Amy Lewis & John Troyer | EMC World 2014
>> A cube at DMC World twenty fourteen is brought to you by D. M. C. Redefine, see innovating the world's first converged infrastructure solution for private cloud computing brocade. Say goodbye to the status quo and hello to Brocade. >> Welcome back to the Cube. This silken angle TVs live wall to wall Coverage of DMC World twenty fourteen here in the Sands Convention Center in Las Vegas. We've got three days to stage is over eighty guests. Lots of practitioners, execs, business leaders got a special segment. I'm bringing you today, bringing onto two thirds of the geek whispers, podcasts, Those in the story for the virtual ization and Claude Communities. No art is to guess. Well, let me introduce it's John Troyer, who's making his debut as the founder of tech reckoning. >> Thanks for having me. >> And we've got Amy Lewis influence marketing from Cisco. Name is your first time on the Cube, so, you know, welcome to the program. >> Thank you for having me on. >> All right, so So, guys, you know, we've been to a lot of conferences way we've hung out with, You know, the various influencers bloggers. It's changed a lot. This is my twelfth year coming M. C World. If you had told me twelve years ago some of things I'd be doing at this show, I wouldn't have believed you. I mean, I was one of the guys in a polo that only got out of out of the office once a year to give a presentation and, you know, talks in people about some cool tak um, and you know, social media is one of those things that, you know turn my career. Eleven. So you know what? Let's have a conversation about what's going on in the industry with kind of community influences and everything. John, maybe you could start us often. You know, Maybe if it leads in tow your new gigs? >> Sure, sure, on one on one, and things have changed. On the other hand, the same dynamics are playing out. Buying the buying cycle has changed. The buying process has changed. Customers are looking much more to their peers and not to traditional media analysts. Marketing folks, they can't find more ads. You can't send out more E mail. So what do you do? You need to get part of the conversation. We've been saying that for five or ten years, that's actually happened. Now the folks that were early on into the blogging space have turned themselves into communicators as well as technologists. We've seen, you know, their careers have have gone and all sorts of interesting places, for instance, you. But I think now that even we could talk about his art Is blogging dead? But I think now we're seeing it. We're seeing social media not as a trade or a practice practice, but simply a tool set that we all use. So that's all I'm saying is it's a It's more of a it spread throughout our organization. Not so much in one tiny niche, right? >> Yeah, Jonah, I love that point. I I I've been preaching for a bunch of years that this is an important skill, something you have to have their wonderful tools. But you've been doing community for a lot longer than Social Media has been around, and, you know, so it's peace, Amy, your influence marketing. What would please way out on this? >> Yeah, I chose the title, actually myself on purpose. To say it's not just social media, think social Media is very important, but like John was saying that to me is a set of tools. They're important platforms or important communications channels, but influencers the people who between the term citizen analysts they are unpaid analyst. But people are very passionate about technology, and they want to write on block and share, really engage their community. That's an important group of people. It's a really a buying center, and we have to find new ways to address them. So community is more important than >> ever. Citizen analysts thought, Let's focus that >> some of the >> people you know, I say some people goto event and they get it, get it, get wined and dined and they get to, you know, write about a bunch of stuff I'm like, you know you're better than journalists, you know, you'll You know you do some really good stuff and sometimes it's a little bit too friendly to the people that are doing it. So you know where do you see the role of kind of the press? You know, the analyst and the influencer? >> It's a great question I've been checking. We need to abstract the or chart. It is. It is a complicated question, but I think the traditional presses really trained and rightfully so in giving us that neutrality. So that is still a very important role. I think the analysts are paid Tio Tio, analyze particular sets, etcetera. They have nation specialty. I think the citizen analyst is interesting because they are what you don't know about the neutrality. But you do know that there are people who roll up their sleeves and really touched the technology. So that becomes a very interesting set because they really care about the technology Kazakh but could become their problem if they don't, you know, raise our voice and sort of engaged with technology and let the community know what, what the new trends are, what they need, what business needs. Our etcetera gives us a really applied version, the PR in the e R outside. >> Don't you want to comment on matter? >> I mean, these are the folks that they lose their jobs if they picked the wrong technology. So they have much more. Their discussions have it. They have more skin in the game. >> Aye, that's right. If you've got the practitioner, you know whether it be the end user sometime times it's the you know channel guy that they do that that's good, You know? What about the people inside the corporations that are also using these? >> I'm super bullish about the use of employees as advocates and evangelists in our community, both for technical education. And for the commercial part of our conversation in the enterprise space, we don't sell solutions with Russia. Your hair's a pressure and very nice calm. Give me a call. We sell it with relationships with people. I've been working on the social media since it existed, I suppose. And what we've seen over and over again is the social channels are really great for getting the word out. But without that personal component, it's like just handing out brochures. So you need your employees out there. You need your employees talking to folks. You need your employees without their representing your brand, just like they would have an event. I've seen that at something. On one hand, it's something that's so trivial that we all agree it's true. On the other hand, I don't. I think a lot of people are just realizing