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Carey Stanton, Veeam & Vaughn Stewart, Pure Storage | Pure Accelerate 2019


 

>> from Austin, Texas. It's Theo Cube, covering your storage. Accelerate 2019. Brought to you by pure storage. >> Welcome back to the Q B. All the leader in live tech coverage. I'm Lisa Martin with David Dante. Couple of gents back on the Cube we have on Stuart the VP of technology for pure von. Welcome back. >> It's great to be here. Thanks for being accelerate. >> Were accepted severe. And we've got Carrie Stanton, VP of Global Biz Dev and corporate development from Theme Carrie, Welcome back. Thank you very much. I'm in the rain. I love the love it planned. Of course. Thank you. Very good branding here. Lots going on with theme and pure. Let's secure. Let's go ahead and start with you. Talk to us about the nature of the V Impure partnership. I'm assuming better together, but give us the breakdown. Sure, >> we've had a relationship for many years, but over the past three years we've seen it. You know, this year, counting this year, like the scale out is just unbelievable. We're growing at triple digits on our Cosell winds in the field, all of its writing, all of the predominantly being driven from the flash blade success that we've had in the marketplace, Our customers are buying into the performance that they have. Our our relationship is growing through joint innovation and joint development. And so what we've seen is raising them to a global partner, on having dedicated resources on it, as only amplified our success. We have. So yeah, it's fantastic. >> And then one from your perspective, what are some of the things that you are hearing? Are you guys being brought in? Maur from team customers is being being brought in more from pure side. What's that mixed like >> we've had? We've had a strong set of channel partners that I think promoting our joint solution on our products kind of a top of their line card. Of course, there's always the customer requested to get pulled in, and I think customers who have experienced either one of our products look at their satisfaction. They look extremely it, like NPS scores right and say, you know, if I'm a pure customer, there's a data protection company. That's gotta nps very similar years, you know, tell us more about what you're doing with with theme. If you look at kind of our common ethos. Right simplicity in the model right co innovation Help Dr Scale. Whether it's been through joint A P I integration with the universal adaptor or tryingto lean into next generation architectures like Flash to flash the cloud. It's just been a very easy progressive partnership to drive and bring in a market. >> Talk more about that joint development. Um, there's a start in the field. No engineering resource is I'd love to Have you had some color to that? >> I think I think I think it's >> a combination of. So we'll start with a universal adapter that was beams initiative to help add scale to the back of process to as you're putting virtue machines into backup mode along, you know, leverage these the storage controller snapshots so that you could come in and out of that back about very quick. V, invisible to production operations, offload a bunch of data processing and in time, out of the equation that just helps scale right back up, more virtual machines faster. That's a program that they initiated that we were one of the founding partners on one of the first partners to publish ah Universal adaptor, or R A p i for it. The >> results have been The results are pure is by far the number one partner for downloads for a customer downloads that we have across our partner Rico system. So we have a vote 15 partner Rico Systems that have written to the universal FBI on. So just last week, you know, over 3000 downloads surpassed over 3000 downloads. Here is 6500 customers. I'll let you do the math. All right, so it's it's great that we see such strong adoption from their customer base. Almost 50% of their customers are team customers on. Then that >> contusion. That's hi, >> It's very high. >> Wow. So give me your favorite customer example that really articulates the value that pure brings the value that being brings. >> We've got a lot going on in the financial space in the healthcare space. >> Butler Health is a joint customer that we have a customer reference win that they've published in that we've published on dhe obviously many, many more, but especially in the people, customers in the financial health care that are looking for performance on Dhe. Looking to that flash blade, a za landing zone that's going to give them more than just a backup target. It's going to give them the ability to leverage it for a I and ML and many other factors, which is again, one of the reasons why we've seen such strong adoption. >> You talk about health care, we're talking about patient data, lives at stake. Give me some of the meat about what this customer, for example, is achieving at the business. Subtle and the human lives level >> Well, I think what they're seeing is of what they were used. It's not so much the exact stats that I could give you down to how money they're getting per second, but it's what they were using before, which is one of the legacy competitors that we have, which we call. You know, some of these donors that they give to market share that we take away day in and day out with without saying names. But there was a reform replace that we came in and taking a second generation solution from a legacy hardware appliance that was being used previously in a secondary storage. >> Yeah, allow me to elaborate a bit, right? So you asked about the technology we kind of talked about the universal adapter for the off load where we've really seen growth has been in this notion of flash to flash the cloud and peers introduced this notion of rapid restore. So again, how do we grow our businesses together? Growing amore mission critical or patient? Critical deployments has been this notion of not just backing up the data faster. That's kind >> of the the >> daily repetitive task that no organization wants to to deal with. Where the rubber meets the road is Can you put the data back? And we've seen this explosion in the increase of of the capacity of data, set sizes and the pressure they put on restoring that data. When you happen to have, ah, harbor failure, a data center go off line or a power issue and this goes so you go back to patient records gotta be online when everything fails and there's an issue with a chair, whatever. Maybe how quickly can we get the data? And we're orders of magnitude faster, then the legacy >> platform. So having an integrated appliance is part of that key and co engineering. Is that right? I mean, you guys pure software no pun intended, right? You don't want to be >> No, no, it sze taking the they wrote to our a p I right So the work that they did on the FBI and then continue to innovate and iterated against it right and coming out with the next version that they just come out with it is, is just differentiating themselves in the marketplace. And that's really what we're seeing. And we're seeing that success that the enterprise today, from what we have without even looking forward to our upcoming V 10 which is gonna have some high end enterprise feature sets. >> And we want to get into that. But something that mom that you were just saying It's almost as if data protection is no longer just an insurance policy. It's an asset. We have to be able to get it back. >> Absolutely fuel, We believe if you look at the legacy backup appliances, they were designed and optimized for short backup windows and are proving to be a challenge at restoring the data, which is actually