one place | QUANTITY | 0.8+ |
couple players | QUANTITY | 0.78+ |
Rory Read, Virtustream | Dell Technologies World 2019
>> Live from Las Vegas. It's the queue covering del Technologies. World twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Del Technologies and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back to Las Vegas. Lisa Martin with too many man, You're watching The Cube Life from Del Technology. World twenty nineteen were here with about fifteen thousand other people, about four thousand Del Technologies Partners. But how? And now for the first time, we're pleased to welcome the CEO of Virtus Dream. Rory Reid Worry. It's great to have you joining student me on the Cube today. >> It is Lisa. It's a pleasure and riel honor to be on the show today. >> So this morning's Kino we were talking before we went live starts with lots of energy news announcements, partnerships, collaboration, walking, you. You're in industry veteran, which will dig into, I'm sure during the segment. >> Thirty five years. >> Thirty five years. That's >> amazing. Thirty five years is how old tells going tto be tthe when the next week. >> Thirty five years. >> That's a magic number. Congratulations. Thank you Virtus Dream. Talk to us about the integration you lead those efforts. Massive acquisition. What's going on now? What's exciting? You >> Well, I think it's kind of amazing what happened in the integration. This is the largest Tak integration in the world. Sixty seven billion dollars. Shortly after Del goes private, they're going to acquire Delhi, M. C, I, E, M, C and V M, where the huge undertaking thousands of people work on it less than ten months from the time it was announced. October of fifteen. It goes live on September seven sixteen. That's amazing, and our customers reacted and are partners in a just a kn amazing way. It's almost like it didn't happen. You know, I'm biased. I think it went really well. But look at the numbers. Look at the reaction in the marketplace. The growth, the synergy, the revenue, the kinds of impact. And then you see today at Del Adele Technology World. Michael does a keynote. He talked about the impact. Karen comes up and talks about giving back and the work that we're doing around Pathetic and printing three D and artificial intelligence based your limbs. I If you're not fired up about that, you can't get energized. And then you top that off with just a GN amazing discussion about the partnership between VM wear and Del Technologies on the Del Cloud And then the work that we're doing with Microsoft and Satya comes on stage with Michael and >> Pie. I >> mean, this is a power pack woman, and we put this company just three years ago together and look at the kind of impact its house in the industry. Amazing, just amazing. >> So worry. Yeah, I think Jeff Clarke said it well this morning. He said, If you're into technology and can't get excited by what's going on, you know, May maybe you're you know, it's kind of you know, my words. Maybe you're not in the right space. You've got a few of the interesting pieces of the Del Technologies family they talk about. You know, the massive acquisition of DMC with V M. Where Purchase dream Not such a small acquisition itself. Over a billion dollars, one point two billion dollars to billion dollars. And, you know, I remember back Bhumi wasn't out that long ago either, for you know, it was less than a billion dollars, but it was a >> ***. *** is an amazing set of technology. I know you're going tohave Chris McNab on later today. Chris and I have worked on what he called the gloomy acceleration plan the last two years. Way with that team have put in a strategy around taking advantage of just an amazing set of technology. Boo Mi's cloud integration software, I believe, is the absolute best on the planet and the work that we've done. We've doubled that business in the last eighteen months. We've added probably a billion dollars of market valuation they've reached. They add thousands of customers every quarter to that portfolio, the reach and touch and how that's going to drive the way data and applications talk in the cloud era. It's just at the beginning of the impact there. And then you look at a company like Virtus Dream. It's the leader in mission Critical application Work loads on the cloud. This is a company born on the cloud. It's based on the cloud nine years ago. It's the one hand to shake. Customers choose us with their most important applications and data because they need to know that it's gonna work and that we have the experience to Planet Tau migrated, optimize it and bring it to the cloud to cloud of fire and that were the single hand to shake. What's different about us is we have an eye *** way had the infrastructure as a service. We have a software stack with extreme software. Take time. I get fired up about Bloomie's technology Virtus Stream Extreme software. Amazing. And then on top of that, you layer on a white glove said of application and professional services. Very cool. But what was the coolest? Where some of the announcements today and how we're playing with its all of'Em went bare VM were based on, uh, Virtus Dream. And when they announced the partnership with Azure and the idea of V M wear work, clothes on Azure that's actually running will be running and running on. And we've been working with Microsoft and IBM where a virtuous string and it's and then and then you know >> when you say it's running on Virtue Stream, Is it your data centers? Is it part of the soft? Oh no, The >> data, the data centers air all Adger. It's using our software and our technology team have built that said, a technology that we've been in partnership for months with Microsoft and IBM, where to create this offering as one of the Cloud Service partners foundational. It's pretty foundation and you know it. But at the end of a think about del technology is one in the ingredient brand. Sure, that's foundational. This is a company built for the next ten years. Del Technologies. And the impact it's gonna have in the industry is just beginning. Where is it going to go? You saw it this morning in the Kino. Michael has some big, big ideas, >> so worry. A lot of times we look at things in the industry and people is like, Oh, it's binary. It's public cloud or Private Cloud. I've worked with a lot of service providers, and when you look at the world multi cloud, it's really more of an end in putting. That is together. Many of the service providers that air You know where I am seeing her del partners before you know, three or four years ago Oh my gosh, A ws and Microsoft. Well, okay. A partner a little like us off, But Amazons, the enemy. And today it's well, I have our stuff and I'm partnering and I probably have connections between them. Help us. Paint is toe where virtue stream fits into this. You know this spectrum today? >> Your stew. You're on the right point about multi cloud. We just did a press release today at a virtuous stream where we partnered with Forrester. We do, ah, whole industry study on the cloud and the future of the cloud multi cloud ninety seven percent of customers. We spoke to that force or spoke to have a multi cloud strategy for their mission. Critical applications at eighty nine percent of them plan to increase their spend on multi cloud mission critical activities. How we play in that space is that we're the trusted player we've done over eighteen hundred ASAP migration. Where an epic health care leader go talk to Novaya. They asked them how it's gone on Virtus Dreams Cloud amazing