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Breaking Analysis: Snowflake Summit 2022...All About Apps & Monetization


 

>> From theCUBE studios in Palo Alto in Boston, bringing you data driven insights from theCUBE and ETR. This is "Breaking Analysis" with Dave Vellante. >> Snowflake Summit 2022 underscored that the ecosystem excitement which was once forming around Hadoop is being reborn, escalated and coalescing around Snowflake's data cloud. What was once seen as a simpler cloud data warehouse and good marketing with the data cloud is evolving rapidly with new workloads of vertical industry focus, data applications, monetization, and more. The question is, will the promise of data be fulfilled this time around, or is it same wine, new bottle? Hello, and welcome to this week's Wikibon CUBE Insights powered by ETR. In this "Breaking Analysis," we'll talk about the event, the announcements that Snowflake made that are of greatest interest, the major themes of the show, what was hype and what was real, the competition, and some concerns that remain in many parts of the ecosystem and pockets of customers. First let's look at the overall event. It was held at Caesars Forum. Not my favorite venue, but I'll tell you it was packed. Fire Marshall Full, as we sometimes say. Nearly 10,000 people attended the event. Here's Snowflake's CMO Denise Persson on theCUBE describing how this event has evolved. >> Yeah, two, three years ago, we were about 1800 people at a Hilton in San Francisco. We had about 40 partners attending. This week we're close to 10,000 attendees here. Almost 10,000 people online as well, and over over 200 partners here on the show floor. >> Now, those numbers from 2019 remind me of the early days of Hadoop World, which was put on by Cloudera but then Cloudera handed off the event to O'Reilly as this article that we've inserted, if you bring back that slide would say. The headline it almost got it right. Hadoop World was a failure, but it didn't have to be. Snowflake has filled the void created by O'Reilly when it first killed Hadoop World, and killed the name and then killed Strata. Now, ironically, the momentum and excitement from Hadoop's early days, it probably could have stayed with Cloudera but the beginning of the end was when they gave the conference over to O'Reilly. We can't imagine Frank Slootman handing the keys to the kingdom to a third party. Serious business was done at this event. I'm talking substantive deals. Salespeople from a host sponsor and the ecosystems that support these events, they love physical. They really don't like virtual because physical belly to belly means relationship building, pipeline, and deals. And that was blatantly obvious at this show. And in fairness, all theCUBE events that we've done year but this one was more vibrant because of its attendance and the action in the ecosystem. Ecosystem is a hallmark of a cloud company, and that's what Snowflake is. We asked Frank Slootman on theCUBE, was this ecosystem evolution by design or did Snowflake just kind of stumble into it? Here's what he said. >> Well, when you are a data clouding, you have data, people want to do things with that data. They don't want just run data operations, populate dashboards, run reports. Pretty soon they want to build applications and after they build applications, they want build businesses on it. So it goes on and on and on. So it drives your development to enable more and more functionality on that data cloud. Didn't start out that way, you know, we were very, very much focused on data operations. Then it becomes application development and then it becomes, hey, we're developing whole businesses on this platform. So similar to what happened to Facebook in many ways. >> So it sounds like it was maybe a little bit of both. The Facebook analogy is interesting because Facebook is a walled garden, as is Snowflake, but when you come into that garden, you have assurances that things are going to work in a very specific way because a set of standards and protocols is being enforced by a steward, i.e. Snowflake. This means things run better inside of Snowflake than if you try to do all the integration yourself. Now, maybe over time, an open source version of that will come out but if you wait for that, you're going to be left behind. That said, Snowflake has made moves to make its platform more accommodating to open source tooling in many of its announcements this week. Now, I'm not going to do a deep dive on the announcements. Matt Sulkins from Monte Carlo wrote a decent summary of the keynotes and a number of analysts like Sanjeev Mohan, Tony Bear and others are posting some deeper analysis on these innovations, and so we'll point to those. I'll say a few things though. Unistore extends the type of data that can live in the Snowflake data cloud. It's enabled by a new feature called hybrid tables, a new table type in Snowflake. One of the big knocks against Snowflake was it couldn't handle and transaction data. Several database companies are creating this notion of a hybrid where both analytic and transactional workloads can live in the same data store. Oracle's doing this for example, with MySQL HeatWave and there are many others. We saw Mongo earlier this month add an analytics capability to its transaction system. Mongo also added sequel, which was kind of interesting. Here's what Constellation Research analyst Doug Henschen said about Snowflake's moves into transaction data. Play the clip. >> Well with Unistore, they're reaching out and trying to bring transactional data in. Hey, don't limit this to analytical information and there's other ways to do that like CDC and streaming but they're very closely tying that again to that marketplace, with the idea of bring your data over here and you can monetize it. Don't just leave it in that transactional database. So another reach to a broader play across a big community that they're building. >> And you're also seeing Snowflake expand its workload types in its unique way and through Snowpark and its stream lit acquisition, enabling Python so that native apps can be built in the data cloud and benefit from all that structure and the features that Snowflake is built in. Hence that Facebook analogy, or maybe the App Store, the Apple App Store as I propose as well. Python support also widens the aperture for machine intelligence workloads. We asked Snowflake senior VP of product, Christian Kleinerman which announcements he thought were the most impactful. And despite the who's your favorite child nature of the question, he did answer. Here's what he said. >> I think the native applications is the one that looks like, eh, I don't know about it on the surface but he has the biggest potential to change everything. That's create an entire ecosystem of solutions for within a company or across companies that I don't know that we know what's possible. >> Snowflake also announced support for Apache Iceberg, which is a new open table format standard that's emerging. So you're seeing Snowflake respond to these concerns about its lack of openness, and they're building optionality into their cloud. They also showed some cost op optimization tools both from Snowflake itself and from the ecosystem, notably Capital One which launched a software business on top of Snowflake focused on optimizing cost and eventually the rollout data management capabilities, and all kinds of features that Snowflake announced that the show around governance, cross cloud, what we call super cloud, a new security workload, and they reemphasize their ability to read non-native on-prem data into Snowflake through partnerships with Dell and Pure and a lot more. Let's hear from some of the analysts that came on theCUBE this week at Snowflake Summit to see what they said about the announcements and their takeaways from the event. This is Dave Menninger, Sanjeev Mohan, and Tony Bear, roll the clip. >> Our research shows that the majority of organizations, the majority of people do not have access to analytics. And so a couple of the things they've announced I think address those or help to address those issues very directly. So Snowpark and support for Python and other languages is a way for organizations to embed analytics into different business processes. And so I think that'll be really beneficial to try and get analytics into more people's hands. And I also think that the native applications as part of the marketplace is another way to get applications into people's hands rather than just analytical tools. Because most people in the organization are not analysts. They're doing some line of business function. They're HR managers, they're marketing people, they're sales people, they're finance people, right? They're not sitting there mucking around in the data, they're doing a job and they need analytics in that job. >> Primarily, I think it is to contract this whole notion that once you move data into Snowflake, it's a proprietary format. So I think that's how it started but it's usually beneficial to the customers, to the users because now if you have large amount of data in paket files you can leave it on S3, but then you using the Apache Iceberg table format in Snowflake, you get all the benefits of Snowflake's optimizer. So for example, you get the micro partitioning, you get the metadata. And in a single query, you can join, you can do select from a Snowflake table union and select from an iceberg table and you can do store procedure, user defined function. So I think what they've done is extremely interesting. Iceberg by itself still does not have multi-table transactional capabilities. So if I'm running a workload, I might be touching 10 different tables. So if I use Apache Iceberg in a raw format, they don't have it, but Snowflake does. So the way I see it is Snowflake is adding more and more capabilities right into the database. So for example, they've gone ahead and added security and privacy. So you can now create policies and do even cell level masking, dynamic masking, but most organizations have more than Snowflake. So what we are starting to see all around here is that there's a whole series of data catalog companies, a bunch of companies that are doing dynamic data masking, security and governance, data observability which is not a space Snowflake has gone into. So there's a whole ecosystem of companies that is mushrooming. Although, you know, so they're using the native capabilities of Snowflake but they are at a level higher. So if you have a data lake and a cloud data warehouse and you have other like relational databases, you can run these cross platform capabilities in that layer. So that way, you know, Snowflake's done a great job of enabling that ecosystem. >> I think it's like the last mile, essentially. In other words, it's like, okay, you have folks that are basically that are very comfortable with Tableau but you do have developers who don't want to have to shell out to a separate tool. And so this is where Snowflake is essentially working to address that constituency. To Sanjeev's point, and I think part of it, this kind of plays into it is what makes this different from the Hadoop era is the fact that all these capabilities, you know, a lot of vendors are taking it very seriously to put this native. Now, obviously Snowflake acquired Streamlit. So we can expect that the Streamlit capabilities are going to be native. >> I want to share a little bit about the higher level thinking at Snowflake, here's a chart from Frank Slootman's keynote. It's his version of the modern data stack, if you will. Now, Snowflake of course, was built on the public cloud. If there were no AWS, there would be no Snowflake. Now, they're all about bringing data and live data and expanding the types of data, including structured, we just heard about that, unstructured, geospatial, and the list is going to continue on and on. Eventually I think it's going to bleed into the edge if we can figure out what to do with that edge data. Executing on new workloads is a big deal. They started with data sharing and they recently added security and they've essentially created a PaaS layer. We call it a SuperPaaS layer, if you will, to attract application developers. Snowflake has a developer-focused event coming up in November and they've extended the marketplace with 1300 native apps listings. And at the top, that's the holy grail, monetization. We always talk about building data products and we saw a lot of that at this event, very, very impressive and unique. Now here's the thing. There's a lot of talk in the press, in the Wall Street and the broader community about consumption-based pricing and concerns over Snowflake's visibility and its forecast and how analytics may be discretionary. But if you're a company building apps in Snowflake and monetizing like Capital One intends to do, and you're now selling in the marketplace, that is not discretionary, unless of course your costs are greater than your revenue for that service, in which case is going to fail anyway. But the point is we're entering a new error where data apps and data products are beginning to be built and Snowflake is attempting to make the data cloud the defacto place as to where you're going to build them. In our view they're well ahead in that journey. Okay, let's talk about some of the bigger themes that we heard at the event. Bringing apps to the data instead of moving the data to the apps, this was a constant refrain and one that certainly makes sense from a physics point of view. But having a single source of data that is discoverable, sharable and governed with increasingly robust ecosystem options, it doesn't have to be moved. Sometimes it may have to be moved if you're going across regions, but that's unique and a differentiator for Snowflake in our view. I mean, I'm yet to see a data ecosystem that is as rich and growing as fast as the Snowflake ecosystem. Monetization, we talked about that, industry clouds, financial services, healthcare, retail, and media, all front and center at the event. My understanding is that Frank Slootman was a major force behind this shift, this development and go to market focus on verticals. It's really an attempt, and he talked about this in his keynote to align with the customer mission ultimately align with their objectives which not surprisingly, are increasingly monetizing with data as a differentiating ingredient. We heard a ton about data mesh, there were numerous presentations about the topic. And I'll say this, if you map the seven pillars Snowflake talks about, Benoit Dageville talked about this in his keynote, but if you map those into Zhamak Dehghani's data mesh framework and the four principles, they align better than most of the data mesh washing that I've seen. The seven pillars, all data, all workloads, global architecture, self-managed, programmable, marketplace and governance. Those are the seven pillars that he talked about in his keynote. All data, well, maybe with hybrid tables that becomes more of a reality. Global architecture means the data is globally distributed. It's not necessarily physically in one place. Self-managed is key. Self-service infrastructure is one of Zhamak's four principles. And then inherent governance. Zhamak talks about computational, what I'll call automated governance, built in. And with all the talk about monetization, that aligns with the second principle which is data as product. So while it's not a pure hit and to its credit, by the way, Snowflake doesn't use data mesh in its messaging anymore. But by the way, its customers do, several customers talked about it. Geico, JPMC, and a number of other customers and partners are using the term and using it pretty closely to the concepts put forth by Zhamak Dehghani. But back to the point, they essentially, Snowflake that is, is building a proprietary system that substantially addresses some, if not many of the goals of data mesh. Okay, back to the list, supercloud, that's our term. We saw lots of examples of clouds on top of clouds that are architected to spin multiple clouds, not just run on individual clouds as separate services. And this includes Snowflake's data cloud itself but a number of ecosystem partners that are headed in a very similar direction. Snowflake still talks about data sharing but now it uses the term collaboration in its high level messaging, which is I think smart. Data sharing is kind of a geeky term. And also this is an attempt by Snowflake to differentiate from everyone else that's saying, hey, we do data sharing too. And finally Snowflake doesn't say data marketplace anymore. It's now marketplace, accounting for its application market. Okay, let's take a quick look at the competitive landscape via this ETR X-Y graph. Vertical access remembers net score or spending momentum and the x-axis is penetration, pervasiveness in the data center. That's what ETR calls overlap. Snowflake continues to lead on the vertical axis. They guide it conservatively last quarter, remember, so I wouldn't be surprised if that lofty height, even though it's well down from its earlier levels but I wouldn't be surprised if it ticks down again a bit in the July survey, which will be in the field shortly. Databricks is a key competitor obviously at a strong spending momentum, as you can see. We didn't draw it here but we usually draw that 40% line or red line at 40%, anything above that is considered elevated. So you can see Databricks is quite elevated. But it doesn't have the market presence of Snowflake. It didn't get to IPO during the bubble and it doesn't have nearly as deep and capable go-to market machinery. Now, they're getting better and they're getting some attention in the market, nonetheless. But as a private company, you just naturally, more people are aware of Snowflake. Some analysts, Tony Bear in particular, believe Mongo and Snowflake are on a bit of a collision course long term. I actually can see his point. You know, I mean, they're both platforms, they're both about data. It's long ways off, but you can see them sort of in a similar path. They talk about kind of similar aspirations and visions even though they're quite in different markets today but they're definitely participating in similar tam. The cloud players are probably the biggest or definitely the biggest partners and probably the biggest competitors to Snowflake. And then there's always Oracle. Doesn't have the spending velocity of the others but it's got strong market presence. It owns a cloud and it knows a thing about data and it definitely is a go-to market machine. Okay, we're going to end on some of the things that we heard in the ecosystem. 'Cause look, we've heard before how particular technology, enterprise data warehouse, data hubs, MDM, data lakes, Hadoop, et cetera. We're going to solve all of our data problems and of course they didn't. And in fact, sometimes they create more problems that allow vendors to push more incremental technology to solve the problems that they created. Like tools and platforms to clean up the no schema on right nature of data lakes or data swamps. But here are some of the things that I heard firsthand from some customers and partners. First thing is, they said to me that they're having a hard time keeping up sometimes with the pace of Snowflake. It reminds me of AWS in 2014, 2015 timeframe. You remember that fire hose of announcements which causes increased complexity for customers and partners. I talked to several customers that said, well, yeah this is all well and good but I still need skilled people to understand all these tools that I'm integrated in the ecosystem, the catalogs, the machine learning observability. A number of customers said, I just can't use one governance tool, I need multiple governance tools and a lot of other technologies as well, and they're concerned that that's going to drive up their cost and their complexity. I heard other concerns from the ecosystem that it used to be sort of clear as to where they could add value you know, when Snowflake was just a better data warehouse. But to point number one, they're either concerned that they'll be left behind or they're concerned that they'll be subsumed. Look, I mean, just like we tell AWS customers and partners, you got to move fast, you got to keep innovating. If you don't, you're going to be left. Either if your customer you're going to be left behind your competitor, or if you're a partner, somebody else is going to get there or AWS is going to solve the problem for you. Okay, and there were a number of skeptical practitioners, really thoughtful and experienced data pros that suggested that they've seen this movie before. That's hence the same wine, new bottle. Well, this time around I certainly hope not given all the energy and investment that is going into this ecosystem. And the fact is Snowflake is unquestionably making it easier to put data to work. They built on AWS so you didn't have to worry about provisioning, compute and storage and networking and scaling. Snowflake is optimizing its platform to take advantage of things like Graviton so you don't have to, and they're doing some of their own optimization tools. The ecosystem is building optimization tools so that's all good. And firm belief is the less expensive it is, the more data will get brought into the data cloud. And they're building a data platform on which their ecosystem can build and run data applications, aka data products without having to worry about all the hard work that needs to get done to make data discoverable, shareable, and governed. And unlike the last 10 years, you don't have to be a keeper and integrate all the animals in the Hadoop zoo. Okay, that's it for today, thanks for watching. Thanks to my colleague, Stephanie Chan who helps research "Breaking Analysis" topics. Sometimes Alex Myerson is on production and manages the podcasts. Kristin Martin and Cheryl Knight help get the word out on social and in our newsletters, and Rob Hof is our editor in chief over at Silicon, and Hailey does some wonderful editing, thanks to all. Remember, all these episodes are available as podcasts wherever you listen. All you got to do is search Breaking Analysis Podcasts. I publish each week on wikibon.com and siliconangle.com and you can email me at David.Vellante@siliconangle.com or DM me @DVellante. If you got something interesting, I'll respond. If you don't, I'm sorry I won't. Or comment on my LinkedIn post. Please check out etr.ai for the best survey data in the enterprise tech business. This is Dave Vellante for theCUBE Insights powered by ETR. Thanks for watching, and we'll see you next time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jun 18 2022

