Image Title

Search Results for Houston Texas:

Lisa Brunet, DLZP Group | AWS PS Partner Awards 2021


 

(upbeat music) >> Hello, and welcome to today's session at the 2021, AWS Global Public Sector Partner Awards, for the award for the best, Think Big for Small Business Partner. I'm your host Natalie Erlich, and we are now joined by our very special guest, Lisa Brunet, a managing Partner and President of the DLZP Group. Welcome to today's session. Now, I'd love to talk with you about how you got to partner with AWS. >> Sure, I think Natalie, thank you so much for your time today. So we started a journey with AWS back in 2012, we ran into an AWS rep at another conference, and he was talking about how he would love to do some innovative technology, because one of my reps were actually wearing gold glass, and he's like, I need something creative, I need something different. Because right now AWS, Amazon is just known for selling online books, while the cloud is only known for storing photos. So we spent a little bit of time working with them, and we came up with this idea of doing creating the test drive, where people could actually go and try a different product, like we actually did PeopleSoft on AWS. So we were able to prove that large ERP applications could run on the cloud. And that was actually faster and more resilient than having it on premise, and from there, it's been a whirlwind journey with AWS. >> Now terrific, well, how does TBSP open doors for companies and help them understand all of the tools available to them through AWS, as well as APN. >> With the Think Big for Small Business program, what it does, it gives us the opportunity to play with the big guys. So a lot of small businesses have the capabilities, they're very agile, and they have the connections, they have the capabilities. But because of our size, we have limitations on getting the number of certifications, getting the network competencies. So with this program, it evens the playing field for everybody. So now I'm able to like... I've been turned away projects because of my size, because they're like, well you're not certified by AWS at this level. But now I'm at the same level, as some of my some of the larger primes, and I'm able to compete with them head to head now. >> So has this kind of like democratizing effect. >> Yes, it does. >> Terrific. Well, to expand a bit more on how, the Think Big program has helped us overcome other kind of obstacles. >> For us, a big obstacle was always with the competencies and the certifications. So before, we would never eligible to get a competency, even though we were the ones that proved that PeopleSoft could run on the clouds. So we had the competency for Oracle Applications, we had the competency from Microsoft, but we could never, we're never eligible to actually get the competency because we were not advanced partner. And then also with the training, we were always being hindered, because we couldn't get all the discounts available at a certain level for the trading, so we had to pay full retail price. Now we get a discount, so I can send everybody for training to make sure that everybody is up to date on their certifications. >> And how do you assess your experience as an AWS partner? >> I love it, I love being an AWS partner, and that's I think what really makes the difference is the employees at AWS, they stand by us for everything. We know, of course we do give a lot of benefits to them, but anytime I have a need, I have everybody's number, I can reach out to anybody on their team and say, I need assistance with this, I'm looking to try to accomplish this, and they'll do anything they can to help us. >> And do you have any advice for other companies who might be interested in moving in that direction as well. >> For any small business, I think that Think Big for Small Business program is a great idea, just as long as you're willing to put the hard work in, and you can prove to AWS that you're willing to work hard, they'll reciprocate and work with you to create this great, to make you a great partner. >> And I'd love to hear more about your company, DLZP Group, tell us about your core market. >> So we actually were split between three different main markets. We try to be equal between public sector, private sector and federal. We are just starting our federal journey. We recently became AA certified, so we're looking to expand in the federal journey, but for us, we try to make sure that we are, we don't have too strong, we don't have more than like 33% of our income coming from any one sector, just because if there's a crisis like with the federal, when they shut down for six months, I don't want to have to layoff my employees, I value my employees too much have to say, I'm sorry, I have to lay you off. So we made sure we're resilient, and we're able to handle any customer at any given time. >> Well, let's talk about resilience, I mean, how do you ensure that you're resilient? Obviously, you've had some really tough time, in the last year or so with a pandemic, I mean, what's your advice for companies that are looking to become even more resilient in the years ahead? >> For us, I think a big thing is we've always worked hard to make sure that we offer a quality product for our customers. So that really helped us on the downtime's. When everybody was struggling, keep the doors open, our customers stood by us, because we've had a proven track record to make sure that we offer them the best solution, were there for them when they need us. So they came to rely on us and they would use this with during the past year during the pandemic. >> And if you could outline just in further detail your business model for our viewers. >> So we actually are 100% remote, and I have staff around the world. We purposely, strategically, like have everybody around the world, because some of our customers are global. We have to offer 24/7 support for them, especially nowadays. But another part was because of disaster recovery. I'm based in Houston, Texas. So we're known for getting hurricanes, that means sometimes I can be without power for three weeks. But I don't want that to affect my customers, I don't want them to feel that they can't come to us, but knowing that if a hurricane comes through, I might know my employees are going to be able to work. So we made sure that we have a great disaster recovery plan, we have where no matter what happens, manmade or natural disaster, we're able to support our customers, without any with any without a pause. And then we also make sure that all of our employees, they have a quality work life balance, and I think that also helps because that shows the clients, that we value our employees, and it makes them want to work with us more, because our employees are happy, they're happy to work with us, because they know that well (crackling drowns out speaker) >> And describe to us in greater detail, the core technology and its key benefits. >> Well, a lot we do is around AWS. So, when we first started with them, as I mentioned, we started with them with the test drive and ERP applications, but then we expanded our services, we started working with serverless, when we first heard about serverless, we were like this is a game changer. We can do almost anything on serverless and save so much money. So we years ago, we went and built our website, so it's 100% serverless. So it costs us a couple pennies a month to run, versus if you think about a traditional website, that's a couple hundred dollars a month to run, and then we started playing with machine learning. So we're now developing internal projects, where we're using machine learning for a number of applications, and we're going to keep expanding, where we're going to have a full suite of applications to give to our customers that will be run at 100% serverless using machine learning. >> Yeah, really terrific. What are your goals for the next year? What is your vision for 2021? >> My goal is to do a little bit more than federal, we're actually expanding to Canada as well. So we have officially launched there, we have employees in Canada that are working in different areas in different provinces and with the federal government to try to help AWS grow there. >> Terrific, and I thought it was just so fascinating, how you're mitigating disaster, and you know, really pushing your business forward, you know, thinking geographically, and that's something that we kind of had to all figured out with a pandemic. So in a way your business has been like a bit of step ahead of the others, and what other ways are you trying to kind of be a step ahead of the curve from the competition. >> So we're looking to stay ahead of the curve by making sure we have the right resources in place, so we do a lot, making sure that when we bring somebody on, we make sure that they're aware that this is a team based company, you're not going to be working individually on one project. We were very big on spec, so we're always making sure that, no matter what level you come in, even if you're just an intern here for the summer, you're running a project, you're getting that real world experience, you're going to even have times where I'm reporting to you, when you have to make sure I'm a accountable for the work. And that helps also build respect amongst the peers, because they know what it takes to run a project, and they're going to make sure that they do a good job, because nobody wants to see their peers if you fail. >> Yeah, well excellent insights, I agree with you. Lisa Brunet, a managing partner and president of the DLZP Group. That's all for this session, I'm your host Natalie Erlich, thank you so much for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jun 30 2021

SUMMARY :

and President of the DLZP Group. and we came up with this idea available to them through and I'm able to compete So has this kind of the Think Big program has helped us So we had the competency We know, of course we do give And do you have any this great, to make you a great partner. And I'd love to hear So we made sure we're resilient, make sure that we offer a quality And if you could outline So we made sure that we have a And describe to us in greater detail, and then we started playing What is your vision for 2021? So we have officially launched there, and that's something that we and they're going to make and president of the DLZP Group.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Natalie ErlichPERSON

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

NataliePERSON

0.99+

Lisa BrunetPERSON

0.99+

CanadaLOCATION

0.99+

six monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

2012DATE

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

three weeksQUANTITY

0.99+

DLZP GroupORGANIZATION

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

PeopleSoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.98+

last yearDATE

0.98+

Houston, TexasLOCATION

0.98+

33%QUANTITY

0.98+

one projectQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.96+

firstQUANTITY

0.96+

one sectorQUANTITY

0.96+

AWS Global Public Sector Partner AwardsEVENT

0.93+

2021EVENT

0.92+

past yearDATE

0.9+

pandemicEVENT

0.87+

APNTITLE

0.86+

couple hundred dollars a monthQUANTITY

0.86+

PS Partner AwardsEVENT

0.85+

Think BigOTHER

0.83+

years agoDATE

0.8+

Oracle ApplicationsORGANIZATION

0.76+

a couple pennies a monthQUANTITY

0.68+

TBSPTITLE

0.61+

AWSEVENT

0.6+

BigOTHER

0.59+

AAORGANIZATION

0.57+

my repsQUANTITY

0.49+

serverlessTITLE

0.45+

External Data | Beyond.2020 Digital


 