set of mission critical capability. But what we're taking is there's this infrastructure is a service in the software stack on the services that software stack is extreme. What we want to do is enable that software stack to manage data and applications in a private environment, a public environment on Prem, and it's all based on the M where so it ties directly into Jeff and Pat's announcement This morning, where they talked about Veum, where being a platform and how they're going to create the Del Cloud on that platform. Virtus Dream is one of the destinations for mission critical workload, but because it's based on VM, where technology it seamlessly begins to integrate across that and allows us to manage data and applications linking our extreme software with the BM, where capabilities that allowed that data and the AP eyes to exchange data and flow freely in a multi cloud world, ninety seven percent of the customers and the forest to research we just released are going to go multi cloud for mission critical, not just based. This's for their most critical applications data >> so future your energy is outstanding in your enthusiasm for this. What are some of the early reactions that customers air having to some of this exciting, groundbreaking news that's coming out today? What do your expectations? >> Well, you know, I spent time with customers, uh, every week and we talk about it, but I've actually talked to customers this day today about it. They found the energy, the passion that the technology that was introduced this morning was sort of game changing because to Stu's point, they are going in a multi cloud era and they know it's going to be multi cloud. And there's going to be on Prem public private. It's gonna link altogether. They need the technology trusted advisors that can work with them, not with a single answer. That only fits one way. Adele Technologies. You want to run on Prem? We have those capabilities you want to run on public count. We have those technologies you want to run in a hybrid kind of solution or a private cloud. We're going to create the ability with these announcements today, tow link it together and create the ability to do it seamlessly, efficiently, productively, cost effectively that allows Our customers too dramatically transformed their business to take them on that digital transformation to disrupt their industries and win. Because when our customers win, we win. That's what we do. Adelle Technologies, we and able our customers to win, and it's all about the customers every single day. You talked about the integration when Michael said every day when we were doing the integration, he said on every decision. When we were building the company, we basically built a new company level by level, he said. The guiding principle that every decision is customer in How does this matter of the customer? How does it make a difference for the customer? And I think we live that everyday. There's fifty fifteen thousand of our closest friends here in Las Vegas there, pretty excited to be here. And why did they take that time? Because we're one of their trusted partners on their digital transformation journey. That's not a bad place to be. If you can't get excited about that, >> Yeah, I'm Rory in the wrong industry. It was amazing to me how fast that immigration work happened. We talked to Howard Elias a bunch along the journey. I'm glad we finally get to you, get you on the record for >> Howard's in the Be's and Guy. What an awesome partner. >> And so you know, one of them's dried. It's ten months is you know, if this thing had taken twenty four months, so much of the industry would have changed by the time from when you went into when you went out. So I guess How do you how do you look at kind of those massive waves versus you know where you need to be with products today in the market and where customers are because you know the danger. You say I want to listen to the customers. Well, you get the old saying if you ask customers they wanted, you know Ah, faster buggy. You know how right you are so right, You make sure you're, you know, hitting that next wave and keeping up with it. I look at you know, all the pieces you have of the puzzle that is the family and in different places along the spectrum. >> Well, I think there's, you know, there's value in the diversity of thought, right, and we talk about on Workforce. But it's a business. The idea that Del technologies is this group of businesses and all these experiences coming together and the interactions with customers from the smallest mom and pop shops farms toe all the way to the most Jake Ganic industry. Transformational companies. You were exposed to a lot of things, and with the kind of forty, one hundred and forty thousand professionals working together and with Michael's vision and the El Tee's vision, there's an ability to see that future, and he is always looking at the future. It's interesting. I worked for a lot of interesting people, but you know, Michael's ability to Teo understand data and of you, he said. It's about having a big year, right? Your ears be twice the size of your mouth. I mean, you gotta listen. And I seriously think he must have a tree of Keebler elves creating data and information. I've never seen so much someone with more data and information. And he he listens. He values the input. He's quick to make a decision, but the team rot rallies around that idea. How can we find that future? And if we make a mistake, let's fix it fast. Let's learn really quick. Make that decision, learn quickly, adjust and capture the opportunity. And it's all about speed and what matters to the customer. I've seen it firsthand. I've been here four years. I spent twenty three years at IBM. I spent five years in Lenovo as their CEO and president. I was CEO and president of Advanced Micro Devices. It's amazing environment where you create a place where technological leaders come every day to solve the most difficult solutions with the founder of the company. That's one of the industry icons, and it's just an amazing privilege and honor to be part of it. And I think you feel that from every person you talk to, that's part of Del Technologies. I am being part of that. Integration was one of the most proudest experiences of my life, and you know what we did way never ran it as an integration office. We kept the decisions with the line with the business, and we had a rapid pays to get through it and decided, and we learned quickly and we adjusted as we went. It wasn't perfect, but it wass pretty close. It's pretty close and I'm bias. I got it. I buy just But it was good. It was good. It was really a great thing. And Howard, amazing guy. But it was because people believed in the vision and they all work together. And when people work together, you can grow, do amazing and great thing. >> You're right. It's all about the people >> it is >> or it's been such a pleasure. Having you on the cute this afternoon was to me. I wish we had more time because I know we can keep talking about it. You're gonna have to come back >> anytime. You like me. It was a pleasure. And thank you so much for taking time to speak to me when you talk to boo me this afternoon, make sure you get into that technology's world. Vast cloud integration platform >> you got. All right, guys. Thank you. Thank you. First to Minuteman. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube live from Day one of our double sat coverage of Del technology World twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching.