where the value in the architecture is. We've talked about rapid restore in bringing, flashing that space. We worked with team engineering on V 10 actually double that performance so that customers, as they upgrade their code line, can again bring those mission critical workloads back online even faster than in the past. In addition to that, we've worked through some of the VM integrations for customs who want to mind that data who want to clone those workloads and bring them up on online and ADM or analytics or searching the metadata of that data. So there's a lot going on besides just your backup and recovery. >> So you guys are saying, Chuck, the appliance don't need the appliance. You've got a better model. Is that what I'm hearing? Or >> we win against appliances day in and day out? So absolutely software. Best of breed software. Best of breed storage hardware. >> What should we expect for V 10 adoption there? You guys announced in the spring? >> Yes, and it will shift in Q four. Dave, honestly, this is gonna be Anton is gonna shit >> a good track record. They're gonna go out there. >> No, but we have some key features that will differentiate us in the marketplace, especially as we go to the enterprise with pier storage, such as immune ability right, So that's a feature that we've talked about. You know, we've been hyping because we believe in it that what it's gonna bring for the protection of ransom, where malware and it's it's gonna be a game changer. We believe in the marketplace and our famous now, as they were finally gonna support now support for their enterprise customer base. So, I mean, those two keep features in and of itself. So again, I talked about the scale that we're having today in the marketplace without these key enterprise features and then having those chip, you know, in the next 90 days are again we believe just gonna continue to elevate our business. >> We're talking to Charlie earlier today about just a CZ. Part of his job is tam expansion and data protection is an obvious area for that. You could have chosen to go buy a small software company, certainly have the cash on your balance sheet and compete. We have chosen to partner talk about the opportunity that you guys jointly see in terms of the market you can penetrate. >> I think it is such a Our ecosystem is so comprised today of partnerships that are based on. On one hand, you're partnering, and on the other hand, you're competing that it is. It is really refreshing to find a partnership like Veen, where we've got very clear lines of what our product offerings are, where they come together and no competitive obstacles. It makes partying in the field the easiest, right? We've got great partnerships across the board somewhere. Appliance vendors. Sometimes those partnerships work fast. Sometimes they running hurdles. We never run into a hurdle together, so it's worked very well. I think our partners, our channel partners, have preferences around the server side that they like to go to market with. We give them the freedom together to pick and choose. So they put invested class software with best class storage to to meet the needs. They put the rest together based on what fits their business model or their current agreements go forward. So >> clear, clear swim lanes, Big market. You guys showed some data at V Mon. I want to say Danny's data, maybe $15 billion Tim man larger. You guys get a piece of that, you get a piece of that >> on a savant said. It's just there's no there's no friction in the marketplace is going out and doing the work we need to do to win. But we never get it that Oh, we can introduce this because it's gonna compete with, even if it's only 2% of what they have, there's there's looting. No, they do not have data protection. And we don't do as, you know. We don't do hardware in storage. So again invested breeds. And I >> think those numbers maybe even conservative because, you know, as you were pointing out, the traditional backup products were designed to deal with the biggest problem, which was back up window, which, by the way, 60% of times the backup didn't work anyway. But you have to get inside of, you know, Yeah, we backed it up check. But backup is One thing is my friend Fred Morris. Recovery is everything. So things are shifting in a digital business recovery. You know, it is tantamount. You know, ever you can't ever not be without your data. So it's an imperative. Yeah, >> it's, um, when you're and the flashlight business unit first came up with the construct of a rapid restore. I mean, admittedly, I was sitting in the corner. I'm just saying there's no way. There's no way that a customer would look to pay a premium for Flash for their backup. And then you meet the customers and it's just one after the other. And there's these stories around. We had to stop production. We couldn't get the AARP back online. Right Way couldn't take transactions because the processing database of the purchasing database was off line and you're just sitting there going. These are really world right issues that impact revenue for organizations. And so we are going through an evolution about rethinking around data protection and what it means into in today's day and age. >> It's security. Such top of mind carry today on the CEO's mind and data protection is part of that. Backup is a key part of that. You think about Ransomware, right? You guys get solutions there. I mean, it all fits together. It's not these sort of bespoke, you know, ideas anymore. It's really one big mosaic so that people can drive their digital transformations. I mean, that's really what they care about. >> I think the themes, old slogan, it just works right. It continues to evolve and that you talked about backup not working in the first place, right? So we have our core fundamental foundations. That theme has right is that it will trust that the customer will know that it will be online. We have the shortest r p o r t o is right in the marketplace, and then you take that and the's enterprise class features again. That's why marrying it with Piers route to market and there go to market strategy is having the success we're having in the marketplace. >> You're hearing a lot from customers. Flash Flash MacLeod. This is There is a very strong need for this. Some of the things that were announced today terms up some more firsts that piers delivering to the market. What are some of the things that you guys were? You maybe Carrie. We'll start with you from themes partnership perspective like a flash Teresi, for example, or starting to be able to deliver. I saw Blake smiles, uh, be ableto bring the cost down so that customers could look at putting a spectrum of workloads, even backups on flash. What is themes? Reaction? Well, smiles. I tend to >> do with Lisa, but I mean, to be honest with you. We sit back and love everything that piers doing from innovation. And so if they're going to come out with a broader set of target solutions for secondary storage, then we're going to be there partner there as we are with flashlights. So we're sitting back and loving the innovation that they're bringing to the market place and to their customers. >> I saw that Cheshire cat grin von >> s o for the audience who may be missed. We had a number of product announcements this morning taking the flash ray from a single product line into a portfolio going to that two year zero workload with the direct memory cache acceleration powered by Intel's often products as we go into a chair to economic space but still keeping all the Tier one features and availability we not flash or a C, which is leveraging QSC is a storage medium. Uh, while we have a design, do expand our tam and find new workloads. We have not looked