>>welcome back. And thanks for joining us for our second session. External data, your new leading indicators. We'll be hearing from industry leaders as they share best practices and challenges in leveraging external data. This panel will be a true conversation on the part of the possible. All right, let's get to >>it >>today. We're excited to be joined by thought spots. Chief Data Strategy Officer Cindy Housing Deloitte's chief data officer Manteo, the founder and CEO of Eagle Alfa. And it Kilduff and Snowflakes, VP of data marketplace and customer product strategy. Matt Glickman. Cindy. Without further ado, the floor is yours. >>Thank you, Mallory. And I am thrilled to have this brilliant team joining us from around the world. And they really bring each a very unique perspective. So I'm going to start from further away. Emmett, Welcome. Where you joining us from? >>Thanks for having us, Cindy. I'm joining from Dublin, Ireland, >>great. And and tell us a little bit about Eagle Alfa. What do you dio >>from a company's perspective? Think of Eagle Alfa as an aggregator off all the external data sets on a word I'll use a few times. Today is a big advantage we could bring companies is we have a data concierge service. There's so much data we can help identify the right data sets depending on the specific needs of the company. >>Yeah. And so, Emma, you know, people think I was a little I kind of shocked the industry. Going from gardener to a tech startup. Um, you have had a brave journey as well, Going from financial services to starting this company, really pioneering it with I think the most data sets of any of thes is that right? >>Yes, it was. It was a big jump to go from Morgan Stanley. Uh, leave the comforts of that environment Thio, PowerPoint deck and myself raising funding eight years ago s So it was a big jump on. We were very early in our market. It's in the last few years where there's been real momentum and adoption by various types of verticals. The hedge funds were first, maybe then private equity, but corporate sar are following quite quickly from behind. That will be the biggest users, in our view, by by a significant distance. >>Yeah, great. Thank um, it So we're going to go a little farther a field now, but back to the U. S. So, Juan, where you joining us from? >>Hey, Cindy. Thanks for having me. I'm joining you from Houston, Texas. >>Great. Used to be my home. Yeah, probably see Rice University back there. And you have a distinct perspective serving both Deloitte customers externally, but also internally. Can you tell us about that? >>Yeah, absolutely. So I serve as the Lord consultants, chief data officer, and as a professional service firm, I have the responsibility for overseeing our overall data agenda, which includes both the way we use data and insights to run and operate our own business, but also in how we develop data and insights services that we then take to market and how we serve our dealers and clients. >>Great. Thank you, Juan. And last but not least, Matt Glickman. Kind of in my own backyard in New York. Right, Matt? >>Correct. Joining I haven't been into the city and many months, but yes, um, based in New York. >>Okay. Great. And so, Matt, you and Emmett also, you know, brave pioneers in this space, and I'm remembering a conversation you and I shared when you were still a J. P. Morgan, I believe. And you're Goldman Sachs. Sorry. Sorry. Goldman. Can you Can you share that with us? >>Sure. I made the move back in 2015. Um, when everyone thought, you know, my wife, my wife included that I was crazy. I don't know if I would call it Comfortable was emitted, but particularly had been there for a long time on git suffered in some ways. A lot of the pains we're talking about today, given the number of data, says that the amount of of new data sets that are always demand for having run analytics teams at Goldman, seeing the pain and realizing that this pain was not unique to Goldman Sachs, it was being replicated everywhere across the industry, um, in a mind boggling way and and the fortuitous, um, luck to have one of snowflakes. Founders come to pitch snowflake to Goldman a little bit early. Um, they became a customer later, but a little bit early in 2014. And, you know, I realized that this was clearly, you know, the answer from first principles on bond. If I ever was going to leave, this was a problem. I was acutely aware of. And I also was aware of how much the man that was in financial services for a better solution and how the cloud could really solve this problem in particular the ability to not have to move data in and out of these organizations. And this was something that I saw the future of. Thank you, Andi, that this was, you know, sort of the pain that people just expected to pay. Um, this price if you need a data, there was method you had thio. You had to use you either ftp data in and out. You had data that was being, you know, dropped off and, you know, maybe in in in a new ways and cloud buckets or a P i s You have to suck all this data down and reconstruct it. And God forbid the formats change. It was, you know, a nightmare. And then having issues with data, you had a what you were seeing internally. You look nothing like what the data vendors were seeing because they want a completely different system, maybe model completely differently. Um, but this was just the way things were. Everyone had firewalls. Everyone had their own data centers. There was no other way on git was super costly. And you know this. I won't even share the the details of you know, the errors that would occur in the pain that would come from that, Um what I realized it was confirmed. What I saw it snowflake at the time was once everyone moves to run their actual workloads in this in the cloud right where you're now beyond your firewall, you'll have all this scale. But on top of that, you'll be able to point at data from these vendors were not there the traditional data vendors. Or, you know, this new wave of alternative data vendors, for example, like the ones that eagle out for brings together And bring these all these data sets together with your own internal data without moving it. Yeah, this was a fundamental shift of what you know, it's in some ways, it was a side effect of everyone moving to the cloud for costs and scale and elasticity. But as a side effect of that is what we talked about, You know it snowflake summit, you know, yesterday was this notion of a data cloud that would connect data between regions between cloud vendors between customers in a way where you could now reference data. Just like your reference websites today, I don't download CNN dot com. I point at it, and it points me to something else. I'm always seeing the latest version, obviously, and we can, you know, all collaborate on what I'm seeing on that website. That's the same thing that now can happen with data. So And I saw this as what was possible, and I distinctly asked the question, you know, the CEO of the time Is this possible? And not only was it possible it was a fundamental construct that was built into the way that snowflake was delivered. And then, lastly, this is what we learned. And I think this is what you know. M It also has been touting is that it's all great if data is out there and even if you lower that bar of access where data doesn't have to move, how do I know? Right? If I'm back to sitting at Goldman Sachs, how do I know what data is available to me now in this this you know, connected data network eso we released our data marketplace, which was a very different kind of marketplace than these of the past. Where for us, it was really like a global catalog that would elect a consumer data consumer. Noah data was available, but also level the playing field. Now we're now, you know, Eagle, Alfa, or even, you know, a new alternative data vendor build something in their in their basement can now publish that data set so that the world could see and consume and be aligned to, you know, snowflakes, core business, and not where we wouldn't have to be competing or having to take, um, any kind of custody of that data. So adding that catalog to this now ubiquitous access, um really changed the game and, you know, and then now I seem like a genius for making this move. But back then, like I said, we've seen I seem like instant. I was insane. >>Well, given, given that snowflake was the hottest aipo like ever, you were a genius. Uh, doing this, you know, six years in advance. E think we all agree on that, But, you know, a lot of this is still visionary. Um, you know, some of the most leading companies are already doing this. But one What? What is your take our Are you best in class customers still moving the data? Or is this like they're at least thinking about data monetization? What are you seeing from your perspective? >>Yeah, I mean, I did you know, the overall appreciation and understanding of you know, one. I got to get my house in order around my data, um, has something that has been, you know, understood and acted upon. Andi, I do agree that there is a shift now that says, you know, data silos alone aren't necessarily gonna bring me, you know, new and unique insights on dso enriching that with external third party data is absolutely, you know, sort of the the ship that we're seeing our customers undergo. Um, what I find extremely interesting in this space and what some of the most mature clients are doing is, you know, really taking advantage of these data marketplaces. But building data partnerships right there from what mutually exclusive, where there is a win win scenario for for you know, that organization and that could be, you know, retail customers or life science customers like with pandemic, right the way we saw companies that weren't naturally sharing information are now building these data partnership right that are going are going into mutually benefit, you know, all organizations that are sort of part of that value to Andi. I think that's the sort of really important criteria. And how we're seeing our clients that are extremely successful at this is that partnership has benefits on both sides of that equation, right? Both the data provider and then the consumer of that. And there has to be, you know, some way to ensure that both parties are are are learning right, gaining you insights to support, you know, whatever their business organization going on. >>Yeah, great one. So those data partnerships getting across the full value chain of sharing data and analytics Emmett, you work on both sides of the equation here, helping companies. Let's say let's say data providers maybe, like, you know, cast with human mobility monetize that. But then also people that are new to it. Where you seeing the top use cases? Well, >>interestingly, I agree with one of the supply side. One of the interesting trends is we're seeing a lot more data coming from large Corporates. Whether they're listed are private equity backed, as opposed to maybe data startups that are earning money just through data monetization. I think that's a great trend. I think that means a lot of the best. Data said it data is yet to come, um, in terms off the tough economy and how that's changed. I think the category that's had the most momentum and your references is Geo location data. It's that was the category at our conference in December 2000 and 12 that was pipped as the category to watch in 2019. On it didn't become that at all. Um, there were some regulatory concerns for certain types of geo data, but with with covert 19, it's Bean absolutely critical for governments, ministries of finance, central banks, municipalities, Thio crunch that data to understand what's happening in a real time basis. But from a company perspective, it's obviously critical as well. In terms of planning when customers might be back in the High Street on DSO, fourth traditionally consumer transaction data of all the 26 categories in our taxonomy has been the most popular. But Geo is definitely catching up your slide. Talked about being a tough economy. Just one point to contradict that for certain pockets of our clients, e commerce companies are having a field day, obviously, on they are very data driven and tech literate on day are they are really good client base for us because they're incredibly hungry, firm or data to help drive various, uh, decision making. >>Yeah, So fair enough. Some sectors of the economy e commerce, electron, ICS, healthcare are doing great. Others travel, hospitality, Um, super challenging. So I like your quote. The best is yet to come, >>but >>that's data sets is yet to come. And I do think the cloud is enabling that because we could get rid of some of the messy manual data flows that Matt you talked about, but nonetheless, Still, one of the hardest things is the data map. Things combining internal and external >>when >>you might not even have good master data. Common keys on your internal data. So any advice for this? Anyone who wants to take that? >>Sure I can. I can I can start. That's okay. I do think you know, one of the first problems is just a cataloging of the information that's out there. Um, you know, at least within our organization. When I took on this role, we were, you know, a large buyer of third party data. But our organization as a whole didn't necessarily have full visibility into what was being bought and for what purpose. And so having a catalog that helps us internally navigate what data we have and how we're gonna use it was sort of step number one. Um, so I think that's absolutely important. Um, I would say if we could go from having that catalog, you know, created manually to more automated to me, that's sort of the next step in our evolution, because everyone is saying right, the ongoing, uh, you know, creation of new external data sets. It's only going to get richer on DSO. We wanna be able to take advantage of that, you know, at the at the pacing speed, that data is being created. So going from Emanuel catalog to anonymous >>data >>catalog, I think, is a key capability for us. But then you know, to your second point, Cindy is how doe I then connect that to our own internal data to drive greater greater insights and how we run our business or how we serve our customers. Andi, that one you know really is a It's a tricky is a tricky, uh, question because I think it just depends on what data we're looking toe leverage. You know, we have this concept just around. Not not all data is created equal. And when you think about governance and you think about the management of your master data, your internal nomenclature on how you define and run your business, you know that that entire ecosystem begins to get extremely massive and it gets very broad and very deep on DSO for us. You know, government and master data management is absolutely important. But we took a very sort of prioritized approach on which domains do we really need to get right that drive the greatest results for our organization on dso mapping those domains like client data or employee data to these external third party data sources across this catalog was really the the unlocked for us versus trying to create this, you know, massive connection between all the external data that we're, uh, leveraging as well as all of our own internal data eso for us. I think it was very. It was a very tailored, prioritized approach to connecting internal data to external data based on the domains that matter most to our business. >>So if the domains so customer important domain and maybe that's looking at things, um, you know, whether it's social media data or customer transactions, you prioritized first by that, Is that right? >>That's correct. That's correct. >>And so, then, Matt, I'm going to throw it back to you because snowflake is in a unique position. You actually get to see what are the most popular data sets is is that playing out what one described are you seeing that play out? >>I I'd say Watch this space. Like like you said. I mean this. We've you know, I think we start with the data club. We solve that that movement problem, which I think was really the barrier that you tended to not even have a chance to focus on this mapping problem. Um, this notion of concordance, I think this is where I see the big next momentum in this space is going to be a flurry of traditional and new startups who deliver this concordance or knowledge graph as a service where this is no longer a problem that I have to solve internal to my organization. The notion of mastering which is again when everyone has to do in every organization like they used to have to do with moving data into the organization goes away. And this becomes like, I find the best of breed for the different scopes of data that I have. And it's delivered to me as a, you know, as a cloud service that just takes my data. My internal data maps it to these 2nd and 3rd party data sets. Um, all delivered to me, you know, a service. >>Yeah, well, that would be brilliant concordance as a service or or clean clean master data as a service. Um, using augmented data prep would be brilliant. So let's hope we get there. Um, you know, so 2020 has been a wild ride for everyone. If I could ask each of you imagine what is the art of the possible or looking ahead to the next to your and that you are you already mentioned the best is yet to come. Can you want to drill down on that. What what part of the best is yet to come or what is your already two possible? >>Just just a brief comment on mapping. Just this week we published a white paper on mapping, which is available for for anyone on eagle alfa dot com. It's It's a massive challenge. It's very difficult to solve. Just with technology Onda people have tried to solve it and get a certain level of accuracy, but can't get to 100% which which, which, which makes it difficult to solve it. If if if there is a new service coming out against 100% I'm all ears and that there will be a massive step forward for the entire data industry, even if it comes in a few years time, let alone next year, I think going back to the comment on data Cindy. Yes, I think boards of companies are Mawr and Mawr. Viewing data as an asset as opposed to an expense are a cost center on bond. They are looking therefore to get their internal house in order, as one was saying, but also monetize the data they are sitting on lots of companies. They're sitting on potentially valuable data. It's not all valuable on a lot of cases. They think it's worth a lot more than it is being frank. But in some cases there is valuable data on bond. If monetized, it can drop to the bottom line on. So I think that bodes well right across the world. A lot of the best date is yet to come on. I think a lot of firms like Deloitte are very well positioned to help drive that adoption because they are the trusted advisor to a lot of these Corporates. Um, so that's one thing. I think, from a company perspective. It's still we're still at the first base. It's quite frustrating how slow a lot of companies are to move and adopt, and some of them are haven't hired CDO. Some of them don't have their internal house in order. I think that has to change next year. I think if we have this conference at this time next year, I would expect that would hopefully be close to the tipping point for Corporates to use external data. And the Malcolm Gladwell tipping point on the final point I make is I think, that will hopefully start to see multi department use as opposed to silos again. Parliaments and silos, hopefully will be more coordinated on the company's side. Data could be used by marketing by sales by r and D by strategy by finance holds external data. So it really, hopefully will be coordinated by this time next year. >>Yeah, Thank you. So, to your point, there recently was an article to about one of the airlines that their data actually has more value than the company itself now. So I know, I know. We're counting on, you know, integrators trusted advisers like Deloitte to help us get there. Uh, one what? What do you think? And if I can also drill down, you know, financial services was early toe all of this because they needed the early signals. And and we talk about, you know, is is external data now more valuable than internal? Because we need those early signals in just such a different economy. >>Yeah, I think you know, for me, it's it's the seamless integration of all these external data sources and and the signals that organizations need and how to bring those into, you know, the day to day operations of your organization, right? So how do you bring those into, You know, you're planning process. How do you bring that into your sales process on DSO? I think for me success or or where I see the that the use and adoption of this is it's got to get down to that level off of operations for organizations. For this to continue to move at the pace and deliver the value that you know, we're all describing. I think we're going to get there. But I think until organizations truly get down to that level of operations and how they're using this data, it'll sort of seem like a Bolton, right? So for me, I think it's all about Mawr, the seamless integration. And I think to what Matt mentioned just around services that could help connect external data with internal data. I'll take that one step beyond and say, How can we have the data connect itself? Eso I had references Thio, you know, automation and machine learning. Um, there's significant advances in terms of how we're seeing, you know, mapping to occur in a auto generated fashion. I think this specific space and again the connection between external and internal data is a prime example of where we need to disrupt that, you know, sort of traditional data pipeline on. Try to automate that as much as possible. And let's have the data, you know, connect itself because it then sort of supports. You know, the first concept which waas How do we make it more seamless and integrated into, you know, the business processes of the organization's >>Yeah, great ones. So you two are thinking those automated, more intelligent data pipelines will get us there faster. Matt, you already gave us one. Great, Uh, look ahead, Any more to add to >>it, I'll give you I'll give you two more. One is a bit controversial, but I'll throw that you anyway, um, going back to the point that one made about data partnerships What you were saying Cindy about, you know, the value. These companies, you know, tends to be somehow sometimes more about the data they have than the actual service they provide. I predict you're going to see a wave of mergers and acquisitions. Um, that it's solely about locking down access to data as opposed to having data open up. Um to the broader, you know, economy, if I can, whether that be a retailer or, you know, insurance company was thes prime data assets. Um, you know, they could try to monetize that themselves, But if someone could acquire them and get exclusive access that data, I think that's going to be a wave of, um, in a that is gonna be like, Well, we bought this for this amount of money because of their data assets s. So I think that's gonna be a big wave. And it'll be maybe under the guise of data partnerships. But it really be about, you know, get locking down exclusive access to valuable data as opposed to trying toe monetize it itself number one. And then lastly, you know. Now, did you have this kind of ubiquity of data in this interconnected data network? Well, we're starting to see, and I think going to see a big wave of is hyper personalization of applications where instead of having the application have the data itself Have me Matt at Snowflake. Bring my data graph to applications. Right? This decoupling of we always talk about how you get data out of these applications. It's sort of the reverse was saying Now I want to bring all of my data access that I have 1st, 2nd and 3rd party into my application. Instead of having to think about getting all the data out of these applications, I think about it how when you you know, using a workout app in the consumer space, right? I can connect my Spotify or connect my apple music into that app to personalize the experience and bring my music list to that. Imagine if I could do that, you know, in a in a CRM. Imagine I could do that in a risk management. Imagine I could do that in a marketing app where I can bring my entire data graph with me and personalize that experience for, you know, for given what I have. And I think again, you know, partners like thoughts. But I think in a unique position to help enable that capability, you know, for this next wave of of applications that really take advantage of this decoupling of data. But having data flow into the app tied to me as opposed to having the APP have to know about my data ahead of time, >>Yeah, yeah, So that is very forward thinking. So I'll end with a prediction and a best practice. I am predicting that the organizations that really leverage external data, new data sources, not just whether or what have you and modernize those data flows will outperform the organizations that don't. And as a best practice to getting there, I the CDOs that own this have at least visibility into everything they're purchasing can save millions of dollars in duplicate spend. So, Thio, get their three key takeaways. Identify the leading indicators and market signals The data you need Thio. Better identify that. Consolidate those purchases and please explore the data sets the range of data sets data providers that we have on the thought spot. Atlas Marketplace Mallory over to you. >>Wow. Thank you. That was incredible. Thank you. To all of our Panelists for being here and sharing that wisdom. We really appreciate it. For those of you at home, stay close by. Our third session is coming right up and we'll be joined by our partner AWS and get to see how you can leverage the full power of your data cloud complete with the demo. Make sure to tune in to see you >>then

Published Date : Dec 10 2020

SUMMARY :

All right, let's get to We're excited to be joined by thought spots. Where you joining us from? Thanks for having us, Cindy. What do you dio the external data sets on a word I'll use a few times. you have had a brave journey as well, Going from financial It's in the last few years where there's been real momentum but back to the U. S. So, Juan, where you joining us from? I'm joining you from Houston, Texas. And you have a distinct perspective serving both Deloitte customers So I serve as the Lord consultants, chief data officer, and as a professional service Kind of in my own backyard um, based in New York. you know, brave pioneers in this space, and I'm remembering a conversation If I'm back to sitting at Goldman Sachs, how do I know what data is available to me now in this this you know, E think we all agree on that, But, you know, a lot of this is still visionary. And there has to be, you know, some way to ensure that you know, cast with human mobility monetize that. I think the category that's had the most momentum and your references is Geo location Some sectors of the economy e commerce, that Matt you talked about, but nonetheless, Still, you might not even have good master data. having that catalog, you know, created manually to more automated to me, But then you know, to your second point, That's correct. And so, then, Matt, I'm going to throw it back to you because snowflake is in a unique position. you know, as a cloud service that just takes my data. Um, you know, so 2020 has been I think that has to change next year. And and we talk about, you know, is is external data now And let's have the data, you know, connect itself because it then sort of supports. So you two are thinking those automated, And I think again, you know, partners like thoughts. and market signals The data you need Thio. by our partner AWS and get to see how you can leverage the full power of