that now. >> So, John, you know, there's some some big companies, you know, creative certification programs to do some of this. There's some companies that just, you know, sign everybody up and, you know, it could be kind of an echo chamber or things like that. You know what? What do you see in these days? To kind of help out. You know the community >> well. There's a lot of software and a lot of programmatic things you could do. Those may be useful in terms of organizing you. It comes down to the people in the culture of the company and help much. You trust your people to go out. I think the best thing we can do is sit up platform for folks to be able to, to communicate. I think that's actually what Amy does really well at Cisco. >> X. It's, um I always talk about influence marketing as being people, platforms in content. And so I agree. I think that we sorted out some of the platform issues as we've learned about social media and grew up with it. I think that we are still working out the people in the content side and what's appropriate, how we can join together and do that and how we can creates a mute platforms may be using the tools of social tio to drive the conversation forward. >> All right. So, I mean, I got one for you. You know, how do we balance the kind of creation of information and kind of the community and fund? I mean, you do a lot of fun event you've got, you know, awful club this week. You've got, you know, bacon, stack and B bacon and bacon. I e I mean, I can't keep track of you, deport vacants and everything. And, you know, there'd be some executives here that would be like that, That social stuff. And they're playing games and things like that. So how do we balance kind of attic business value and greeting, you know, value to the community. And, you know, having fun in building community. >> No, it's a great question. A couple of years ago, I got a text in the middle of the night that said, Please explain to me how the bacon is a marketing play. Please explain this and you know, I need a power point slide. So if you've never had to explain, be bacon on the power points, I for that challenge out to everyone. But I think in the last couple of years people started to see it more and more as we're, uh, we're similar to the sales role, and that's how we've sort of changed the language. So I perform a sales like function, except I don't carry a quota. So it is about building the relationship like John was saying, and it is about balancing fun with your intent. So I think that if you create a fun environment, if you create an openness and willingness to listen, then the good things will follow. So you form the relationships of people. You open up their ability to create content with you because they don't feel under attack. They're ready to share. And again, it's it's kind of a magical formula. Be nice and create opportunity. >> Yeah, so >> I think we'll part of it's a generational ship. I think part of it a generational shift and part of it is a temperamental she So tradition again, going back to sales traditional enterprise sales. You might go and play golf with somebody, cause that's what you enjoy doing for our kind of geeks. Our golf is eating bacon and talking about the duplication strategies, right? That's where we're having the most fun. So it's It's just it's same sort of thing. Just a shift in generations. >> Yeah, I wonder if you know what, what role this community help in kind of careers. You know, I think you know, we're talking so much of these shows about, you know, if your storage admin. If you're networking admin and you know you're down there, you know, configuring Luns or setting up the land, you know, we're going to have a job in a couple of years because automation is gonna change. You know, how much does the community help in kind of those career paths and education? >> So, John, I think we should interview stew on this one. Should we have the geek whispers takeover. I think this is your great example. You've talked about you, you were on a career path and we hear this a lot, and when you raise your hand to volunteer, we sort of jokingly call the spokes uniforms. You both really enjoy the technology and like to communicate about it. When you raise your hand and make yourself known to the community, to your employers, to the world at large, it gives you different opportunities. And I think I don't think you go into technology really without wanting to have an evolving, exciting career. So I think that he's becoming proficient in these tools. Joining your community is an opportunity to learn from your peers to get back to your peers and to raise her profile and open yourself up to the possibility of a new opportunity or a new idea or different engagement. A new way to learn >> In today's business environment, communication is a key part of whatever you do, even if you're the guy sitting there configuring the lungs, because if you're not communicating with your teams and the application teams and the storage of network virtualization team, you're not going to succeed so I think that's an important part of it, right? Being a communicator, absolutely critical and art. Barney. >> All right, so either one of you feel free to answer, but I think back to my early days, you know, two thousand eight, I was so excited when I got invited to a couple of conferences. A blogger, you could kind of get a pass, and I would, You know, ten might take my own vacation time and usually spend that on expenses because my employer at the time didn't get it. It was this innovation conference in, like, in a New York City with four hundred people, and it was like, kind of amazing. I've seen people go to B m world on their own dime where they can get a pass. I mean, you know, it's great to see when you when you got the passion. So I guess the question I wanted to ask is, you know, with companies today, who should they be inviting? How do they do it? You know? You know. Is it you know, the blogger Or is it the, you know, empty Alexis co expert? You know, bm where be expert, you know, What? How's that? How's that changing? Or is it >> changing? Well, I think what you've seen happen over the years is something that was a little more unstructured, which was a kind of blogger relations program. Working with both customers partners, employees in your ecosystem has turned into something a little more formal. We created the V Expert program in two thousand nine to formalize what we were already doing. It's an analogy to the endless relations, press relations, investor relations, sorts of programs. So I