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Del Technologies It's great to have you joining student me So this morning's Kino we were talking before we went live starts with lots of energy news Thirty five years. Thirty five years is how old tells going tto be tthe when the next week. Thank you Virtus Dream. and the work that we're doing around Pathetic and printing three D and artificial at the kind of impact its house in the industry. You know, the massive acquisition of DMC with V M. Where Purchase I believe, is the absolute best on the planet and the work that we've done. And the impact it's gonna have in the industry is just beginning. Many of the service providers that air You know where I am seeing her ninety seven percent of the customers and the forest to research we just released are What are some of the early reactions that customers air having to some of this exciting, create the ability to do it seamlessly, efficiently, Yeah, I'm Rory in the wrong industry. Howard's in the Be's and Guy. so much of the industry would have changed by the time from when you went into when you went out. And I think you feel that from every person you talk to, It's all about the people You're gonna have to come back talk to boo me this afternoon, make sure you get into that technology's world. you got.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
IBM | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Chris | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Michael | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Microsoft | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Jeff Clarke | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Karen | PERSON | 0.99+ |
four years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Jeff | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
five years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
ten months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Chris McNab | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Forrester | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Las Vegas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Amazons | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Pat | PERSON | 0.99+ |
twenty three years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Virtus Dream | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Boo Mi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Adelle Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Lisa | PERSON | 0.99+ |
forty | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
October | DATE | 0.99+ |
Adele Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Howard | PERSON | 0.99+ |
ninety seven percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Sixty seven billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
less than ten months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
two billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
first time | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
less than a billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
twenty four months | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Rory Reid | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Thirty five years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Del Cloud | TITLE | 0.99+ |
eighty nine percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Advanced Micro Devices | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Rory Read | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Over a billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
next week | DATE | 0.99+ |
Rory | PERSON | 0.99+ |
three | DATE | 0.99+ |
del technology | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
DMC | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
First | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Satya | PERSON | 0.98+ |
Del Technologies Partners | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
three years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
twice | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Del | PERSON | 0.98+ |
Prem | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
one hundred and forty thousand professionals | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
about four thousand | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Day one | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
nine years ago | DATE | 0.97+ |
Bloomie | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
This morning | DATE | 0.96+ |
Stu | PERSON | 0.96+ |
September seven sixteen | DATE | 0.96+ |
fifty fifteen thousand | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
single answer | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
Michael Dell Keynote Analysis | Dell Technologies World 2019
>> live from Las Vegas. It's the queue covering del Technologies. World twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Del Technologies and its ecosystem partners. >> Hello and welcome to Del >> Technologies with Cubes Coverage Our tenth year covering DMC World del World Here >> Pat Kelsey who test Not your time yet, but you're going to be coming on later. >> Great key note. Thanks for coming by. >> I appreciate it. Explored back tomorrow. You later. All right. >> Not Kelson. You're kicking off the cube coverage. Three days. The wall, the wall colors. Got two sets. Shotgun of content. We got to cube cannons blowing out the content. I'm John Force to minimum David. Want a key note? Uh, really kind of the tectonic plates in the industry. Kind of coming together you had on stage is something. The Tele CEO of Microsoft, Michael Dell, CEO of Down, founder of Del Technology and Pat Gayle Sr. Legends in the industry Captains of the industry. Really a critical juncture for Del technology worlds and a slew of other announcements. But the Del Cloud unified workspace but showing Microsoft on stage. This is a game changing move for Del technology world sure del del Technologies. But also of'Em. Where. Bm where in bed with eight of us. We know that cover that relationship now, going multi cloud all the way with Azure and seeing the CEO on stage Pretty incredible days. >> I think you nailed it. It's a V m wear story, John, and the numbers tell it. VM wears market value's eighty three billion Del owns eighty percent of it. That's sixty >> six billion. What's left. Dell's market value is forty seven billion. That says, the Del Cores worth negative nineteen billion. If it weren't for VM, where Satya Nadella wouldn't be here and you're seeing Michael Dell really drive the integration? He said that several times on stage today. How much collaboration? I love the collaboration across the divisions. You saw Jeff Clarke with Pack yell Sigur talking about new desktop management, talking about VM wear Cloud on del. It's