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Matt GlickmanPERSON

0.99+

CindyPERSON

0.99+

JuanPERSON

0.99+

EmmaPERSON

0.99+

MattPERSON

0.99+

2015DATE

0.99+

DeloitteORGANIZATION

0.99+

EmmettPERSON

0.99+

New YorkLOCATION

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

December 2000DATE

0.99+

GoldmanORGANIZATION

0.99+

Goldman SachsORGANIZATION

0.99+

Eagle AlfaORGANIZATION

0.99+

EagleORGANIZATION

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

AndiPERSON

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

AlfaORGANIZATION

0.99+

third sessionQUANTITY

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

12DATE

0.99+

Houston, TexasLOCATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

BothQUANTITY

0.99+

second sessionQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

both sidesQUANTITY

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

MalloryPERSON

0.99+

both partiesQUANTITY

0.99+

Morgan StanleyORGANIZATION

0.99+

second pointQUANTITY

0.99+

TodayDATE

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

Cindy HousingPERSON

0.99+

Rice UniversityORGANIZATION

0.98+

26 categoriesQUANTITY

0.98+

Dublin, IrelandLOCATION

0.98+

2014DATE

0.98+

eight years agoDATE

0.98+

Malcolm GladwellPERSON

0.98+

2ndQUANTITY

0.98+

first principlesQUANTITY

0.98+

ThioPERSON

0.97+

U. S.LOCATION

0.97+

firstQUANTITY

0.97+

MawrORGANIZATION

0.97+

1stQUANTITY

0.97+

one pointQUANTITY

0.97+

2020DATE

0.96+

PowerPointTITLE

0.96+

fourthQUANTITY

0.96+

this weekDATE

0.96+

first baseQUANTITY

0.95+

eachQUANTITY

0.92+

CNN dot comORGANIZATION

0.92+

OndaORGANIZATION

0.92+

SpotifyORGANIZATION

0.92+

Angie Embree, Best Friends Animal Society | AWS Imagine Nonprofit 2019


 

>> Narrator: From Seattle, Washington it's the CUBE covering AWS Imagine non-profit. Brought to you by Amazon web services. >> Hey welcome back everybody, Jeff Frick here with the CUBE. We're on the waterfront in Seattle, it's an absolutely gorgeous couple of days here at the AWS Imagine Nonprofit Conference. We went to the AWS Imagine Education Conference, this is really all about nonprofits and we're hearing all kinds of interesting stories about how these people are using AWS to help conquer really big problems. We're going to shift gears a little bit from the two footed problems to the four footed problems and that's animals and everybody likes animals but nobody likes animal shelters and nobody likes the ultimate solution that many animal shelters used to use to take care of problems. But thank you to our next guest, that is not quite the case so much anymore. So we're really happy to have Angie Embree on. She is the CIO of Best Friends Animal Society, Angie great to see you. >> It's great to see you as well and thank you for having me. >> Oh absolutely! So before we got on I just heard this crazy, crazy statistic that when your organization started in 1984 approximately 17 million animals were killed in US shelters per year. That number is now down to 700 thousand, that is a giant, giant reduction. And yet you, with big audacious goals really are looking to get that to zero. So, that's a giant goal, give us a little bit of background on the organization and how you decided to go after a goal like that and some of the ways you are actually going to achieve it. >> Well, the organization started in 1984 and it started with a group of friends in Southern Utah who decided that, you know the killing in America's shelters just had to go. So really the Best Friends founders started the no-kill movement along with a gentleman in San Francisco by the name of Rich Avanzino. And as you said, they took you know the killing down from 17 million in 1984 to approximately 733 thousand now. The organization started as just the sanctuary, we have the largest no-kill companion animal sanctuary in the country where we hold about 17 hundred animals every day. And we also have, you know, knowing that we needed to help out the rest of the country we have built life saving centers in Houston, Texas. Or we're working on Houston, Texas but Los Angels, California, New York City, Salt Lake City, Atlanta, Georgia, it seems like I've left somebody out but, >> Probably, but that's okay. >> We have life saving centers all over the country. So it was really, you know, when they realized what was going on in America's shelters it was really the idea that we should not be killing animals for space. So, just recently in fact, I will say recently but in the last few years, Julie Castle our CEO put kind of, did our moon shot, put that stake in the ground and said we're going to take this country no-kill by the year 2025. >> Right. >> So it's super exciting. >> So it's really interesting because you guys are trying to execute your vision, and it's easy to execute your own vision, but it's a whole different thing when you're trying to execute your vision through this huge infrastructure of shelters that have been around forever. So, I wonder if you can explain kind of what's your relationship with shelters that you don't own. I guess, I think you said before we turned on the cameras there are affiliates, so how does that relationship work? How do you help them achieve your goal which is no-kill. >> Yeah, so we have over 27 hundred network partners around the country. And what we do is we help to educate them on, you know we understand their problems, we have creative programs to solve those problems. So we help to educate them on, you know, how they can implement these programs within their shelters. We provide them grant funding, we have an annual conference every year where they can come and learn. But they're really our partners and you know we know we can't do it alone. It's going to take us, it's going to take them and it's going to take everybody in every community to really step up and help solve the problem. >> Right, and what was the biggest thing that changed in terms of kind of attitude in terms of the way they operate the shelter because I think you said before that a lot of the killing was done to make room. >> Right, killing is done usually for space. >> So what do they do know? Clearly the space demands probably haven't changed so what are they doing alternatively where before they would put the animal down? >> Well alternatively we're doing transport programs. So there are areas in the country that actually have a demand for animals. So instead of killing the animals, we put them on some sort of transport vehicle and we take them to the areas that are in demand. We also do what's called a trap-neuter-return program. So one of the biggest problems across the country are community cats so those, a lot of people call them feral cats but they're community cats and usually have a caretaker. But what we do is we trap those cats, we take them into the shelter, we neuter them and vaccinate them and then return them to their home. That keeps them from making a lot of other little cats. >> Making babies (laughs) >> So yeah, cat's are one of the biggest problems in shelters today because of the community cats, they're feral cats and they're not adoptable. So if we can, we don't have to kill them. We can, you know, we can keep them from reproducing as I said and then we can put them back in their habitat where they live a long healthy life, happy life. >> Right, so you said you've joined the organization 5 years ago, 5 and 1/2 years ago and you're the CIO, first ever CIO. >> I am (laughs) >> What brought you here and then now that you're here with kind of a CIO hat, what are some of the new perspective that you can bring to the organization that didn't necessarily, that they had had before from kind of a technical perspective? >> Well, what brought me here was, I never expected to be here, if you would have told me I would be the CIO at Best Friends Animal Society you know 10 years ago I would have said you're kidding because I didn't really realize that there were professional positions in organizations like Best Friends. But I, you know, my journey begins the same as, began the same as a lot of peoples did. I was that little kid always bringing home animals and you know my mother hated it. You know it was always something showing up at our doorstep with me, you know. And I just loved animals all my life and as I went through college and got my degree and started my professional career, then I thought well I'm going to of course have animals because I can have as many as I want now, right! (laughs) So I started adopting, and I didn't even realize until I was in my 30s that they were killing in shelters and I learned that in Houston, Texas when I lived there. I was working for IBM at the time, and one day a lady came on the television and she said they were doing a new segment and she said we're a no-kill shelter and I thought oh my god if there are no-kill shelters then there are kill shelters, right? >> There must be the other. >> Yeah so, to make a long story short then I started not working in animal welfare but doing more to support the movement and donating. Adopting from shelters and fostering animals and then one day I had been to Best Friends as a visitor vacationing in this beautiful part of Utah. But I saw the CIO ... >> Position. >> position open and I said I'm going for it. >> Good for you. >> Yeah. >> Good for you, so now you're there so what are some of the things you've implemented from kind of a techy, you know kind of data perspective that they didn't have before? >> Well, they didn't have a lot. >> They probably didn't have a lot, besides email and the obvious things. >> Being the first CIO I don't know that I knew what I was walking into at the time because I got to Kanab, and Kanab Utah where the sanctuary is, is the headquarters. And Kanab is very infrastructure challenged. >> (laughs) Infrastructure challenged, I like that. >> There is one ISP in Kanab and there is no redundancy in networks so we really don't have, you know, you come from the city and you think, you take these things for granted and you find out oh my god, what am I going to do? And Kanab is you know the hub of our network, so if Kanab goes down, you know the whole organization is down so one of the first decisions I made was that we were going to the cloud. >> Right, right. >> Because we had to get Kanab out of that position and that was one of our, one of the first major decisions I made and we chose AWS as our partner to do that so that was very very exciting. We knew that they had infrastructure we couldn't dream of providing. >> Right, right. >> And, you know we could really make our whole network more robust, our applications would be available and we could really do some great things. >> You're not worried about the one ISP provider in Kanab because of an accident that knocks a phone pole down. >> Yeah, yeah. >> All right but then you're talking about some new things that you're working on and a new thing you talked about before we turned the cameras on community lifesaving dashboards, what is that all about? >> Okay, so a couple of years ago the community lifesaving dashboard is the culmination of two years of work. From all across the Best Friends organization not just the IT department, in fact it was the brainchild of our Chief Mission Officer Holly Sizemore. But it's really, in animal welfare there's never been a national picture of what the problem really is regarding killing animals in shelters. So we did this big. >> Because they're all regional right? They're all regional shelters, very local. >> They're all local community shelters, yes. And transparency isn't forced, so you know some states force transparency, they reinforce in the report numbers but a lot of states don't. >> At the state level. >> Yeah, a lot of states don't, so. You know when you're killing animals in shelters you really don't want people to know that. >> Yeah, yeah it's not something you want to advertise. >> Because the American public doesn't believe in it. So anyway we worked really hard to collect all this data from across the country and we put it all into this dashboard and it is now a tool where anybody in the public, it's on our website, can look at it and they can see that where we're at from a national level. They can see where they're at from a state level, they can drill down into their community and they can drill down to an individual shelter. >> Wow. >> And the idea behind the dashboard is to really, is to get communities behind helping their shelters. Because as I said earlier, it's going to take us all. >> Right. >> And not only Best Friends and our partners but the public plays a big part of this. >> Right, and so when did that roll out? Do you have any kind of feedback, how's it working? >> It's working wonderfully, we rolled it out at our conference in July. >> So recently, so it's a pretty new initiative. >> Yeah it's just a few weeks old. >> Okay. >> We rolled it out at our national conference and we were all a bit nervous about it, you know especially from a technology perspective. >> Right, right. >> We knew that being the first of it's kind ever in animal welfare that you know it was going to get a lot of publicity both inside and outside the movement. >> (laughs) How you want to say both pro and con. >> Yeah, and it's sitting on our website, well really pro and con. >> Right, right. >> But it's sitting on our website and we're like okay, we don't know what kind of traffic we're going to get, you know what are we going to do about this? So we spent a lot of time with Amazon prior to the launch, you know having them look at our environment and getting advice, discussing it with them. >> Not going to bring down that ISP in Utah. >> No, thank god! (laughs) >> (laughs) >> No it wasn't, thank god we were in the cloud. So Amazon really helped us prepare and then the day of the launch, we knew the time of the launch. So we actually had a war room set up, a virtual war room and we had Amazon employees participating in our war room. We watched the traffic and we did get huge spikes in traffic at all times through the day when certain things were happening. And I'm happy to say from a technology perspective it was a non-event because we did not crash we stayed up, we handled all the traffic, we scaled when we needed to, and we did it you know, virtually at the press of a button. >> Awesome. >> Or the flick of a switch, whatever you want to say. >> That's what you want right? >> Yeah, exactly. >> You just don't want anyone to know, I was like give a good ref, nobody's talking about you you probably did a good job. >> Yeah, exactly yeah. >> Good, so before I let you go so what are some of your initiatives now looking forward. You've got this great partner in AWS, you have basically as much horsepower as you need to get done what you need to get done. What are some of the things that you see, you know kind of next for your roadmap? >> Well, we have a lot. >> Don't give me the whole list (laughs) >> No I'm just going to hit on a few key points. I think, you know we used Amazon initially as our cloud infrastructure but I think the biggest thing we're looking at is platform as a service. There is so much capability out there with predictive analytics, machine learning, artificial intelligence, ARVR, you name it facial recognitions, so we're really investigating those technologies because we think they have you know they could have a huge impact on our movement and really help us achieve life saving. >> Right, right. >> And, I think that, you know we're starting we have our fledgling data science program. We're using the Amazon data lake technology, Athena, Glue, they were just telling me about data lake formation which I just a few minutes ago emailed my data guy and said start looking at data lake formation. >> Right, right. >> So, I mean we're really investing in the platform as a service. The other thing I see is that we're, animal welfare is sort of broken from a technology perspective and a data perspective. In that we have no interoperability and you know we don't have the data available. So lets say you want to adopt a 5-year old animal. Well, you go to a shelter you can't get 5 years of history on a 5 year old animal. So it's really starting to fix the foundation for the movement as a whole, not just Best Friends. So, making sure that you know the veterinary data is there, all the data from the pet ecosystem is there. So we're investigating with AWS they're actually coming to our sanctuary in a couple of months, we're going to do a workshop to figure out how we do this, how we really fix it so that we have interoperability between every shelter when an animal moves from shelter to rescue or whatever so that their data follows them wherever they go. So adopters are fully informed when adopting an animal. >> Because you're in a pretty interesting position, because you're not with any one particular shelter you kind of cross many many boundaries. So you're in a good position to be that aggregator of that data. >> Yeah, I don't know that we want to be the aggregator but we want to lead the movement towards doing that. Just getting the technology players, the shelter management systems, the other people who play a role in technology for animal welfare, getting them in a room and talking and figuring out this problem is huge. >> Right. >> And with a partner like Amazon we feel it can be solved. >> Right. Well Angie thank you for taking a few minutes and sharing your story, really really enjoyed hearing it. >> All right thank you so much. >> All right, she's Angie, I'm Jeff you're watching the CUBE we're at AWS Imagine in Seattle, thanks for watching we'll see you next time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Aug 13 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Amazon web services. and nobody likes the ultimate solution It's great to see you as well and some of the ways you are actually going to achieve it. And we also have, you know, knowing that we needed to So it was really, you know, when they realized So it's really interesting because you guys So we help to educate them on, you know, how they can before that a lot of the killing was done to make room. So instead of killing the animals, we put them on We can, you know, we can keep them from reproducing Right, so you said you've joined the organization and you know my mother hated it. and then one day I had been to Best Friends and the obvious things. Being the first CIO I don't know that I knew in networks so we really don't have, you know, and that was one of our, one of the first major And, you know we could really make in Kanab because of an accident So we did this big. Because they're all regional right? And transparency isn't forced, so you know you really don't want people to know that. and they can drill down to an individual shelter. And the idea behind the dashboard is to really, but the public plays a big part of this. at our conference in July. and we were all a bit nervous about it, you know in animal welfare that you know it was going to get Yeah, and it's sitting on our website, prior to the launch, you know having them look we scaled when we needed to, and we did it you know, I was like give a good ref, nobody's talking about you What are some of the things that you see, I think, you know we used Amazon initially And, I think that, you know we're starting and you know we don't have the data available. you kind of cross many many boundaries. Yeah, I don't know that we want to be the aggregator and sharing your story, really really enjoyed hearing it. we'll see you next time.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
David NicholsonPERSON