mean, it's it's it's a little more buttoned up. It's a little more of a membership thing, but we I know both of DMC and BM where and it Cisco, Francisco champions to try to embrace all the folks that are out there blogging. I think you know, if you're a market or you need to make sure that you're keep your eyes open and you don't just talk to the people that you've gathered in your living room, Bye. You know, a lot of it's pretty easy if you're enthusiastic about technology, if you're engaged with the technology, if you put some effort into it, it's actually pretty easy to get involved with one of these programs there, there, there and there, there, fourth of people in them right there. They're not there to say the glory of the emcee and glory of Cisco and glory of'em, where they're there to help you with your career. They're there to give you tools to give you networking and, you know, hopefully get you to places like this. So I encourage everybody that that's interested in starting, you know, go ahead and get started. It's easier than you think to get involved. >> I agree with that, and I think that way want to be almost like an airline program that you'd actually want to participate. And it's sort of my job like this is a customer service activity, and I often talk about if you talk about the large pool of influencers. Maybe they haven't identified yet. Or maybe they prefer to stay independent. Or maybe they do have interest in a lot of different technologies. Me for them to engage in one of these programs, that stolen, important set of people that you have to deal with the mark, you know, and again set up these blogger days have longer briefings. But like John was saying, When you have the group of people that you name and give it a program name, this is a little bit of inside baseball if we don't talk about giving program a name and funding can follow. So if you're working in a corporate marketing environment, it's really important to explain to people that marketing structure behind what you're doing and when you treat them as a class, it gives you some advantage is you can scale out a little easier. You can provide more assets to those individuals, and it frees you up to Dio. What I love to do, which is is to really engage with those individuals and create content with them. So, >> yeah, so how is engagement these days? You know, I think back, you know, that you know, ten years ago, you talk. You know, one percent of the community would, you know, be doing almost all the contribution. Ten percent might be a little active and everybody else's lurker. You know, when we founded Wicked Bond Day, Volonte actually has on his business card that he's a one percenter which goes back to you know it. It's, you know, the one percent that causes all the trouble, the one percent that causes all all of the commotion. So, you know, with this wave, I mean, we were founded off of, you know, economics in crowd sourcing and everything else, and the Cube is all about, you know, sharing information. We put it all out there. We want everybody to contribute and, you know, give that feedback. You know, How are we along now? You know that that journey to get more people involved. >> I think the opportunity is there more than ever. I think you're right. I mean, there's always gonna be a percentage of people who want to raise her hand, the class that want to give up their PTO to go to a conference that that had this other life they just can't help themselves. And so in some ways it's finding the most impassioned and giving them opportunities. But I think that with the platforms and the scale, there is a greater opportunity for people. They don't want to start their own block. For instance, one of the things we do it Cisco champions is allowed people to guess, block or allow them to come post a podcast. So I think there are more more ways to and there, you know, that's one example. There's lots of other groups that provide people again a little bit a dose of it so they might not want to run a full media company on their own. They don't wanna build Q, but they want to participate. And I think that we have so many more opportunities for them to do that that we're seeing group. >> We're seeing platform ships over the years. I think we as technologists human beings have a tendency to forget their past relatively quickly, as people have moved from the MySpace world to the Facebook Twitter world. I think actually, we're headed for I don't call it I don't want to call it post Facebook, but it certainly is. A multi platform world made >> it just like >> it's a multi device world. We're not opposed PC world in that. I think you're seeing the rise of more specialized communities. They come back again from from our from our origins back ten or twenty years ago. I think we're seeing that people want more deeper engagement along the company. A lot of the report building and kind of conversation. And hey, how are you? Goes on on Twitter. But I think people are really looking for a place where they can have a better conversation, more interaction, more lasting death that might not be on their own. Blogger in their own kind of indie web sort of style, roll your own block. But there are more and more platforms that people are making available for this kind of connection again. What was once niche eventually permeates the whole >> yes. So, you know, the concern I have is it's tough because it is so dispersed right now, you know? You know, I love Twitter, you know? Hi, I'm stew, you know, on Twitter. And I know you guys are big on it, too. And I don't love the multi platform discussion. You know, I always love when you dropped that kind information on the community. But, you know, how >> do we How do we get that >> depth? It's one of the things I always worry about is, you know, people will read the headline and, you know, just react at it and, you know, they might even share it a bunch, but they haven't read it. Uh, so how do we get that deeper engagement? Deeper understanding. I mean, you know, I always say, you know, the I'm too busy is a poor excuse because, you know, you know Michelangelo and I'd sign that many hours in the day way we did and, you know, sure they didn't have their phone buzzing all over >> the place. >> I actually think we should do less. Not more. I think I think too much information, too many channels, too many corporate channels, too many personal channels, too much bad content. The world does not need more crappy content. So whether you're a individual, blogger or marketer, I'd say just turn the dial back a little bit. Did