at backup for the flash rate. See, at this point the flash, the flash, the cloud powered by the data hub in the rapid restore is going strong, so you want to kind of keep the team focused on that? And we've got other markets that we have yet to penetrate that have been more price sensitive where we think the flash racy is a better alignment. Now again, maybe over time I'll be found wrong and we'll change our tune. But you know, I'll give an example. Go back to Ransomware. Ransomware is a top three question in terms of any storage conversation. When you deal with a financial institution today to the point where not only are they asking about, what are you doing in your products? What are you doing across your partner ecosystem? Some of the modern proof of concepts required it to go through a ransomware recovery procedure because you know these financial institutions, they're worried about getting not just locked out, but locked out on your H a sight because you just replicated the ransomware over. So this this ability have immutable, immutable image to bill to bring it back online fast a rapid restored somewhere. You could see what these technologies start to line up in a comprehensive solution for the customers, and so flash racy is great. It has nowhere. The band with a flash blade. So we're gonna try to keep those a separate products in different markets at the time. But at least for time being, >> thanks for clarifying >> that cloud. I gotta ask the quad cloud question. It's interesting you guys have both embraced. Cloud is you're seeing it. In the old days, I was saying, I think I'm saying Charlie again. Executives were like, No, don't do that. It's gonna kill us. But now it's okay. It's not a zero sum game. That trend is your friend. You gotta embrace it. How are you making cloud each of you a tailwind versus the You know what all the analysts expect ahead, What else gets going? Zero sum game is going to steal from a to B. >> Well, I mean, Dave, you can imagine from my vantage point, it's easy to say that we're looking at Cloud is just, you know, expanding the TAM, expanding the ecosystem features we have today at the archive here. The success we're having with both Microsoft Azure and eight of us are phenomenal. Growing 40% month over month, right, the adoption with all the new innovations that Danny and Antonio have talked on the show that were coming out with envy. 10 are only gonna amplify that. But it all starts back with our partners ships today that we have one private clouds and as customers are looking to evolve to the cloud So we work with our partners like peer to ensure that we're working with them today. And as customers want to embrace the cloud they can. But predominantly, those primary workloads are still remaining on Prem and they're looking on how they're going to support the cloud. And we're doing that today and we'll be doing that. Maura's we go forward >> block storage announcement you guys made today was quite interesting way now spinning up East End shoes and s threes And what >> So this morning we announced general availability for pure Claude Block store on AWS and plans, as we are currently in beta and development for other clouds. But the folks today is this AWS and you pair Claude Block store, which is basically the software of a flash ray architect for the hardware inside of a W s so that you have the same functionality and service that you have on Prem and you pair that with pure is a service, which is our op X moderate could pay as you consume and the flexibility of sign a 12 month contracts. You want 90% on Prem today in 10% of cloud two months from now, you want it 50 50 like used the utility model to consume wherever you want, so you can meet the requirements of your infrastructure, whether it's on Prem in the cloud or some hybrid combination. >> But the interesting thing to me was your doing a lot of the heavy lifting for the customers with regard to the architecture. What you architect in the club that I wonder. Is there an opportunity to do something like that with backup? Or is that just, you know, not economical, deep, deep archive, things like that? I mean, >> I'm pretty sure we're told not to make any news right now because >> stay tuned. I've already said >> too much, so I'm probably a >> good thing. We're live >> in big trouble. >> Wow, guys. So the 1st 10 years of pure, tremendous amount of innovation is, Charlie said, an overnight success in 10 years, so much more coming down. We've already heard about a tremendous amount of innovation and evolution today. So we can't wait to have you guys back on to the next event in here. Get our neck braces on for the whiplash of news that's gonna be coming at us. All right. We are like your day Volante. I'm Lester Martin. Go pats. >> You're sorry. And Bruce. Carrie and I were crazy >> sports fans. Let's just be very PC. Go, everybody. Everybody gets participation. Trophies just coming anyway. You're watching the Cube. Lisa Martin for day, Volante. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Sep 18 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Couple of gents back on the Cube we have on Stuart the VP of technology for pure It's great to be here. I love the love it planned. buying into the performance that they have. Are you guys being brought in? That's gotta nps very similar years, you know, tell us more about what you're doing with No engineering resource is I'd love to Have you had some color to that? partners on one of the first partners to publish ah Universal adaptor, So just last week, you know, over 3000 That's hi, the value that being brings. Butler Health is a joint customer that we have a customer reference win that they've published in that we've published Give me some of the meat about what this customer, for example, is achieving at the business. It's not so much the exact stats that I could give you down So you asked about the technology we kind of talked about the universal adapter for the road is Can you put the data back? I mean, you guys pure software no pun intended, right? they did on the FBI and then continue to innovate and iterated against it right and coming out with the next version that But something that mom that you were just saying It's almost as if data protection is no Absolutely fuel, We believe if you look at the legacy backup appliances, So you guys are saying, Chuck, the appliance don't need the appliance. we win against appliances day in and day out? is gonna shit a good track record. in the marketplace without these key enterprise features and then having those chip, you know, opportunity that you guys jointly see in terms of the market you can penetrate. our channel partners, have preferences around the server side that they like to go to market with. You guys get a piece of that, you get a piece of that And we don't do as, you know. the traditional backup products were designed to deal with the biggest problem, And then you meet the customers and it's just you know, ideas anymore. the marketplace, and then you take that and the's enterprise class features again. What are some of the things that you guys were? And so if they're going to come out with a broader set of target to the point where not only are they asking about, what are you doing in your products? It's interesting you guys have both embraced. and Antonio have talked on the show that were coming out with envy. But the folks today is this AWS and you pair Claude Block store, But the interesting thing to me was your doing a lot of the heavy lifting for the customers with regard to the architecture. I've already said good thing. So we can't wait to have you guys back on to the next event in here. Carrie and I were crazy Let's just be very PC.