0.99+

ChrisPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

JoelPERSON

0.99+

Jeff FrickPERSON

0.99+

PeterPERSON

0.99+

MonaPERSON

0.99+

Dave VellantePERSON

0.99+

David VellantePERSON

0.99+

KeithPERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

JeffPERSON

0.99+

KevinPERSON

0.99+

Joel MinickPERSON

0.99+

AndyPERSON

0.99+

RyanPERSON

0.99+

Cathy DallyPERSON

0.99+

PatrickPERSON

0.99+

GregPERSON

0.99+

Rebecca KnightPERSON

0.99+

StephenPERSON

0.99+

Kevin MillerPERSON

0.99+

MarcusPERSON

0.99+

Dave AlantePERSON

0.99+

EricPERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

DanPERSON

0.99+

Peter BurrisPERSON

0.99+

Greg TinkerPERSON

0.99+

UtahLOCATION

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

RaleighLOCATION

0.99+

BrooklynLOCATION

0.99+

Carl KrupitzerPERSON

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

LenovoORGANIZATION

0.99+

JetBlueORGANIZATION

0.99+

2015DATE

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

Angie EmbreePERSON

0.99+

Kirk SkaugenPERSON

0.99+

Dave NicholsonPERSON

0.99+

2014DATE

0.99+

SimonPERSON

0.99+

UnitedORGANIZATION

0.99+

Stu MinimanPERSON

0.99+

SouthwestORGANIZATION

0.99+

KirkPERSON

0.99+

FrankPERSON

0.99+

Patrick OsbornePERSON

0.99+

1984DATE

0.99+

ChinaLOCATION

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

SingaporeLOCATION

0.99+

Aamir Lakhani, Fortinet | CUBE Conversation Jan 2018


 

(dramatic music) >> Hi I'm Peter Burris with Wikibon, and welcome to this Cube conversation with Fortinet's Aamir Lakhani. Aamir's a world renowned cyber security expert, and lead researcher at Fortinet. And is known in the blackout world as Dr. Chaos. Aamir, thanks very much for joining us today. >> Ah, thank you, glad to be here. >> So, I'm in our Palo Alto studios, Aamir's in Houston, Texas. Aamir how did we move from a world where the issues associated with cyber security were really pertinent and relevant to a few, to an increasing emphasis across business and the concerns about cyber security. And how is that expertise becoming increasingly relevant to business today? >> Wow, that's a, that's a very interesting question. You know, the best I can say is it's a brave new world today. I mean if you think about it today, everything is connected and interconnected to the net. From our homes, to our cars, to our TVs. It's a smart world as everyone says. And because of that there's a lot of opportunity, not only to be connected, but also, a lot of opportunity for attackers to exploit systems. Use these systems as launching pads to gain access to more important information. And we're seeing that all over the place. You know, when I started off my career, it used to be that security experts were really the guys that knew how to configure the vendor boxes. The best that they knew how to. They got the certifications from the vendors. They had the best practices from the vendors. And somewhere along the line, someone realized that, hey, it's going to be a good idea to actually test the security, and pretend like we're the bad guys. And that's where the evolution of I think, penetration testing as well as a red team and offensive security came into play. Where the good guys are now actually writing bad code trying to be the hackers. And trying to guess what the hackers are going to do, before they even do it. And I think that's where we're at today. And the reason we're there is, there's a lot of opportunity with a lot of devices everywhere that's interconnected. >> So, in many respects we've moved from a world where security was a feature of the products we purchased to where today, security really is an asset. And it's an asset that the external world, especially the bad guys, are constantly trying to erode for the business. We've seen some actual resources emerge in the cyber security world. Like the dark net, for example, that is, has many purposes, it might be used in certain countries as a way of circumnavigating limitations on privacy, or access to different sources of information. But it's clearly also being used by nefarious individuals to at least, plan and set up nefarious acts. Take us through the role that the dark net is playing today in the changing landscape of cyber security. >> Exactly, and the first thing to explain is the dark net is almost the media term. Because, it means a variety of different things. First of all, in its most basic form, what it means is, it's all the information that Google doesn't have, that you can't do a Google search for. And that could include, you know, ISPs, it could include forums. But what most people talk about when they talk about the dark net is, what we call the Tor network. Or the onion routing network. Which is, basically, a specialized network that you need to specialized software to gain access to. And you need to know where to go. It's not just, you know, Google search for something. You actually have to have places that you need to go to. That really is today, what is the dark net. Now there are other aspects to the dark net. There's other peer to peer networks. But really it's a hidden network. And that's kind of the evolution of the dark net. >> So, if we think about the role that the dark net's playing. It's not so much the business itself will operate on the dark net, but it needs, at some point in time, visibility into some of the activities that are being performed on the dark net. Because dark net activities turn into surface net problems for enterprises, if they're not smart about their cyber security practices, policies and approaches. Tell us a little bit about some of the manifestations of dark net activities that are hidden, that suddenly become hidden when you don't want them to. And manifest themselves as cyber security problems. >> Exactly, one of the things that we have on the dark net is this concept called ghost markets. And what a ghost market is, think about black market. But a black market, you know, sells goods, and services that could be illegal. A ghost market is very similar, except that it's a very I would say transparent, or it could be a market that may not be up for a long time. It could be here one day, and it could disappear the next day. And that's why it's called a ghost market. Now, what you find on these ghost markets, one of the more popular ghost markets, that was in the media was Silk Roads. You essentially can find anything you want. Now most of the time they're selling illegal drugs. Anything you can think of. But there's other things that they sell on ghost markets as well, such as, exploit kids, cyber zero day attacks, credit cards, a lot of credit cards, account numbers. Account passwords for anything you can think of. Like Netflix, or HBO, or anything that's out there. And on top of that, there's a lot of forums that hackers participate in. You know sometimes a hacker may say, "Hey, I'm just interested in learning how "to create ransomware, how do I create ransomware?" And someone will say, "Well, this is how you do it. "This is a ransomware kit. "Oh, by the way, I can create ransomware for you. "And charge you some money." And other times, hackers are very specific. They're like, "I really don't like company ABC dot com, "I want to attack them, can anyone help me?" And you will find intelligence based on that. You know, we monitor companies all the time. And we know sometimes before they're going to get attacked. Because there's a lot of chatter on the dark net about that. >> So, we have this dark net in which individuals could be anonymous. And that anonymity buys them the opportunity to do some, again, bad things. But you mentioned something interesting, this notion of a ghost market. All markets feature some sort of mechanism for actually handling transactions, for remunerating exchanges. Money. But money is not an honest, at least not with credit cards. How are some of the cryptocurrencies playing a role here in mediating these exchanges in the dark net? Let's start there, and then we'll get into some other factors associated with cryptocurrencies. And how they are important enterprises. Let's start with that one. >> Yeah, so first, you're right, you know, everyone wants to buy and sell something off the dark net. And at first when this was first coming into play, these ghost markets, back in the day people used to use things like gift cards, and re-loaded cards, and web money. And, you know, those things really didn't last. And really what exploded on the dark net what became the de facto currency on the dark net was Bitcoins, and that's how people started transacting with Bitcoins and it, in my opinion, my personal opinion, I think that's one of the reasons why Bitcoins really took off. Now Bitcoins unlike popular belief, they're not really anonymous, there is a public ledger. That keeps track of all the transactions taking place. So, there are other cryptocurrencies that are coming into play that are more anonymous. Mineiro, for example, is not a new cryptocurrency. But it's a popular cryptocurrency that's coming into play in the dark market. In fact, one of the largest dark markets, ghost markets, today called the Dream Market on the dark net, announced that they're going to start accepting Mineiro. So, because of that, I personally believe Mineiro's going to start like gaining more and more popularity. Because now the bad guys, now the criminals are actually using it, it's worth value to them, and they're going to start exchanging information. And of course, with these cryptocurrencies, you can always take it to some sort of exchange, and you can also launder these currencies. And maybe even trade it in for real cash. >> So, many people talk about the need to expect the best, but plan for the worst. And a lot of enterprises today need to start to being more planful about what to do in the event that they encounter a problem. So, for example, some of their data gets stolen, and they end up with some ransomware. That leads the acid question, should firms actually start thinking about creating reserves of some of these currencies? Should they find themselves being attacked? >> You know, so, first of all, I do think it makes sense for firms to at least understand, you know, how cryptocurrency works. Now, I would never promote a, you know, suggest that firms pay a ransom in any type of manner. Because, obviously, it just encourages, and drives the cyber criminal underground. And we've seen that. In fact, in these forums, in these dark net forums, there are attackers out there that say, "Hey, I've attacked this firm, "or I've targeted this industry, "and they're well known to pay, so let's go after them." The healthcare industry is a good example of that. Obviously, for various reasons the healthcare industry can take very little downtime. I mean, there's medical, you know, concerns people's lives, and concerns. So, generally they've been known to pay for ransomware. And that's documented all over the dark web. So, people actually encourage attackers, encourage those attackers to go after their healthcare. Just getting back to your question. You know, one of the last things that you want be in a situation is, you don't ever want to be in the situation where you have to, come up, and understand how cryptocurrencies works, and try and learn it on the fly, while your, you know, while your entire system's are down. While your networks are being held hostage. So, for that reason I would absolutely recommend at least to my customers, hey, learn about cryptocurrency. How it works, what the upside, and what the bad side is. Obviously, in today's market, there's a lot of volatility in cryptocurrency because, you know, it's not being held, or created like currencies, it's being held more like a resource, like gold. You know, people are investing into it. It's becoming, you know, something like this dark market of futures. And, but I think customers need to, and the general public probably needs to learn about how exactly that works. Because there's a lot of misconceptions in cryptocurrency today. >> So, you mentioned that perhaps they shouldn't have a reserve of cryptocurrency, because we don't want to encourage anybody to pay for it. Once you pay you've put a target on your back as someone who's willing to pay. But you also mentioned that firms have to learn something about cryptocurrencies, in advance of actually having a problem. What is a good high quality, world class stance for enterprise relative to cryptocurrency? What are the say, the two or three points that you would suggest, a CEO, board of directors, worry about, and what do they need to really understand now as part of their cryptocurrency stance, what do you think? >> Well, for a cryptocurrency specifically, I think, you know, businesses really need to understand the volatility of it. You know, it is a face, face currency. You know, what does that exactly mean? Who's backing that up? You know, how does it, how does it, you know, drive its value, I think those are very important questions. You know, I do have, you know, clients that actually do hold a very large reserves of cryptocurrency for various reasons. Not only for cyber security reasons. But also, potentially, for investment reasons as well. And that's getting into a whole another world. But I think they need to understand what that really means. But being on those, you know, let's take it back to the cyber aspect of things. One of the things that attackers do concentrate on is attacking cryptocurrency wallets. If you can attack a wallet, and steal the actual cryptocurrency that's obviously worth money to them. A lot of business that do invest in cryptocurrency, or, you know, have any type of cryptocurrency holdings really don't understand how to secure their wallets. Sometimes they use the online methods, which are fine. I mean you are relying on, on the online provider, or the Cloud provider that's providing that wallet. Or other customers that do understand details on cryptocurrency make, keep complete offline wallets. Remember, a cryptocurrency is basically a math algorithm, it's a hash, it's a set of numbers. It doesn't matter if it's really digital online, or if it's stored on a piece of paper in your draw. As long as you have that number you have that cryptocurrency. And so, it's a, I think when you're getting into the dynamics of money, and how it works it's always a little interesting. But I want to stress to you, you know, it's very common for people not to understand how to store cryptocurrency and get those wallets stolen, or hi-jacked, and once that's done, it's gone. It's like cash, you're not going to get that back. >> So, we've talked a little bit about how we got to this point today with cyber security, and how it's becoming, while still very specialized and highly technical, more, and more people have to be, at least, be aware of it. So that they can act rapidly, and properly when they encounter a problem. Look forward the next few years Aamir. And give us some visibility into where you think the cyber security world's going to be? How is this going to play out? If we think about 2020, 2021? >> Wow, that's a loaded question. You know, to keep in the context of this talk. You know, we spoke a little bit about the dark net. And, you know, it's an evolving marketplace, and maybe the dark net was responsible for a little bit of the ignition behind cryptocurrencies. And I think cryptocurrencies, a good thing that came out of it was the blockchain, this public ledger. On basically keeping transactions public, while keeping identities anonymous. I think the blockchain is very powerful even outside of cryptocurrencies. When you're talking about sharing medical information, and research, and actually talking about verifying things, or making a smart contract. A smart contract is basically, a contract that will automatically execute on the Internet, based after certain conditions are met. I think based on those technologies, you know, we're going to see some sort of an evolution of how, you know how security, how cyber security, and technology is really being integrated into our everyday lives. And I know people say, "Well it's already "integrated into our everyday lives." But I don't think you've seen anything yet. I mean I think that cyber security is going to be part of the ecosystem. It's not going to be a bolt on product. It's going to have to be built in from day one. From design, and everything that we do. Whether it's from heart monitors, and heart pumps, to your smart TVs, to of course, your computers, and data centers. >> So, last question, Aamir, we had, or I introduced the segment by talking about how security used to be a feature of different products, and you mentioned this as well, and increasingly it's becoming an asset, a crucial asset of the business. Now, some companies are a little bit more orientated towards that perspective than others. Fortinet, for example, I would argue is very strong on the orientation towards the idea that you have to, that security should be an asset. You have to invest in that appropriately. But identify some things that CIOs, CSOs, CDOs, can do to try to up level the stance within the business of security as an asset. That combines both technology, but also practice processes, and people. >> Right, no, that's a good point. You know, you cannot think of security just as a bolt on technology. I think that's very important. You know, one of things that we do at Fortinet. It's a practice that we preach. And I think a lot of professionals would agree with this. Is that security has to be built all around your ecosystem. That all your devices just can't be specialized add on products. All your devices have to be participating in security. You know, that's why at Fortinet we have what we call our security fabric. Where it's not only our products. But other products as well, are continuously sharing information about blocking attacks. And blocking threats, as well as providing visibility into corporations. And I think corporations kind of miss that sometimes. They're like, "Hey, I bought a product, "I should be good, right?" But they don't really understand what that product does. The effectiveness of that product. How well is it actually blocking the threats. And what is it not doing. What are the questions that you should be asking about the product, or about the environment that you don't know about. And I think once you start building security as a fabric embedded into an ecosystem, embedded into your business practices, right from everything. From, you know, from your charter, from your board of directors understanding, you know, cyber security all the way down to the secretary that's opening up email links. Understanding that, hey, I could be actually putting my company and my business at risk. I think once you've started instilling that mindset, you become more successful. >> Well it's more than just-- >> You know-- >> It's more than just the technology. It's also you. How does, how do people like you, how does your insight, your expertise, your content get distributed and adopted as a consequence of relationships at Fortinet. And obviously others as well? >> Yeah, I mean, I'm really lucky. Our team of researchers, 200 plus researchers, looking for the most common threats. The most updated techniques that the hackers, that the bad guys, that cyber criminals are using. We're examining threats across the board. From everything that you hear on the news. We're on top of it. And the nice thing is, we digest all of that information, and we look at the inner workings of that information. And then we use advanced technologies. Such as artificial intelligence, neural networks, or just a, good old grease work on figuring how to stop these attacks. And that brainpower, that trust that we have, gets actually digested into all the products. And that's very important. Now on top of just being smart guys that create good technology to stop that, we definitely believe that, you know, sharing is caring. And that's why we work with not only government agencies, not only with large businesses, but we also work with, I would say even our competitors, and tell them right away, "Hey, you know, we." When we see a problem, "You guys, look out for this problem. "This could be a big deal. "This could even affect your customers." And that's one of the reasons Fortinet was one of the founding members of the Cyber Threat Alliance which is a lot of security vendors sharing information about threats, and letting the technology speak for itself. >> And a lot of very savvy large enterprises that have a major stake to play in security world as well, again, successfully sharing their insight. Because security as you said, it's a team sport. It takes a village, to secure a business. I guess you could say. Aamir Lakhani, lead researcher, Dr. Chaos thanks very much for joining us in this Cube conversation about cyber security, the dark net, cryptocurrencies. And some of the things that businesses have to worry about as they move forward, and increase their activity. And their dependency on digital technologies. Once again, this is Peter Burris, Wikibon. I've been speaking with Aamir Lakhani at Fortinet. Hope you enjoyed this Cube conversation. >> Aamir: Thanks. (dramatic music)