work on better, longer pieces that add more? I think that's the only way that we can shift the conversation. >> Yeah, long for love it. Oh, no, absolutely. I still read so >> well. It's a curatorial function as well, that we have to be responsible. And that's yet one more way people can participate. We see people rise and in the community because they're really great curator Sze, because they syndicate the content in ways are interesting to others because time is of a value so that becomes a real asset. And the skill is Well, >> yeah, great. Great point. Could you know, so many times I'm like I really like to do a thousand word post on this, but, you know, sometimes all I'll come out of this show and take, you know, I did a year ago. I did it. I didn't article on the federation. You know, the ZPM were pivotal and coming out of the show, I've got a lot of new data, and I could really quickly take some photos. I've done. Takes some of the notes. I take some of the tweets and, you know, put together an order. Won't take me as long. I mean, I'll probably do it on the plane ride home. So what I wanna ask next is, you know, you guys see a lot of things out there. What coolest thing you're seeing either at a at a conference or event or you know what? What? What's catching, right? What? What's interesting? Done. >> There's a whole new side out there called Tech, right? I don't know what's cool out there again. I'm seeing multi channel multi, a lot of experiments. There's some cool stuff going on with the indie web. There's I mean, everything is mobile. I don't know. There's just a lot of places. It >> sounds like you Let's give the plug. Integrity has finally cool things and, you know, solid. But something >> like that tech reckoning is a site that's gonna bring. It's an independent site. It's not associate with any vendor. It's going to bring some of the community and enterprise community together to talk about some of these things about Where is it going as a whole? Where's technology going, where our career is going to try to help us get to whatever this you know, it is a service. Third platform, Whatever you wanna call it, where the heck were going? It looks pretty interesting, and it looks like it isn't gonna be quite the same thing. So we're trying to bring together a set of people and just tackle some of those problem and also work together and collaborate. It's so much easier with open source with cloud. With all the tools we have available, it's so cheap and easy to build new pieces of technology, not just a type of each other words online, but to actually build stuff that I'm very excited about. The power taking going far. This from open source, right? Taking the power of people to come together and build cool new stuff. That's what I would like to. >> Still, I'm just angry that you scooped Matt and I on getting to interview John first about >> tech recognition. So, Amy, you you do some cool things that some of events we talk about, the waffle bacon, you What have you seen out there that that's kind of interesting? Or, you know, how do you find some of the cool new ideas? >> Yeah, I think you always I'm working with a really talented events team right now. And I think one of the things I've seen them sort of transform is that social is not other, you know? And we're seeing the social and this concept of community permeate and really think about our audience to really engage that core base, those those tech enthusiasts, and to see what you can do to in engage them. So I'm saying it in real life and in these community platforms. So I think that's been one of the other great trends is watching people band together and various kinds of consortiums. I won't name names, but there's a few folks outlook community. We're seeing a lot of this happen where they're sort of grouping together, and they're saying if they pull their resource is what happens, they might be able to gather enough money to go to a conference or to fund a buddy or to get a hotel room that they've got extra spaces somebody can crash. So I'm saying it's very cool, sort of stitching together opportunity and working together to learn more. So again, the combination of the platforms, using the technology and then in real life connection. >> All right, so I've been asking all the questions here. So before we wrap up, you know, Amy, anything you want, Johnny, when as me, John same, we throw it open. When Whenever >> you first signed up for your Twitter account, did you think it would lead you here because you have the best Twitter >> account? No, actually, a friend of mine for me and Steve Todd, who was blogging before I was, and he said, You know, when there's trepidation when you're gonna get published and you never know where it leads. And we were talking about this after he and I were on the stage at Radio City Music Hall right after Bill Clinton had been on because they brought the bloggers down when we were there. And it's like, Come on, you know, I'm, you know, I'm an engineer by training, you know, I've done. You know, I've done some sales. I've done engineering. I've done you no operations. Technologist is hard. So you know, some of the places the people I've met. I mean, if you just reach out to people, it still, even though there's so many people on Twitter, you know, the people that right and our authors and bloggers, If you comment or you reach out to them, a lot of them reach back. I mean, you know, I still amazed at some of the people I've met get to rub elbows with. No, just just have had a blast with him. So >> get another one. So do you think unicorns can be trained? Do you think people have to be born with the skill set, Or do you think you can be a uniformed rancher? >> No, I think I think I think they could be trained. You know, it's absolutely it's Ah, it's a tough skill set. I mean, you know, doing video is not easy. First couple of times you do it. It's different there's there's all these muscles. You know, Writing is one of those things that you know. I thought I was an okay writer, but hadn't done a lot of it. They're things you do. So try it out. And that thing I tell you, you got to stick with it for a while. I thought Twitter was pretty stupid. First Go on it. But, you know, I stuck on it for another six months and have some fun with it. No, here we are six years later and you know it is a lot and, you know, blocking of writing and blogging and everything else you know all over. I >> like the muscle memory idea. >> It's hard. You were on camera, have remember not to scratch my face. Strange. He'll set, I ask. I actually, I'm