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Archana Venkatraman, IDC | Actifio Data Driven 2019


 

>> from Boston, Massachusetts. It's the queue covering active eo 2019. Data driven you by activity. >> Hi. We're right outside of the Boston Haba. You're watching >> the cube on stew Minimum in. And this is active Geo data driven. 2019 due date. Two days digging into, You >> know, the role of data inside Cos on, you know, in an ever changing world, happy to welcome to the program of first time guests are China Oven countrymen who's a research manager at I. D. C. Coming to us from across the pond in London. Thanks so much for joining us. Pleasure. So tell us a little bit. I d c. We know. Well, you know, the market landscapes, you know, watching what's happening. Thie said it 77 Zita bites that was put up in the keynote. Came came from I D. C. Tells you you're focused. >> Yeah, so I'm part of the data protection and storage research team, But I have, ah, European focus. I covered the Western European markets where data protection is almost off a neurotic interest to us. So a lot of our investment is actually made on the context of data protection. And how do I become data driven without compromising on security and sovereignty and data locality. So that's something that I look at. I'm also part of our broader multi cloud infrastructure team on also develops practice. I'm looking at all these modern new trends from data perspective as well. So it's kind of nice being >> keeping you busy, huh? Yeah. So about a year ago, every show that I went to there would be a big clock up on the Kino stage counting down until gpr went way actually said on the Q. Many times it's like we'll know when GPR starts with lawsuits. Sister and I feel like it was a couple of days, if not a couple of weeks before some of the big tech firms got sued for this. So here we are 2019. It's been, you know, been a while now since since since this launch. How important is GDP are you know what? How is that impacting customers and kind of ripple effect? Because, you know, here in the States, we're seeing some laws in California and beyond that are following that. But they pushed back from the Oh, hey, we're just gonna have all the data in the world and we'll store it somewhere sure will protect it and keep it secure. But but But >> yeah, yeah, so it's suggestive. Here is a game changer and it's interesting you said this big clock ticking and everybody has been talking about it. So when the European Commission >> announced repairs >> coming, organizations had about two years to actually prepare for it. But there were a lot of naysayers, and they thought, This is not gonna happen. The regulators don't have enough resources to actually go after all of these data breaches, and it's just too complicated. Not everyone's going complaints just not gonna happen. But then they realised that the regulators we're sticking to it on towards the end. Towards the last six months in the race to GDP, and there was this helter skelter running. Their organizations were trying to just do some Die Ryan patch of exercise to have that minimum viable compliance. So there they wanted to make sure that they don't go out of business. They don't have any major data breaches when Jean Pierre comes a difference that that was the story of 2018 although they have so much time to react they didn't on towards the end. They started doing a lot of these patch up work to make sure they had that minimum by the compliance. But over time, what we're seeing is that a lot off a stewed organizations are actually using GDP are as to create that competitive differentiations. If you look at companies like Barclays, they have been so much on top of that game on DH. They include that in their marketing strategies and the corporate social responsibility to say that, Hey, you know our business is important to us, but your privacy and your data is much more valuable to us, and that kind of instantly helps them build that trust. So they have big GDP, our compliance into their operations so much and so well that they can actually sell those kind of GPR consultancy services because they're so good at it. And that's what we are seeing is happening 2019 on DH. Probably the next 12 to 18 months will be about scaling on operational izing GDP are moving from that minimum viable compliance. >> Its interest weighed a conversation with Holly St Clair, whose state of Massachusetts and in our keynote this morning she talked about that data minimalist. I only want as much data as I know what I'm going to do. How I'm goingto leverage it, you know, kind of that pendulum swing back from the I'm goingto poured all the data and think about it later. It is that Did you see that is a trend with, you know, is that just governments is that, you know, you seeing that throughout industries and your >> interesting. So there was seven gpr came into existence. There were a lot of these workshops that were happening for on for organizations and how to become GDP. And there was this Danish public sector organization where one of the employees went to do that workshop was all charged up, and he came back to his employer and said, Hey, can you forget me on it Took that organization about 14 employees and three months to forget one person. So that's the amount of data they were holding in. And they were not dilating on all the processes were manual which took them so long to actually forget one person on. So if you don't cleanse a pure data act now meeting with all these right to be forgotten, Andi, all these specific clauses within GPR is going to be too difficult. And it's going to just eat up your business >> tryingto connecting the dots here. One of the one of the big stumbling blocks is if you look at data protection. If I've got backup, if I've got archive, I mean, if I've taken a snapshot of something and stuck that under a mountain in a giant tape and they say forget about me Oh, my gosh, Do I have to go retrieve that? I need to manage that? The cost could be quite onerous. Help! Help us connect the dots as to what that means to actually, you know, what are the ramifications of this regulation? >> Yeah, So I think so. Judy PR is a beast. It's a dragon off regulations. It's important to dice it to understand what the initial requirements are on one was the first step is to get visibility and classified the data as to what is personal data. You don't want to apply policies to all the data because I might be some garbage in there, so you need to get visibility on A says and classified data on what is personal data. Once you know what data is personal, what do you want to retain? That's when you start applying policies too. Ensure that they are safe and they're anonymous. Pseudonym ized. If you want to do analytics at a later stage on DH, then you think about how you meet. Individual close is so see there's a jeep airframe, but you start by classifying data. Then you apply specific policies to ensure you protect on back up the personal data on. Then you go about meeting the specific requirements. >> What else can you tell us about kind of European markets? You know, I I know when I look at the the cloud space, governance is something very specific to, and I need to make sure my data doesn't leave the borders and like what other trends in you know issues when you hear >> it from Jenny Peered forced a lot ofthe existential threat to a lot of companies. Like, say, hyper scale. Er's SAS men does so they were the first ones to actually become completely compliant to understand their regulations, have European data data hubs, and to have those data centres like I think At that time, Microsoft had this good good collaboration with T systems to have a local data center not controlled by Microsoft, but by somebody who is just a German organizations. You cannot have data locality more than that, right? So they were trying different innovative ways to build confidence among enterprises to make sure that cloud adoption continues on what was interesting. That came out from a research was that way thought, Gee, DPR means people's confidence and cloud is going to plunge. People's confidence in public cloud is going to pledge. That didn't happen. 42% of organizations were still going ahead with their cloud strategies as is, but it's just that they were going to be a lot more cautious. And they want to make sure that the applications and data that they were putting in the cloud was something that they had complete visibility in tow on that didn't have too much of personal data and even if it had, they had complete control over. So they had a different strategy off approaching public cloud, but it didn't slow them down. But over time they realised that to get that control ofthe idea and to get that control of data. They need to have that multiple multi cloud strategy because Cloud had to become a two way street. They need to have an exit strategy. A swell. So they tried to make sure that they adopted multiple cloud technologies and have the data interoperability. Ahs Well, because data management was one of their key key. Top of my prayer. >> Okay, last question I had for you. We're here at the active you event. What? What do you hear from your customers about Octavio? Any research that you have relevant, what >> they're doing, it's going interesting. So copy data management. That's how active you started, right? They created a market for themselves in this competition, a management and be classified copy data management within replication Market on replication is quite a slow market, but this copy data management is big issue, and it's one of the fastest growing market. So So So they started off from a good base, but they created a market for themselves and people started noticing them, and now they have kind of grown further and grown beyond and tried to cover the entire data management space. Andi, I think what's interesting and what's going to be interesting is how they keep up the momentum in building that infrastructure, ecosystem and platform ecosystem. Because companies are moving from protecting data centers to protecting centers of data on if they can help organizations protect multiple centers of data through a unified pane of glass, I have a platform approach to data management. Then they can help organizations become data drivers, which gives them the competitive advantage. So if they can keep up that momentum there going great guns, >> Thank you so much for joining us in Cheshire, sharing the data that you have in the customer viewpoints from Europe. So we'll be back with more coverage here from Active EO data driven 2019 in Boston. Mess fuses on stew Minimum. Thanks for watching the Q. Thank you.

Published Date : Jun 18 2019

SUMMARY :

Data driven you by activity. Hi. We're right outside of the Boston Haba. the cube on stew Minimum in. Well, you know, the market landscapes, you know, watching what's happening. So a lot of our investment is actually made on the context of data protection. you know, been a while now since since since this launch. Here is a game changer and it's interesting you said and the corporate social responsibility to say that, Hey, you know our business is important to It is that Did you see that is a trend with, So that's the amount of data they were holding in. One of the one of the big stumbling blocks is if you look at data protection. It's important to dice it to understand what the initial requirements are on one but it's just that they were going to be a lot more cautious. We're here at the active you event. So if they can keep up that momentum there Thank you so much for joining us in Cheshire, sharing the data that you have in the customer viewpoints from

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Kevin Bogusz, NECECT | Veritas Vision Solution Day 2018


 