Published Date : Jan 24 2018

SUMMARY :

And is known in the blackout world as Dr. Chaos. And how is that expertise becoming And because of that there's a lot of opportunity, And it's an asset that the external world, And that could include, you know, that are being performed on the dark net. And someone will say, "Well, this is how you do it. And that anonymity buys them the opportunity that's coming into play in the dark market. And a lot of enterprises today need to start And that's documented all over the dark web. that you would suggest, a CEO, board of directors, But I think they need to understand what that really means. And give us some visibility into where you think I think based on those technologies, you know, that you have to, that security should be an asset. And I think once you start building security as a fabric It's more than just the technology. And the nice thing is, we digest all of that information, And some of the things that businesses have to worry about (dramatic music)

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Aamir LakhaniPERSON

0.99+

AamirPERSON

0.99+

Peter BurrisPERSON

0.99+

FortinetORGANIZATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

Jan 2018DATE

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Houston, TexasLOCATION

0.99+

ABC dot comORGANIZATION

0.99+

200 plus researchersQUANTITY

0.99+

NetflixORGANIZATION

0.99+

Cyber Threat AllianceORGANIZATION

0.99+

HBOORGANIZATION

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

three pointsQUANTITY

0.98+

MineiroORGANIZATION

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

2020DATE

0.98+

bothQUANTITY

0.98+

next dayDATE

0.98+

2021DATE

0.96+

firstQUANTITY

0.96+

first thingQUANTITY

0.95+

WikibonORGANIZATION

0.94+

FirstQUANTITY

0.85+

one dayQUANTITY

0.81+

Dream MarketORGANIZATION

0.8+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.79+

Dr. ChaosPERSON

0.74+

one of the thingsQUANTITY

0.7+

ChaosPERSON

0.69+

day oneQUANTITY

0.68+

BitcoinsOTHER

0.67+

zeroQUANTITY

0.63+

Dr.PERSON

0.51+

Elizabeth Ames, AnitaB.org | Grace Hopper 2017


 

>> Live from Orlando, Florida, it's theCUBE covering Grace Hopper's Celebration of women in computing. Brought to you by SiliconANGLE Media. >> Hey welcome back everybody. Jeff Frick here at theCUBE. We're at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, the best name in tech conferences. 18,000 women here in Orlando, filling up the Orange County Conference Center. We're excited to be here for our fourth year, and part of the whole program is getting some of the leadership from AnitaB.org on to give us an update and we're really excited to have Elizabeth Ames. She's the SVP of Marketing and Alliances and Programs but we just think of her as Elizabeth at AnitaB.org. So, Elizabeth, great to see you. >> Great to be here. >> Absolutely >> We're thrilled to have you here at the Celebration. >> I can't believe it's been four years. I've been telling so many people. There are still so many people that have never been here. I was amazed at the keynote, the first day, there was the call, the houselights went up, how many people it's their first time, and as big as this conference is, as much the people that know it love it, there's still a lot of people that have not been exposed to this show. >> It's absolutely the case. We have every year it seems like more and more sort of first timers. Which is great because we love to have them come but we'd love to have them come back. I think it's really an expression of how this issue has become a big issue and that the women are really engaged and excited and they want to be a part of it, so it's great. >> The other thing I don't think a lot of people know is there's obviously a lot of recruiting going on, there's a lot of young people here which is really what I think gives it its flavor, but we had Workday on. They said they had 140 people here from Workday. I talked to a guy last night at dinner from Google, I think they had 180 people and I said to her, "Do you have any show "that you bring that many people to "that's not your own show, so the amount of investment" And then I said, it's all young, fresh out of school No, it's all ranges, all ages. So again, I think there's a lot going on here that people are just not that exposed to. >> Yeah, that's absolutely true. So, if you look at our attendance overall, about 70% are industry and a lot of those are companies that are bringing their women and some of them are their younger women who have maybe been in the firm, in the company for a year or two or three or something like that, but the place where a lot of women drop out of the industry is more mid-career and so I think more and more companies are seeing this as a way to help their mid-career women recommit to the field and make those connections with the community at large and get a little bit more reinvigorated so we definitely see companies bringing all kinds of women out of their organization, and they like to bring a mix, so that they have some of their senior women that are sort of mentoring women who are mid-career or women who are more junior and it just gives them a really good mix. And then about 30% of our attendees are academic, we call it academic, but it's primarily students, so undergraduate, graduate, post doc, and research type people, and then some amount of professors and teaching assistants, those types of people. >> Yeah, and I really think it's the youth that give this show its special vibe. I mean there's a lot of great keynotes and some fantastic stories and really great global representation, a ton of African representation. But I do think it's the youth, it's the youngsters that bring a really unique and positive energy that you don't really see at many other conferences. >> Yeah, and I think part of that is that the community at large, you know women that are in the field they care about the women coming up and they want them to succeed and they want them to have every single opportunity so everybody's kind of invested in them and interested in nurturing and helping them along. So it does create this really, I don't know, positive environment, right. We always jokingly say there's a reason we call it a celebration. We don't call it a conference, we call it a celebration. >> Everyone's a delegate too. I like that too. It's not attendees. And that's come up on a number of interviews too where when people have reflected back on people that have helped them along the way the payback, it's almost like it's been scripted is, OK, now you need to do this to the next person to really pay it forward and that again is a consistent theme that we have also heard from the keynotes earlier today, that it is about paying it forward, which is funny because sometimes you'll hear kind of a catty women reputation that they're trying to keep each other down, you know that that was kind of a classic, another hurdle that women had to face in the professional world that they weren't necessarily supporting each other, and that is not the case here, at all. It's very much a supportive environment. >> We may have a self selection bias going on here >> Well that's okay >> But I think there's nothing but support for one another in the community and everybody recognizes that we all have to pull together. >> Right. So interesting times at AnitaB.org, the organization that puts on Grace Hopper, change of leadership, we had Brenda on, so kind of a fresh face, fresh energy. Telle. I'm going to see if I can get her a horse tomorrow to ride off into the sunset if the sun breaks out here in Orlando, so it's exciting times. It's a time of transition, always a little kind of mixed feelings, but also tremendous excitement and kind of new chapter, if you will. So tell us a little bit about what's going on at AnitaB.org >> It's an incredibly exciting time. First of all, a nod to Telle. She's been at the helm for 15 years. She's seen an incredible amount of growth. She took this on really as a favor to her dear dear friend and then took on the mantle upon Anita's death. She's done an amazing job. She's certainly an icon within the community overall I'm sure you'll hear more from her in the future. It's been great. Brenda is new fresh face. She has accomplished some pretty amazing things with the Chicago Public Schools. She's really invigorated to step into this space and it's great having her. I think the thing that you really, hopefully you got from her when she was here is that she is just this incredibly genuine person. She's lived the experience. She can relate to what all of these women have gone through. She has this profound commitment to make things different. And just the biggest heart that you could possibly imagine. >> Right, and a little chip on her shoulder. Which she talked about and it's come up time and time again where when people are told they can't do things for a lot of people, there's no greater motivator than being told you can't do this, you shouldn't do this, you're not qualified. She said "I've been in positions "where I've been told I can't be there." So to have that little chip on her shoulder I think is a real driver for many folks. >> It is. We recently did a little written piece it hasn't actually gotten published yet where we kind of went back and looked at a lot of the language that we're hearing today about women are not biologically suited to be programmers or women aren't this or women aren't that. And we did this little let's look back historically, and when did women get certain rights, and one of the things that really stood out for us in looking at that was women weren't admitted to all of the premier colleges, Harvard, Yale, whatever, until the 1960s. Which is kind of shocking when you think about it. >> Yeah, it's like yesterday practically. >> The language that was used at the time was almost identical to the language that we're hearing today. Women weren't biologically suited for this, it's really not in the right makeup for them. And yet today, half the students at those schools are women. And women have earned their way there. I just kind of laughingly say it's like deja vu all over again. We've heard all of that. we've heard people tell us you can't do that, you shouldn't do that, no you're not welcome and I think women they're not going to back down. >> It's interesting times too, because the classic gates, the distribution gate, the financing gate, the investment gate, to build companies, to create companies, they've all been broken down and kudos or serendipitously computing is the vehicle that's broken down a lot of those traditional barriers. You used to be, you couldn't start a new company because you had to get into distribution. You couldn't be a writer, there was only a few newspaper editors that controlled everything. That's all completely changed and now ubiquitous distribution, democratization of software, open source, you don't have to raise a bunch of money and buy a bunch of servers. It's so much easier to go out and affect the world and there's no easier way to affect the world than writing a great piece of software. >> Yeah, I think you're spot on on that. There's so much more leverage out there for people that want to start something. I believe that will accrue to the advantage of women. I always end up saying women are going to do great things and then I have to stop myself and say they are doing great things today. I think we've seen that already with some of the keynotes. Fei-Fei Li, and yet you hear her story as an immigrant and as a mother, as an Asian woman. She's had her challenges and she told her personal story not like with a woe is me but with a clear eye towards the things that she had to overcome to get where she was. >> And a lot of hard work, just a flat out a lot of hard work including working at the dry cleaners while she was going to school. >> Yeah, exactly. And yet there she is, one of the leaders in that space and doing incredible things. So I think you're starting to hear more and more about those women. I think they've always been there. I think that we just don't hear as much about them. So, this venue is such a great opportunity for us to hear more of their stories. >> Right, and we learned a lot about that last year with the whole Hidden Figures thing that we had on here as well as the movie and that was again, in the 60's. So we're in October, it's kind of the end the year. As you look forward to 2018, what are some of your priorities for AnitaB.org? I won't put you on the hook to tell us where Grace Hopper will be next year. You can tell us if you want. >> I saw it posted at Pride someplace. >> Is it posted already? >> I saw that and it was like whoa, I didn't know that was in the wild yet. >> But give us kind of a look. What are your priorities for next year? I know AVI Local has been a thing that's been growing over time. What are you kind of looking at as you're doing your 2018 planning? >> As amazing as it is to have 18,000 people here, which just blows our mind, we hope it continues to grow. We also know that no matter how big this conference gets that not everyone will be able to come here for a variety of reasons and so building out the local communities and making it so that, empowering those local communities to have smaller versions of this type of thing and growing this movement to a bigger scale that really encompasses all the women that are out there because even though people here say "Oh, 18,000 women, holy cow" it's a tip of the iceberg. There are thousands and thousands more women out there, we know there are. We really want to find a way to reach every single one of them and bring support and connection and inspiration to every single one of them so that they stay in the field, can achieve their dreams and their highest potential. That will have an impact on them and on the communities they live in. That's really what our focus is. >> Well, Elizabeth, again. Always great to see you. Congratulations on a phenomenal conference. And thank for inviting us to be here. It's really, honestly, one of our favorite places to be. >> We love having you here. I would just end by saying all you people out there, come join us next year. >> There you go. Are you going to tell them where? >> Houston, Texas. >> In Houston. - Back in Houston. >> Good barbecue. Ask me, I'll tell you where to go. Alright, she's Elizabeth Ames. I'm Jeff Frick. You're watching theCUBE from the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing 2017. Thanks for watching. [Upbeat Techno Music]