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Harry Glaser, Modlbit, Damon Bryan, Hyperfinity & Stefan Williams, Snowflake | Snowflake Summit 2022


 

>>Thanks. Hey, everyone, welcome back to the cubes. Continuing coverage of snowflakes. Summit 22 live from Caesars Forum in Las Vegas. Lisa Martin here. I have three guests here with me. We're gonna be talking about Snowflake Ventures and the snowflakes start up Challenge. That's in its second year. I've got Harry Glaser with me. Co founder and CEO of Model Bit Start Up Challenge finalist Damon Bryan joins us as well. The CTO and co founder of Hyper Affinity. Also a startup Challenge Finalists. And Stephane Williams to my left here, VP of Corporate development and snowflake Ventures. Guys, great to have you all on this little mini panel this morning. >>Thank you. >>Thank you. >>Let's go ahead, Harry, and we'll start with you. Talk to the audience about model. But what do you guys do? And then we'll kind of unpack the snowflake. The Snowflakes challenge >>Model bit is the easiest way for data scientists to deploy machine learning models directly into Snowflake. We make use of the latest snowflake functionality called Snow Park for python that allows those models to run adjacent to the data so that machine learning models can be much more efficient and much more powerful than they were before. >>Awesome. Damon. Give us an overview of hyper affinity. >>Yes, so hyper affinity were Decision Intelligence platform. So we helped. Specifically retailers and brands make intelligent decisions through the use of their own customer, data their product data and put data science in a I into the heart of the decision makers across their business. >>Nice Step seven. Tell us about the startup challenge. We talked a little bit about it yesterday with CMO Denise Pearson, but I know it's in its second year. Give us the idea of the impetus for it, what it's all about and what these companies embody. >>Yeah, so we This is the second year that we've done it. Um, we it was really out of, um Well, it starts with snowflake Ventures when we started to invest in companies, and we quickly realised that there's there's a massive opportunity for companies to be building on top of the Lego blocks, uh, of snowflake. And so, um, open up the competition. Last year it was the inaugural competition overlay analytics one, Um, and since then, you've seen a number of different functionalities and features as part of snowflakes snow part. Being one of them native applications is a really exciting one going forward. Um, the companies can really use to accelerate their ability to kind of deliver best in class applications using best in class technology to deliver real customer outcomes and value. Um, so we've we've seen tremendous traction across the globe, 250 applicants across 50. I think 70 countries was mentioned today, so truly global in nature. And it's really exciting to see how some of the start ups are taking snowflake to to to new and interesting use cases and new personas and new industries. >>So you had 200 over 250 software companies applied for this. How did you did you narrow it down to three? >>We did. Yeah, >>you do that. >>So, behind the scenes, we had a sub judging panel, the ones you didn't see up on stage, which I was luckily part of. We had kind of very distinct evaluation criteria that we were evaluating every company across. Um and we kind of took in tranches, right? We we took the first big garden, and we kind of try to get that down to a top 50 and top 50. Then we really went into the details and we kind of across, um, myself in ventures with some of my venture partners. Um, some of the market teams, some of the product and engineering team, all kind of came together and evaluated all of these different companies to get to the top 10, which was our semifinalists and then the semi finalists, or had a chance to present in front of the group. So we get. We got to meet over Zoom along the way where they did a pitch, a five minute pitch followed by a Q and A in a similar former, I guess, to what we just went through the startup challenge live, um, to get to the top three. And then here we are today, just coming out of the competition with with With folks here on the table. >>Wow, Harry talked to us about How did you just still down what model bit is doing into five minutes over Zoom and then five minutes this morning in person? >>I think it was really fun to have that pressure test where, you know, we've only been doing this for a short time. In fact model. It's only been a company for four or five months now, and to have this process where we pitch and pitch again and pitch again and pitch again really helped us nail the one sentence value proposition, which we hadn't done previously. So in that way, very grateful to step on in the team for giving us that opportunity. >>That helps tremendously. I can imagine being a 4 to 5 months young start up and really trying to figure out I've worked with those young start ups before. Messaging is challenging the narrative. Who are we? What do we do? How are we changing or chasing the market? What are our customers saying we are? That's challenging. So this was a good opportunity for you, Damon. Would you say the same as well for hyper affinity? >>Yeah, definitely conquer. It's really helped us to shape our our value proposition early and how we speak about that. It's quite complicated stuff, data science when you're trying to get across what you do, especially in retail, that we work in. So part of what our platform does is to help them make sense of data science and Ai and implement that into commercial decisions. So you have to be really kind of snappy with how you position things. And it's really helped us to do that. We're a little bit further down the line than than these guys we've been going for three years. So we've had the benefit of working with a lot of retailers to this point to actually identify what their problems are and shape our product and our proposition towards. >>Are you primarily working with the retail industry? >>Yes, Retail and CPG? Our primary use case. We have seen any kind of consumer related industries. >>Got it. Massive changes right in retail and CPG the last couple of years, the rise of consumer expectations. It's not going to go back down, right? We're impatient. We want brands to know who we are. I want you to deliver relevant content to me that if I if I bought a tent, go back on your website, don't show me more tense. Show me things that go with that. We have this expectation. You >>just explain the whole business. But >>it's so challenging because the brothers brands have to respond to that. How do you what is the value for retailers working with hyper affinity and snowflake together. What's that powerhouse? >>Yeah, exactly. So you're exactly right. The retail landscape is changing massively. There's inflation everywhere. The pandemic really impacted what consumers really value out of shopping with retailers. And those decisions are even harder for retailers to make. So that's kind of what our platform does. It helps them to make those decisions quickly, get the power of data science or democratise it into the hands of those decision makers. Um, so our platform helps to do that. And Snowflake really underpins that. You know, the scalability of snowflake means that we can scale the data and the capability that platform in tangent with that and snowflake have been innovating a lot of things like Snow Park and then the new announcements, announcements, uni store and a native APP framework really helping us to make developments to our product as quick as snowflakes are doing it. So it's really beneficial. >>You get kind of that tailwind from snowflakes acceleration. It sounds like >>exactly that. Yeah. So as soon as we hear about new things were like, Can we use it? You know, and Snow Park in particular was music to our ears, and we actually part of private preview for that. So we've been using that while and again some of the new developments will be. I'm on the phone to my guys saying, Can we use this? Get it, get it implemented pretty quickly. So yeah, >>fantastic. Sounds like a great aligned partnership there, Harry. Talk to us a little bit about model bit and how it's enabling customers. Maybe you've got a favourite customer example at model bit plus snowflake, the power that delivers to the end user customer? >>Absolutely. I mean, as I said, it allows you to deploy the M L model directly into snowflake. But sometimes you need to use the exact same machine learning model in multiple endpoints simultaneously. For example, one of our customers uses model bit to train and deploy a lead scoring model. So you know when somebody comes into your website and they fill out the form like they want to talk to a sales person, is this gonna be a really good customer? Do we think or maybe not so great? Maybe they won't pay quite as much, and that lead scoring model actually runs on the website using model bit so that you can deploy display a custom experience to that customer we know right away. If this is an A, B, C or D lead, and therefore do we show them a salesperson contact form? Do we just put them in the marketing funnel? Based on that lead score simultaneously, the business needs to know in the back office the score of the lead so that they can do things like routed to the appropriate salesperson or update their sales forecasts for the end of the quarter. That same model also runs in the in the snowflake warehouse so that those back office systems can be powered directly off of snowflake. The fact that they're able to train and deploy one model into two production environment simultaneously and manage all that is something they can only do with bottled it. >>Lead scoring has been traditionally challenging for businesses in every industry, but it's so incredibly important, especially as consumers get pickier and pickier with. I don't want I don't want to be measured. I want to opt out. What sounds like what model but is enabling is especially alignment between sales and marketing within companies, which is That's also a big challenge at many companies face for >>us. It starts with the data scientist, right? The fact that sales and marketing may not be aligned might be an issue with the source of truth. And do we have a source of truth at this company? And so the idea that we can empower these data scientists who are creating this value in the company by giving them best in class tools and resources That's our dream. That's our mission. >>Talk to me a little bit, Harry. You said you're only 4 to 5 months old. What were the gaps in the market that you and your co founders saw and said, Guys, we've got to solve this. And Snowflake is the right partner to help us do it. >>Absolutely. We This is actually our second start up, and we started previously a data Analytics company that was somewhat successful, and it got caught up in this big wave of migration of cloud tools. So all of data tools moved and are moving from on premise tools to cloud based tools. This is really a migration. That snowflake catalyst Snowflake, of course, is the ultimate in cloud based data platforms, moving customers from on premise data warehouses to modern cloud based data clouds that dragged and pulled the rest of the industry along with it. Data Science is one of the last pieces of the data industry that really hasn't moved to the cloud yet. We were almost surprised when we got done with our last start up. We were thinking about what to do next. The data scientists were still using Jupiter notebooks locally on their laptops, and we thought, This is a big market opportunity and we're We're almost surprised it hasn't been captured yet, and we're going to get in there. >>The other thing. I think it's really interesting on your business that we haven't talked about is just the the flow of data, right? So that the data scientist is usually taking data out of a of a of a day like something like Smoke like a data platform and the security kind of breaks down because then it's one. It's two, it's three, it's five, it's 20. Its, you know, big companies just gets really big. And so I think the really interesting thing with what you guys are doing is enabling the data to stay where it's at, not copping out keeping that security, that that highly governed environment that big companies want but allowing the data science community to really unlock that value from the data, which is really, really >>cool. Wonderful for small startups like Model Bit. Because you talk to a big company, you want them to become a customer. You want them to use your data science technology. They want to see your fed ramp certification. They want to talk to your C. So we're two guys in Silicon Valley with a dream. But if we can tell them the data is staying in snowflake and you have that conversation with Snowflake all the time and you trust them were just built on top. That is an easy and very smooth way to have that conversation with the customer. >>Would you both say that there's credibility like you got street cred, especially being so so early in this stage? Harry, with the partnership with With Snowflake Damon, we'll start with you. >>Yeah, absolutely. We've been using Snowflake from day one. We leave from when we started our company, and it was a little bit of an unknown, I guess maybe 23 years ago, especially in retail. A lot of retailers using all the legacy kind of enterprise software, are really starting to adopt the cloud now with what they're doing and obviously snowflake really innovating in that area. So what we're finding is we use Snowflake to host our platform and our infrastructure. We're finding a lot of retailers doing that as well, which makes it great for when they wanted to use products like ours because of the whole data share thing. It just becomes really easy. And it really simplifies it'll and data transformation and data sharing. >>Stephane, talk about the startup challenge, the innovation that you guys have seen, and only the second year I can. I can just hear it from the two of you. And I know that the winner is back in India, but tremendous amount of of potential, like to me the last 2.5 days, the flywheel that is snowflake is getting faster and faster and more and more powerful. What are some of the things that excite you about working on the start up challenge and some of the vision going forward that it's driving. >>I think the incredible thing about Snowflake is that we really focus as a company on the data infrastructure and and we're hyper focused on enabling and incubating and encouraging partners to kind of stand on top of a best of breed platform, um, unlocked value across the different, either personas within I T organisations or industries like hypothermia is doing. And so it's it's it's really incredible to see kind of domain knowledge and subject matter expertise, able to kind of plug into best of breed underlying data infrastructure and really divide, drive, drive real meaningful outcomes for for for our customers in the community. Um, it's just been incredible to see. I mean, we just saw three today. Um, there was 250 incredible applications that past the initial. Like, do they check all the boxes and then actually, wow, they just take you to these completely different areas. You never thought that the technology would go and solve. And yet here we are talking about, you know, really interesting use cases that have partners are taking us to two >>150. Did that surprise you? And what was it last year. >>I think it was actually close to close to 2 to 40 to 50 as well, and I think it was above to 50 this year. I think that's the number that is in my head from last year, but I think it's actually above that. But the momentum is, Yeah, it's there and and again, we're gonna be back next year with the full competition, too. So >>awesome. Harry, what is what are some of the things that are next for model bed as it progresses through its early stages? >>You know, one thing I've learned and I think probably everyone at this table has internalised this lesson. Product market fit really is everything for a start up. And so for us, it's We're fortunate to have a set of early design partners who will become our customers, who we work with every day to build features, get their feedback, make sure they love the product, and the most exciting thing that happened to me here this week was one of our early design partner. Customers wanted us to completely rethink how we integrate with gets so that they can use their CI CD workflows their continuous integration that they have in their own get platform, which is advanced. They've built it over many years, and so can they back, all of model, but with their get. And it was it was one of those conversations. I know this is getting a little bit in the weeds, but it was one of those conversations that, as a founder, makes your head explode. If we can have a critical mass of those conversations and get to that product market fit, then the flywheel starts. Then the investment money comes. Then you're hiring a big team and you're off to the races. >>Awesome. Sounds like there's a lot of potential and momentum there. Damon. Last question for you is what's next for hyper affinity. Obviously you've got we talked about the street cred. >>Yeah, what's >>next for the business? >>Well, so yeah, we we've got a lot of exciting times coming up, so we're about to really fully launch our products. So we've been trading for three years with consultancy in retail analytics and data science and actually using our product before it was fully ready to launch. So we have the kind of main launch of our product and we actually starting to onboard some clients now as we speak. Um, I think the climate with regards to trying to find data, science, resources, you know, a problem across the globe. So it really helps companies like ours that allow, you know, allow retailers or whoever is to democratise the use of data science. And perhaps, you know, really help them in this current climate where they're struggling to get world class resource to enable them to do that >>right so critical stuff and take us home with your overall summary of snowflake summit. Fourth annual, nearly 10,000 people here. Huge increase from the last time we were all in person. What's your bumper sticker takeaway from Summit 22 the Startup Challenge? >>Uh, that's a big closing statement for me. It's been just the energy. It's been incredible energy, incredible excitement. I feel the the products that have been unveiled just unlock a tonne, more value and a tonne, more interesting things for companies like the model bit I profanity and all the other startups here. And to go and think about so there's there's just this incredible energy, incredible excitement, both internally, our product and engineering teams, the partners that we have spoke. I've spoken here with the event, the portfolio companies that we've invested in. And so there's there's there's just this. Yeah, incredible momentum and excitement around what we're able to do with data in today's world, powered by underlying platform, like snowflakes. >>Right? And we've heard that energy, I think, through l 30 plus guests we've had on the show since Tuesday and certainly from the two of you as well. Congratulations on being finalist. We wish you the best of luck. You have to come back next year and talk about some of the great things. More great >>things hopefully will be exhibited next year. >>Yeah, that's a good thing to look for. Guys really appreciate your time and your insights. Congratulations on another successful start up challenge. >>Thank you so much >>for Harry, Damon and Stefan. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cubes. Continuing coverage of snowflakes. Summit 22 live from Vegas. Stick around. We'll be right back with a volonte and our final guest of the day. Mhm, mhm