seeing a lot of interest in short form video. I know the kids are all doing it. I mean, obviously, we're doing it here. You do it. It's part of your practice. But in talking with people about our new activities, it's just so easy to take a chair. I think that's actually, even though it's been coming up for years, I think where I think that's an interesting thing >> on all right now, I'll give one of those inside tips videos. Great. Some people don't like to watch video. Yeah, broadcaster great. Some people don't like to listen to him, you know, writing's great. Some people won't read. So you know what? One of the early lessons I had is when I was, you know, being a, you know, active member on standard evangelizing of solution. I did it everywhere it you know that give presentations that shows you put it up on slide chair. You do you two videos, you blogged about it. You talk to everybody, you bet that you can everywhere. And you know, it just permeates out there. It could be a bunch of works and then there's tools that are out there. >> They're all connected events, right? I've discovered recently, and I can't believe I just realized this. But it was with the conversation with Amy on our Christmas broadcast that even though I've been part of an online group for years, I'm part of digital marketing for BM. Where for years, Uh, actually, most of my work. Half of my work is off line having my workers meeting people in person, getting to meet them and connecting that online and offline. And the synergy there is just is immense. >> Yeah, absolutely. I mean, other than the keynotes, my phone stays in my pocket for the most time. Unless I'm going between events. It's the in real life and nearly getting to know things. I was joking, You know, Twitter went away. Tomorrow might be a little sad, but I can connect the most. All those people, we got him on LinkedIn, Facebook and, you know, email. I still use something. Don't taking their holds. Absolutely. So you know, to wrap. I guess if you want to, just You know what people find more on your podcast. Find your website. You know Amy, Like it start? Well, >> where >> are Equus? Versace, of course. Geek hyphen whispers dot com on way, published every week. So give us a listen. See what you think. And I'm >> Matthew Brender. Sorry you couldn't join this time, but it's a lot as it were. A DMC world and you two are here in Matthew's. >> It's hard. We're going toe to toe. It's true. We're going to record with him like it's a Max headroom figure on a yes tomorrow, so and also I'm on Twitter as calms mention and I block under that same constantly dot com girls have engineers. That's true. I have engineers, unplug dot com as well. And now sixty second Tech, the short first on the popcorn version >> and I. J. Troia on Twitter and tech reckoning dot com. I went inside. >> Hey, Amy, John. Thanks so much. We We love taking the podcast. Inception. Sile inside the Cube. Look forward to seeing you lost events connecting with the community and everybody. Definitely check out their stuff. I'm at stew on Twitter with yvonne dot org's is where most of my articles go, and, of course, silicon angled on TV is where you can find all the video. Thanks for joining us. We will be back with the rest of DMC world covered.
SUMMARY :
A cube at DMC World twenty fourteen is brought to you by D. I'm bringing you today, bringing onto two thirds of the geek whispers, Cube, so, you know, welcome to the program. and you know, social media is one of those things that, you know turn my career. We've seen, you know, been around, and, you know, so it's peace, Amy, your influence marketing. Yeah, I chose the title, actually myself on purpose. get to, you know, write about a bunch of stuff I'm like, you know you're better than journalists, you know, you'll You know you you know, raise our voice and sort of engaged with technology and let the community know what, I mean, these are the folks that they lose their jobs if they picked the wrong technology. you know channel guy that they do that that's good, You know? So you need your employees out there. There's some companies that just, you know, sign everybody up and, you know, it could be kind of an echo chamber or things There's a lot of software and a lot of programmatic things you could do. I think that we sorted out some of the platform issues as we've I mean, you do a lot of fun event you've got, you know, So I think that if you create a fun environment, cause that's what you enjoy doing for our kind of geeks. You know, I think you know, we're talking so much of these shows about, you know, if your storage admin. and when you raise your hand to volunteer, we sort of jokingly call the spokes uniforms. In today's business environment, communication is a key part of whatever you do, even if you're the guy sitting there configuring the lungs, I mean, you know, it's great to see when you when you got the passion. you know, if you're a market or you need to make sure that you're keep your eyes open and you don't just talk to the people that you've gathered the mark, you know, and again set up these blogger days have longer briefings. You know, one percent of the community would, you know, there, you know, that's one example. I think we as technologists human beings have a tendency But I think people are really looking for a place where they can have a better conversation, more interaction, And I know you guys are big on it, too. It's one of the things I always worry about is, you know, people will read the headline and, I think that's the only way that we can shift the conversation. I still read so And the skill is Well, I take some of the tweets and, you know, put together an order. I don't know what's cool out there you know, solid. where our career is going to try to help us get to whatever this you know, it is a service. the waffle bacon, you What have you seen out there that that's kind of interesting? and to see what you can do to in engage them. So before we wrap up, you know, Amy, anything you want, I mean, you know, I still amazed at some of the people I've met Do you think people have to be born with the skill set, Or do you think you can be a uniformed rancher? I mean, you know, doing video is not easy. I know the kids are all doing it. One of the early lessons I had is when I was, you know, being a, And the synergy there is just is So you know, to wrap. See what you think. you two are here in Matthew's. And now sixty second Tech, the short first on the I went inside. Look forward to seeing you lost events connecting with the community and everybody.