>> Announcer: From Chicago, it's theCUBE, covering Veritas Vision Solution Day 2018. Brought to you by Veritas. >> Hello, everyone, welcome back to the Windy City. We're here with Veritas at the Veritas Solution Day. You're watching theCUBE, the leader in live tech coverage. Kevin Bogusz is here, he's a senior information engineer ECECT, a telecommunications company. Kevin, thanks for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you. >> So, this event, a very intimate customer event. I don't know if you were at Veritas Vision last year, big, huge customer event, many thousands of people. It's an intimate customer event, 50, 75 people. What're your thoughts on, you know, you took time out of your day to come here, why? What's here for you? >> Get a better understanding what Veritas can do for my company in terms of backups and stuff. We do use Backup Exec in my organization. I've been there for four years, and understanding what you guys do and everything, 'cause we're back when you used to be Symantec. Highs and lows, with tech support, whatever, but other than that, it's been great. >> Okay, so talk about ECECT, what's the company do? >> We are the parent company of NEC out in Japan. We do, in the beginning we developed telecommunications for companies ESP via CISCO, then it came us. for companies ESP via CISCO, then it came us. Before I start they gave me some background terms on how they did stuff. They were absorbed by NECJ and after that we went through a reorganization about a year and half ago. So we have grown from 50 people in a small office in Lincolnshire to having almost four to five offices, from all way out to Washington state all the way out to Cheshire Connecticut >> And you're a service provider or-- >> Not a service provider. We're pretty much a development firm. We're all development, they used to do stuff in Lincolnshire, they used to sell stuff before they got absorbed by NECJ. They used to do the sales, they do the development, they did everything in Lincolnshire, before the big dot com bust, which I was told when I got brought in. After the big dot com bust, it was who was going to take us over, and that became NECJ. >> When you say development, you mean product development? >> Yes. >> Okay great, so in your role as Senior Information Engineer you look after lot of things, but one of them is course is data protection services, right? >> So immediately when I hear four or five remote offices you've got distributed data all over the place, you got to figure out how to protect that. So, how do you protect that? I'm really interested in what's changed. You and I were talking before about, remember the virtualization days. You got to rethink everything, in terms of data protection 'cause we didn't have as many servers physically. Things are changing again, so how have things changed? What's changing and what are the big initiatives you're working on? Paint a picture for us if you would. >> Well, in the beginning, we weren't really heavily into virtualization, now we really have. It's actually has saved on a couple of positions, we actually had to move our ticket system over to virtualization because the servers bought the guy. So we took care of it, so we moved it over to virtualization now we are backing up, with Backup Exec, being able to do either files, folders or do the whole virtual. Also we actually did high availability to provide us with more protection everything else, plus in addition to what we are asking to what Veritas can do for us. >> Okay so virtualization is relatively new for you guys >> Yes. >> And what about Cloud? You hear about things like Cloud and Multicloud, you doing much in Cloud? >> Not that much in Cloud, pretty much it's, if it has to been in the Cloud. We have slowly developed going towards the Cloud and what I've have heard and what I've have seen from my manager. But right now, we're kind of backing off just a little bit, just to see is it approved by the big company or can we go on our own whim, and do that sort of thing. Because I have just developed something a clone of Dropbox. At the organization because Dropbox is not considered legit at my company, so I had to come up with a new idea. >> Okay, so let's talk about some of the other trends, that might be driving your business. DR, presumably is one, everyone talks about well, backup is insurance I hate buying insurance, I want to get more out of it. Even though disaster recovery is insurance too it's important insurance, and so, are you trying to extend your backup and recovery, into disaster recovery? >> Yes, we're-- >> How are you doing that? >> As of right now, we are using Backup Exec. There's a little hiccup here and that I am till trying to figure out how to fix. But we do have the DR between two sites in the beginning that my manager wanted to roll out. And we do, do files, folders, you name it even including virtualizations. We do have a secondary server that does the tapes also which we are trying to transition into the whole DR, So, we can do files and then after that we can do the whole tape. Dump at the tape and then send it off to iron them out. >> Your hiccup is a technical issue? >> It's a technical issue, but other than that, we're trying to figure out, what's causing it. Because one side we'll go from perfectly being okay, but when we try to send trillions of data over to the other thing, it mostly turns to the network almost. But right now we are trying to figure out, is it network based or is it something else. >> What was the challenge, right? 'Cause you've done all this distributing data. And you got to make sure it's all consistent. You know, you think about pointing time copies. When things are distributed all over the place, which is the point and time? So how are you sort of dealing with some of those challenges? >> Ways to dealing with that is pretty much figuring out one prime example trying to deal with that was we had our technical publications people and I got a message on our corporate messenger saying, "I kind of screwed up, can you help me?" And I got go, "What did you do?" I kind of over wrote this, and I'll do is, go through the thing, go through the management thing with Backup Exec going what day was it? I went did this day. How far back do you need to go? Oh I need to go about a month. Okay, here you go. >> And so when you do a recovery like that, how do you validate that the data is consistent with what the business user wants it? It's the business user's responsibility presumably. They have to look at it and say, okay, Kevin thank you. You got me what I needed or can you back a little further? >> That has happened too. What I do with my people at work is that especially with the technical publication people is I ask them okay, what happened on this day? Oh, I overwrote this. Okay, from that point in the past, what haven't you written over? and how far can I go back? Oh you can go back this far. Like, okay, here's your date range, I gave you these two files. Oh, yes please recover it, and I go okay, I got to pull on these files and folders, here you go. >> So what are you looking for in a backup software? I did a little sort of preview upfront and the market's exploding. >> Yes >> You seeing some companies raise hundreds of millions of dollars, obviously Veritas is a leader along with three or four of others. They have most of the market. Everybody wants a piece of that action. So, I'm sure you're getting knocks on the door everyday. You are getting inundated emails, switch to us. So what do you look for in a data protection vendor? Why Veritas? Are you are sticking with those guys? Are you are thinking about switching? Maybe give us some color there. >> Right now, with Veritas we have had... before I started they use to be with Symantec and then Symantec got brought up by Veritas, which what happened. So they've been with this company, in the past why I have been told is, they've been with Symantec since Backup Exec 14. Like way before the Backup Exec 2015, the latest one just came out. We been looking at Veeam. At that time Veeam was looking as, all that we do is virtuals. Okay, that kind of helps us but our main thing is if something bad happens, can you do files for us? No. And I've been inundated with them through TDWC say, Oh, so and so can help you, I'm like, "Do you guys do virtuals?" Yeah! So, what has changed? I've kind of stacked with Backup Exec just because I used over the four years I've been here. I used that before in a previous company. So I have some background but other than that, I've seen a thing where, I've been forced with some of the applications at work I've have to gone to Open-source. I have to gone to Winbond 2, I've been going to Red Hat Linuz Enterprise. And the main concern that I have is, yes we can do Oracle and everything else for SQL. What about my SQL Server? Oh we don't do that. So I have to do a virtual machine back up on the virtual. >> So we were talking to Veritas technical people they claim, test this with the customer. They claim they can do a lot of different used cases you mentioned MySQL, they talk about being able to do NoSQL and other unstructured data, where as some others might have to partner with a specialist. Do find that that Veritas actually has that kind of harden stack across lot of used cases? Or would you like them to do more? >> I would like them do more, because I gave them one scenario, where we've actually used one of our test clients. We do test clients type of stuff called TestRail by Gurock. And I've asked them multiple times I have big SQL database and we're bound to. How can I back that up? And I have asked multiple times. Oh, all we do is Oracle. And I go, I understand my SQL is opensource but I know there's post cres. Post cres is like my SQL, it's like a fork of it but at least, give me that ability. >> You mentioned you're a Red Hat customer as well as others but what do you think of IBM acquisition? Announced acquisition of Red Hat does it make you nervous? >> It doesn't make me nervous, it's you're going back to the days of you know the big IBM, we used to be big and they started branching out, selling off stuff to Lenova, all that type of stuff. I just see them going, oh crap! We kind of sold off bits and pieces here. We're going to come back. >> Dave: Shrink to grow. But as a customer of Red Hat, you're not concerned? You feel that Red Hat's going to stay pure? >> If they keep the status quo of that they have done and everything, don't mess with anything, anything like that be able to have like consumers play with what there's out there like Fedora, go right ahead. Do whatever you want to do. If you got the money, the burn, go ahead and do more development and stuff. I would love to see IBM do more with Red Hat. >> So it's awesome to have a practitioner on, who knows where all their skeletons are buried but you still sticking with Veritas is from what I am understanding. I'll give you the last word, final thoughts. >> Veritas to me in a nutshell, they keep on innovating what they have been doing and making the product better, with what they've been doing through the previous versions, that I have dealt with. I think they're going to, in my opinion, they will probably out beat Veeam in terms of back up stuff. 'Cause I know they are the two big players. As Veritas and Veeam are doing the back ups and right now Veeam is probably playing catch up because ever since they told us, "Oh, we are do files." Instead of doing just virtuals. >> Well, Kevin thanks very much for coming on theCUBE, It's great to have you. >> You too. >> Alright, keep it right there everybody, we will be back with our next guest right after this short break. You're watching theCube from Chicago. Right back. (techno music)