Published Date : Jun 16 2022

SUMMARY :

Guys, great to have you all on this little mini panel this morning. But what do you guys do? Model bit is the easiest way for data scientists to deploy machine learning models directly into Snowflake. Give us an overview of hyper affinity. So we helped. Give us the idea of the impetus for it, what it's all about and what these companies And it's really exciting to see how some of the start ups are taking snowflake to So you had 200 over 250 software companies applied We did. So, behind the scenes, we had a sub judging panel, I think it was really fun to have that pressure test where, you know, I can imagine being a 4 to 5 months young start up of snappy with how you position things. Yes, Retail and CPG? I want you to deliver relevant content to me that just explain the whole business. it's so challenging because the brothers brands have to respond to that. You know, the scalability of snowflake means that we can scale the You get kind of that tailwind from snowflakes acceleration. I'm on the phone to my guys saying, Can we use this? bit plus snowflake, the power that delivers to the end user customer? the business needs to know in the back office the score of the lead so that they can do things like routed to the appropriate I want to opt out. And so the idea that And Snowflake is the right partner to help us do it. dragged and pulled the rest of the industry along with it. So that the data scientist is usually taking data out of a of a of a day like something But if we can tell them the data is staying in snowflake and you have that conversation with Snowflake all the time Would you both say that there's credibility like you got street cred, especially being so so are really starting to adopt the cloud now with what they're doing and obviously snowflake really innovating in that area. And I know that the winner is back in India, but tremendous amount of of and really divide, drive, drive real meaningful outcomes for for for our customers in the community. And what was it last year. But the momentum Harry, what is what are some of the things that are next for model bed as and the most exciting thing that happened to me here this week was one of our early design partner. Last question for you is what's next for hyper affinity. So it really helps companies like ours that allow, you know, allow retailers or whoever is to democratise Huge increase from the last time we were all in person. the partners that we have spoke. show since Tuesday and certainly from the two of you as well. Yeah, that's a good thing to look for. We'll be right back with a volonte and our final guest of the day.

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Rinesh Patel, Snowflake & Jack Berkowitz, ADP | Snowflake Summit 2022


 

(upbeat music) >> Welcome back to theCUBE's continuing coverage of Snowflake Summit 22 live from Caesars Forum in Las Vegas. I'm Lisa Martin with Dave Vellante. We've got a couple of guests joining us now. We're going to be talking about financial services. Rinesh Patel joins us, the Global Head of Financial Services for Snowflake, and Jack Berkowitz, Chief Data Officer at ADP. Guys, welcome to the program. >> Thanks, thanks for having us. >> Thanks for having us. >> Talk to us about what's going on in the financial services industry as a whole. Obviously, we've seen so much change in the last couple of years. What does the data experience look like for internal folks and of course, for those end user consumers and clients? >> So, one of the big things happening inside of the financial services industry is overcoming the COVID wait, right? A lot of banks, a lot of institutions like ours had a lot of stuff on-prem. And then the move to the Cloud allows us to have that flexibility to deal with it. And out of that is also all these new capabilities. So the machine learning revolution has really hit the services industry, right? And so it's affecting how our IT teams or our data teams are building applications. Also really affecting what the end consumers get out of them. And so there's all sorts of consumerization of the experience over the past couple of years much faster than we ever expected it to happen. >> Right, we have these expectations as consumers that bleed into our business lives that I can do transactions. It's going to be on the swipe in terms of checking authenticity, fraud detection, et cetera. And of course we don't want things to go back in terms of how brands are serving us. Talk about some of the things that you guys have put in place with Snowflake in the last couple of years, particularly at ADP. >> Yeah, so one of the big things that we've done, is, one of the things that we provide is compensation data. So we issue a thing called the National Employment Report that informs the world as to what's happening in the U.S. economy in terms of workers. And then we have compensation data on top of that. So the thing that we've been able to do with Snowflake is to lower the time that it takes us to process that and get that information out into the fingertips of people. And so people can use it to see what's changed in terms of with the worker changes, how much people are making. And they can get it very, very quickly. And we're able to do that with Snowflake now. Used to take us weeks, now it's in a matter of moments we can get that updated information out to people. >> Interesting. It helps with the talent war and- >> Helps in the talent war, helps people adjust, even where they're going to put supply chain in reaction to where people are migrating. We can have all of that inside of the Snowflake system and available almost instantaneously. >> You guys announced the Financial Data Cloud last year. What was that like? 'Cause I know we had Frank on early, he clearly was driving the verticalization of Snowflake if you will, which is kind of rare for a relatively new software company but what's that been like? Give us the update on where you're at and biggest vertical, right? >> Absolutely, it's been an exciting 12 months. We're a platform, but the journey and the vision is more. We're trying to bring together a fragmented ecosystem across financial services. The aim is really to bring together key customers, key data providers, key solution providers all across the different Clouds that exist to allow them to collaborate with data in a seamless way. To solve industry problems. To solve industry problems like ESG, to solve industry problems like quantitative research. And we're seeing a massive groundswell of customers coming to Snowflake, looking at the Financial Services Data Cloud now to actually solve business problems, business critical problems. That's really driving a lot of change in terms of how they operate, in terms of how they win customers, mitigate risk and so forth. >> Jack, I think, I feel like the only industry that's sometimes more complicated than security, is data. Maybe not, security's still maybe more fragmented- >> Well really the intersection of the two is a nightmare. >> And so as you look out on this ecosystem, how do you as the chief data officer, how do you and your organization, what process do you use to decide, okay, which of the, like a chef, which of these ingredients am I going to put together for my business. >> It's a great question, right? There's been explosion of companies. We kind of look at it in two ways. One is we want to make sure that the software and the data can interoperate because we don't want to be in the business of writing bridge code. So first thing is, is having the ecosystem so that the things are tested and can work together. The other area is, and it's important to us is understanding the risk profile of that company. We process about 20% of the U.S. payroll, another 25% of the taxes. And so there's a risk to us that we have an imperative to protect. So we're looking at those companies are they financed, what's their management team. What's the sales experience like, that's important to us. And so technology and the experience of the company coming together are super important to us. >> What's your purview as a chief data officer, I mean, a lot of CDOs that I know came out of the back office and it was a compliance or data quality. You come out of industry from a technology company. So you're sort of the modern... You're like the modern CDO. >> Thanks. Thanks. >> Dave: What's your role? >> I appreciate that. >> You know what I'm saying though? >> And for a while it was like, oh yeah, compliance. >> So I actually- >> And then all of a sudden, boom, big deal. >> Yeah, I really have two jobs. So I have that job with data governance but a lot of data security. But I also have a product development unit, a massive business in monetization of data or people analytics or these compensation benchmarks or helping people get mortgages. So providing that information, so that people can get their mortgage, or their bank loans, or all this other type of transactional data. *So it's both sides of that equation is my reading inside. >> You're responsible for building data products? >> That's right. >> Directly. >> That's right. I've got a massive team that builds data products. >> Okay. That's somewhat unique in your... >> I think it's where CDOs need to be. So we build data products. We build, and we assist as a hub to allow other business units to build analytics that help them either optimize their cost or increase their sales. And then we help with all that governance and communication, we don't want to divide it up. There's a continuum to it. >> And you're a peer of the CIO and the CISO? >> Yeah, exactly. They're my peers. I actually talk to them almost every day. So I've got the CIO as a peer. >> It's a team. >> I've got the security as a peer and we get things done together. >> Talk about the alignment with business. We've been talking a lot about alignment with the data folks, the business folks, the technical folks to identify the right solutions, to be able to govern data, to monetize it, to create data products. What does that... You mentioned a couple of your cohorts, but on the business side, who are some of those key folks? >> So we're like any other big, big organization. We have lots of different business units. So we work directly with either the operational team or the heads of those business units to divine analytic missions that they'll actually execute. And at the same time, we actually have a business unit that's all around data monetization. And so I work with them every single day. And so these business units will come together. I think the big thing for us is to define value and measure that value as we go. As long as we're measuring that value as we go, then we can continue to see improvements. And so, like I said, sometimes it's bottom line, sometimes it's top line, but we're involved. Data is actually a substrate of the company. It's not a side thing to the company. >> Yeah, you are. >> ADP. >> Yeah but if they say data first but you really are data first. >> Yeah. I mean, our CEO says- >> Data's your product. >> Data's our middle name. And it literally is. >> Well, so what do you do in the Snowflake financial services data Cloud? Are you monetizing? >> Yeah. >> What's the plan? >> Yeah, so we have clients. So part of our data monetization is actually providing aggregate and anonymized information that helps other clients make business decisions. So they'll take it into their analytics. So, supply chain optimization, where should we actually put the warehouses based on the population shifts? And so we're actually using the file distribution capabilities or the information distribution, no longer files, where we use Snowflake to actually be that data cloud for those clients. So the data just pops up for our other clients. >> I think the industry's existed a lot with the physical movement of data. When you physically move data, you also physically move the data management challenges. Where do you store it? How do you map it? How do you concord it? And ultimately data sharing is taking away that friction that exists. So it's easier to be able to make informed decisions with the data at hand across two counterparties. >> Yeah, and there's a benefit to us 'cause it lowers our friction. We can have a conversation and somebody can be... Obviously the contracts have to be signed, but once they get done, somebody's up and running on it within minutes. And where it used to be, as you were saying, the movement of data and loss of control, we never actually lose control of it. We know where it is. >> Or yeah, contracts signed, now you got to go through this long process of making sure everything's cool, or a lot of times it could slow down the sale. >> That's right. >> Let's see how that's going to... Let's do a little advanced work. Now you're working without a contract. Here, you can say, "Hey, we're in the Snowflake data cloud. It's governed, you're a part of the ecosystem." >> Yeah, and the ecosystem we announced, oh gee, I think it's probably almost a year and a half ago, a relationship with ICE, Intercontinental Exchange, where they're actually taking our information and their information and creating a new data product that they in turn sell. So you get this sort of combination. >> Absolutely. The ability to form partnerships and monetize data with your partners vastly increases as a consequence. >> Talk to us about the adoption of the financial services data cloud in the last what, maybe nine months or so, since it was announced? And also in terms of the its value proposition, how does the ADP use case articulate that? >> So, very much so. So in terms of momentum, we're a global organization, as you mentioned, we are verticalized. So we have increasingly more expertise and expertise experience now within financial services that allows us to really engage and accelerate our momentum with the top banks, with the biggest asset managers by AUM, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds on Snowflake. And obviously those data providers and solution providers that we engage with. So the momentum's really there. We're really moving very, very fast in a great market because we've got great opportunity with the capabilities that we have. I mean, ADP is just one of many use cases that we're working with and collaborations that we're taking to market. So yeah, the opportunity to monetize data and help our partners monetize the data has vastly increased within this space. >> When you think about... Oh go ahead, please. >> Yeah I was just going to say, and from our perspective, as we were getting into this, Snowflake was with us on the journey. And that's been a big deal. >> So when you think about data privacy, governance, et cetera, and public policy, it seems like you have, obviously you got things going on in Europe, and you got California, you have other states, there's increasing in complexity. You guys probably love that. (Dave laughs) More data warehouses, but where are we at with that whole? >> It's a great question. Privacy is... We hold some of the most critical information about people because that's our job to help people get paid. And we respect that as sort of our prime agenda. Part of it deals with the technology. How do you monitor, how do you see, make sure that you comply with all these regulations, but a lot of it has to do with the basic ethics of why you're doing and what you're doing. So we have a data and AI ethics board that meets and reviews our use cases. Make sure not only are we doing things properly to the regulation, but are these the types of products, are these the types of opportunities that we as a company want to stand behind on behalf of the consumers? Our company's been around 75 years. We talk about ourselves as a national asset. We have a trust relationship. We want to ensure that that trust relationship is never violated. >> Are you in a position where you can influence public policy and create more standards or framework. >> We actually are, right. We issue something every month called the National Employment Report. It actually tells you what's happening in the U.S. economy. We also issue it in some overseas countries like France. Because of that, we work a lot with various groups. And we can help shape, either data policy, we're involved in understanding although we don't necessarily want to be out in the front, but we want to learn about what's happening with federal trade commission, EOC, because at the end of the day we serve people, I always joke ADP, it's my grandfather's ADP. Well, it was actually my grandfather's ADP. (Dave laughs) He was a small businessman, and he used a ADP all those years ago. So we want to be part of that conversation because we want to continue to earn that trust every day. >> Well, plus your observation space is pretty wide. >> And you've got context and perspective on that that you can bring. >> We move somewhere between two, two and a half trillion dollars a year through our systems. And so we understand what's happening in the economy. >> What are some of the, oh sorry. >> Can your National Employment Report combined with a little Snowflake magic tell us what the hell's going to happen with this economy? >> It's really interesting you say that. Yeah, we actually can. >> Okay. (panelists laugh) >> I think when you think about the amount of data that we are working with, the types of partners that we're working with, the opportunities are infinite. They really, really are. >> So it's either a magic eight ball or it's a crystal ball, but you have it. >> We think- >> We've just uncovered that here on theCUBE. >> We think we have great partners. We have great data. We have a set of industry problems out there that we're working, collaboration with the community to be able to solve. >> What are some of the upcoming use cases Rinesh, that excite you, that are coming up in financial services- >> Great question. >> That snowflake is just going to knock out of the park. >> So look, I think there's a set of here and now problems that the industry faces, ESG's a good one. If you think about ESG, it means many different things from business ethics, to diversity, to your carbon footprint and every asset manager has to make sure they have now some form of green strategy that reflects the values of their investors. And every bank is looking to put in place sustainable lending to help their corporate customers transition. That's a big data problem. And so we're very much at the center of helping those organizations support those informed investors and help those corporates transition to a more sustainable landscape. >> Let me give you an example on Snowflake, we launched capabilities about diversity benchmarks. The first time in the industry companies can understand for their industry, their size, their location what their diversity profile looks like and their org chart profile looks like to differentiate or at least to understand are they doing the right things inside the business. The ability for banks to understand that and everything else, it's a big deal. And that was built on Snowflake. >> I think it's massive, especially in the context of the question around regulation 'cause we're seeing more and more disclosure agreements come out where regulators are making sure that there's no greenwashing taking place. So when you have really strong sources of data that are standardized, that allow that investment process to ingest that data, it does allow for a better outcome for investors. >> Real data, I mean, that diversity example they don't have to rely on a survey. >> It's not a survey. >> Anecdotes. >> It's coming right out of the transactional systems and it's updated, whenever those paychecks are run, whether it's weekly, whether it's biweekly or monthly, all that information gets updated and it's available. >> So it sounds like ADP is a facilitator of a lot of companies ESG initiatives, at least in part? >> Well, we partner with companies all the time. We have over 900,000 clients and all of them are... We've never spoken to a client who's not concerned about their people. And that's just good business. And so, yeah we're involved in that and we'll see where it goes over time now. >> I think there's tremendous opportunity if you think about the data that the ADP have in terms of diversity, in terms of gender pay gap. Huge, huge opportunity to incorporate that, as I said into the ESG principles and criteria. >> Good, 'cause that definitely is what needs to be addressed. (Lisa laughs) Guys thank you so much for joining Dave and me on the program, talking about Snowflake ADP, what you're doing together, and the massive potential that you're helping unlock with the value of data. We appreciate your insights and your time. >> Thank you for having us. >> Dave: Thanks guys. >> Thank you so much. >> For our guests, and Dave Vellante, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching theCUBE, live in Las Vegas at Snowflake Summit 22. Dave and I will be right back with our next guest. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jun 15 2022