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Pat Gelsinger - EMC World 2014 - theCUBE - #EMCWorld
the cube at emc world 2014 is brought to you by emc redefine b.c.e innovating the world's first converged infrastructure solution for private cloud computing brocade say goodbye to the status quo and hello to rokade okay welcome back everyone here live in las vegas for emc world 20 at 2040 i was going to say vmworld because you're a new CEO of vm role here I'm John for a bounder still hanging with Dave vellante my co-host he would Pat Gelsinger cube alumni friend of the cube it's our fifth season we opened up at emc world 2010 in Boston Pat was on the cube then set a great time ever since pad welcome back to the cube just got off the plane from Istanbul how do you feel I feel a little bit yet like that's been a long long day okay we'll get a lot of information out of you did so first time I ask you about the D SSD acquisition I'll see you you known Andy for a while what does that all mean for the industry software at the center of the value proposition is is the hardware and compute going to be this abundant resource that no one ever sees what's your take on all this well i think you know first I think of Andy is like the Rembrandt of hardware design right you know he's just done all the amazing system design work in the industry for many years he's been a friend for many years and just great great respect for him individually obviously d SSD is doing some great work you know I think it's going to prove to be a critical technology in the entire converged infrastructure space and clearly this high-performance flash capacity there's going to be a game changer for what you're able to do in the rack and obviously with bills participation from sa p they see it as a very very critical capability for in-memory environments and some of the data analytics that they want to do so i think this is a a bold move by emc i was a fully supportive of it and i think it's going to yield very very powerful hardware for software to take advantage they bring you in on a deal like that and consult with you is it is it it's about hey Pat we need your advice I saw the board meetings I sit in the M&A meetings and I'm an Oni and so for decades okay yeah so it wasn't just a cursory glance a little bit more than it's been in the works for a while so we've been fine we'll get more information we'll be digging for home sources I'll talk about cloud I've seen last time we're at vmworld we talked about the cloud I said hey is hybrid cloud really going to be the destination you like what are you talking about it's going to be the destination it is the hybrid cloud is the way here at ian's emc world you hear joe tucci up there even using the words AWS disruption amazon is clearly on the radar public cloud is still it is out there as a viable alternative and the words like reinvent which is the conference name for amazon redefine is this conference it's ok to have amazon out there but hybrids cloud is still the deal with containers and what not I mean has a hybrid cloud narrative change for you amplified straight narrow foot pedal to the metal ya know we are absolutely convinced hybrid is the answer and maybe start with a few facts I mean it's always good to ground ourselves in a little bit of data and today on premise is ninety two percent of IT spent so eight percent is in the cloud whereas sales pass so you sort of say wow great and predictions would say by 2020 it's seventy-five percent on-premise the twenty-five percent in the public cloud so you look at that and say boy you know even just from the spin perspective it's going to be hybrid and then you look at facts like security privacy governance s la's liability cost performance all of those things will keep people on premise so it's clearly a hybrid world right where it is the on and off premise and we've clearly seen that as we've laid out this positioning of hybrid the industry is following us we're seeing amazon talk about we're seeing Microsoft talk about or seeing google talk about it all the other big cloud players are saying yo yo VMware got it right hybrid is the answer it seems they all the territory is being claimed now it's like we almost seen in almost not bubble bursts are you seeing box pull there s one obviously their economic of buying customers isn't working so I see that the pullback for they're you're seeing some other companies get massive valuations that aren't publicly traded yeah there's really kind of know really market there and then other companies in the flash marker fusion-io by the memory kind of sub that wasted well below but the container technology so I got to ask you about some of the new stuff that you seeing one valuations and also the new containers we heard da cars pretty hot right now what do you make sense of the containers in particular well on the first of the valuations I mean clearly the Pease of these very high growth you know early stage not money-making companies were just out of control and I have comment on that before at the Wall Street Journal CIO event that they were just way out of range and it's good to see those coming into more reasonable ranges now and I think that will wash through the entire industry because there was this mini bubble of you know just crazy Pease you know and you know with respect to docker and some of the other container technologies that clearly is you know enthusiasm around some of the lightweight stateless mechanisms but what I'll point out is that there have been different container approaches over the last 30 years and the only one that has had sustained architectural influence and investment has been the vm and our effort is continuing to pound the overhead continue to add value security networking management you know all the things that we've been able to build around that's idea of the vm container and of course if people are really you know see lightweight containers is valuable but we'll stick a bunch of them in a vm i mean it's just another management model for a lightweight deployment of stateless apps so John I've been thinking about you know Joe's waves right and we think okay with this next wave that we're in what's different about this way you've laid out a 50 billion dollar tam you just talked about how much of that the public clouds going to get I wonder if we could make an observation to get your feedback on it the economics of cloud they start to look so you've got software economics ninety percent gross margins hardware you know the economics at volume the marginal economics are talking about you know aren't as attractive but they're still good and then services is negative you know but diseconomies of scale if you will it seems like in the cloud that online cloud services are now taking shape the same way software is so at volume you're getting software like economics so the question is how does VMware and VMware you know cloud vcloud hybrid service get to that scale and that volume so that you can participate in that so first of all is it is it a reasonable premise to note and can you get to that scale and how do you get to that scale yeah and you know you'll see a little bit of my keynote tomorrow I'll talk about this a little bit more one is you know we're investing we're growing very rapidly as we expand the number of presences in the u.s. you