of'Em were story You're right on >> and pack. Kelsey is to really key message up their simplicity, simplifying I t. The Common operate. I felt like we were in a Cube interview four years ago because that's was the basis of hybrid cloud now kind of coming to fruition. Clear visibility, at least on the tech stack side on the operating side, this is an operator world in a developer world, and simplicity and ease of operations is going to be the critical differentiated for the winners. >> Yeah, so So, John. First of all, I think we're getting some clarity on this multi cloud world. Look, one of the things that Veum where did so? Well, not just that wave, A virtual ization, but V Centre was the centre of I t management. And the question is, can they extend that into multi cloud world? When Veum where made the partnership with a W s. It's like, Oh my gosh, what does that mean to Del We got the answer today. What? That means Adele Veum were cloud on Del AMC hardware for me personally. That relationship between VM Rendell I think it's closer from the top executive all the way on down to the field go to market than it ever was. I was one of the first people working with VM where a DMC I watched that relationship emcee always kept them is kind of the way own you, But you're gonna be independent work across the board across the board. You hear. You know V s right. V X, Ray Allen and XX and P. K s and all these wonderful products Dell and VM work developing together, going to market together. It has ripples, but Amazon likes it. Microsoft like that big deal to see Veum wear and Microsoft partnered together. There are some challenges with some other partners Visa vi, Cisco And you know, some of some of the others, like IBM and HB that, if historically partner a lot with the anywhere but a lot of exciting news and definitely on >> and cha gi ve m were knocked down Google last month. >> So, guys, this is the theme we're seeing. We see Zoom went public. That was a videoconferencing disrupting an existing industry people thought would never be disrupted. You heard something and tell a stay on stage. Say on stage here that the new generation of new APS need new infrastructure. So a re vamp, a reset revitalisation of infrastructure to power APS via cloud. It's kind. The same game computing resource is software APS but with a whole new distributor architecture. A boom is coming. We see the stock market is up huge. You see the tech earnings last week across the board. Solid results. This is now a game change. This is not a bad business to be in. You know what was once could be. A declining business sees more remote workers, people working from multiple locations, mobile unification with cloud computing, a complete renaissance across the board game. I mean, this is a big revenue opportunity. >> Well, Mike Michael Dell's Kino wasn't just about products. It was about innovation. He talked about solving world problems, a big picture stuff on. Then he let Pat and Jeff get down a little bit more into the product. Weeds and you'LL hear more of that. But Michael is laying out a huge vision. What a juxtaposition between that's what, four, five years ago, you had sort of Joe Tucci, the chairman, up on stage. Michael was there. You had. You had John Chambers there. Now Michael owns the whole kit and caboodle. He's calling the shots, and people want to do business with them. Veum, where again, As you pointed >> out to me and Lucia question, you've been following the emcee for a long time. When we interviewed Michael Dell years ago, when he was in private that he bought AMC one of things. He said a lot. People were pooh poohing the whole deal. Why they want to buy that boat anchor. He said, scale matters. So are we seeing a new generations do elected to weigh in on this too, of competitive strategy where scale matters because you look at what Del Technologies has done and is doing there essentially rolled up the global I t business and are competing at scale with synergies not even looked at before early on when we talked about it. But we started see from fruit off that scale Amazon prove scale cloud Uh, Microsoft moves of the clouds scale up now the earnings air up Thoughts >> Well, what strikes me, John, is that, you know, they always talk about end end cos talk about synergy. Synergy is a code word for cutting what you heard today. You had be ave up there, you know, talking about a video and talking about the end end capabilities that Del technology brings Del by acquiring the emcee. And of course, VM. Where is a much way more strategic partner for corporations way more than many of these startups? Khun B. so that is their linchpin. You could maybe criticize him on innovation and, oh, maybe they don't have the hottest product, but and end throw in financial services and other services. People want to do business with this company because they trust >> to scale clouds scale, delle scale, scale. >> So we heard Tom suite this morning. Talk about that, Del. Maybe I missed a couple of turns in the marketplace and they needed to go private to kind of rearrange things When they bought emcee. We knew that there are a couple of tail winds that they could arrive hyper converge infrastructure. Absolutely one. We've been watching that trend since day one that their outpacing the industry there. The leader. If you talk from a software standpoint, VM wears their. If you talk from a hardware standpoint, Dell's there who's number two in the space nutanix, which also is a complicated relationship. But Del sells that in Vienna, where still is the primary hyper visor on that environment, so they're still beating the market growth. But they're doing that by gaining market share on DH taking it. Michael always loves to talk about when he's taking market from the business So the question is the overall macro, you know, how long can they keep that double digit growth going? And Dave, I know you're looking to begin with Tom Sweet. A >> ninety billion dollar business grew fourteen percent last year. So this company, in order to grow it has to gain share because the market is not. You're not going that fast. You can't rely on repatriation. I'm sorry that people are going to just disappear from the cloud and come back. So you've got to gain share the other thing, I think, to their favours. Let's face it, they really did have their act together in storage. They were kind of missing the boat there and took their eye off the ball. PC stayed strong. They got their act together in storage, which helped with the product. Mitch mixed higher margins. So last year was a very, very strong year. Twenty twenties going to be a tougher compare, but it seems like they still have some knobs to turn >> just about competition. But, um, Nutanix, what do they do? VM where relationship with a W s. I'm sure. Andy