SUMMARY :

the Global Head of Financial in the last couple of years. inside of the financial services industry And of course we don't is, one of the things that we It helps with the talent war and- inside of the Snowflake system You guys announced the We're a platform, but the like the only industry Well really the intersection of the two And so as you look so that the things are I mean, a lot of CDOs that I know Thanks. And for a while it was And then all of a sudden, So I have that job with data governance that builds data products. That's somewhat unique in your... And then we help with all that governance So I've got the CIO I've got the security as a peer Talk about the alignment with business. and measure that value as we go. but you really are data first. I mean, our CEO says- And it literally is. So the data just pops up So it's easier to be able Obviously the contracts have to be signed, could slow down the sale. in the Snowflake data cloud. Yeah, and the ecosystem we announced, and monetize data with your partners and help our partners monetize the data When you think about... as we were getting into this, are we at with that whole? behalf of the consumers? where you can influence public policy the day we serve people, Well, plus your observation that you can bring. happening in the economy. It's really interesting you say that. Okay. about the amount of data or it's a crystal ball, but you have it. that here on theCUBE. We think we have great partners. going to knock out of the park. that the industry faces, ESG's a good one. And that was built on Snowflake. of the question around regulation they don't have to rely on a survey. the transactional systems companies all the time. about the data that the ADP and the massive potential Dave and I will be right

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Frank Slootman, Snowflake | Snowflake Summit 2022


 

>>Hi, everybody. Welcome back to Caesars in Las Vegas. My name is Dave ante. We're here with the chairman and CEO of snowflake, Frank Luman. Good to see you again, Frank. Thanks for coming on. Yeah, >>You, you as well, Dave. Good to be with you. >>No, it's, it's awesome to be, obviously everybody's excited to be back. You mentioned that in your, in your keynote, the most amazing thing to me is the progression of what we're seeing here in the ecosystem and of your data cloud. Um, you wrote a book, the rise of the data cloud, and it was very cogent. You talked about network effects, but now you've executed on that. I call it the super cloud. You have AWS, you know, I use that term, AWS. You're building on top of that. And now you have customers building on top of your cloud. So there's these layers of value that's unique in the industry. Was this by design >>Or, well, you know, when you, uh, are a data clouding, you have data, people wanna do things, you know, with that data, they don't want to just, you know, run data operations, populate dashboards, you know, run reports pretty soon. They want to build applications and after they build applications, they wanna build businesses on it. So it goes on and on and on. So it, it drives your development to enable more and more functionality on that data cloud. Didn't start out that way. You know, we were very, very much focused on data operations, then it becomes application development and then it becomes, Hey, we're developing whole businesses on this platform. So similar to what happened to Facebook in many, in many ways, you know, >>There was some confusion I think, and there still is in the community of, particularly on wall street, about your quarter, your con the consumption model I loved on the earnings call. One of the analysts asked Mike, you know, do you ever consider going to a subscription model? And Mike got cut him off, then let finish. No, that would really defeat the purpose. Um, and so there's also a narrative around, well, maybe snowflake, consumption's easier to dial down. Maybe it's more discretionary, but I, I, I would say this, that if you're building apps on top of snowflake and you're actually monetizing, which is a big theme here, now, your revenue is aligned, you know, with those cloud costs. And so unless you're selling it for more, you know, than it costs more than, than you're selling it for, you're gonna dial that up. And that is the future of, I see this ecosystem in your company. Is that, is that fair? You buy that. >>Yeah, it, it is fair. Obviously the public cloud runs on a consumption model. So, you know, you start looking all the layers of the stack, um, you know, snowflake, you know, we have to be a consumption model because we run on top of other people's, uh, consumption models. Otherwise you don't have alignment. I mean, we have conversations, uh, with people that build on snowflake, um, you know, they have trouble, you know, with their financial model because they're not running a consumption model. So it's like square pack around hole. So we all have to align ourselves. So that's when they pay a dollar, you know, a portion goes to, let's say, AWS portion goes to the snowflake of that dollar. And the portion goes to whatever the uplift is, application value, data value, whatever it is to that goes on top of that. So the whole dollar, you know, gets allocated depending on whose value at it. Um, we're talking about. >>Yeah, but you sell value. Um, so you're not a SaaS company. Uh, at least I don't look at you that that way I I've always felt like the SAS pricing model is flawed because it's not aligned with customers. Right. If you, if you get stuck with orphaned licenses too bad, you know, pay us. >>Yeah. We're, we're, we're obviously a SaaS model in the sense that it is software as a service, but it's not a SaaS model in the sense that we don't sell use rights. Right. And that's the big difference. I mean, when you buy, you know, so many users from, you know, Salesforce and ServiceNow or whoever you have just purchased the right, you know, for so many users to use that software for this period of time, and the revenue gets recognized, you know, radically, you know, one month at a time, the same amount. Now we're not that different because we still do a contract the exact same way as SA vendor does it, but we don't recognize the revenue radically. We recognize the revenue based on the consumption, but over the term of the contract, we recognize the entire amount. It just is not neatly organized in these monthly buckets. >>You know? So what happens if they underspend one quarter, they have to catch up by the end of the, the term, is that how it works or is that a negotiation or it's >>The, the, the spending is a totally, totally separate from the consumption itself, you know, because you know how they pay for the contract. Let's say they do a three year contract. Um, you know, they, they will probably pay for that, you know, on an annual basis, you know, that three year contract. Um, but it's how they recognize their expenses for snowflake and how we recognize the revenue is based on what they actually consume. But it's not like you're on demand where you can just decide to not use it. And then I don't have any cost, but over the three year period, you know, all of that, you know, uh, needs to get consumed or they expire. And that's the same way with Amazon. If I don't consume what I buy from Amazon, I still gotta pay for it. You know, so, >>Well, you're right. Well, I guess you could buy by the drink, but it's way, way more expensive and nobody really correct. Does that, so, yep. Okay. Phase one, better simpler, you know, cloud enterprise data warehouse, phase two, you introduced the, the data cloud and, and now we're seeing the rise of the data cloud. What, what does phase three look like >>Now? Phase, phase three is all about applications. Um, and we've just learned, uh, you know, from the beginning that people were trying to do this, but we weren't instrumental at all to do it. So people would ODBC, you know, JDBC drivers just uses as database, right? So the entire application would happen outside, you know, snowflake, we're just a database. You connect to the database, you know, you read or right data, you know, you do data, data manipulations. And then the application, uh, processing all happens outside of snowflake. Now there's issues with that because we start to exfil trade data, meaning that we started to take data out of snowflake and, and put it, uh, in other places. Now there's risk for that. There's operational risk, there's governance, exposure, security issues, you know, all this kind of stuff. And the other problem is, you know, data gets Reed. >>It proliferates. And then, you know, data science tests are like, well, I, I need that data to stay in one place. That's the whole idea behind the data cloud. You know, we have very big infrastructure clouds. We have very big application clouds and then data, you know, sort of became the victim there and became more proliferated and more segment. And it's ever been. So all we do is just send data to the work all day. And we said, no, we're gonna enable the work to get to the data. And the data that stays in more in place, we don't have latency issue. We don't have data quality issues. We don't have lineage issues. So, you know, people have responded very, very well to the data cloud idea, like, yeah, you know, as an enterprise or an institution, you know, I'm the epicenter of my own data cloud because it's not just my own data. >>It's also my ecosystem. It's the people that I have data networking relationships with, you know, for example, you know, take, you know, uh, an investment bank, you know, in, in, in, in New York city, they send data to fidelity. They send data to BlackRock. They send data to, you know, bank of New York, all the regulatory clearing houses, all on and on and on, you know, every night they're running thousands, tens of thousands, you know, of jobs pushing that data, you know, out there. It just, and they they're all on snowflake already. So it doesn't have to be this way. Right. So, >>Yes. So I, I asked the guys before, you know, last week, Hey, what, what would you ask Frank? Now? You might remember you came on, uh, our program during COVID and I was asking you how you're dealing with it, turn off the news. And it was, that was cool. And I asked you at the time, you know, were you ever, you go on Preem and you said, look, I'll never say never, but it defeats the purpose. And you said, we're not gonna do a halfway house. Actually, you were more declarative. We're not doing a halfway house, one foot in one foot out. And then the guy said, well, what about that Dell deal? And that pure deal that you just did. And I, I think I know the answer, but I want to hear from you did a customer come to you and say, get you in the headlock and say, you gotta do this. >>Or it did happen that way. Uh, it, uh, it started with a conversation, um, you know, via with, uh, with Michael Dell. Um, it was supposed to be just a friendly chat, you know, Hey, how's it going? And I mean, obviously Dell is the owner of data, the main, or our first company, you know? Um, but it's, it, wasn't easy for, for Dell and snowflake to have a conversation because they're the epitome of the on-premise company and we're the epitome of a cloud company. And it's like, how, what do we have in common here? Right. What can we talk about? But, you know, Michael's a very smart, uh, engaging guy, you know, always looking for, for opportunity. And of course they decided we're gonna hook up our CTOs, our product teams and, you know, explore, you know, somebody's, uh, ideas and, you know, yeah. We had some, you know, starts and restarts and all of that because it's just naturally, you know, uh, not an easy thing to conceive of, but, you know, in the end it was like, you know what? >>It makes a lot of sense. You know, we can virtualize, you know, Dell object storage, you know, as if it's, you know, an S three storage, you know, from Amazon and then, you know, snowflake in its analytical processing. We'll just reference that data because to us, it just looks like a file that's sitting on, on S3. And we have, we have such a thing it's called an external table, right. That's, that's how we basically, it projects, you know, a snowflake, uh, semantic and structural model, you know, on an external object. And we process against it exactly the same way as if it was an internal, uh, table. So we just extended that, um, you know, with, um, with our storage partners, like Dell and pure storage, um, for it to happen, you know, across a network to an on-prem place. So it's very elegant and it, it, um, it becomes an, an enterprise architecture rather than just a cloud architecture. And I'm, I just don't know what will come of it. And, but I've already talked to customers who have to have data on premises just can't go anywhere because they process against it, you know, where it originates, but there are analytical processes that wanna reference attributes of that data. Well, this is what we'll do that. >>Yeah. I'm, it is interesting. I'm gonna ask Dell if I were them, I'd be talking to you about, Hey, I'm gonna try to separate compute from storage on prem and maybe do some of the, the work there. I don't even know if it's technically feasible. It's, I'll ask OI. But, um, but, but, but to me, that's an example of your extending your ecosystem. Um, so you're talking now about applications and that's an example of increasing your Tam. I don't know if you ever get to the edge, you know, we'll see, we're not quite quite there yet, but, um, but as you've said before, there's no lack of market for you. >>Yeah. I mean, obviously snowflake it it's, it's Genesis was reinventing database management in, in a cloud computing environment, which is so different from a, a machine environment or a cluster environment. So that's why, you know, we're, we're, we're not a, a fit for a machine centric, uh, environment sort of defeats the purpose of, you know, how we were built. We, we are truly a native solution. Most products, uh, in the clouds are actually not cloud native. You know, they, they originated the machine environments and you still see that, you know, almost everything you see in the cloud by the way is not cloud native, our generation of applications. They only run the cloud. They can only run the cloud. They are cloud native. They don't know anything else, >>You know? Yeah, you're right. A lot of companies would just wrap something in wrap their stack in Kubernetes and throw it into the cloud and say, we're in the cloud too. And you basically get, you just shifted. It >>Didn't make sense. Oh. They throw it in the container and run it. Right. Yeah. >>So, okay. That's cool. But what does that get you that doesn't change your operational model? Um, so coming back to software development and what you're doing in, in that regard, it seems one of the things we said about Supercloud is in order to have a Supercloud, you gotta have an ecosystem, you gotta have optionality. Hence you're doing things like Apache iceberg, you know, you said today, well, we're not sure where it's gonna go, but we offering options. Uh, but, but my, my question is, um, as it pertains to software developments specifically, how do you, so one of the things we said, sorry, I've lost my train there. One of the things we said is you have to have a super PAs in order to have a super cloud ecosystem, PAs layer. That's essentially what you've introduced here. Is it not a platform for our application development? >>Yeah. I mean, what happens today? I mean, how do you enable a developer, you know, on snowflake, without the developer, you know, reading the, the files out of snowflake, you know, processing, you know, against that data, wherever they are, and then putting the results set, God knows where, right. And that's what happens today. It's the wild west it's completely UN uncovered, right? And that's the reason why lots of enterprises will not allow Python anything anywhere near, you know, their enterprise data. We just know that, uh, we also know it from streamlet, um, or the acquisition, um, large acquisition that we made this year because they said, look, you know, we're, we have a lot of demand, you know, uh, in the Python community, but that's the wild west. That's not the enterprise grade high trust, uh, you know, corporate environment. They are strictly segregated, uh, today. >>Now do some, do these, do these things sometimes dribble up in the enterprise? Yes, they do. And it's actually intolerable the risk that enterprises, you know, take, you know, with things being UN uncovered. I mean the whole snowflake strategy and promises that you're in snowflake, it is a, an absolute enterprise grade environment experience. And it's really hard to do. It takes enormous investment. Uh, but that is what you buy from us. Just having Python is not particularly hard. You know, we can do that in a week. This has taken us years to get it to this level, you know, of, of, you know, governance, security and, and, you know, having all the risks around exfiltration and so on, really understood and dealt with. That's also why these things run in private previews and public previews for so long because we have to squeeze out, you know, everything that may not have been, you know, understood or foreseen, you know, >>So there are trade offs of, of going into this snowflake cloud, you get all this great functionality. Some people might think it's a walled garden. How, how would you respond to that? >>Yeah. And it's true when you have a, you know, a snowflake object, like a snowflake, uh, table only snowflake, you know, runs that table. And, um, you know, that, that is, you know, it's very high function. It's very sort of analogous to what apple did, you know, they have very high functioning, but you do have to accept the fact that it's, that it's not, uh, you know, other, other things in apple cannot, you know, get that these objects. So this is the reason why we introduce an open file format, you know, like, like iceberg, uh, because what iceberg effectively does is it allows any tool, uh, you know, to access that particular object. We do it in such a way that a lot of the functionality of snowflake, you know, will address the iceberg format, which is great because it's, you're gonna get much more function out of our, you know, iceberg implementation than you would get from iceberg on its own. So we do it in a very high value addeds, uh, you know, manner, but other tools can still access the same object in a read to write, uh, manner. So it, it really sort of delivers the original, uh, promise of the data lake, which is just like, Hey, I have all these objects tools come and go. I can use what I want. Um, so you get, you get the best of both worlds for the most part. >>Have you reminds me a little bit of VMware? I mean, VMware's a software mainframe, it's just better than >>Doing >>It on your own. Yep. Um, one of the other hallmarks of a cloud company, and you guys clearly are a cloud company is startups and innovation. Um, now of course you see that in, in the, in the ecosystem, uh, and maybe that's the answer to my question, but you guys are kind of whale hunters, <laugh> your customers are, tend to be bigger. Uh, is the, is the innovation now the extension of that, the ecosystem is that by design. >>Oh, um, you know, we have a enormous, uh, ISV following and, um, we're gonna have a whole separate conference like this, by the way, just for, yeah. >>For developers. I hope you guys will up there too. Yeah. Um, you know, the, the reason that, that the ISV strategy is very important for, you know, for, for, for, for many reasons, but, you know, ISVs are the people that are really going to unlock a lot of the value and a lot of the promise of data, right? Because you, you can never do that on your own. And the problem has been that for ISVs, it is so expensive and so difficult to build a product that can be used because the entire enterprise platform infrastructure needs to be built by somebody, you know, I mean, are you really gonna run infrastructure, database, operations, security, compliance, scalability, economics. How do you do that as a software company where really you only have your, your domain expertise that you want to deliver on a platform. You don't wanna do all these things. >>First of all, you don't know how to do it, how to do it well. Um, so it is much easier, much faster when there is already platform to actually build done in the world of clout that just doesn't, you know, exist. And then beyond that, you know, okay, fine building. It is sort of step one. Now I gotta sell it. I gotta market it. So how do I do that? Well, in the snowflake community, you have already market <laugh>, there's thousands and thousands of customers that are also on self lake. Okay. So their, their ability to consume that service that you just built, you know, they can search it, they can try it, they can test it and decide whether they want to consume it. And then, you know, we can monetize it. So all they have to do is cash the check. So the net effecti of it is we drastically lowered the barriers to entry into the world, you know, of software, you know, two men or two women in a dog, and a handful of files can build something that then can be sold, sort of to, for software developers. >>I wrote a piece 2012 after the first reinvent. And I, you know, and I, and I put a big gorilla on the front page and I said, how do you compete with Amazon gorilla? And then one of my answers was you build data ecosystems and you verticalize, and that's, that's what you're doing >>Here. Yeah. There certain verticals that are farther along than others, uh, obviously, but for example, in financial, uh, which is our largest vertical, I mean, the, the data ecosystem is really developing hardcore now. And that's, that's because they so rely on those relationships between all the big financial institutions and entities, regulatory, you know, clearing houses, investment bankers, uh, retail banks, all this kind of stuff. Um, so they're like, it becomes a no brainer. The network affects kick in so strongly because they're like, well, this is really the only way to do it. I mean, if you and I work in different companies and we do, and we want to create a secure, compliant data network and connection between us, I mean, it would take forever to get our lawyers to agree that yeah, it's okay. <laugh> right now, it's like a matter of minutes to set it up. If we're both on snowflake, >>It's like procurement, do they, do you have an MSA yeah. Check? And it just sail right through versus back and forth and endless negotiations >>Today. Data networking is becoming core ecosystem in the world of computing. You know, >>I mean, you talked about the network effects in rise of the data cloud and correct. Again, you know, you, weren't the first to come up with that notion, but you are applying it here. Um, I wanna switch topics a little bit. I, when I read your press releases, I laugh every time. Cause this says no HQ, Bozeman. And so where, where do you, I think I know where you land on, on hybrid work and remote work, but what are your thoughts on that? You, you see Elon the other day said you can't work for us unless you come to the office. Where, where do you stand? >>Yeah. Well, the, well, the, the first aspect is, uh, we really wanted to, uh, separate from the idea of a headquarters location, because I feel it's very antiquated. You know, we have many different hubs. There's not one place in the world where all the important people are and where we make all the important positions, that whole way of thinking, uh, you know, it is obsolete. I mean, I am where I need to be. And it it's many different places. It's not like I, I sit in this incredible place, you know, and that's, you know, that's where I sit and everybody comes to me. No, we are constantly moving around and we have engineering hubs. You know, we have your regional, uh, you know, headquarters for, for sales. Obviously we have in Malaysia, we have in Europe, you know? And, um, so I wanted to get rid of this headquarters designation. >>And, you know, the, the, the other issue obviously is that, you know, we were obviously in California, but you know, California is, is no longer, uh, the dominant place of where we are resident. I mean, 40% of our engineering people are now in be Washington. You know, we have hundreds of people in Poland where people, you know, we are gonna have very stressed location in Toronto. Um, yeah. Obviously our customers are, are everywhere, right? So this idea that, you know, everything is happening in, in one state is just, um, you know, not, not correct. So we wanted to go to no headquarters. Of course the SCC doesn't let you do that. Um, because they want, they want you to have a street address where the government can send you a mail and then it becomes, the question is, well, what's an acceptable location. Well, it has to be a place where the CEO and the CFO have residency by hooker, by crook. >>That happened to be in Bozeman Montana because Mike and I are both, it was not by design. We just did that because we were, uh, required to, you know, you know, comply with government, uh, requirements, which of course we do, but that's why it, it says what it says now on, on the topic of, you know, where did we work? Um, we are super situational about it. It's not like, Hey, um, you know, everybody in the office or, or everybody is remote, we're not categorical about it. Depends on the function, depends on the location. Um, but everybody is tethered to an office. Okay. In words, everybody has a relationship with an office. There's, there's almost nobody, there are a few exceptions of people that are completely remote. Uh, but you know, if you get hired on with snowflake, you will always have an office affiliation and you can be called into the office by your manager. But for purpose, you know, a meeting, a training, an event, you don't get called in just to hang out. And like, the office is no longer your home away from home. Right. And we're now into hotel, right? So you don't have a fixed place, you know? So >>You talked in your keynote a lot about last question. I let you go customer alignment, obviously a big deal. I have been watching, you know, we go to a lot of events, you'll see a technology company tell a story, you know, about their widget or whatever it was their box. And then you'll see an outcome and you look at it and you shake your head and say, well, that the difference between this and that is the square root of zero, right. When you talk about customer alignment today, we're talking about monetizing data. Um, so that's a whole different conversation. Um, and I, I wonder if you could sort of close on how that's different. Um, I mean, at ServiceNow, you transformed it. You know, I get that, you know, data, the domain was okay, tape, blow it out, but this is a, feels like a whole new vector or wave of growth. >>Yeah. You know, monetizing, uh, data becomes sort of a, you know, a byproduct of having a data cloud you all of a sudden, you know, become aware of the fact that, Hey, Hey, I have data and be that data might actually be quite valuable to parties. And then C you know, it's really easy to then, you know, uh, sell that and, and monetize that. Cause if it was hard, forget it, you know, I don't have time for it. Right. But if it's relatively, if it's compliant, it's relatively effortless, it's pure profit. Um, I just want to reference one attribute, two attributes of what you have, by the way, you know, uh, hedge funds have been into this sort of thing, you know, for a long time, because they procure data from hundreds and hundreds of sources, right. Because they're, they are the original data scientists. >>Um, but the, the bigger thing with data is that a lot of, you know, digital transformation is, is, is finally becoming real. You know, for years it was arm waving and conceptual and abstract, but it's becoming real. I mean, how do we, how do we run a supply chain? You know, how do we run, you know, healthcare, um, all these things are become are, and how do we run cyber security? They're being redefined as data problems and data challenges. And they have data solutions. So that's right. Data strategies are insanely important because, you know, if, if the solution is through data, then you need to have, you know, a data strategy, you know, and in our world, that means you have a data cloud and you have all the enablement that allows you to do that. But, you know, hospitals, you know, are, are saying, you know, data science is gonna have a bigger impact on healthcare than life science, you know, in the coming, whatever, you know, 10, 20 years, how do you enable that? >>Right. I, I have conversations with, with, with hospital executives are like, I got generations of data, you know, clinical diagnostic, demographic, genomic. And then I, I am envisioning these predictive outcomes over here. I wanna be able to predict, you know, once somebody's gonna get what disease and you know, what I have to do about it, um, how do I do that? <laugh> right. The day you go from, uh, you know, I have a lot of data too. I have these outcomes and then do me a miracle in the middle, in the middle of somewhere. Well, that's where we come in. We're gonna organize ourselves and then unpack thats, you know, and then we, we work, we through training models, you know, we can start delivering some of these insights, but the, the promise is extraordinary. We can change whole industries like pharma and, and, and healthcare. Um, you know, 30 effects of data, the economics will change. And you know, the societal outcomes, you know, um, quality of life disease, longevity of life is quite extraordinary. Supply chain management. That's all around us right >>Now. Well, there's a lot of, you know, high growth companies that were kind of COVID companies, valuations shot up. And now they're trying to figure out what to do. You've been pretty clear because of what you just talked about, the opportunities enormous. You're not slowing down, you're amping it up, you know, pun intended. So Frank Luman, thanks so much for coming on the cube. Really appreciate your time. >>My pleasure. >>All right. And thank you for watching. Keep it right there for more coverage from the snowflake summit, 2022, you're watching the cube.