know second we're very aggressively partnering and we announced their first partnership with savvis you'll see us announce other partnerships like that that we're going to leverage their capital as well right and who invests the most in capital of any industry in the room service providers all right they blow away everybody else so partnering with them the other view of that would be with vGHS is is that we also have our bspp program where you know i'll give some of the stats in the keynote tomorrow but we have an overwhelming right Brett for those vs PP partners that already has us very much at scale as one of the largest clouds not just what we do but through this broad range of partnerships that we form so overall you know we have a very powerful strategy when you add up all of those and given our business model of software and services you know it's very unique and combine that with these statistics I was giving you up on and off-premise and the private cloud you have 40 million VMs 500,000 customers you know we bring a lot to the table once all about a AirWatch so big acquisition the Federation helped a little bit o financing that's absurd yet right so talk about the importance of air watch you know where it fits into the end-user computing strategy and and what gives you excitement about air watch well you know I think one is in the whole end-user computing space you know two years ago people viewed it like VMware had a hobby you know hey we're selling these fear and a you know growing some of this yeah yeah well and you know hiring Sanjay rebuilding the leadership team investing in our end user computing sales force and now the air watch acquisition everybody realizes this ain't a hobby anymore we are taking the space very very seriously and really redefining the industry quite rapidly with the breadth of what we've done with horizon six plus the inorganic move with air watch you know we are here to win in this space and taking share substantially from Citrix and others in the category yo secondly and as part of the whole secular shift not just the cloud but it's the mobile cloud era so it's to redefine and deliver that PC experience but it's also uniquely right to enable the secure managed experience for all the mobile devices as well that's where AirWatch is clearly you know tearing up the track and you know we believe it's separating from the rest of the industry of players as that leader and really gives us the unrivaled portfolio of assets now I talked about the obviously the compute trend is moving to the data center you're seeing the commoditization now the data centers want to do the same way you talk about that publicly so with the software at the software-defined enterprises joe tucci calls we've called the sava define data center how does that change from your standpoint from a focus standpoint because you mentioned you got AirWatch is no longer a hobby you're building a you know business got a tam expansion strategy aggressively investing you have an ecosystem that you've kind of had from your hobby days now you're kind of nurturing it and expanding it what is the focus and from a software-defined perspective what is that focus specifically and how do you keep your troops marching to the cadence of that focus yeah we laid out our three areas for VMware over a year ago we said we're going to do three things software-defined data center virtualized the whole data center second do the hybrid cloud this on and off-premise and then go from the data center to the device pcs and mobile devices you know with what we've done we have all the pieces in place now the acquisitions are all in place the execution and that consistency that we've laid out now for almost a year and a half you know has really resonated both internally to my teams you know to our sales teams through our customers and our partners as well and they get it and you know that consistency has really gotten us more and more momentum we're seeing all of those limits you know really firing on all cylinders at this point so I saw the news that Gould is no longer involved kind of he was kind of cuz he's now the CEO of e mc2 you're the free captain of VMware and the Federation of the ship what is that like for you now and what are you tapping into the Federation what is pure VMware can you kind of square that off in terms of Aussie VMware what are you tap to the Federation what do you have available to you sure sure and you know with the Federation perspective you know we got a lot of benefit from I will say you know the layer that emc provides you know I call up Joe we have a shareholders meeting right yoyo cage oh yeah I'm okay good done shareholders really finish I mean yo some of those things are just elegant definitely right you know we can get things done by John date and at the same time yeah we're accountable to the street for all the financial metrics all the things that you want to be accountable to public shareholders for you know we also get the benefit like you saw an air watch your the cash position we're better aligning ourselves and global accounts were both of us our prep presence so we get the leverage of both sales teams the capacity that we have you're seeing some of the solutions work that we're doing be pivotal assets recently right you know moving things around to you know best position things for the different players as customers or seeing that you know to line those assets between it between us and also very very clearly saying okay you know here are the areas and i'll hit on this in my keynote tomorrow right this is how the vmware assets work with the emc assets and we're going to leverage each other as we go forward but as we say you know the Federation motto is strategically aligned right you know while remain you know loosely coupled so continuing to be able to go partner right with others in the industry to facilitate that flexible ecosystem I want to ask you about Silicon Valley right so obviously you have a great campus VMware means one of the most beautiful campuses in Silicon Valley well done it's fits into the hillside there my favorite areas but as you guys go global Silicon Valley's also going global and there's also kind of like a let's say bubble ish environment out there right now evaluation we just talked about control Silicon Valley's changing what's your take of the currents data Silicon Valley in terms of the innovation I know you're going to be talking with Stanford University and Mark injuries and coming up on a panel has it changed over the past few years and it does it still have that innovation and visit is it bringing it back Alan's of cycles change which you're taken so that well we're going to have a nice campus opening you know beautiful VMware a campus we're gonna have a little party yes I don't know this is the cube invited okay thanks i hope so yes so we're going to be the ribbon cutting ceremony ins and that's going to be great and mark is going to be there john hennessy my thesis advisor now the president of Stanford is going to be there Joe the board so we're gonna have a great event talking about that exact question right and really talking about the future of the valley unquestionably today it remains the hottest bed of innovation anywhere in the world but I think you always look at that and say you know where the recipe is still there