Jackson looking distant, healing words like chaotic, complex, the bane of our existence. Kind of talking about cloud in general and you deal with multiple clouds were packed. Nelson, you say that, um kind of public cloud losing babe flavor here means to you got the public cloud dominating. Now, all this talk about on premise and you got nutanix out there. What? What happens in Nutanix here? >> Yes. Oh, look, Nutanix astute. Doing well on Dell is a very important O am. But way just on nutanix made a big partnership with Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Which, of course, I'm sure Michael doesn't like that happening. You know, Nutanix needs to keep growing their rice software company. It's interesting to talk about the other competitors I mentioned Cisco. Cisco is transforming themselves into a software company. Del Del Technology is the core business wants to be the leading infrastructure company they have VM wear. Bumi and Pivotal are their software branch with the core. Business is really around that scale that that that whole you know, infrastructure piece and it's a different chuck it the Mark >> Chuck Robbins that Cisco CEO Cisco's not yet made a big, bold move like a red at move. Well, could nutanix be that move game? >> Well, I don't know. I don't know. I think I play is an I o T. But But But to your point about your question about the cloud Cloud is not attenuating Amazons, with thirty billion dollar company growing forty one percent a year throwing off twenty five thirty percent operating margins. I mean, that's where the innovation is. That's where the scale is. Everybody wants to do multi cloud because they don't have a cloud. It's your only path if you don't have a cloud. So So I think Cloud's got a long walk >> look and they talk to you know, I tell you, you know, my community got all excited when Michael got up on stage and said, We're all in on Corin eh? Teas and what we're doing with multi cloud you're going to hear under the covers here. Everything is going from VM wear V M as that unit down to container ization, you know, talking about at that application modernization. That's where they're going to lean on VM wear modernizing some what they're doing. And you know, of course, pivotal in Bhumi are the ones that are the tip of the spear in that area. >> I don't think David, it's a suit point there. The Amazon growth will continue because if you look at what Del Technologies has rolled out today, certainly that Microsoft thing is well shot across the bow. Multi cloud, Nice checkbox. Great to see the committee of the CEO there. But everything benefits with sass in the clouds. SAS is a cloud game And if scale on the clouds gonna be there, I only see the public cloud getting stronger because the scales they're the economics cannot be ignored. Certainly the data equation will be interesting, but anon a premise infrastructure that's set up operating like a cloud. I think we'LL ultimately benefit because Amazons weak link, if there is one, is that they really don't have a sass business, right? So they have a series of customers that deuce ***. But that's going to be an opportunity for all those workloads to run on the clouds. And the question is >> going to be >> how how >> cloud like is what we here today. And I I'm a skeptic. I want to see it first, you know, Show me. >> Yeah. No, I mean, what do we hear? What are you know Veum works, you know, services on Azure. It's the STD sea stack. So we understand what that is. It is more than just virtualization. But we used to say Private Cloud just can't be virtual ization plus plus. So Veum wears, you know, expanding and changing that model. But, you know, is it cloud enough? I mean the David, you know? Oh, you want to finance it with an effects we could totally have That affects affects the two. It's great. But, you know, >> at the end of the day, innovation and economics winds and the cloud guys have the scale. I mean, look at the amount of money we heard from Google last month. They spent what, twelve billion dollars in Cap Ex through April. It would take Oracle six years to spend that much in Cap Exit would take IBM three and a half four years to spend that much in CAF X. They're cost structure is going to be so much lower. And ultimately, I believe that's going to win. >> Talk about the winners and losers because we heard at the Bank of America you mentioned also what you just said. They're the future has redefined not how you got here, how you move forward. What's the competitive positioning posture for a winning supplier in the modern era of Iranian Cloud? >> I think it's really smart that Adele is forcing these integrations and getting out ahead of this multi cloud thing, I guess said before. If you don't have a public cloud, you've gotto get into that multi cloud management business. VM wears their their their obvious linchpin. They're early in the game. This is Guest is going to play over the next five to seven years. But VM wear has knocked down eight of us. Google, now Azure. They've got a relationship with Alibaba. It's just a matter of time before you see that one happening. So they are in the pole position. The other one is IBM Red Hat. I mean, those are the two favorites in my >> and by the way, red hats here. And if you want to run, you know the latest greatest red hat solution on the Del Ready notes. You know, of course you can do that. So you know, we'd love to talk about competition, but at the end of the day, it's what's good for customers and can they pick and choose the option of their choice. How much do I get? A full stack. That's the same. And how much is their choice? And I didn't hear the word choice. Ah, lot because, you know, they were focusing on certain announcement day. But absolutely, Adele has done a good job in the space in the cloud space of laying out the top choices that customers want. >> The choice wasn't used because the choices del they'LL ship you VX rails. I'm not sure they'll be shipping other things in there. Maybe they will, too. Thanks for the analysis. Degraded. Al says, man, It's gonna be a great show. Three days of wall to wall comes to cube sets two cannons of content coming your way here A Dell Technology world. The Cube cannons stay with us for three days. I'm jumpers Do Minimum day Volonte Lisa Martin, Rebecca Knight All here in Las Vegas for Delta No stay with us We'LL be right back