Published Date : Jun 15 2022

SUMMARY :

Good to see you again, Frank. You have AWS, you know, I use that term, AWS. you know, with that data, they don't want to just, you know, run data operations, populate dashboards, One of the analysts asked Mike, you know, do you ever consider going to a subscription model? with people that build on snowflake, um, you know, they have trouble, you know, with their financial model because bad, you know, pay us. you know, so many users from, you know, Salesforce and ServiceNow or whoever you have just purchased the they, they will probably pay for that, you know, on an annual basis, you know, that three year contract. Phase one, better simpler, you know, cloud enterprise data warehouse, You connect to the database, you know, you read or right data, you know, you do data, data manipulations. like, yeah, you know, as an enterprise or an institution, you know, I'm the epicenter of you know, for example, you know, take, you know, uh, an investment bank, you know, in, you know, were you ever, you go on Preem and you said, look, I'll never say never, but it defeats the purpose. just naturally, you know, uh, not an easy thing to conceive of, but, you know, You know, we can virtualize, you know, Dell object storage, you know, I don't know if you ever get to the edge, you know, we'll see, we're not quite quite there yet, So that's why, you know, we're, And you basically get, you just shifted. Oh. They throw it in the container and run it. you know, you said today, well, we're not sure where it's gonna go, but we offering options. you know, on snowflake, without the developer, you know, reading the, the files out of snowflake, And it's actually intolerable the risk that enterprises, you know, take, So there are trade offs of, of going into this snowflake cloud, you get all this great functionality. uh, you know, other, other things in apple cannot, you know, get that these objects. Um, now of course you see that Oh, um, you know, we have a enormous, uh, ISV following and, be built by somebody, you know, I mean, are you really gonna run infrastructure, you know, of software, you know, two men or two women in a dog, and a handful of files can build you know, and I, and I put a big gorilla on the front page and I said, how do you compete with Amazon gorilla? regulatory, you know, clearing houses, investment bankers, uh, retail banks, It's like procurement, do they, do you have an MSA yeah. Data networking is becoming core ecosystem in the world of computing. Again, you know, It's not like I, I sit in this incredible place, you know, and that's, And, you know, the, the, the other issue obviously is that, you know, we were obviously in California, We just did that because we were, uh, required to, you know, you know, I have been watching, you know, we go to a lot of events, you'll see a technology company tell And then C you know, you know, a data strategy, you know, and in our world, that means you have a data cloud and you have all the enablement that thats, you know, and then we, we work, we through training models, you know, you know, pun intended. And thank you for watching.

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Carl Perry, Snowflake | Snowflake Summit 2022


 