as you look to the future and you know competition for labor is intense you know tax rates you know people move out of the valley because of justification and San Francisco big discussion yeah right you know toyota just moved to texas I mean there's always this you know you know do you still have that recipe right nowhere else has even close to the valley and that today race you that in your travels oh absolutely absolutely but every place in the world says I want to be like the valley right every place in the world is saying what do I need to do to create that same recipe you know whether that's bangalore or whether that's beijing or shenzhen right or whether that's a israel or you know many spots in the world well Silicon Valley export that knowledge and is that is that a good thing you know I don't think silicon but you know knowledge ideas right you know this is bubbling cauldron but there's something special about the valley that it's been able to maintain now for you know three decades and it doesn't look like it's coming to an end hey Chuck house is pretty excited about v san are you as excited oh very excited about these why what why you so excited what does it all mean well you know if you're a V admin right which you know is the heart of our customer base you say check find me local disk check provision local disk well I've just done storage right it's powerful it is you know amazingly simple and gives great performance and it redefines the hot edge right for you know via for virtual storage a new tier of storage so we're very excited about it certainly doesn't replace all of storage but it gives a new cheer a new capacity that for a virtual admin is just perfect is that new tier incremental I mean must replace some storage of sexually it's right you know I mean the good news is storage continues to grow right you know it's one of the right the areas of IT that just continues to grow as capacity grows an application demands take and I'm of course there's going to be some trade-offs to the some places and we do see lower capacity lower end of the market test dead some vb i use cases dr use cases where hey people might trade it off versus other all tournaments good news for you MC obviously they're mostly up market right is where their strength is but so we're very excited about be San and really see it as a critical new component of the vmware family and we stream i/o acquisition you made seems to be working out okay you happy about that yeah yeah nothing's been tons of time on extreme I oh these days but you made that that was all a lot of the acquisitions they did at the MC we're doing just fine hey you know and I cheer my team on back there when I meet it was like huh why did that would slip so that's not what the JC we were talking earlier the dream team is now kind of spread thin running their own little ships if you will in the Federation but back when 2010 we started doing the cube it was all kind of under one roof and we kind of said hey you got to get the meat on the bone we talked about in the queue hey the product portfolio is in transition you talk about some of the acquisitions looking back what are you most proud of for the team not just yourself but the group what you guys made some of those calls that might have been on the fence what was some of the highlights you look back and then where you are today well you think about some of the key decisions that we made and you know we did green pump that's now in the center of a pivotal now we did I salon that's performed extremely well we have done the data domain and clearly the whole back up space is performed very well we've also laid some of the seeds for the future right like extreme i/o like Viper were done when I was there so all these things you don't it's done well EMC gained significant share since I joined and they have the tools to really be positioned to help go through this next phase of the transition and obviously under David and his team's a leadership you know the industry remains in transition and that's still affecting EMC and they're having to you know carefully navigate that next phase and I think you've heard a lot from him today we love pulling the sound bites out I have a quote here 430 two days ago from you but I want to don't talk about that now but the quote we had on the cube you said is that if you don't get out from that next wave you'll be driftwood Joe Tucci said today if you don't take an offensive approach with this platform you're going to wither away so let's talk about that getting out in front that next wave in your mind share it the folks out there in your world words why at this point in time so important from an industry perspective you seen in movies before you've seen the massive inflection points you've seen Moore's Law at full tilt you know try to compare where we are today from irrelevance and making sense of the excitement and controversy opportunity yeah well we are as we would say as we're going that you know from client server to mobile cloud right this will be tectonic shifts and write the amount that's going to shift to cloud the amount that's going to shift away from PCs to mobile devices in the industry and all the vendors that have their value propositions tied to a hardware defined approach guess what yeah that's going to be a secular decline where people are going to be competing for a premise based the revenue that way into the mime ironmen that's going to be flat to down right and there's going to be no possibility of growth and you look at what's happened right you know consecutive quarters at IBM for instance boy you know they're feeling the pain right of this transition and the cloud transition it's barely underway right mobile is just scratching the surface yeah you know so these trends are just about to get started you know the analogy I'll give them my keynote tomorrow is 1989 and we're Digital Equipment Corporation and over the next seven years guess what right the entire business is going to shift that guessing always great to have you on the cube just any final parting words about what you're going to work on this week some things you're highlighting customer events us you keynote what do you expect to see here at emc world this week well you know I always see OEMC role is a great place and you know just feel incredibly embraced and our partners at emc and just happy that they give me the opportunity to address the audience here that's always a great joy and it is this period of extraordinary transition and everybody here right as the conference's has to redefine themselves on the other side of these tectonic shifts that are underway and EMC is you know doing that and there you know to all of their partners and customers saying here's what you need to do to go with us event in August right around the corner fat thank you inside of you when he finds one of my closest friends off we love talking with you and we'll see you at your event we're going to be actually attending the ribbon-cutting ceremony I was talking to the folks but getting the cube they're going back and forth but we'll get it done Pat Gessling you inside the cube the CEO VMware friend of the cube would love having you on be right back after this short break Pat glad to see you're like I could see it you
SUMMARY :
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