Published Date : Oct 12 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by SiliconANGLE Media. of the leadership from AnitaB.org on to give us an update that have not been exposed to this show. that the women are really engaged and excited and I said to her, "Do you have any show so that they have some of their senior women that you don't really see at many other conferences. the community at large, you know women that are in the field and that is not the case here, at all. But I think there's nothing but support for one another I'm going to see if I can get her a horse tomorrow And just the biggest heart that you could possibly imagine. So to have that little chip on her shoulder and one of the things that really stood out for us I just kind of laughingly say it's like the investment gate, to build companies, and then I have to stop myself and say And a lot of hard work, just a flat out a lot of hard work I think that we just don't hear as much about them. I won't put you on the hook to tell us where I didn't know that was in the wild yet. What are you kind of looking at that really encompasses all the women It's really, honestly, one of our favorite places to be. We love having you here. Are you going to tell them where? - Back in Houston. Ask me, I'll tell you where to go.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Elizabeth AmesPERSON

0.99+

ElizabethPERSON

0.99+

Jeff FrickPERSON

0.99+

BrendaPERSON

0.99+

AnitaPERSON

0.99+

15 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

OctoberDATE

0.99+

OrlandoLOCATION

0.99+

HoustonLOCATION

0.99+

YaleORGANIZATION

0.99+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

2018DATE

0.99+

TellePERSON

0.99+

HarvardORGANIZATION

0.99+

Chicago Public SchoolsORGANIZATION

0.99+

180 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

140 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

fourth yearQUANTITY

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.99+

AnitaB.orgORGANIZATION

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

tomorrowDATE

0.99+

Houston, TexasLOCATION

0.99+

Orlando, FloridaLOCATION

0.99+

Fei-Fei LiPERSON

0.99+

18,000 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

four yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

a yearQUANTITY

0.99+

18,000 womenQUANTITY

0.99+

SiliconANGLE MediaORGANIZATION

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

Grace HopperPERSON

0.99+

first timeQUANTITY

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

yesterdayDATE

0.98+

last nightDATE

0.98+

2017DATE

0.97+

first dayQUANTITY

0.97+

60'sDATE

0.97+

Orange County Conference CenterLOCATION

0.97+

about 30%QUANTITY

0.96+

about 70%QUANTITY

0.95+

Hidden FiguresTITLE

0.94+

1960sDATE

0.94+

theCUBEORGANIZATION

0.93+

AsianOTHER

0.91+

WorkdayEVENT

0.91+

half the studentsQUANTITY

0.9+

FirstQUANTITY

0.88+

Grace HopperEVENT

0.88+

firstQUANTITY

0.86+

thousands more womenQUANTITY

0.85+

AVI LocalORGANIZATION

0.85+

Celebration of Women in Computing 2017EVENT

0.84+

earlier todayDATE

0.8+

Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in ComputingEVENT

0.78+

AfricanOTHER

0.77+

single opportunityQUANTITY

0.76+

and ProgramsORGANIZATION

0.76+

Celebration of women in computingEVENT

0.73+

AnitaB.orgOTHER

0.69+

GracePERSON

0.64+

singleQUANTITY

0.63+

thingsQUANTITY

0.49+

HopperTITLE

0.48+

PrideORGANIZATION

0.38+

Brian McDaniel, Baylor College of Medicine | Pure Accelerate 2017


 

>> Announcer: Live from San Fransisco It's theCUBE Covering PURE Accelerate 2017. Brought to you by PURESTORAGE. >> Welcome back to PURE Accelerate. This is theCUBE, the leader in live tech coverage. I'm Dave Vellante with my co-host Stu Miniman. This is PURE Accelerate. We're here at Pier 70. Brian McDaniel is here he's an infrastructure architect at the Baylor College of Medicine, not to be confused with Baylor University in Waco Texas, anymore. Brian Welcome to theCUBE. >> Thanks for having me appreciate it. >> You're very welcome. Tell us about the Baylor College of Medicine. >> So, Baylor College of Medicine is a, first and foremost, a teaching facility but also the leader in research and development for healthcare in the Texas Medical Center in Houston Texas. We currently employ roughly 1,500 physicians and so they occupy a multitude of institutions, not only at Baylor but other facilities and hospitals in and around the Texas Medical Center. >> So, it's kind of' healthcare morning here Stu. We've been talking about electronic medical records, meaningful use, the Affordable Care Act, potential changes there, HIPAA, saving lives. These are big issues. >> We're not at the HIMSS Conference Dave? >> We should be at HIMMS. So these are big issues for any organization in healthcare. It's just exacerbates the challenges on IT. So, I wonder if you can talk about some of the drivers in your business, compliance, and in new tech and maybe share with us some of the things that you're seeing. >> Absolutely so first and foremost, we are an Epic system shop. That's our EMR. So, from a enterprise and clinical operation, that is our number one mission critical application. It provides your electronic medical records to our staff, regardless of where they're physically located at. So that alone is a demanding type of solution if you will, the mobility aspect of it. Delivering that in a fast manner and a repeatable manner is upmost important to our physicians because they're actually seeing patients and getting to your records and being able to add notes and collaborate with other institutions if necessary. So, time to market is very important and accessibility is also up there. >> Right so, you mentioned that collaboration and part of that collaboration is so much data now, being able to harness that data and share it. Data explodes everywhere but in healthcare, there's so much data to the extent we start instrumenting things. What are you guys doing with all that data? >> Right now, it lives within the clinical application, right in Epic, but as you pointed out that is where the value is. that is where your crown jewels so to speak are at. That data is now being looked at as a possible access point outside of the clinical operation. So, it's environment is going to be even more important going forward, when you look to branch out into some of the basic sides in more of a research, to gain access to that clinical data. That historically has been problematic for the research to be done accessing that information. >> So, in the corporate we like to think of, from an IT perspective, you got to run the business, you got to grow the business, you got to transform the business. It's a little different in healthcare. You kind of got to comply. A lot of your time is spent on compliance and regulation changes and keeping up with that. And then there's got to be a fair amount that's at least attempting to do transformation and in kind of keeping up with the innovations. Maybe you could talk about that a little bit. >> Absolutely, particularly on the innovation side, we work closely with out partners at Epic and we work to decide roadmaps and how that fits into the Baylor world. Case in point, a year ago we were set to go to the new version of Epic, which was 2015. And Epic is nice enough to lay out requirements for you and say, here's what your system needs to meet in order to comply with Epic standards. So, they give you a seal of approval, so to speak. And there's monetary implications for not meeting those requirements. So it's actually dollars and cents. It's not just , we want you to meet this. If you do then there's advantages to meeting it. So, they provided that to us and went though the normal testing phases and evaluations of our current platform, both from compute and storage. And honestly we struggled to meet their requirements with our legacy systems. So the team was challenged to say well, what can we do to meet this? We have our historical infrastructures, so if we're going to deviate from that, let's really deviate and look at what's available to the market. So, Flash comes to mind immediately. So, there's a multitude of vendors that make Flash storage products. So we started meeting with all of 'em, doing our fact finding and our data gathering, meeting with all of 'em. First and foremost, they have to be Epic certified. That eliminated a couple of contenders right off the bat. Right? You're not certified. >> I would expect some of the startups especially. >> It did. Some of the smaller, Flash vendors, for example, one of 'em came in and we said, well, what do you do with Epic? And they said what's Epic. And you kind of scratch your head and say thank you. >> Thank you for playing. >> Here's the door. So, it eliminates people but then when we meet with PURE, and we talked to them and we meet 'em and you get to really know that the family and the culture that they bring with the technology. Yes it's got to be fast but Flash is going to be fast. What else can you do? And that's where you start learning about how it was born on Flash, how it was native to Flash and so you get added benefits to the infrastructure by looking at that type of technology, which ultimately led us there, where we're at running Epic on our Flash arrays. >> And Brian, you're using the Flash stack configuration of converge infrastructure. It sounds like it was PURE that lead you that way as opposed to Cisco? Could you maybe walk us through that? >> That's very interesting, so we're a UCS shop. We were before PURE. So when PURE came in, the fact that they had a validated design with the Flash stack infrastructure, made it all that more easier to implement the PURE solution because it just is modular enough to fit in with our current infrastructure. That made it very appealing that we didn't have to change or alter much. We just looked at the validated design that says, here's your reference architecture, how it applies to the Flash stack. You already have UCS. We love it, we're a big fan. And here's how to implement it. And it made the time to market, to get production work loads on it, very quick. >> And the CVD that you got from Cisco, that's Cisco plus PURE but was it healthcare Epic specific or was that the PURE had some knowledge for that that they pulled in? >> So, that was one of the value adds that we feel PURE brought was the Epic experience. And whether that's scripting, the backups, and if you're familiar with Epic, the environmental refreshes that they have to do. There's seven Epic environments. And they all have to refresh off of each other and play off of each other so, >> So you have a window that you have to hit right. >> And you do right? And historically that window's been quite large. And now, not so much which makes everybody happy. >> Hey, that's what weekends are for. >> Absolutely, yeah, our DBAs attest to that right? So, we would like to think we've made their world and life a little bit more enjoyable 'cause those weekends now, they're not having to babysit the Epic refreshes. Back to the point of Epic experience, that was instrumental in the decision makings from a support with the PURESTORAGE help desk, awareness of what it takes to run Epic on PURE, and then going forward knowing that there's a partnership behind Epic and PURE and certainly Baylor College of Medicine as we continue to look at the next versions of Epic, whether that's 2018 and on to 2020, whatever that decision is, we know that we have a solid foundation now to grow. >> And Brian I'm curious, you've been a Cisco shop for a while, Cisco has lots of partnerships as well as, they've got a hyper-converged offering that they sell themselves. What was your experience working with Cisco and do they just let you choose and you said, I want PURE and they're like, great? Do you know? What was that like? >> To your point, there's validated designs for many customers and Cisco is kind of at the hub of that, that core with the compute and memory of the blade systems, the UCS. They liked the fact that we went with PURE 'cause it does me a validated design. And they have others with other vendors. The challenge there is how do they really integrate with each other from tools to possibly automation down the road, and how do they truly integrate with each other. 'Cause we did bring in some of the other validated design architecture organizations and I think we did our due diligence and looked at 'em to see how they differentiate between each other. And ultimately, we wanted something that was new and different approach to storage. It wasn't just layering your legacy OS on a bunch of Flash drives and call it good. Something that was natively born to take advantage of that technology. And that's what ultimately led us to PURE. >> Well, PURE has a point of view on the so called hyper-converged space. You heard Scott Dietzen talking this morning. What's your perspective on hyper-convergence? >> Hyper-converge is one of those buzz words that I think gets thrown out of there kind of off the cuff if you will. But people hear it and get excited about it. But what type of workloads are you looking to take advantage of it? Is it truly hyper-converged or is it just something that you can say you're doing because it sounds cool? I think to some degree, people are led astray on the buzzwords of the technology where they get down to say, what's going to take advantage of it? What kind of application are you putting on it? If your application, in our case, can be written by a grad student 20 years ago that a lab is still using, it does it make sense to put it on hyper-converged? No, because it can't take advantage of the architecture or the design. So, in a lot of ways, we're waiting and seeing. And the reason we didn't go to a hyper-converged platform is a, Epic support and b, we were already changing enough to stay comfortable with the environment and knowing that come Monday morning, doctors will be seeing patients and we're already changing enough, that was another layer that we chose not to change. We went with a standard UCS configuration that everyone was already happy with. That made a significant difference from an operational perspective. >> Essentially, your processes are tightly tied to Epic and the workflow associated with that. So from an infrastructure perspective, it sounds like you just don't want it to be in the way. >> We don't. The last thing we want in infrastructure getting in the way. And quite frankly, it was in the way. Whether that was meeting latency requirements or IOPS requirements from the Cache database or the Clarity database within the Epic system, or if was just all of are just taking a little bit longer than they expect. We don't want to be that bottleneck, if you will, we want them to be able to see patients faster, run reports faster, gain access to that valuable data in a much faster way to enable them to go about their business and not have to worry about infrastructure. >> Brian, PURE said that they had, I believe it's like 25 new announcements made this morning, a lot of software features. Curious, is there anything that jumped out at you, that you've been waiting for and anything still on your to do list that you're hoping for PURE or PURE and it's extended ecosystem to deliver for you? >> Great question, so at the top of that list is the replication of the arrays, whether that's in an offsite data center or a colo and how that applies to an Epic environment that has to go through this flux of refreshes, and from a disaster or business continuity standpoint, we're actively pursuing that, and how that's going to fit with Baylor. So, we're very excited to see what our current investment, free of charge by the way, once you do the upgrade to 5.0, is to take advantage of those features, with replication being one of 'em. >> And then, I thought I heard today, Third Sight is a service. Right? So you don't have to install your own infrastructure. So, I'm not sure exactly what that's all about. I got to peel the onion on that one. >> To be determined right? When we look at things like that, particularly with Epic, we have to be careful because that is the HIPAA, PHI, that's your records, yours and mine, medical records right? You just don't want that, if I told you it's going to be hosted in a public cloud. Wait a minute. Where? No it's not. We don't want to be on the 10 o'clock news right? However, there's things like SAP HANA and other enterprise applications that we certainly could look at leveraging that technology. >> Excellent, we listen, thank you very much Brian for coming on theCUBE. We appreciate your perspectives and sort of educating us a little bit on your business and your industry anyway. And have a great rest of the show. >> Yeah, thank you very much. Appreciate it. >> You're welcome. Alright keep it right there everybody. This is theCUBE. We're back live right after this short break from PURE Accelerate 2017. Be right back.