Published Date : Nov 10 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Veritas. We're here with Veritas at the Veritas Solution Day. I don't know if you were at Veritas Vision last year, and understanding what you guys do and everything, We do, in the beginning we developed telecommunications and that became NECJ. So, how do you protect that? now we are backing up, with Backup Exec, so I had to come up with a new idea. and so, are you trying to extend your backup and recovery, And we do, do files, folders, you name it But right now we are trying to figure out, And you got to make sure it's all consistent. And I got go, "What did you do?" And so when you do a recovery like that, I gave you these two files. So what are you looking for in a backup software? So what do you look for in a data protection vendor? I have to gone to Winbond 2, Or would you like them to do more? And I have asked multiple times. you know the big IBM, You feel that Red Hat's going to stay pure? be able to have like consumers play with but you still sticking with Veritas and making the product better, with what they've been doing It's great to have you. everybody, we will be back with our next guest

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Flynn Maloy, HPE & John Treadway, Cloud Technology Partners | HPE Discover 2017 Madrid


 

>> Narrator: Live from Madrid, Spain it's theCube, covering HPE Discover Madrid 2017. Brought to you by Hewlitt Packard Enterprise. >> Welcome back to Madrid everybody. This is theCube, the leader in live tech coverage. My name is Dave Vellante and I'm here with my co-host for the week, Peter Burris, otherwise known as Mr. Universe. This is HPE Discover Madrid 2017. Flynn Maloy is here as the Vice President of Marketing the HP Point Next. >> Hi guys. >> And John Treadway is here as the Senior Vice President of Strategy and Portfolio at Cloud Technology Partners, an HPE company. Gentlemen, great to see you again. Welcome to theCube. >> Great to see you. >> It's been a good week. We were just talking about the clarity that's coming to light with HPE, the portfolio, some of the cool acquisitions. You and I, Flynn, were at this event last year in London. You had the Cheshire Cat smile on your face. You said something big is coming. I can't really tell you about it partly because I can't tell you about it. The other part is we're still shaping it. Then Point Next came out of it. How are you feeling? Give us the update. >> It's been a really exciting year for services. This time last year we knew as Antonio announced, we're going to be bringing our services together after we announced that we're spinning out our outsourcing business. We're bringing technology services at the time forward. We had a new brand coming. We purchased Cloud Cruiser in February so we're investing in the business. We also invested in services back in the engine room all year long to really build up to our announcement this week with Green Lake which takes our consumption services to the next level. Then of course in September we continue to invest and acquire Cloud Technology Partners and by the way brought on our new leadership team with Ana Pinczuk and Parvesh Sethi. For us here at HP it's really been a banner year for services. It's really been transformative for the company and we're excited to lead it going into FY '18. >> John, Cloud Technology Partners specializing, deep technology expertise. You've got an affinity for AWS, you've got a bunch of guys that reinvent this week in close partnership with them. Interesting acquisition from your perspective coming into HPE. What's it been like? What has HP brought you and what have you brought HP? >> That's a fantastic question. We have really found that everything about this experience has exceeded our expectations across the board. When you go into these things you're kind of hoping for the best outcome, which is we're here because we want to be able to grow our business and scale it and HP gives us that scale. We also think that we have a lot of value to add to the credibility around public cloud and the capabilities we bring. You hope that those things turn out to be true. The level of engagement that we're getting across the business with the sellers, with the customers, with the partners is way beyond expectations. I like to say that we're about six months ahead of where we thought we'd be in terms of integration, in terms of capability and expertise. Really bringing that public cloud expertise, not just to AWS, we do a lot of Azure work, we do a lot of Google work as well, really does allow the HPE teams to be able to go into their clients and have a new conversation that they couldn't have a year ago. >> What is that new conversation? >> The new conversation is really about, and we like to use the term "the right mix." I.T. is not just one mode. You're gonna have internal I.T., you're gonna have private clouds. Public cloud is a reality. AWS is the fastest growing company in tech history ever. If you think about that it's a reality for our clients, HPE clients, that public cloud is there. That new capability that we could bring, that credibility is that we have done this for the last seven years with large enterprises across all sorts of industries and domains: Toko, healthcare, financial services in particular. We bring that to the table, combine that with the scale and operational capability of HPE and now we have something that's actually pretty special. >> Just to add, it is about the customers at the end of the day. It's about where do those workloads want to land? Public cloud, private cloud, traditional, those are all tools in your toolbox. What customers want to know is what is the right mix? There are workloads that are ideal for going to the public cloud. There are workloads that are ideal for staying on prem. Finding that right mix, especially by bringing in the capabilities of what needs to go to public cloud that really rounds out our portfolio for hybrid I.T. >> I'm starting to buy the story. The upstarts, the fastest growing company in the world would say old guard trying to hang onto the past. I like the way you framed it as look, we know our customers want to go to the cloud. They want certain workloads to be on prem. We want them to succeed. We're open, we're giving them choice. Maybe two years ago it sounded like bromide. But you're actually putting it into action acquiring a company like CTP. It's interesting what you were saying, John, about well no not just AWS, it's Google, it's Azure. You've got independent perspective on what should go where or on prem. >> We always have so even as a company that derived most of our revenue from public cloud over the last few years, we've never, ever been the company that said everything should go to public cloud. Toss it all, go to Amazon, toss it all, go to Azure. Never been our perspective. We've had methodology for looking through the application portfolio and helping determine where things should go. Very often a large percentage of the portfolio we say it's good where it is, don't move it. Don't move it right away. >> But in the past that's where it ended. You said okay, hey, go figure out, go talk to HPE. >> That's actually a funny thing because we've had this conversation. Literally when we would say okay we'll take care of this part for the public cloud, but you're on your own for the private cloud stuff, in the past HP would do the reverse. We'll help you with the private cloud stuff, and we think this could go to public cloud. But you're kind of on your own with that. Not that there wasn't any capability, but it wasn't really well developed. Now we can say this should go to private cloud, this should go to public cloud and guess what? We can do both. >> Dave: So now you've got a lean-in strategy. >> Absolutely right, as John said the funnels and the response from our customers have been outstanding. As you can imagine, Mike, all of our top customers are saying fantastic, come talk to us, come talk to us. They're having to prioritize where they go over the last few months. We are well ahead of where we were. >> We strongly believe over the years that the goal is not to bring your business to the cloud. It's to bring the cloud to your business. That ultimately means that public cloud will be a subset of the total although Amazon's done a wonderful job of putting forward the new mental model for the future of computing. Can you guys reliably through things like Green Lake and other, can you present yourselves as a cloud company that just doesn't have a public cloud component? >> Let me approach the response to that question in a slightly different way. When you look at our strategy around making hybrid I.T. simple it's not necessarily which cloud is the right cloud? It's not really about that. It's about where should the workloads land? We do believe that the pragmatic answer is you need to be a little bit above all of those choices. They're all in the toolbox. If you look at, for example, our announcement with One Sphere this week that's a perfect example of what customers are asking the industry to do which is to look across all of it. The reality is it's hybrid, it's multi-cloud and speaking at that length. >> But you're saying it's a super set of tools that each are chosen based on the characteristics of workloads, data, whatever it might be, that's right. So John look, as human beings we all get good at stuff. We say I know that person I can stereotype him. I can stereotype that. What's the euristic that your team is using to very quickly look at a workload? Give our audience, our clients a clue here so that they can walk away a little bit and say well that workload naturally probably is going to go here. And that workload's naturally going to go there. What's it like 30 second where you're able to generally get it right 80% of the time? >> It really comes down to a set of factors, right? One factor is just technical fit. Will it work at all? We can knock out a lot of workloads because they're on old Unix or just kind of generally the technical fit isn't there, right? Second thing is from a business case. Does it make sense? Is there gonna be any operational saving against the cost of doing the migration? Because migrating something isn't free right? It's never free. Third is what is the security and governance constraint within which I'm living? If I have a data residency requirement in a country and there's no hyper-scale public cloud presence in that country then that workload needs to stay in that country, right? It's those types of high-level factors we can very quickly go from the list of here's your entire list down to already these are candidates for further evaluation. Then we start to get into sort of deeper analysis. But the top level screen can happen very, very quickly. >> You do that across the, you take an application view, obviously. A workload view. Then how do avoid sort of boiling the ocean? Or do you boil the ocean? You have tools to help do that. >> We do, I mean we've invested a lot in IP, both service IP and software IP in both Point Next also comes with some strong IP in this as well that we've been able to merge in with. Our application assessment methodology is backed by a tool called