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Del Technologies Great key note. I appreciate it. We know that cover that relationship now, going multi cloud all the way with Azure I think you nailed it. I love the collaboration across is going to be the critical differentiated for the winners. There are some challenges with some other partners Visa vi, Cisco And you know, Say on stage here that the new generation of new APS need new infrastructure. He's calling the shots, and people want to do business with them. do elected to weigh in on this too, of competitive strategy where scale matters because you look Well, what strikes me, John, is that, you know, they always talk about end end cos talk about synergy. overall macro, you know, how long can they keep that double digit growth going? I'm sorry that people are going to just disappear from the cloud and come back. Kind of talking about cloud in general and you deal with multiple clouds were packed. Business is really around that scale that that that whole you know, Well, could nutanix be that move game? I mean, that's where the innovation is. look and they talk to you know, I tell you, you know, my community got all excited when Michael got up on stage and said, I only see the public cloud getting stronger because the scales they're the economics cannot be ignored. I want to see it first, you know, Show me. I mean the David, you know? I mean, look at the amount of money we heard from Google last month. They're the future has redefined not how you got here, how you move forward. It's just a matter of time before you see that one happening. And I didn't hear the word choice. Thanks for the analysis.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Michael | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Dave | PERSON | 0.99+ |
IBM | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Cisco | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Andy Jackson | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Michael Dell | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Adele | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Rebecca Knight | PERSON | 0.99+ |
David | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Pat Kelsey | PERSON | 0.99+ |
ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ | |
Alibaba | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Pat | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Tom Sweet | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
April | DATE | 0.99+ |
Microsoft | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
AMC | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Chuck Robbins | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Nutanix | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
sixty | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Lucia | PERSON | 0.99+ |
eighty percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Las Vegas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Jeff Clarke | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Dell | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Joe Tucci | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Oracle | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Amazons | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
fourteen percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
three days | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Hewlett Packard Enterprise | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Jeff | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Kelson | PERSON | 0.99+ |
last month | DATE | 0.99+ |
twelve billion dollars | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Del Technology | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
HB | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Satya Nadella | PERSON | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
nutanix | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
forty seven billion | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
del Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Vienna | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
twenty five thirty percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
six years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two sets | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
tomorrow | DATE | 0.99+ |
John Chambers | PERSON | 0.99+ |
eight | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Nelson | PERSON | 0.99+ |
last week | DATE | 0.99+ |
tenth year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
nineteen billion | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Bhumi | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
eighty three billion | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Bank of America | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Visa vi | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Brian Stewart, Deloitte | Dell Boomi World 2018
>>live from Las Vegas. It's the Cube covering booby World 2018. Brought to you by Del Bumi >>Welcome back to the Cube. We're live at Bumi World 2018 in Las Vegas. I'm Lisa Martin with John Ferrier and we're welcoming to the King for the first time. Brian Stewart, managing director of Deloitte specifically in the h r transformation practice. Brian, thanks so much for joining us on the program today. >>Thanks for having me, >>Deloitte. Long time Global Systems integrator with Del Technologies del Bumi. You were on a customer panel this morning and the Kino that was very interesting. Talk to us about what? Deloitte His helping American Airlines transform with Del Boom. You mentioned This is, you know, this is a big, long duration transformation. American Airlines, well known, a lot of passengers. A lot of customers don't just about where you started three years ago, what that transformation has been like. >>Sure, in 2013 when American and US Airways came together, the first thing they did was focused on their customer world. And once they were able to get the customer rolled under control, they started looking at how they could take their employees world forward and what what we started to do was, as they said, we want to take successfactors and make that our system of record way came in to do the implementation. Okay, so we leverage Successfactors used elbow me to do the integration between all the external and internal systems. So it's some 136 plus integration State star systems and 327 internal systems spread out, you know, across the American Airlines. >>And what were some of the big results that you have helped them achieve to date? >>Well, I think for American the biggest thing was they wanted their employees experience to be the same as their customers never want it. They believe that if the employees experience is the best, it can be that the customers will have the best boss works pains. And so when they were able to do the implementation successfactors and tied together the integration points it allowed there and play experience to come up to the same standards as their customer experience. And for the first time, they had an integrated system that allowed them to get that view, provide consistent experience across the board and give them really