Published Date : Jun 13 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by PURESTORAGE. not to be confused with Baylor University You're very welcome. and so they occupy a multitude of institutions, So, it's kind of' healthcare morning here Stu. So, I wonder if you can talk about some of the drivers and getting to your records and being able to add notes there's so much data to the extent we start for the research to be done accessing that information. and in kind of keeping up with the innovations. And Epic is nice enough to lay out requirements for you And you kind of scratch your head and you get to really know that the family and the culture It sounds like it was PURE that lead you that way And it made the time to market, the environmental refreshes that they have to do. And you do right? and certainly Baylor College of Medicine as we continue and do they just let you choose and you said, They liked the fact that we went with PURE What's your perspective on hyper-convergence? kind of off the cuff if you will. and the workflow associated with that. and not have to worry about infrastructure. or PURE and it's extended ecosystem to deliver for you? and how that applies to an Epic environment So you don't have to install your own infrastructure. because that is the HIPAA, PHI, that's your records, Excellent, we listen, thank you very much Brian Yeah, thank you very much. This is theCUBE.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
BrianPERSON

0.99+

Dave VellantePERSON

0.99+

Brian McDanielPERSON

0.99+

CiscoORGANIZATION

0.99+

Baylor College of MedicineORGANIZATION

0.99+

PUREORGANIZATION

0.99+

2015DATE

0.99+

Scott DietzenPERSON

0.99+

Baylor UniversityORGANIZATION

0.99+

EpicORGANIZATION

0.99+

2020DATE

0.99+

Stu MinimanPERSON

0.99+

Affordable Care ActTITLE

0.99+

2018DATE

0.99+

25 new announcementsQUANTITY

0.99+

Monday morningDATE

0.99+

BaylorORGANIZATION

0.99+

10 o'clockDATE

0.99+

Houston TexasLOCATION

0.99+

a year agoDATE

0.99+

HIPAATITLE

0.99+

Waco TexasLOCATION

0.99+

FirstQUANTITY

0.99+

San FransiscoLOCATION

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

todayDATE

0.98+

theCUBEORGANIZATION

0.98+

Medical CenterORGANIZATION

0.98+

PURE AccelerateORGANIZATION

0.98+

SAP HANATITLE

0.98+

UCSORGANIZATION

0.98+

Pier 70LOCATION

0.97+

FlashTITLE

0.96+

oneQUANTITY

0.96+

firstQUANTITY

0.94+

DavePERSON

0.93+

Third SightORGANIZATION

0.93+

20 years agoDATE

0.93+

HIMMSORGANIZATION

0.89+

this morningDATE

0.88+

1,500 physiciansQUANTITY

0.84+

TexasLOCATION

0.84+

Accelerate 2017COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.84+

PHITITLE

0.82+

Mimi Valdes, Dr. Jeanette Epps, & Christina Deoja, NASA - Grace Hopper Celebration #GHC16 #theCUBE


 

>>Fly from Houston, Texas. It's the cube covering Grace Hopper celebration of women in computing. >>Welcome back to the cubes coverage of the Grace Hopper conference here in Houston, Texas. I am your host, Rebecca Knight. We have a great panel today. Uh, three distinguished guests, Jeanette Epps, an aerospace astronaut. Uh, an engineer at NASA, Mimi Valdez, a executive producer on the film, hidden figures and Christina DOJ who is a, I want to call her a rocket scientist. She will not let me, she's an electrical engineer at, at, at NASA. Thank you so much for joining me. Hey Jeanette. I want to start with you. Um, recently president Obama has said we're gonna put men on Mars, men and women, men and women on Mars. How realistic is that? I mean, it's exciting for the, for the rest of us, non astronauts to hear this is, is it realistic? >>It is realistic. And one of the things I love that he, he did that was that it gives a national initiative to go back to Mars. And so that means that people will get more involved in STEM careers, especially girls will get more involved. And it's kinda like, you know what JFK did back in the 60s to give us that push a goal, an end goal to do something. Great. >>And do you think that, you know, he said by 2030, it's not very long from now. I mean, is it going to happen? I mean, what's, >>well right now a witness is working on is we have the NASA Orion program and it's a, uh, a power light capsule that will be launched off of one of the largest rockets bigger than the Saturn five or as big. And so that the mission of NASA, Orion is to take us beyond low earth orbit and go deeper into space. So we're looking at NASA, Orion, potentially maybe being the ship that will go to Mars and you know, maybe we have more work to do, but all of getting the nation onboard with going to Mars will inspire a new generation to do great things that will help us to get to Mars. Even >>Obama has said he loves science as a kid. That was his favorite subject in school. And do you think that it will have this galvanizing effect of, as you said, making sure more little boys and girls are studying STEM? >>Well, I've seen it already with some of the tweets and different things, questions that kids ask me nowadays. I think every kid has in their heart this goal to go to Mars now. And um, I can't go to a conference or anywhere without, uh, some young child asking about Mars and what, what are, how are we going to get there? When are we going to get there? And you know, I think one of my jobs is to inspire them to get involved in STEM and help us to get to Mars. There's a lot of technology that we need to develop and produce so that we can get astronauts to live longer away from the earth surface. We have the propulsion system that can get them there faster and bring them back home long. Will it take, well, it depends on the propulsion system that we developed. So there's a number of things that we're working on to make sure that what president Obama has said will get us to Mars in the 2030s if it's pushed out to a little later, that's fine. We're working on it and we're, we're going forward with them. >>Mimi, I want to talk to you now about the film hidden figures. Uh, we'll be out in some theaters and Christmas wide release in January. It is the story of black women mathematicians working in the 1960s at NASA. How did you find out about this story? Well, I give credits at Donna gelato, one of the producers on the film who optioned the book when it was a book proposal. So before the book was even written, she optioned this the story, and it's just this amazing story that the world doesn't even know about. We all know about John Glenn's mission. He came back a national hero. It was a moment in history that galvanized the world. You know, America winning the space race. But we don't know the story of all these brilliant mathematicians, all these women who actually will really responsible Katherine Johnson specifically who hand calculated those numbers for his cause. >>Everybody, I mean, I think this is such an amazing thing to do. And, and again, we just don't know her story. And as well as Dorothy Vaughn and Mary Jackson, I mean, so many women that worked at NASA that were just, um, they were hidden. You just don't know their stories. So, so the film tells their story, it tells their, um, it tells what they did, how they helped John Glenn. Did John Glenn appreciate that John Glenn actually would not go into space unless Katherine double checked the numbers. Like he wanted her to actually, you know, he, he, he trusted her because this is when the IBM computers were first coming into NASA. So they had started asserted use that and he was like, Hmm, I, I need Catherine to check the numbers before I go into say they were friends, professional colleagues. I mean he just knew who, you know, obviously she, she was really responsible and sort of that whole mission. >>And, and you know, for him it was just sort of like, eh, these computers thing, this was like a new thing at NASA. He's like, I need a human to make sure that these numbers are right. Right. Yeah. So we're excited about the film. Who's in it? Taraji P Henson plays captain Johnson. Octavia Spencer, please. I'm Dorothy Vaughan and Janell Monae. Um, she's a, uh, a musician. This is sort of her first really big role and she plays Mary Jackson. Kevin Costner is the head of the space station. Um, we have really great actors, but I think what was really important to everyone who participated in the film was everyone understood the importance of the story and wanting to make sure that we got it right. And also, you know, movies are supposed to be entertaining, but when they can be also inspirational and educate in some way, the fact that some young girls somewhere may see this movie and decide to pursue a career in math or science or any of the STEM careers is really gratifying to us because that's what we would love to accomplish. >>You know, Christina, you have been at NASA for nine years. Uh, tell me about your style, how you got, how you got to NASA in the first place. So I've always loved space since I was like a young child. I was in fifth grade when I told my parents that I wanted to work for NASA. So really since that point, like that was, you know, my dream. And so I, you know, pursued the math and science. Those were some of my favorite subjects. Um, luckily I had some supportive parents who really like saw that desire in me and kind of nurtured and encouraged me to, Hey, if that's what you want to do, then you go for it. We'll do whatever we can. Um, and then I came across some NASA opportunities in high school. Um, and one of the programs was the high school aerospace scholars program. >>And in that program I kinda got a glimpse into what it was like to be an engineer, to work at NASA. I got to speak with, you know, fight directors and um, flight controllers. And there's so many people who contribute to the space program. And that experience really solidified my desire to pursue STEM, STEM. Um, so I started to electrical engineering and then from there, um, you know, did the internship at NASA and I've enjoyed my career so far. It's been a, it's been a great experience. And so you work on the jet propulsion system of spaceships. Um, I work Lena. Um, I work on the power systems power systems. So you are, what do you do? So, um, as an electrical engineer on power systems, I work on the design of the power system testing. Um, basically everything on the spacecraft is going to need power. >>So I'm responsible for how I need to provide power, how much, um, when we talk about going to Mars, that's a, that's a long duration mission and power is something that, um, you have to budget for. So we need to advance that technology to support these missions that, um, our administration has said we want to go there. How are y'all going to accomplish this? So there's a lot of um, design hands on work and it's, you know, it's a challenge. But I mean, together as a team, we can, I believe that will, you know, meet that goal and be able to deliver a power system that will take us to Mars. So this is a question for rip for really all of you. You're an astronaut, you were working at NASA, you just made a movie to encourage young women to, to, to, to get into the STEM field. Why is it NASA recruiting here at, at, at Grace Hopper and, and should it be, do not, do you want to take this? >>Well, that's a good question. It's not that I'm mass and I don't, it's not that I don't think NASA has a desire to recruit here. I think there's recruiting times where people come out and do that. But I think I'm, one of the things that we do in the astronaut Corps, we try to go out and attend conferences like that and try to inspire students to be interested in NASA to understand what NASA is doing, to understand, you know, the shuttle retired. But we're still flying. In fact, when I fly to space and hopefully in 2018 I'll fly with the Russians. But in the meantime, NASA's building two shadows that would take astronauts to the international space station and NASA, Orion, that'll take us deeper into space. So we want to try to inspire with our stories and get people interested in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and now even the arts, the arts play a big part of this. The arts play a big part of the well, yeah, I think I'm as a scientist and looking at patterns and things like that, there's a lot of um, people who, um, begin to work in the arts, even if it's building things with their hands and making, sculpting things, painting things. And so there's a lot of artwork that comes into play in science that is >>really refreshing, exciting, count, counterintuitive. I mean, what would you say are the ways we've talked about getting them, getting them interested through, through film. Um, talking about, uh, Obama making this, this grand announcement and Treme, what are some other ways that we can get the next generation into this field? Well, representation is obviously important. I think when people get to see images in the media of these different fields and all the possibilities, I mean every kid on this planet is obsessed with their phone, maybe not realizing like the importance of these STEM careers that are making these phones even possible or even exist. And I think the more that we can expose these careers and all these possibilities, I think it will just be just more beneficial just for humanity in general. I mean, as we know, nothing in this world can exist without math. >>Nothing. So the more that we can sort of encourage young people to see what an incredible career this is in all the possibilities that go into it, I just think we'll be better off as a nation and as a, you know, just globally as a world. Jeanette, I mean, do you have any thoughts about how, what you would advise someone? I mean you started at NASA nine years ago. So I mean, as an engineer I feel like, I mean I am making some contribution, but really the way I feel like I have more impact is through mentoring and you know, participating in those outreach type of activities for, uh, younger students like K through 12. And then also, um, you know, undergraduate like where they're really like trying to figure out what are the career options and STEM. And so that's how I feel I can have an impact there. >>And these movies help because there's a surge of like, like it's inspirational for young students to see this and be like, Oh, I never knew that that was an option. And so we get outreached to NASA, um, our request to, you know, interact with, uh, local schools and communities and kind of, um, you know, do all my lessons or just teaching with them, just talking about kind of like what the career is like. So, um, I mean I hoping that I can contribute in that way for younger, younger people. Janette are, you are an impressive astronaut, but you are also known as a black woman astronaut. Yeah. D do you do, do you bristle at that or do you embrace it? What, what do you, how, what's the responsibility? >>Oh, I totally embrace it. You know, I'm young ladies always ask me, did you have a problem being a black woman and engineering? And I always tell them that, um, I don't have a problem with being a black woman. And if other people do, then that's their problem. I totally embrace it because I'm, one of the things that I didn't realize was that, um, there's still a need to have positive role models and images of yourself. You know, growing up, my mom never taught my twin sister and I that you couldn't do something because you are a female or Brown. But there are a lot of young ladies that actually do experience that. And so having a positive roam out of it, show them that, Hey look, if I can do this, you can do this too. There's no reason you shouldn't be doing this right now yourself. >>So you are a role model. And how do you then also make sure that it's active role modeling and not just sort of standing on a pedestal of. >>One of the things I like to do is like Catherine Johnson and these great ladies that, you know, without them I, you know, I wouldn't be here is you have to do well and you have to perform well. You have to do the same work that your colleagues are doing and don't do less and don't accept less either. And when it comes to the hard work, put in the time, do the work, complete the tasks and make sure you're, you're representing yourself and your group well and you don't want to be accounted as well. You know, she's the one that we've got to help and we've got to do this, but you want to be a contributing member to every group that you're a part of and completing the tasks, doing the same work if not better. I like to say do better work, but you know, you want to be a part of the. >>Yeah. But that puts so much pressure too because it is, it's, it's be a contributor, but also don't mess up because you are under a microscope to some degree because those are, >>you know, messing up isn't, isn't. Um, failure is never, um, should never be. If it's unintentional, that's okay because you always learn from your mistakes and you have to forgive yourself and keep moving forward. If you stop right there because of a failure, um, you wouldn't go anywhere. We all fell. And it's how you respond to it. That matters. >>Yeah. Every failure is an opportunity to learn. And I think, um, you know, yeah. You can't be scared. I mean, the first and foremost is just doing a good job that, cause once, if you're just dedicated and focused on that, then I think great things can happen. And then failure is really a, a buzzword in Silicon Valley too. Right now. It's a fail fast. Um, and this idea, as you were talking about that it's your response to failure that makes a difference. Yeah. And NASA, I became familiar with this famous phrase of failing forward, meaning that yes, you're going to encounter problems, but if you are learning from the, if you're making improvements, you can design something better. So we call it failing forward. And that concept has, I've embraced that comset and it's, you know, I've encountered many failures. I mean, designing new hardware. It's not gonna, you know, work right off the box. And I'm kind of embracing that idea that it's a learning experience. As long as you don't give up as if you're applying what you learned, then that is not a failure. Christina, this is great. Christina DOJ, Mimi Valdez, Jeanette Epps. Thank you so much for joining us today. This has been such a having to be here. I'm not worthy. Thank you. This has been Rebecca Knight live coverage of the Grace Hopper conference here in Houston, Texas. We'll be back after this break.