(calm music) >> Welcome to theCUBE's live coverage of Snowflake Summit '22 from Las Vegas, Caesars Forum. Lisa Martin here with Dave Vellante, we're going to unpack some really cool stuff next, in the next 10 minutes with you, Carl Perry joins us, the Director of Product Management at Snowflake, he's here to talk about Snowflake's new Unistore workloads, how it's driving the next phase of innovation, welcome to the program. >> Oh, thank you so much for having me, this is awesome. >> There's a ton of momentum here, I saw the the numbers from fiscal 23Q1, product revenue 394 million, 85% growth, a lot of customers here, the customer growth is incredible as well, talk to us about Unistore, what is it? Unpack it and how have the customers been influential in it's development? >> Yeah, so Unistore is a way for customers to take their transactional workloads, for their enterprise applications and now have them run on or be built on top of Snowflake and now, you have your transactional data, along with all of your historical data, so now you have a single unified platform for doing anything you need to do with your data, whether it's transactional, single row look-ups, we can do that, whether it's the analytical data across again, transactional and historical data in a single query, our customers are super excited about this. >> So, what are Hybrid Tables? Is that just an extension of external tables? >> Yeah, that's a great question. So, Hybrid Tables are a new table-type that we've added to Snowflake and Hybrid Tables are really kind of just like another table with a couple of key differences, so number one is that Hybrid Tables provide fast, fine-grain read and write operations, so when you do something like a select star from customers where customer ID=832, that's going to return extremely fast, but on top of that same data, your transactional data, you can actually perform amazing analytical queries that return extremely fast and that's what Hybrid Tables at their core are. >> So, what does this mean for, so you're bringing that world of transaction and analytics together, what does it mean for customers? Walk us through Carl, an example of- >> Yeah, so it's great, so Adobe is a customer that is looking at using and leveraging Hybrid Tables today, and then more broadly Unistore, and frankly, Adobe has been an amazing customer since they started their journey, just really quickly, they're in phase three, the first phase was customers had data in Snowflake that they wanted to take advantage of with the Adobe Campaign Platform and so what they did is they built a connector basically into and being able to access customer data, and then they started to look at, "Well, this thing's working really well, let's try to leverage Snowflake for all our analytical needs." And so that was kind of phase two, and now phase three is like, look let's go and reimagine what we can do with the Adobe Campaign Platform by having both the transactional and analytical data in the same platform, so that they can really enable their customers to do personalization, ad campaign management, understanding the ethicacy of those things at a scale that they haven't been able to do before. >> Prior to this capability, they would what? Have to go outside of the Snowflake Data Cloud? And do something else? And then come back in? >> Exactly, right? So, they'd have a transactional system where all of the transactional state for what the customer was doing inside Adobe Campaign, setting up all their campaigns and everything, and that would be stored inside a database, right? And then they would need to ensure that, that data was moved over to Snowflake for further analytical purposes, right? You know you imagine the complexity that our customers have to manage every single day, a separate transactional system, an ETL pipeline to keep that data flowing and then Snowflake, right? And with Unistore, we really believe that customers will be able to remove that complexity from their lives and have that single platform that really makes their lives easier. >> I mean, they'll still have a transactional system, will they not? Or do you see a day where they sort of sunset that? >> I mean, there's a set of workloads that are not going to be the best choice today for Unistore and Hybrid Tables, right? And so we know that customers will continue to have their own transactional systems, right? And there's lots of transactional systems that customers rely and have entire applications, and systems built around, right? Right now with Hybrid Tables and Unistore, customers can take those enterprise applications, not consumer-facing applications and move them over to leverage Snowflake, and then really think about re-imagining how they can use their data that's both realtime transactional, as well as all the historical data without the need to move things between systems or use a ton of different services. >> The Adobe example that you just gave seems like, I loved how you described the phases they're in, they're discovering, it's like peeling the onion and just discovering more, and more, but what it sounds like is that Snowflake has enabled Adobe to transform part of it's business, how is Unistore positioned to be so transformational for your customers? >> Well, I mean I think there's a couple of things, so one, they have this like level of complexity today for a set of applications that they can completely stop worrying about, right? No need to maintain that separate transactional system for that again, enterprise application, no need to maintain that ETL pipeline, that's kind of like one step, the next step is, I mean all your data's in Snowflake, so you can start leveraging that data for insight and action immediately, there's no delay in being able to take advantage of that data, right? And then number three, which I think is the most compelling part is because it's part of Snowflake, you getting the benefit of Snowflake's entire ecosystem, whether it's first party capabilities like easy to manage and enforce really powerful governance, and security policies, right? Being able to take data from the market place and actually join it with my realtime transactional data, this is game-changing and then most importantly is the third-party ecosystem of partners who are building all these incredible solutions on top of Snowflake, I can't even begin to imagine what they're going to do with Hybrid Tables in Unistore. >> So, Carl I have to ask you, so I talked to a lot of customers and I talked to a lot of technology companies, explain, so Snowflake obviously was the first to separate compute from storage and you know the cloud, cloud database and then tons of investment came into that space, kind of follow you on, so that's cool, you reached escape velocity, awesome, but a lot of the companies that I talked to are saying, "We're converging transaction and analytics," I think (speaking softly) calls it HTAP or something, they came up with a name, explain the difference between what you're doing and what everybody else is doing, and why, what customer benefits you're delivering? >> Yeah, so I mean I think that's a really great question and to use the term you used HTAP, right? It's a industry understood term, really when people think about HTAP, what that is about is taking your transactional data that you have and enabling you to do fast analytical capabilities on that, and that's great, but there are a couple of problems that historical HTAP solutions have suffered from, so number one, that acceleration, that colander format of data is all in memory, so you're bound by the total amount of memory that you can use to accelerate the queries that you want to, so that's kind of problem one, this is not the approach that Snowflake is taking, most importantly, it's not just about accelerating queries on transactional data, whether it's a single-row lookup or a complex aggregate, it's about being able to leverage that data within the data cloud, right? I don't want to have a separate dataset on a transactional system or an HTAP system that can give me great analytics on transactional data and then I can't use it with all the other data that I have, it's truly about enabling the transformation with the data cloud and completely taking away silos, so that your data, whether it's realtime, whether it's historical, can be treated as a single dataset, this is the key thing that is different about Unistore, you can take the power of the data cloud, all of it, all of the partners, all the solutions and all the capabilities we continue to add, and leverage your data in ways that nobody's thought of possible before. >> Governance is a huge, huge component of that, right? So, in the press release, you have this statement, "As part of the Unistore Snowflake is introducing Hybrid Tables," you explained that, "Which offer fast, single-row operations and allow customers to build transactional business applications directly on Snowflake"- >> Yep. >> That's a little interesting tidbit, so you expect customers are going to build transactional applications inside the data cloud? And somewhat minimize the work that is going to be required by their existing transactional databases, correct? >> Exactly and I think, so let me say a couple things on this, right? So, first of all, there's a class of applications that will be able to just build on top of Hybrid Tables and run on Snowflake directly, for their transactional needs, I think what's super interesting here though is when you again start to talk about all your data, one example that we're going to walk through tomorrow in our talk is being able to do a transaction that updates data in a Hybrid Table and then updates data in a Standard Snowflake Table, and then either being able to atomically commit, or rollback that transaction, this is a transaction that's spanning multiple different table types inside Snowflake and you'll have consistency of either the rollback or the commit, this type of functionality doesn't exist elsewhere and being able to take, and build transactional applications with these capabilities, we think is transformative- >> And that's all going to happen inside the Snowflake Data Cloud, with all the capabilities and it's not like you know what you're doing with Dell and Pure, it's nice, but it's read-only, you can't you know add and delete, and do all that stuff, this is Native? First class citizen inside the database? >> Yep, just like other table types, you'll be able to take on and leverage the power of the data cloud as a normal table that you'd be able to use elsewhere. >> Got to ask you, your energy in the way that you're talking about this is fantastic, the transformation that it's going to be, how central it is to the product innovations that Snowflake is coming out with, what's been the feedback from customers? As there's so many thousands of folks here today, the keynote was standing in your room only, there was an overflow, what are you hearing on the floor here? >> Well, I mean, I think it was funny in the talk when I announced that primary keys are going to be required and enforced, and we got a standing ovation, I was like, "Wow, I didn't expect people to be so excited about primary key enforcement." I mean, what's been amazing both about the private preview and the feedback we're getting there, and then some of the early feedback we're getting from customers is that they want to understand and they're really thinking about like, "Wait, I can use Snowflake for all of this now?" And honestly I think that people are kind of like, "But wait, what would I do if I could have those applications running on Snowflake and not have to worry about multiple systems? Wait, I can combine it with all my historical data and anything that's in the data cloud, like what can I do?" Is the question they're asking and I think that this is the most fascinating thing, customers are going to build things they haven't been able to build before and I'm super excited to see what they do. >> But more specifically, my takeaway is that customers, actually application builders are going to be able to build applications that have data inherent to those apps, I mean John Furrier years ago said, "You know data is the new development kit." And it never happened the data, the data stack if you will separate from the application development stack, you're bringing those two worlds together, so what do you think the implications are of that? >> Well, I mean I think that we're going to dramatically simplify our customers lives, right? A thing that we focus on at Snowflake is relentless customer innovation, so we can make their lives better, so I mean frankly we talk to customers like, "Wait, I can do all this? Wait, are you sure that I'll be able to do this?" And we walk through what we can do, and what we can't do, and they really are like, "Wow, this could just dramatically simplify our lives and wait, what could we do with our data here?" And so, I think with the announcement of Unistore, and also all the Native app stuff that we're announcing today, I think we're really trying to enable customers and app developers there to think about, and being able to leverage Snowflake as their transactional system, the system of source, so I mean, I'm super excited about this, I came to Snowflake to work on this and I'm like, "Can't believe we get to talk about it." >> How do you, how, how? How does this work? What's the secret sauce behind it? Is it architecture or is it? >> Yeah, so I mean I think a big part of it is the architecture that we chose, so you know number one, a key product philosophy that we have at Snowflake is we have one product, we don't have many, we don't put the onus of complexity onto our customers and so building that into Snowflake is actually really hard, so underlying Hybrid Tables, which is the feature that powers Unistore is a row storage engine, a row-based storage engine, right? And then data is asynchronously copied over into a colander format and what this provides, because it's just another table that's deeply integrated with Snowflake is the compiler's completely aware of this, so you can write a query that spans multiple tables and take advantage of it, and we'll take over all the complexity, whether it needs to be a fast response to a single-row lookup, or it needs to aggregate and scan a ton of data, we'll make sure that we choose the right thing and provide you with the best performance that we have- >> You built that intelligence inside of that? >> Completely built in and amazing, but provided in a very simple fashion. >> You said you came to Snowflake to do this? How long ago was that? >> I came here a little over a year and a half. >> Okay, and had they started working on this obviously beforehand, or at least envisioning it, right? >> Yeah, this I mean, this is absolutely incredible, I have been working on this now for a year and a half, some of the team members have been working on it for more and it's incredible to finally be able to talk to customers and everybody about it, and for them to tell us what they're trying to do. I've already talked to a bunch of customers like, "Well wait, I could do this, or this, what about this scenario?" And it's awesome to hear their requirements, right? The thing that's been most amazing and you'll hear it in the talk tomorrow with Adobe who's been a great customer is like, "Customers give us insanely hard requirements." And what I love about this company is not, "Well, you know it's easier to do it this way." It's like, "No, how can we actually make their life easier?" And so, we really focus on doing that with Snowflake. >> And that's one of the things Frank talked about this morning with that mission alignment being critical there. So, it's in private preview now, when can folks expect to get their hands on it? >> Well, we don't have a date right now we're talking about, but you can go signup to be notified of the public preview when we get there, I think it's like snowflake.com/try-unistore, but we'll publish that later and you know if you're interested in the private preview, talk to your account team and we'll see if we can get you in. >> Carl, thank you so much for joining Dave and me in an action-packed 15 minutes, talking about the power of Unistore, what it's going to enable organizations to do and it sounds like you're tapping the surface, there's just so much more innovation that's to come, you're going to have to come back. >> Yes, that sounds awesome, thank you so much. >> Our pleasure. For Carl and Dave Vellante, I'm Lisa Martin, you're watching theCUBE's live coverage of Snowflake Summit '22 from the show floor in Las Vegas, we're going to be right back with our next guest. (calm music)

Published Date : Jun 15 2022

SUMMARY :

in the next 10 minutes with you, Oh, thank you so much for having me, and now, you have your transactional data, and that's what Hybrid and then they started to look at, and have that single platform and move them over to leverage Snowflake, and actually join it with my and to use the term you used HTAP, right? and leverage the power of the data cloud and I'm super excited to see what they do. the data stack if you will separate and being able to leverage Snowflake and amazing, and a half. and for them to tell us And that's one of the things and you know if you're interested and it sounds like you're Yes, that sounds awesome, and Dave Vellante,

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Phil Quade, Fortinet | CUBE Conversation, April 2020


 