give them place confidence. And they knew where to go to get their data, to manage their own data. >>About where you see Del Bumi succeeding where others haven't been successful, the attractions been great. A lot of watching might be looking at Dublin's Hey, okay, what's they're born in the cloud. What's why why were they successful? What's what's what's the key thing in your mind >>from our perspective, when we looked at the possible options way, looked at several possible metal wears and way Bumi stood out was to measure weight, scalability and flexibility going forward. When you're talking American Airlines, over the course of last 20 years, we're talking 325,000 plus employees that have traveled benefits. So in order to scale to that kind of number as we pull across, we had to have a solution that could be speed to build and pull that information on a regular basis. Okay, boom. He really check that box in the hard way where nobody else could. >>Big trend is different, you know, hit the easy, but not so easy when you're dealing with a lot of legacy integration points project timelines tend to get loaded in lengthened. That's the challenge. How to shorten those? Well, it's a big, big challenge. Howto customers get that that success point. >>There were a couple of different ways that we looked at handling that number one by using booming. We had all the pre built, you know, attachments to the FBI's for success factors. That was a big deal for us, because we're going to have speed to build, right? I mean, when you're talking 136 integrations that have now turned into 100 50 as after we've gone life, it's Yeah, it's a lot. It's a lot to manage, and we can't have a situation where every little thing is it's custom built. Then things start to fall apart, right? It becomes a self fulfilling, snowballing top of prophecy. So the consistency provided by Bumi allowed us to get that speed, and then it also gave us the flexibility to make calls where sometimes there are challenges with that kind of volume of data to make the combined like ad hoc report calls with the A P, I calls and do innovative actions that most people haven't seen. I know some of the stuff we were doing. They said we didn't know you could do that way, pulled it off. >>Well, what a surprise. So that's the business. You want to be in success point where you can actually go out, get value of the data and deliver the user experience. Peace, >>right. And as we go forward and we continue to leverage a state AIDS, you know, HR systems are great. And like I said, American believes that with experience must mean customer experience. But it's often hard to determine our why exactly right. Because, you know, HR Systems. You know, it's not always clear, but one of things you can take it forward on is combining it with other data across the organization and looking at how we can tie the employee data using Bumi with data from airports or customer, and tie that out and provide insights going forward. >>You know, that's a big deal. And I think you're in the hr side of it. This personal practice you're in now, but I think you nailed what we hear a lot, which is Oh, we have a staff that's gonna help you. But you know about a horizontally scalable cloud fabric model, whether it's on premises or in cloud. But the data accessibility cross pollinates. That's a key value. >>Yeah, you know, when you look at things that can impact operations Dr Shareholder value I mean, when you can get insights on those type of things back and binding that set of data going across like you're talking about, it really changes what you can get out of the system. >>So it's more than just immigration platform at that point. Yeah, it's a data trust platform >>on booming searches underlying foundation friendly with that date around >>transformation theme of many events. Del Bumi coming out today and say we want to be the transformation transformation is now a sea level conversation. It's a board level conversation. It's an imperative, very challenging for businesses like American Airlines, who grow dramatically by opposition et cetera, but also weren't born in the cloud to undergo such transformation. When you were having conversations with customers, where are you going right to that sea level? The boardroom. This is alright, delight. We have to transform. We need your help to help us identify where we should start. What's that customer like inquiry Start like >>it depends. I mean, sometimes it's a question about what can the road map look like? Kind of what you're talking about from that sea level executive or way. Maybe in the middle of an implementation where we're identifying, you know, like, here's how we can leverage the state and take it forward and bringing that forward. You know, when you talk to one of the things that you see all the time, is people on the ground have wonderful ideas and understand exactly what you know. Changes could help impact the business. And listening to those people and putting together their thoughts and taking it forward is one of the things we do to try to make sure way actually leverage all parts off Clyde experience. So I think you can start the way you're talking about. But it can also start with, you know, I think when the gentleman I work with it at American senior manager and his ideas are something constantly collaborate on to try to come up with how we can improve American Airlines is business. >>So, uh, >>in terms of delights partnership as a global systems integrator with Delta me, you have choice customers have choice. It's It's about much more than integrating applications data people processes. Today, Dell, Gloomy came out and said, We want to be not just the transformation partner, but we're We're gonna redefine the eye and ipads intelligence percent McNab talked about. I pass to Dato from some of the things you heard presumably yesterday. The Partner Summit. What excites you about this new vision that Del Bhumi is bringing the iPads >>well, the opening up in the flexibility of the platform and to add your logic in as the represented from sky, I'll have talked about this morning understanding how you can add that logic and to drive changes to anything from customer experience. You know, adding the intelligence into your workflow being part of the, you know, their flow product that they're talking about, adding that intelligence in really changes the game on what you can do. And that is the most exciting part to me, because if you had that intelligence and you can save both a customer frustration, user user experience and the bottom line and you know you can, you can anticipate things more quickly and be able to help people sell them ourselves. >>Ryan, My final question for you is you seen different evolutions of deployments and consultancy projects over the years. They've