Aura. Aura is a tool for taking that data, collecting it, and help providing individualization in reporting and decisioning at the high level on these items. Then every application that looks like a great candidate for something that I'm gonna invest in migration, we need to do a deeper analysis. Because it isn't lifting and shifting. It doesn't work for 90% of the applications, or 80%, or 70. It's certainly not anywhere near 50% of the applications. They require a little bit of work, sometimes a lot of work, to be able to have operational scale in a public cloud environment because they're expecting a certain performance and operational characteristic of their internal infrastructure and it's not there. It's a different model in the public cloud. >> A lot of organizations like yours would have a challenge presenting that to a customer because they can't get the attention of the senior leaders. How is it that you guys are able to do that? You were talking I think, off-camera, talking about 20-plus years of experience on average for each of your professionals. Is that one of the secrets to how you've succeeded? >> This is a big thing and why this integration's working so well is that the people, the early team all the way through today of CTP are all seasoned I.T. professionals. We're not kids straight out of school that have only known how to do I.T. in an Amazon way. We have CIOs of banks that are in our executive team, or in our architecture team that have that empathy and understanding of what it means to be in the shoes. Not having this arrogant approach of everything must be a certain way because that's what we believe. That doesn't work. The clients are all different. Every application is a snowflake and needs to be treated as such, needs to be treated like an individual, like a human. You want to be treated like an individual, not like -- >> Stalker! (laughing) >> Gezunheit. (laughing) >> Okay, so now the challenge is how you scale that. How you replicate that globally and scale it and get the word out. Talk about that challenge. >> That's right and one of the big things we're really excited to see is the merger of the IP that comes from CTP along with everything that we have inside of Point Next and then rolling that out to the 5,000 plus consultants that we've got inside of HP and our partners. That's really where we're expecting a lot of the magic to come from is once we really expose the integrated set of what those capabilities are we think, and Ana has said it on stage. We had heard from a couple of analysts that we believe that together we have the largest cloud advisory in the industry today. >> It was interesting we actually had, we've had challenges in the past where we've gone into clients and were starting to get into some pretty serious level of work. We were a younger company, didn't have the scale, and scope, and capability of HPE. Now we're being brought in to these opportunities and the clients are saying HP, you're right here. We can do that. We have the scale to now start doing the larger transformation programs and projects with these clients that we didn't have before. Now we're being invited back in, right? In addition to that being invited in because now we have the cloud competency that we can bring to the table. >> You know what, I kind of want to go back to the point you made earlier about how it's all cloud. That resonates with me. I think it is all cloud depending on where you want to land the various pieces. If that's what you want to call that umbrella I think it makes a ton of sense. You know, a lot of what we've announced this week with Green Lake is about trying to bridge the benefits gap with public cloud as the benchmark for the experience today for what needs to stay on prem. When you sit down and for all those reasons you outlined, whether it's ready, whether it isn't ready, where the data has to sit, or whether or not. There's gonna be x-workloads that need to stay on prem. We've been working hard in the engine room to really build out an experience that can feel to the customer a lot like what you get from the public cloud. That's gonna continue to be an investment area for us. >> If the goal is success for the business then you don't measure success by whether you got to Amazon. >> That's correct. >> The goal of success is the business. You measure success by whether or not the business successfully adopts the technology where the data requires. What's interesting about the change we're experiencing is in many respects for the first time the way of thinking about problems in this industry is going through a radical transformation. Let's credit AWS for catalyzing a lot of that change. >> Absolutely, setting that benchmark. I mean it really is a catalyst. >> But you look at this show, HP has adopted the thought process, it's adopted it. It's no longer in our position to say fine, you want to think this way, we'll help. >> Imagine this, as One Sphere comes up and as we really can manage multi-clouds and as we'll eventually be able to move workloads between the various clouds, manage the whole estate, view the whole estate and everything under it whether it's off-prem or on-prem is all consumption. I mean, how does that change central I.T.? Central I.T. radically changes. If everything's consumed, wherever it is and you've got a visibility to the whole estate and you can move stuff depending on what the right mix is, that's a fundamental change and we're not there yet as an industry. But that's a fundamental change to the role of Central I.T. >> But your CIOs are thinking along those lines. We can verify they are thinking along those lines. >> Again the strategy's coming into focus for me personally. I think us generally. We talked to Ana about services-led, outcome-led. And if it's big chewy outcome like kind of IBM talks well you've got partners to help you do that. Deloitte, we had PWC on. They're big, world-class organizations with deep expertise in retail and manufacturing and oil and gas. You're happy to work with those guys. If it is service-led or outcome-led you can make money whether you're going to Amazon, whether you're staying on prem, whether you're doing some kind of hybrid in between and you're happy to do that as an agnostic, independent player. Now yeah, of course you'd like to sell HP hardware and software, why not? >> I think that's really an important point. When it comes to the infrastructure itself we do believe we have the best infrastructure in the industry, but we play well with others and we always said HPE plays well with others. When it comes to the app layer we are app agnostic. A lot of our biggest competitors are not. When you go out and talk to CIOs today that's really, this is my app, this is my baby. This is the one that I want. They're not really looking for alternatives for that in many cases. When you're thinking agnostic that's really where we think partner, being agnostic, working with all the ad vendors, working with all the SIs, we think that's where the future-- >> And it's a key thing. You guys are younger, but you remember Unix is snake oil. I mean-- >> Designing is a Russian Trump. >> Unix is snake oil and then two years later it's like here our Unix. >> Flynn: It's the best thing ever. >> So you now are in a position to say great, wherever you wanna go we'll take you there. That's powerful because it can be genuine and it can be lucrative. >> What's unlocking here is the ability to actually execute a digital transformation program within the enterprise. One of the big things the public cloud providers brought to us and that HPE's now bringing in through the internal infrastructure is that agility and speed of innovation of the users. Their ability to actually get things done very quickly and reduce the cycle time of innovation. That frankly has always been the core benefit of the public cloud model, that pay-as-you-go, start with what you need, use the platform services as they grow. That model has been there since the beginning and it's over 11 years of AWS at this point. Now with enterprise technology adopting similar models of pay for it when you consume it, we'll provision it in advance, we'll get things going for you, we're giving that model. It's about unlocking the ability for the enterprise to do innovation at scale. >> I wanna end if I can on met Jonathan Buma last night, J.P., J.B., sorry. You're J.T. >> It's confusing. >> But one of the things I learned, a small organization, 200-250 people roughly when you got acquired, but you've got this thing called Doppler, right? Is that what it's called, Doppler? Explain that, explain the thought leadership angles that you guys have. >> Actually from the very beginning. >> The marketing team loves this, it's fantastic. >> So follow up with how. >> From day one there's a few things that we said were core principles, the way that we were going to grow and run the business. I'll talk about one other thing first which was that we were gonna be technology-enabled, technology-enabled services company. That we were gonna invest in IP both at the service level but as the technology level to accelerate the delivery of what we do. The second thing as a core principle is that we were going to lead through thought leadership. So we have been the most prolific producers of independent cloud content as a services firm bar none. Yeah, there's newspapers, magazines, analyst firms like yourself producing a lot of content. The stuff that we're producing is based on direct experience of implementing these solutions in the cloud with our clients so we can bring best practices. We're not talking about our services. We're talking about what is the best practice for any enterprise that wants to get to the cloud. How do you do security? How do you do organizational change? That has a very large following of Doppler both online where we have an email newsletter. But we also do printed publication of our quarterly Dopplers that goes out to a lot of our clients, the CIOs and key partners. That kind of thought leadership has really set us apart from all of the rest of the, even the born in cloud consultancies who never put that investment in. >> Flynn, you're a content guy. >> Absolutely. >> So you've got to really appreciate this. >> That's a dream, it's an absolute dream. One of the things, another proof point as a way to end, services first strategy is what we're doing in the market community at HP more money, energy, content, time is going into how we're talking, thought leadership and services than anything else in the company. We've got not just branding for Point Next and Green Lake, but bringing Doppler forward, bringing those great case studies forward. Putting that kind of content at the tip of the HPE sphere. It's not something you've seen from our company in the past. I think keep your eyes out over the next year. We'll have this conversation in six months and you'll see a lot more from us on that topic. >> Great stuff, congratulations on the process, the exit, the future. Good luck, exciting. >> Thanks guys. >> Really appreciate it. Keep it right there everybody, we'll be back right after this short break. Dave Vallente for Peter Burris from HPE Discover Madrid. This is theCube. (upbeat instrumental music)