from the cube studios in Palo Alto in Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world this is a cube conversation hello and welcome to the cube conversation here in the Palo Alto studio I'm John four host of the cube we are here at the quarantine crew of the cube having the conversations that matter the most now and sharing that with you got a great guest here Phil Quaid was the chief information security officer of Fortinet also the author of book digital bing-bang which I just found out he wrote talking about the difference cybersecurity and the physical worlds coming together and we're living that now with kovat 19 crisis were all sheltering in place Phil thank you for joining me on this cube conversation so I want to get in this quickly that I think the main top thing is that we're all sheltering in place anxiety is high but people are now becoming mainstream aware of what we all in the industry have been known for a long time role of data cybersecurity access to remote tools and we're seeing the work at home the remote situation really putting a lot of pressure on as I've been reporting what I call at scale problems and one of them is security right one of them is bandwidth we're starting to see you know the throttling of the packets people are now living with the reality like wow this is really a different environment but it's been kind of a disruption and has created crimes of opportunity for bad guys so this has been a real thing everyone's aware of it across the world this is something that's now aware on everyone's mind what's your take on this because you guys are fighting the battle and providing solutions and we're doing for a long time around security this highlights a lot of the things in the surface area called the world with what's your take on this carbon 19 orton s been advocating for architectures and strategies that allow you to defend anywhere from the edge through the core all the way up to the cloud boom so with you know high speed and integration and so all the sudden what we're seeing not just you know in the US but the world as well is that that edge is being extended in places that we just hadn't thought about or our CV that people just hadn't planned for before so many people or telecommunication able to move that edge securely out to people's homes and more remote locations and do so providing the right type of security of privacy if those communications that are coming out of those delicate ears I noticed you have a flag in the background and for the folks that might not know you spent a lot of time at the NSA government agency doing a lot of cutting-edge work I mean going back to you know really you know post 9/11 - now you're in the private sector with Fortinet so you don't really speak with the agency but you did live through a time of major transformation around Homeland Security looking at data again different physical thing you know terrorist attacks but it did bring rise to large-scale data to bring to those things so I wanted to kind of point out I saw the flag there nice nice touch there but now that you're in the private sector it's another transformation it's not a transition we're seeing a transformation and people want to do it fast and they don't want to have disruption this is a big problem what's your reaction to that yeah I think what you're reporting out that sometimes sometimes there's catalysts that cause major changes in the way you do things I think we're in one of those right now that we're already in the midst of an evolutionary trend towards more distributed workforces and as I mentioned earlier doing so with the right type of security privacy but I would think what I think the global camp in debt endemic is showing is that we're all going to be accelerating that that thing is like it's gonna be a lot less evolutionary and a little bit more faster that's what happens when you have major world events like this being 911 fortunate tragedies it causes people to think outside the box or accelerate what they're already doing I think wearing that in that world today yeah it pulls forward a lot of things that are usually on the planning side and it makes them reality I want to get your thoughts because not only are CEOs and their employees all thinking about the new work environment but the chief information security officer is people in your role have to be more aware as more things happening what's on the minds of CISOs around the world these days obviously the pandemics there what are you seeing what are some of the conversations what are some of the thought processes what specifically is going on in the of the chief information security officer yeah I think there's probably a there's probably two different two different things there's the there's the emotional side and there's the analytic side on the emotional side you might say that some Caesars are saying finally I get to show how cyber security can be in an abler of business right I can allow you to to to maintain business continuity by allowing your workers to work from home and trying sustain business and allow you to keep paying their salary is very very important to society there's a very important time to step up as the seaso and do what's helpful to sustain mission in on the practical side you say oh my goodness my job's gotten a whole lot harder because I can rely less and less on someone's physical controls that use some of the physical benefits you get from people coming inside the headquarters facility through locked doors and there's personal congress's and personal identification authentication you need to move those those same security strategies and policies and you need to move it out to this broad eggs it's gotten a lot bigger and a lot more distributed so I want to ask you around some of the things they're on cyber screws that have been elevated to the top of the list obviously with the disruption of working at home it's not like an earthquake or a tornado or hurricane or flood you know this backup and recovery for that you know kind of disaster recovery this has been an unmitigated disaster in the sense of it's been unfor casted I was talking to an IT guy he was saying well we provisioned rvv lands to be your VPNs to be 30% and now they need a hundred percent so that disruption is causing I was an under forecast so in cyber as you guys are always planning in and protecting has there been some things that have emerged that are now top of mind that are 100 percent mindshare base or new solutions or new challenges why keep quite done what we're referring to earlier is that yep any good see so or company executive is going to prepare for unexpected things to a certain degree you need it whether it be spare capacity or the ability to recover from something an act of God as you mentioned maybe a flood or tornado or hurricane stuff like that what's different now is that we have a disruption who which doesn't have an end date meaning there's a new temporal component that's been introduced that most companies just can't plan for right even the best of companies that let's say Ronald very large data centers they have backup plans where they have spare fuel to run backup generators to provide electricity to their data centers but the amount of fuel they have might only be limited to 30 days or so it's stored on-site we might think well that's pretty that's a lot of for thinking by storing that much fuel on site for to allow you to sort of work your way through a hurricane or other natural disaster what we have now is a is a worldwide crisis that doesn't have a 30-day window on it right we don't know if it's gonna be 30 days or 120 days or or you know even worse than that so what's different now is that it's not just a matter of surging in doing something with band-aids and twine or an extra 30 days what we need to do is as a community is to prepare solutions that can be enduring solutions you know I have some things that if the absent I might like to provide a little color what those types of solutions are but that that would be my main message that this isn't just a surge for 30 days this is a surge or being agile with no end in sight take a minute explain some of those solutions what are you seeing whatever specific examples and solutions that you can go deeper on there yeah so I talked earlier about the the edge meaning the place where users interact with machines and company data that edge is no longer at the desktop down the hallway it could be 10 miles 450 miles away to where anyone where I'm telling you I'm commuting crumb that means we need to push the data confidentiality things out between the headquarters and the edge you do that with things like a secure secured tunnel it's called VPNs you also need to make sure that the user identification authentication this much is a very very secure very authentic and with high integrity so you do that with multi-factor authentication there's other things that we like that that are very very practical that you do to support this new architecture and the good news is that they're available today in the good news at least with some companies there already had one foot in that world but as I mentioned earlier not all companies had yet embraced the idea of where you're going to have a large percentage of your workforce - until a community so they're not quite so they're there they're reacting quickly to to make sure this edge is better protected by identification and authentication and begins I want to get to some of those edge issues that now translate to kind of physical digital virtualization of of life but first I want to ask you around operational technology and IT OT IT these are kind of examples where you're seeing at scale problem with the pandemic being highlighted so cloud providers etc are all kind of impacted and bring solutions to the table you guys at Foot are doing large scale security is there anything around the automation side of it then you've seen emerge because all the people that are taking care of being a supplier in this new normal or this crisis certainly not normal has leveraged automation and data so this has been a fundamental value proposition that highlights what we call the DevOps movement in the cloud world but automation has become hugely available and a benefit to this can you share your insights into how automation is changing with cyber I think you up a nice question for me is it allowed me to talk about not only automation but convergence so it's let's hit automation first right we all even even pre-crisis we need to be better at leveraging automation to do things that machines do best allow people to do higher-order things whether it's unique analysis or something else with a with a more distributed workforce and perhaps fewer resources automation is more important ever to automatically detect bad things that are about to happen automatically mitigating them before they get or they get to bad you know in the cybersecurity world you use things like agile segmentation and you use like techniques called soar it's a type of security orchestration and you want to eat leverage those things very very highly in order to leverage automation to have machines circum amount of human services but you also brought up on my favorite topics which is ot graceful technology though OTS you know are the things that are used to control for the past almost a hundred years now things in the physical world like electric generators and pipes and valves and things like that often used in our critical infrastructures in my company fort net we provide solutions that secure both the IT world the traditional cyber domain but also the OT systems of the world today where safety and reliability are about most important so what we're seeing with the co19 crisis is that supply chains transportation research things like that a lot of things that depend on OT solutions for safety and reliability are much more forefront of mine so from a cybersecurity strategy perspective what you want to do of course is make sure your solutions in the IT space are well integrated with you solutions in the OT space to the so an adversary or a mistake in cause a working to the crack in causing destruction that convergence is interesting you know we were talking before you came on camera around the fact that all these events are being canceled but that really highlights the fact that the physical spaces are no longer available the so-called ot operational technologies of events is the plumbing the face-to-face conversations but everyone's trying to move to digital or virtual eyes that it's not as easy as just saying we did it here we do it there there is a convergence and some sort of translation this new there's a new roles there's new responsibilities new kinds of behaviors and decision making that goes on in the physical and digital worlds that have to then come together and get reimagined and so what's your take on all this because this is not so much about events but although that's kind of prime time problem zooming it is not the answer that's a streaming video how do you replicate the value of physical into the business value in digital it's not a one-to-one so it's quite possible that that we might look back on this event to cover 19 experience we might look back at it in five or ten years and say that was simply a foreshadowing of our of the importance of making sure that our physical environment is appropriate in private what I mean is that with the with the rapid introduction of Internet of Things technologies into the physical world we're going to have a whole lot of dependencies on the thing inconveniences tendencies inconveniences on things an instrument our physical space our door locks or automobiles paths our temperatures color height lots of things to instrument the physical space and so there's gonna be a whole lot of data that's generated in that cyber in a physical domain increasingly in the future and we're going to become dependent upon it well what happens if for whatever reason in the in the future that's massively disruptive so all of a sudden we have a massive disruption in the physical space just like we're experiencing now with open 19 so again that's why it makes sense now to start your planning now with making sure that your safety and reliability controls in the physical domain are up to the same level security and privacy as the things in your IT delete and it highlights what's the where the value is to and it's a transformation I was just reading an article around spatial economics around distance not being together it's interesting on those points you wrote a book about this I want to get your thoughts because in this cyber internet or digital or virtualization of physical to digital whether it's events or actual equipment is causing people to rethink architectures you mentioned a few of them what's the state of the art thinking around someone who has the plan for this again is in its complex it's not just creating a gateway or a physical abstraction layer of software between two worlds there's almost a blending or convergence here what's your what's your thoughts on what's the state of the art thinking on this area yeah the book that I number of a very esteemed colleagues contribute to what we said is that it's time to start treating cybersecurity like a science let's not pretend it's a dark art that we have to relearn every couple years and what what we said in the in the digital Big Bang is that humankind started flourishing once we admitted our ignorance in ultimately our ignorance in the physical world and discovered or invented you can right word the disciplines of physics and chemistry and once we recognize that our physical world was driven by those scientific disciplines we started flourishing right the scientific age led to lots of things whether it would be transportation health care or lots of other things to improve our quality of life well if you fast forward 14 billion years after that cosmic Big Bang which was driven by physics 50 years ago or so we had a digital Big Bang where there was a massive explosion of bits with the invention of the internet and what we argue in the book is that let's start treating cybersecurity like a science or the scientific principle is that we ought to write down and follow a Rousseau's with you so we can thrive in the in the in a digital Big Bang in the digital age and one more point if you don't mind what we what we noted is that the internet was invented to do two things one connect more people or machines than ever imagined in to do so in speeds that were never imagined so the in the Internet is is optimized around speed in connectivity so if that's the case it may be a fundamental premise of cybersecurity science is make sure that your cyber security solutions are optimized around those same two things that the cyber domains are optimized around speed in integration continue from there you can you can build on more and more complex scientific principles if you focus on those fundamental things and speed and integration yeah that's awesome great insight they're awesome I wanted to throw in while you had the internet history lesson down there also was interesting was a very decentralization concept how does that factor in your opinion to some of the security paradigms is that helped or hurt or is it create opportunities for more secure or does it give the act as an advantage yeah I love your questions is your it's a very informed question and you're in a give me good segue to answer the way you know it should be answer yeah the by definition the distributed nature of the Internet means it's an inherently survivable system which is a wonderful thing to have for a critical infrastructure like that if one piece goes down the hole doesn't go down it's kind of like the power grid the u.s. the u.s. electrical power grid there's too many people who say the grid will go down well that's that's just not a practical thing it's not a reality thing the grades broken up into three major grades and there's AB ulis strategies and implementations of diversification to allow the grid to fail safely so it's not catastrophic Internet's the same thing so like my nipple like I was saying before we ought to de cyber security around a similar principle that a catastrophic failure in one partner to start cybersecurity architecture should result in cascading across your whole architecture so again we need to borrow some lessons from history and I think he bring up a good one that the internet was built on survivability so our cybersecurity strategies need to be the same one of the ways you do that so that's all great theory but one of the ways you do that of course is by making your cybersecurity solutions so that they're very well integrated they connect with each other so that you know speaking in cartoon language you know if one unit can say I'm about to fail help me out and another part of your architecture can pick up a slack and give you some more robust security in that that's what a connected the integrated cyber security architecture do for you yeah it's really fascinating insight and I think resiliency and scale are two things I think are going to be a big wave is going to be added into the transformations that going on now it's it's very interesting you know Phil great conversation I could do a whole hour with you and do a fish lead a virtual panel virtualize that our own event here keynote speech thanks so much for your insight one of things I want to get your thoughts on is something that I've been really thinking a lot lately and gathering perspectives and that is on biosecurity and I say biosecurity I'm referring to covet 19 as a virus because biology involves starting a lab or some people debate all that whether it's true or not but but that's what people work on in the biology world but it spreads virally like malware and has a similar metaphor to cybersecurity so we're seeing conversation starting to happen in Washington DC in Silicon Valley and some of my circles around if biology weapon or it's a tool like open-source software could be a tool for spreading cybersecurity Trojans or other things and techniques like malware spear phishing phishing all these things are techniques that could be deployed metaphorically to viral distribution a biohazard or bio warfare if you will will it look the same and how do you defend against the next covet 19 this is what you know average Americans are seeing the impact of the economy with the shelter in place is that what happens again and how do we prevent it and so a lot of people are thinking about this what is your thoughts because it kind of feels the same way as cybersecurity you got to see it early you got to know what's going on you got to identify it you got to respond to it time to close your contain similar concepts what's your thoughts on with BIOS we don't look with all due respect to the the the bio community let me make a quick analogy to the cyber security strategy right cyber security strategy starts with we start as an attacker so I parts of my previous career I'm an authorized had the opportunity to help develop tools that are very very precisely targeted against foreign adversaries and that's a harder job than you think I mean I think the same is true of anyone of a natural-born or a custom a buyer buyer is that not just any virus has the capability to do a lot of harm to a lot of people selling it so it's it's if that doesn't mean though you can sit back and say since it's hard it'll never happen you need to take proactive measures to look for evidence of a compromise of something whether it's a cyber cyber virus or otherwise you have to actively look for that you have to harm yourself to make sure you're not susceptible to it and once you detect one you need to make sure you have a the ability to do segmentation or quarantine very rapidly very very effectively right so in the cyber security community of course the fundamental strategy is about segmentation you keep different types of things separate that don't need to interact and then if you do have a compromise not everything is compromised and then lastly if you want to gradually say bring things back up to recover you can do some with small chunks I think it's a great analogy segmentation is a good analogy to I think what the nation is trying to do right now by warranty kneeing and gradually reopening up things in in segments in actually mention earlier that some of the other techniques are very very similar you want to have good visibility of where you're at risk and then you can automatically detect and then implement some some mitigations based on that good visibility so I agree with you that it turns out that the cyber security strategies might have a whole lot in common with biohazard I address it's interesting site reliability engineers which is a term that Google coined when they built out their large-scale cloud has become a practice that kind of mindset combined with some of the things that you're saying the cyber security mindset seemed to fit this at scale problem space and I might be an alarmist but I personally believe that we've been having a digital war for many many years now and I think that you know troops aren't landing but it's certainly digital troops and I think that we as a country and a global state and global society have to start thinking about you know these kinds of things where a virus could impact the United States shut down the economy devastating impact so I think Wars can be digital and so I may be an alarmist and a conspirators but I think that you know thinking about it and talking about it might be a good thing so appreciate your insights there Phil appreciated what one other point that might be interesting a few years back I was doing some research with the National Lab and we're looking for novel of cybersecurity analytics and we hired some folks who worked in the biology the bio the biomedical community who were studying a biome fires at the time and it was in recognition that there's a lot of commonality between those who are doing cybersecurity analytics and those reviewing bio biology or biomedical type analytics in you know there was a lot of good cross fertilization between our teams and it kind of helps you bring up one more there's one more point which is what we need to do in cybersecurity in general is have more diversity of workforces right now I don't mean just the traditional but important diversities of sex or color but diversity of experiences right some of the best people I've worked with in the cyber analytics field weren't computer science trained people and that's because they came in problems differently with a different background so one of the things that's really important to our field at large and of course the company my company fort net is to massively increase the amount of cyber security training that's available to people not just the computer scientists the world and the engineers but people in other areas as well the other degree to non-greek people and with that a you know higher level of cyber security training available to a more diverse community not only can we solve the problem of numbers we don't have enough cybersecurity people but we can actually increase our ability to defend against these things I have more greater diversity of thought experience you know that's such a great point I think I just put an exclamation point on that I get that question all the time and the skills gap is should I study computer science and like actually if you can solve problems that's a good thing but really diversity about diversity is a wonderful thing in the age of unlimited compute power because traditionally diversity whether it was protocol diversity or technical diversity or you know human you know makeup that's tend to slow things down but you get higher quality so that's a generalization but you get the point diversity does bring quality and if you're doing a data science you don't want have a blind spot I'm not have enough data so yeah I think a good diverse data set is a wonderful thing you're going to a whole nother level saying bringing diversely skill sets to the table because the problems are diverse is that what you're getting at it is it's one of our I'll say our platforms that we're talking about during the during the covered nineteen crisis which is perhaps there's perhaps we could all make ourselves a little bit better by taking some time out since we're not competing taking some time out and doing a little bit more online training where you can where you can either improve your current set of cybersecurity skills of knowledge or be introduced to them for the first time and so there's one or some wonderful Fortinet training available that can allow both the brand-new folks the field or or the the intermediate level folks with you become higher level experts it's an opportunity for all of us to get better rather than spending that extra hour on the road every day why don't we take at least you know 30 of those 60 minutes or former commute time and usually do some online soccer security treaty feel final question for you great insight great conversation as the world and your friends my friends people we don't know other members of society as they start to realize that the virtualization of life is happening just in your section it's convergence what general advice would you have for someone just from a mental model or mindset standpoint to alleviate any anxiety or change it certainly will be happening so how they can better themselves in their life was it is it thinking more about the the the experiences is it more learning how would you give advice to folks out there who are gonna come out of this post pandemic certainly it's gonna be a different world we're gonna be heightened to digital and virtual but as things become virtualized how can someone take this and make a positive outcome out of all this I I think that the future the future remains bright earlier we talked about sci-fi the integration of the cyber world in the physical world that's gonna provide great opportunities to make us more efficient gives us more free time detect bad things from happening earlier and hopefully mitigating those bad things from happening earlier so a lot of things that some people might use as scare tactics right convergence and Skynet in in robotics and things like that I believe these are things that will make our lives better not worse our responsibilities though is talking about those things making sure people understand that they're coming why they're important and make sure we're putting the right security and privacy to those things as these worlds this physical world and the soccer worlds converged I think the future is bright but we still have some work to do in terms of um making sure we're doing things at very high speeds there's no delay in the cybersecurity we put on top of these applications and make sure we have very very well integrated solutions that don't cause things to become more complex make make things easier to do certainly the winds of change in the big waves with the transformations happening I guess just summarize by saying just make it a head win I mean tailwind not a headwind make it work for you at the time not against it Phil thank you so much for your insights I really appreciate this cube conversation remote interview I'm John Ford with the cube talking about cybersecurity and the fundamentals of understanding what's going on in this new virtual world that we're living in to being virtualized as we get back to work and as things start to to evolve further back to normal the at scale problems and opportunities are there and of course the key was bringing it to you here remotely from our studio I'm John Ferrier thanks for watching [Music]

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Recep Ozdag, Keysight | CUBEConversation


 