gotten shorter in the gravy train of two year projects. Everyone's making money that because planes serviced just different animal Baxter, I t was different. Now cloud speed is critical. You mentioned scale earlier. I need speed. I need scale and I need to have automation. I don't want to be going back and uploading on the 138 6 integration and find out the 3rd 1 has problems. This is chasing your tail kind of philosophy. That's over this new world. What's different about this world we're living in now? If you had to tell a friend Hey, As you start going into digital transformation, watch out for these things. But do more of this. What would that advice be? How would you advise >>I think in? If I were to try to phrase it like that, It's the key that we look for his automation and everything. So one, the big challenges I know most people faces. All right, I contest these interfaces. I've quarterly releases. People talk about release fatigue, right? How can I oughta make my testing Sakhalin away because that doesn't come just out of the box right in, actually leverage moving for some of that. But But how can automate that cycle? Because what you're exactly right. People don't want to have to say tweet one value on my data model. Now I have to test 48 interfaces. I shouldn't have to generate 40 a day sets. It should be automated and ready to go. And I think that kind of speed is what we look at as a big changer for how we how we handle keeping those things compressed and not testing everything in the world every time >>and changes the productivity. Yeah. I mean, those are like, that's grunt work. You gotta go down and get down and dirty. If you don't have the automation, someone's gonna do that. It's a weekend, you know. I mean, we could be ruined basically at that point, >>and and you see that frustration, right? Because you know, if people have to do that nobody you have highly experienced in highly paid people, they don't want to sit there in top in data all day because it's a waste of their time. So it's not evaluate either. >>It's no, it's a waste of time. It's also wasted a lot of money. Well, Brian, thanks so much for stopping by the Cube, joining John and me today and talk to us about what Deloitte is enabling customers with double me to achieve with respected transformation. We appreciate your time. >>Thank you very much. >>Thank you so much for watching the Cube life from Bhumi World 18. I'm Lisa Martin with John Ferrier will be right back with our next >>guest.
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Del Bumi managing director of Deloitte specifically in the h r transformation practice. You mentioned This is, you know, this is a big, internal systems spread out, you know, across the American Airlines. And for the first time, they had an integrated system that allowed them to get that view, provide consistent About where you see Del Bumi succeeding where others haven't been He really check that box in the hard way where nobody else could. Big trend is different, you know, hit the easy, but not so easy when you're dealing with a lot of legacy We had all the pre built, you know, attachments to the FBI's for success factors. You want to be in success point where you can actually go out, You know, it's not always clear, but one of things you can take it forward on But you know about a horizontally scalable cloud fabric model, Yeah, you know, when you look at things that can impact operations Dr So it's more than just immigration platform at that point. When you were having conversations with customers, where are you is people on the ground have wonderful ideas and understand exactly what you know. I pass to Dato from some of the things you heard presumably yesterday. adding that intelligence in really changes the game on what you can do. If you had to tell a friend It's the key that we look for his automation and everything. It's a weekend, you know. Because you know, if people have to do that nobody you have highly experienced Well, Brian, thanks so much for stopping by the Cube, joining John and me today and talk to us about what Deloitte is Thank you so much for watching the Cube life from Bhumi World 18.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
John Ferrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Lisa Martin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Brian Stewart | PERSON | 0.99+ |
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Brian | PERSON | 0.99+ |
American Airlines | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Ryan | PERSON | 0.99+ |
2013 | DATE | 0.99+ |
John Ferrier | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Delta | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Deloitte | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Las Vegas | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
two year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
American Airlines | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Dell | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
48 interfaces | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
FBI | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
first time | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Today | DATE | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
327 internal systems | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Del Bhumi | PERSON | 0.99+ |
iPads | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.99+ |
American | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
136 integrations | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
US Airways | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
325,000 plus employees | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
Del Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
40 a day | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
three years ago | DATE | 0.97+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Del Technologies del Bumi | ORGANIZATION | 0.95+ |
Clyde | PERSON | 0.94+ |
ipads | COMMERCIAL_ITEM | 0.93+ |
Gloomy | ORGANIZATION | 0.93+ |
McNab | PERSON | 0.93+ |
this morning | DATE | 0.91+ |
last 20 years | DATE | 0.9+ |
Cube | ORGANIZATION | 0.87+ |
136 plus integration | QUANTITY | 0.87+ |
one value | QUANTITY | 0.86+ |
Partner Summit | EVENT | 0.86+ |
first thing | QUANTITY | 0.85+ |
138 6 | OTHER | 0.84+ |
100 50 | OTHER | 0.83+ |
Del Boom | ORGANIZATION | 0.82+ |
Bhumi World | LOCATION | 0.79+ |
double | QUANTITY | 0.77+ |
Boomi World 2018 | EVENT | 0.75+ |
Baxter | PERSON | 0.75+ |
Kino | ORGANIZATION | 0.68+ |
3rd 1 | QUANTITY | 0.68+ |
Dublin's | ORGANIZATION | 0.68+ |
American | LOCATION | 0.62+ |
King | PERSON | 0.61+ |
Dato | PERSON | 0.51+ |
Bumi World 2018 | EVENT | 0.48+ |
18 | EVENT | 0.48+ |
2018 | DATE | 0.44+ |
Sakhalin | ORGANIZATION | 0.35+ |