Published Date : Nov 29 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Hewlitt Packard Enterprise. Flynn Maloy is here as the Vice President of Marketing And John Treadway is here as the Senior Vice President You had the Cheshire Cat smile on your face. and acquire Cloud Technology Partners and by the way that reinvent this week in close partnership with them. and the capabilities we bring. We bring that to the table, combine that with the scale of the day. I like the way you framed it as look, most of our revenue from public cloud over the last But in the past that's where it ended. for the private cloud stuff, in the past HP would do and the response from our customers have been outstanding. of the total although Amazon's done a wonderful job We do believe that the pragmatic answer is that each are chosen based on the characteristics go from the list of here's your entire list Then how do avoid sort of boiling the ocean? It's certainly not anywhere near 50% of the applications. Is that one of the secrets to how you've succeeded? We have CIOs of banks that are in our executive team, (laughing) Okay, so now the challenge is how you scale that. We had heard from a couple of analysts that we believe We have the scale to now start doing the larger to the customer a lot like what you get If the goal is success for the business The goal of success is the business. Absolutely, setting that benchmark. HP has adopted the thought process, it's adopted it. between the various clouds, manage the whole estate, We can verify they are thinking along those lines. Again the strategy's coming into focus in the industry, but we play well with others I mean-- Unix is snake oil and then two years later So you now are in a position to say great, One of the big things the public cloud providers I wanna end if I can on met Jonathan Buma last night, But one of the things I learned, a small organization, but as the technology level to accelerate the delivery Putting that kind of content at the tip of the exit, the future. This is theCube.

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