>> from our studios in the heart of Silicon Valley, Palo Alto, California It is >> a cute conversation. Hey, welcome back. Get ready. Geoffrey here with the Cube. We're gonna rip out the studios for acute conversation. It's the middle of the summer, the conference season to slow down a little bit. So we get a chance to do more cute conversation, which is always great. Excited of our next guest. He's Ridge, IP, Ops Statik. He's a VP and GM from key. Cite, Reject. Great to see you. >> Thank you for hosting us. >> Yeah. So we've had Marie on a couple of times. We had Bethany on a long time ago before the for the acquisition. But for people that aren't familiar with key site, give us kind of a quick overview. >> Sure, sure. So I'm within the excess solutions group Exhale really started was founded back in 97. It I peered around 2000 really started as a test and measurement company quickly after the I poet became the number one vendor in the space, quickly grew around 2012 and 2013 and acquired two companies Net optics and an ooey and net optics and I knew we were in the visibility or monitoring space selling taps, bypass witches and network packet brokers. So that formed the Visibility Group with a nice Xia. And then around 2017 key cite acquired Xia and we became I S G or extra Solutions group. Now, key site is also a very large test and measurement company. It is the actual original HB startup that started in Palo Alto many years ago. An HB, of course, grew, um it also started as a test and measurement company. Then later on it, it became a get a gun to printers and servers. HB spun off as agile in't, agile in't became the test and measurement. And then around 2014 I would say, or 15 agile in't spun off the test and measurement portion that became key site agile in't continued as a life and life sciences organization. And so key sites really got the name around 2014 after spinning off and they acquired Xia in 2017. So more joy of the business is testing measurement. But we do have that visibility and monitoring organization to >> Okay, so you do the test of measurement really on devices and kind of pre production and master these things up to speed. And then you're actually did in doing the monitoring in life production? Yes, systems. >> Mostly. The only thing that I would add is that now we are getting into live network testing to we see that mostly in the service provider space. Before you turn on the service, you need to make sure that all the devices and all the service has come up correctly. But also we're seeing it in enterprises to, particularly with security assessments. So reach assessment attacks. Security is your eye to organization really protecting the network? So we're seeing that become more and more important than they're pulling in test, particularly for security in that area to so as you. As you say, it's mostly device testing. But then that's going to network infrastructure and security networks, >> Right? So you've been in the industry for a while, you're it. Until you've been through a couple acquisitions, you've seen a lot of trends, so there's a lot of big macro things happening right now in the industry. It's exciting times and one of the ones. Actually, you just talked about it at Cisco alive a couple weeks ago is EJ Computer. There's a lot of talk about edges. Ej the new cloud. You know how much compute can move to the edge? What do you do in a crazy oilfield? With hot temperatures and no powers? I wonder if you can share some of the observations about EJ. You're kind of point of view as to where we're heading. And what should people be thinking about when they're considering? Yeah, what does EJ mean to my business? >> Absolutely, absolutely. So when I say it's computing, I typically include Io TI agent. It works is along with remote and branch offices, and obviously we can see the impact of Io TI security cameras, thermal starts, smart homes, automation, factory automation, hospital animation. Even planes have sensors on their engines right now for monitoring purposes and diagnostics. So that's one group. But then we know in our everyday lives, enterprises are growing very quickly, and they have remote and branch offices. More people are working from remotely. More people were working from home, so that means that more data is being generated at the edge. What it's with coyote sensors, each computing we see with oil and gas companies, and so it doesn't really make sense to generate all that data. Then you know, just imagine a self driving car. You need to capture a lot of data and you need to process. It just got really just send it to the cloud. Expect a decision to mate and then come back and so that you turn left or right, you need to actually process all that data, right? We're at the edge where the source of the data is, and that means pushing more of that computer infrastructure closer to the source. That also means running business critical applications closer to the source. And that means, you know, um, it's it's more of, ah, madness, massively distributed computer architecture. Um, what happens is that you have to then reliably connect all these devices so connectivity becomes important. But as you distribute, compute as well as applications, your attack surface increases right. Because all of these devices are very vulnerable. We're probably adding about 5,000,000 I ot devices every day to our network, So that's a lot of I O T. Devices or age devices that we connect many of these devices. You know, we don't really properly test. You probably know from your own home when you can just buy something and could easily connect it to your wife. I Similarly, people buy something, go to their work and connect to their WiFi. Not that device is connected to your entire network. So vulnerabilities in any of these devices exposes the entire network to that same vulnerability. So our attack surfaces increasing, so connection reliability as well as security for all these devices is a challenge. So we enjoy each computing coyote branch on road officers. But it does pose those challenges. And that's what we're here to do with our tech partners. Toe sold these issues >> right? It's just instinct to me on the edge because you still have kind of the three big um, the three big, you know, computer things. You got the networking right, which is just gonna be addressed by five g and a lot better band with and connectivity. But you still have store and you still have compute. You got to get those things Power s o a cz. You're thinking about the distribution of that computer and store at the edge versus in the cloud and you've got the Leighton see issue. It seems like a pretty delicate balancing act that people are gonna have to tune these systems to figure out how much to allocate where, and you will have physical limitations at this. You know the G power plant with the sure by now the middle of nowhere. >> It's It's a great point, and you typically get agility at the edge. Obviously, don't have power because these devices are small. Even if you take a room order branch office with 52 2 100 employees, there's only so much compute that you have. But you mean you need to be able to make decisions quickly. They're so agility is there. But obviously the vast amounts of computer and storage is more in your centralized data center, whether it's in your private cloud or your public cloud. So how do you do the compromise? When do you run applications at the edge when you were in applications in the cloud or private or public? Is that in fact, a compromise and year You might have to balance it, and it might change all the time, just as you know, if you look at our traditional history off compute. He had the mainframes which were centralized, and then it became distributed, centralized, distributed. So this changes all the time and you have toe make decisions, which which brings up the issue off. I would say hybrid, I t. You know, they have the same issue. A lot of enterprises have more of a, um, hybrid I t strategy or multi cloud. Where do you run the applications? Even if you forget about the age even on, do you run an on Prem? Do you run in the public cloud? Do you move it between class service providers? Even that is a small optimization problem. It's now even Matt bigger with H computer. >> Right? So the other thing that we've seen time and time again a huge trend, right? It's software to find, um, we've seen it in the networking space to compete based. It's offered to find us such a big write such a big deal now and you've seen that. So when you look at it from a test a measurement and when people are building out these devices, you know, obviously aton of great functional capability is suddenly available to people, but in terms of challenges and in terms of what you're thinking about in software defined from from you guys, because you're testing and measuring all this stuff, what's the goodness with the badness house for people, you really think about the challenges of software defined to take advantage of the tremendous opportunity. >> That's a really good point. I would say that with so far defined it working What we're really seeing is this aggregation typically had these monolithic devices that you would purchase from one vendor. That wonder vendor would guarantee that everything just works perfectly. What software defined it working, allows or has created is this desegregated model. Now you have. You can take that monolithic application and whether it's a server or a hardware infrastructure, then maybe you have a hyper visor or so software layer hardware, abstraction, layers and many, many layers. Well, if you're trying to get that toe work reliably, this means that now, in a way, the responsibility is on you to make sure that you test every all of these. Make sure that everything just works together because now we have choice. Which software packages should I install from which Bender This is always a slight differences. Which net Nick Bender should I use? If PJ smart Nick Regular Nick, you go up to the layer of what kind of ax elation should I use? D. P. D K. There's so many options you are responsible so that with S T N, you do get the advantage of opportunity off choice, just like on our servers and our PCs. But this means that you do have to test everything, make sure that everything works. So this means more testing at the device level, more testing at the service being up. So that's the predeployment stage and wants to deploy the service. Now you have to continually monitor it to make sure that it's working as you expected. So you get more choice, more diversity. And, of course, with segregation, you can take advantage of improvements on the hardware layer of the software layer. So there's that the segregation advantage. But it means more work on test as well as monitoring. So you know there's there's always a compromise >> trade off. Yeah, so different topic is security. Um, weird Arcee. This year we're in the four scout booth at a great chat with Michael the Caesars Yo there. And he talked about, you know, you talk a little bit about increasing surface area for attack, and then, you know, we all know the statistics of how long it takes people to know that they've been reach its center center. But Mike is funny. He you know, they have very simple sales pitch. They basically put their sniffer on your network and tell you that you got eight times more devices on the network than you thought. Because people are connecting all right, all types of things. So when you look at, you know, kind of monitoring test, especially with these increased surface area of all these, Iet devices, especially with bring your own devices. And it's funny, the H v A c seemed to be a really great place for bad guys to get in. And I heard the other day a casino at a casino, uh, connected thermometer in a fish tank in the lobby was the access point. How is just kind of changing your guys world, you know, how do you think about security? Because it seems like in the end, everyone seems to be getting he breached at some point in time. So it's almost Maur. How fast can you catch it? How do you minimize the damage? How do you take care of it versus this assumption that you can stop the reaches? You >> know, that was a really good point that you mentioned at the end, which is it's just better to assume that you will be breached at some point. And how quickly can you detect that? Because, on average, I think, according to research, it takes enterprise about six months. Of course, they're enterprise that are takes about a couple of years before they realize. And, you know, we hear this on the news about millions of records exposed billions of dollars of market cap loss. Four. Scout. It's a very close take partner, and we typically use deploy solutions together with these technology partners, whether it's a PM in P. M. But very importantly, security, and if you think about it, there's terabytes of data in the network. Typically, many of these tools look at the packet data, but you can't really just take those terabytes of data and just through it at all the tools, it just becomes a financially impossible toe provide security and deploy such tools in a very large network. So where this is where we come in and we were the taps, we access the data where the package workers was essentially groom it, filtering down to maybe tens or hundreds of gigs that that's really, really important. And then we feed it, feed it to our take partners such as Four Scout and many of the others. That way they can. They can focus on providing security by looking at the packets that really matter. For example, you know some some solutions only. Look, I need to look at the package header. You don't really need to see the send the payload. So if somebody is streaming Netflix or YouTube, maybe you just need to send the first mega byte of data not the whole hundreds of gigs over that to our video, so that allows them to. It allows us or helps us increase the efficiency of that tool. So the end customer can actually get a good R Y on that on that investment, and it allows for Scott to really look at or any of the tech partners to look at what's really important let me do a better job of investigating. Hey, have I been hacked? And of course, it has to be state full, meaning that it's not just looking at flow on one data flow on one side, looking at the whole communication. So you can understand What is this? A malicious application that is now done downloading other malicious applications and infiltrating my system? Is that a DDOS attack? Is it a hack? It's, Ah, there's a hole, equal system off attacks. And that's where we have so many companies in this in this space, many startups. >> It's interesting We had Tom Siebel on a little while ago actually had a W s event and his his explanation of what big data means is that there's no sampling air. And we often hear that, you know, we used to kind of prior to big day, two days we would take a sample of data after the fact and then tried to to do someone understanding where now the more popular is now we have a real time streaming engines. So now we're getting all the data basically instantaneously in making decisions. But what you just bring out is you don't necessarily want all the data all the time because it could. It can overwhelm its stress to Syria. That needs to be a much better management approach to that. And as I look at some of the notes, you know, you guys were now deploying 400 gigabit. That's right, which is bananas, because it seems like only yesterday that 100 gigabyte Ethan, that was a big deal a little bit about, you know, kind of the just hard core technology changes that are impacting data centers and deployments. And as this band with goes through the ceiling, what people are physically having to do, do it. >> Sure, sure, it's amazing how it took some time to go from 1 to 10 gig and then turning into 40 gig, but that that time frame is getting shorter and shorter from 48 2 108 100 to 400. I don't even know how we're going to get to the next phase because the demand is there and the demand is coming from a number of Trans really wants five G or the preparation for five G. A lot of service providers are started to do trials and they're up to upgrading that infrastructure because five G is gonna make it easier to access state of age quickly invest amounts of data. Whenever you make something easy for the consumer, they will consume it more. So that's one aspect of it. The preparation for five GS increasing the need for band with an infrastructure overhaul. The other piece is that we're with the neutralization. We're generating more Eastern West traffic, but because we're distributed with its computing, that East West traffic can still traverse data centers and geography. So this means that it's not just contained within a server or within Iraq. It actually just go to different locations. That also means your data center into interconnect has to support 400 gig. So a lot of network of hitmen manufacturers were typically call them. Names are are releasing are about to release 400 devices. So on the test side, they use our solutions to test these devices, obviously, because they want to release it based the standards to make sure that it works on. So that's the pre deployment phase. But once these foreign jiggy devices are deployed and typically service providers, but we're start slowly starting to see large enterprises deploy it as a mention because because of visualization and computing, then the question is, how do you make sure that your 400 gig infrastructure is operating at the capacity that you want in P. M. A. P M. As well as you're providing security? So there's a pre deployment phase that we help on the test side and then post deployment monitoring face. But five G is a big one, even though we're not. Actually we haven't turned on five year service is there's tremendous investment going on. In fact, key site. The larger organization is helping with a lot of these device testing, too. So it's not just Xia but key site. It's consume a lot of all of our time just because we're having a lot of engagements on the cellphone side. Uh, you know, decide endpoint side. It's a very interesting time that we're living in because the changes are becoming more and more frequent and it's very hot, so adapt and make sure that you're leading that leading that wave. >> In preparing for this, I saw you in another video camera. Which one it was, but your quote was you know, they didn't create electricity by improving candles. Every line I'm gonna steal it. I'll give you credit. But as you look back, I mean, I don't think most people really grown to the step function. Five g, you know, and they talk about five senior fun. It's not about your phone. It says this is the first kind of network built four machines. That's right. Machine data, the speed machine data and the quantity of Mr Sheen data. As you sit back, What kind of reflectively Again? You've been in this business for a while and you look at five G. You're sitting around talking to your to your friends at a party. So maybe some family members aren't in the business. How do you How do you tell them what this means? I mean, what are people not really seeing when they're just thinking it's just gonna be a handset upgrade there, completely missing the boat? >> Yeah, I think for the for the regular consumer, they just think it's another handset. You know, I went from three G's to 40 year. I got I saw bump in speed, and, you know, uh, some handset manufacturers are actually advertising five G capable handsets. So I'm just going to be out by another cell phone behind the curtain under the hurt. There's this massive infrastructure overhaul that a lot of service providers are going through. And it's scary because I would say that a lot of them are not necessarily prepared. The investment that's pouring in is staggering. The help that they need is one area that we're trying to accommodate because the end cell towers are being replaced. The end devices are being replaced. The data centers are being upgraded. Small South sites, you know, Um, there's there's, uh how do you provide coverage? What is the killer use case? Most likely is probably gonna be manufacturing just because it's, as you said mission to make mission machine learning Well, that's your machine to mission communication. That's where the connected hospitals connected. Manufacturing will come into play, and it's just all this machine machine communication, um, generating vast amounts of data and that goes ties back to that each computing where the edge is generating the data. But you then send some of that data not all of it, but some of that data to a centralized cloud and you develop essentially machine learning algorithms, which you then push back to the edge. The edge becomes a more intelligent and we get better productivity. But it's all machine to machine communication that, you know, I would say that more of the most of the five communication is gonna be much information communication. Some small portion will be the consumers just face timing or messaging and streaming. But that's gonna be there exactly. Exactly. That's going to change. I'm of course, we'll see other changes in our day to day lives. You know, a couple of companies attempted live gaming on the cloud in the >> past. It didn't really work out just because the network latency was not there. But we'll see that, too, and was seeing some of the products coming out from the lecture of Google into the company's where they're trying to push gaming to be in the cloud. It's something that we were not really successful in the past, so those are things that I think consumers will see Maur in their day to day lives. But the bigger impact is gonna be for the for the enterprise >> or jet. Thanks for ah, for taking some time and sharing your insight. You know, you guys get to see a lot of stuff. You've been in the industry for a while. You get to test all the new equipment that they're building. So you guys have a really interesting captaincy toe watches developments. Really exciting times. >> Thank you for inviting us. Great to be here. >> All right, Easier. Jeff. Jeff, you're watching the Cube. Where? Cube studios and fellow out there. Thanks for watching. We'll see you next time.

Published Date : Jun 20 2019

SUMMARY :

the conference season to slow down a little bit. But for people that aren't familiar with key site, give us kind of a quick overview. So more joy of the business is testing measurement. Okay, so you do the test of measurement really on devices and kind of pre production and master these things you need to make sure that all the devices and all the service has come up correctly. I wonder if you can share some of the observations about EJ. You need to capture a lot of data and you need to process. It's just instinct to me on the edge because you still have kind of the three big um, might have to balance it, and it might change all the time, just as you know, if you look at our traditional history So when you look are responsible so that with S T N, you do get the advantage of opportunity on the network than you thought. know, that was a really good point that you mentioned at the end, which is it's just better to assume that you will be And as I look at some of the notes, you know, gig infrastructure is operating at the capacity that you want in P. But as you look back, I mean, I don't think most people really grown to the step function. you know, Um, there's there's, uh how do you provide coverage? to be in the cloud. So you guys have a really interesting captaincy toe watches developments. Thank you for inviting us. We'll see you next time.

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