Published Date : Oct 21 2016

SUMMARY :

It's the cube covering Thank you so much for joining me. And one of the things I love that he, he did that was that it gives a And do you think that, you know, he said by 2030, it's not very long from And so that the mission of NASA, And do you think that it will have this galvanizing effect of, as you said, And you know, Mimi, I want to talk to you now about the film hidden figures. I mean he just knew who, you know, obviously she, she was really responsible And also, you know, movies are supposed to be entertaining, And so I, you know, pursued the math and science. I got to speak with, you know, fight directors and um, together as a team, we can, I believe that will, you know, meet that goal and be to understand, you know, the shuttle retired. I mean, what would you say are And then also, um, you know, undergraduate like where they're outreached to NASA, um, our request to, you know, interact with, And I always tell them that, um, I don't have a problem with being a black woman. And how do you then also make sure that it's active role modeling One of the things I like to do is like Catherine Johnson and these great ladies that, you know, but also don't mess up because you are under a microscope to some degree because those are, And it's how you respond to it. And that concept has, I've embraced that comset and it's, you know,

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
ObamaPERSON

0.99+

Jeanette EppsPERSON

0.99+

Janell MonaePERSON

0.99+

Katherine JohnsonPERSON

0.99+

Rebecca KnightPERSON

0.99+

JeanettePERSON

0.99+

Kevin CostnerPERSON

0.99+

Dorothy VaughanPERSON

0.99+

Mimi ValdezPERSON

0.99+

Mimi ValdesPERSON

0.99+

ChristinaPERSON

0.99+

Octavia SpencerPERSON

0.99+

NASAORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mary JacksonPERSON

0.99+

CatherinePERSON

0.99+

Catherine JohnsonPERSON

0.99+

John GlennPERSON

0.99+

Taraji P HensonPERSON

0.99+

JFKPERSON

0.99+

Dorothy VaughnPERSON

0.99+

JanuaryDATE

0.99+

Christina DOJPERSON

0.99+

MarsLOCATION

0.99+

Christina DeojaPERSON

0.99+

Silicon ValleyLOCATION

0.99+

nine yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

JanettePERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

Houston, TexasLOCATION

0.99+

1960sDATE

0.99+

2030sDATE

0.99+

MimiPERSON

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

2018DATE

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

2030DATE

0.99+

LenaPERSON

0.98+

nine years agoDATE

0.98+

AmericaORGANIZATION

0.98+

presidentPERSON

0.98+

KatherinePERSON

0.98+

fifth gradeQUANTITY

0.98+

Grace HopperEVENT

0.98+

JohnsonPERSON

0.97+

TremePERSON

0.97+

60sDATE

0.97+

Lisa Dugal, PwC Advisory - Grace Hopper 2015 - #GHC15 - #theCUBE


 

from Houston Texas extracting the signal from the noise it's the cute coverage Grace Hopper celebration of women in computing now your host John furrier and Jeff fridge okay welcome back everyone we are here live in Houston Texas for the Grace Hopper celebration of women in computing this is SiliconANGLE media's the cube our flagship program we go out to the events and extract the simla noise i'm john ferry the founder of SiliconANGLE join with Jeff Frick general manager of the cube our next guest is Lisa Dougal who's the chief diversity officer pwc consulting welcome to the cube thank you very much great to see you great to chat with you before we came on we talked about you were at Carnegie Mellon back in the 80s and we just had Eileen big enough for it to it another 80s throwback like me in sheb back to the 80s hot tub time machine whatever you want to call it it's a lot of fun so thanks for spending some time with us oh my pleasure so first what are you working on so that's the first point we've learned that's a good question to ask what are you working on what am i working on so for me personally I do a number of different things right as my role is chief diversity officer I am creating and evolving and implementing programs that help all kinds of diversity in the workplace which ranges from women to minorities to men as well which is one of our big focus areas right as a partner in the practice i'm also a retail consumer partner so I work with retail and consumer clients on transforming their businesses from strategy to execution digital transformations hot right now Adam everything is being automated I mean everything's addressable now Internet of Things creates absolutely % data acquisition it does but I think at the same time it's created such a wealth of I will call it information old school or data its recent project right I think companies are struggling with how do you parse through how do you tell the story how do you figure out a what the data is telling you if you take the consumer industry for one right they've got huge amounts of consumer data now the question is how do you use it how you turn it into innovation one of the things you were mentioning before you came on was that you did a thesis at Carnegie Mellon back in the eighties where you ready to say a computer science major but everyone had the code which great paid back in the 80s and maybe we should reinstitute that across the university I agree I think everything went should coach likes math and sciences to me I think a requisite skill for everybody but you say that these are supposed decision-making using computers now fast forward to today where we were just chatting about for the first time in modern in business history you can actually measure everything so no more excuses if you could actually measure everything right so the question becomes what do you want to measure right yeah so what does that do with a business how does that change and I think it's a combination of measurement which just looks historical and that's important right with predictive and right where the world is going it's predictive analytics behavioral analytics right because that enables us to figure out how we want to change we're only ever looking backwards we had a static point in time yeah and that's informative and you need that and as we talked before you need to be able to parse through the data and decide which is relevant and which is really the lever you want to pull but I think more and more we're seeing companies doing data modeling and data predictive analytics on just about everything right right and Merv Adrian loves to talk about data in motion from gartner and you know it's no longer good enough to have it look at it then decide what you're going to do now really was spark and some of the new technologies you actually have an opportunity to look at the data in motion in a transaction in a retail environment and change change the transaction midstream to hopefully get to a better out absolutely so what you seeing kind of out in the in the world of some of these more advanced retailers and some of the things I think that's happening i think the ability to drop coupons as people walk by the aisle is more and more prevalent right not just any coupon but we know you buy a lot of milk right i think you're going to see more and more price changing based on the consumer i know you you've been into my store you're a loyal customer I'll pop you the milk at this price where somebody else might pay a higher price I think the world is open in terms of how these companies are using not just the data they collect on the product and the technologies but also on you as the individual least I want to get your thoughts on a concept that we've been kind of gleaming out of the data here at Grace Hopper and other events we've been to around women in computing but more importantly also computer science and that there's a lot of different semantics people argue about women versus ladies this versus that there's so many different you know biases mean I'm biased whatever all that stuff's happening but one constant in all this is that these two debt variables transparency and always learning and that seems to be a driver of a lot of change here and you mentioned digital transformation what are you seeing out there that's really driving the opportunities around transparency you can save data access you have data then things are transparent always be learning this new opportunities so those seems to be a big pivot points here at this event here where there's a lot of opportunities there's a subtle conversation of not just the pay thing and the gender equality on pay but opportunities is the big theme we're seeing here absolutely I am really energized by being here right first of all to see so many young women all passionate about technology and computing and really being inserted in the right ways you know I've had women come up to me even on the escalator shake my hand as a hello you're from pricewaterhousecoopers let me ask you what you do during your day right I think in my day a there was no place to go and even if you did you were trying to navigate a very different world and you were trying to perhaps not be you but be somebody else right how do you fit into the man's world I used to watch all sports all weekend so I can make sure I could participate in office conversation when I got in on Monday mornings right I think to hear the conversations that the women are having that are very technology driven but also very much authentic to who they are is where we're going see if you were a young lady in tech now you actually program the fantasy games so that you'd win the game everywhere that's right you could write the code this is but there's a lot of coding a lot of developers here phenomenal growth in develops we just had a young girl just graduated she's phenomenal Natalia and she got into it she started in journalism major and second year in she switched into computer science because she was tinkering with wearables which is terrific right one of the conversations I like to have with our young women about PwC in particular but a lot of parts of the industry the ability to combine industry or sector knowledge with the technology right so I was talking to one women who said well you know I just switched out of pre-med I really like medicine but I got into coding and I simply have you thought about you know the whole arena of the health care industry is dramatically changing right we're moving to the point where we have you know patient information hospital information drug trial information we can integrate all that you could stay with healthcare and still do technology and coding and she's looking at me like she'd never thought about the revelation you said early undulation the old days you try to be someone else try to fit into a man's world but now you're saying you know just the app just follow your passion and this technology behind it interesting enough is also an effect on the men like I had a Facebook post on my flight down here at the Wi-Fi on the plane and i typed in my facebook friends hey real question is a politically incorrect to say I love women in tech I kind of put that out there is kind of a link bait but all sudden the arguments were weighed politically correct love is for versions of love's like argument and wedding Gary deep hey very deep but the one comment was just be yourself and I think I tell our women that all the time and all our people right but i think this the shift to the workplace openness where you can be authentic and i find often are young women in particular get guidance from mentors who are men and they try to emulate that and some of that is good but you have to emulate that while being authentic to who you are otherwise you run that risk of perhaps being perceived in authentic or you know it comes off a little bit too can write what's your best advice to men because one of the things that we seeing is a trend now and certainly is that men inclusion is also into the conversation absolutely big thing we are doing that as a firm both in the US and globally we're a ten-by-ten impact sponsor for he for she which is the UN's initiative with companies governments and not-for-profits to engage men in a conversation about raising awareness around women and for us it's women in the workplace right so there really a couple of things I think men can do one is listen and actively engage with the women and not just women at your level women who are Millennials as well if you can't of not comfortable having that conversation which I know many with women and men both aren't it's hard to put yourself in their shoes right the second is to really be an advocate right think about when you walk into meetings who's not in the room are the people looking all like you what do you do about that right and i think that the third is make it personal you know be involved and know what's going on and know how you could help it seems so simple right when you just lay it out there right those are not complicated concepts but but to put them in practices is you know it takes an active you know kind of thinking about it right to really make it happen to impact change it does and i think more it is natural for people to gravitate to people who are like them particularly in the workspace we get very comfortable in our own let's call them echo chambers and then you move with your echo chamber and your echo chamber might have a little diversity but likely it doesn't have a lot of generational diversity it may or may not have all kinds of racial ethnic gender diversity and so you might meet somebody on the outside who's a little different but you go back to your go tues who are still in your echo chamber so I think the goal is to get into multiple a few echo chambers right also I also comfort zone right i mean people like what's familiar to them and pushing the comfort zone barrier is one issue right now happy young come to be uncomfortable be comfortable and the uncomfortable how is that right what people should look for I mean and everyone has their own struggles and journeys what how did people cope it so I often to have this conversation with methanol how do I talk to women about being women I said well that's probably not the first conversation you should be having right talk to them about who they are and what's important to you and then the relationship you have to build what we call familiarity comfort and trust and once you've built that you can have a conversation perhaps about what a woman's plans are if she's pregnant but you can't just walk in and taught me the for that yeah you can't blurt it out right thank you thanks off at not a walk not a good icebreaker yeah yeah so Lisa you know there's a lot of talk about what's the right thing to do what is right meaning it's the right thing to do in terms of morally and as a human being to include people but really there's there's a bottom line positive impact to there's a better outcome impact and pwc you guys do a lot of analysis you work a lot of companies so there's some studies you can share some some facts or figures that you guys have discovered about how there's really great bottom line better decisions better products better profitability when you have a diverse point of view that you bring to a problem set absolutely there are number of different ways to look at that I think you're right it is the right thing to do the moral thing to do people want to feel good about it but at the end of the day we know that diversity is good for business performance right and there are a number of studies out there that talk about board composition and how you know now bored women on boards has been legislated in enough countries around the world for long enough now you can correlate long-term 10-15 year performance with the performance of those companies and we see that those companies perform better right you can look at just the diversity I mean another angle of looking at it is we do a lot of work with Millennials in the millennial studies right and people coming off a campus are more Geographic gender ethnic minority diverse than any generations we've seen at a very long time right there more women coming off of campus in general than men right now and they're doing very well right so there's also the zero-sum game that says if we don't figure out how to accommodate a track promote retain women then we're not going to be able to get the best of the best of the workforce and you become at a competitive disadvantage well it's quality that's the competitive advantage is the quality that you get with the diversity absolutely how do you manage that process because some would say diversity slows things down because you have different perspectives but the outputs higher quality high equality and more innovation right and one of the things we like to do is talk about diversity and a number of different angles so there's race gender sexual orientation there's also in our business diversity of degrees so we have coders working with mba is working with lawyers doctors strategist and part of that is the way you get the thinking and the most innovative solutions to your problems and I think when you begin to develop and to find it that way there are places for more people to get on the wheel so to speak right everybody is thinking about diversity not just you look different or you experience but you bring a different perspective to the problem because you have a different background where you grow up and what you studied it's just it's just funny that you know in being diverse you're actually leveraging people's biases to get to a better solution absolutely perfect all the way around that's right and i think that there's a movement now and we're really moving from thinking about being equal to thinking about being equitable right equal would say if you have three kids peering over a fence ones four foot ones five-foot 16 foot give them all in one foot box well that's not going to get the forefoot guy over the fence right what you really have to do is give them each a size box that they need right so the six-foot kid probably doesn't need a box at all if it's a five-foot fence right the 5-foot kid might need a little stepstool and the forfeit kid probably needs a large cube right right that's being equitable it's not necessary to me out well based on the outcome based on the album about the objective right versus some statistical equitable correct so I think in business we're moving more to looking at that outcome based heck with biddle equity being equitable across outcomes equitable thank you not just being equal because I think for a long term it was treat everybody the same and that's diversity it's really appreciate everybody for their just as differences and let them play to their strengths right and use the data science tools available Go Daddy put out the survey results of their salaries to you seeing the University of Virginia Professor Brian gave a keynote today about the software that they're building an open source for tooling but the date is going to be key but at the end of the day management drives the outcome objective so I'm Celeste someone at a senior level who's had a good journey from the 80 Eileen big and talk about the same thing you're now at the top of the pyramid the flywheels developing there's some good on in migration with women coming into the field house the balance how's that flywheel working for the mentoring the pipeline in the operational I'd say I give you one example right so we have a women in technology what started as a program it's now a part of our business right we started about two and a half years ago with 30 women who are trying to figure out in technology you give you a long term implementation projects for you know six months a year two years and only operate in the same echo chamber right so how do you network with other women how do you meet them it's now 1400 people strong and one of the pillars of it is a mentorship program we had and it doesn't sound like a lot but see from where you start right increase if we started with needing having about 50 50 women mentored right we're up to hundreds of women being mentored and last time we opened the program we had 150 leaders not just we had other people but leaders sign up within the first few days to mentor the women so in my mind that's success that success reason I didn't need to promise my job good job on your older thank you taking you for that network effect there's an app for that now the network effectors are dynamic now so coming back to the theory of socialization and social theory as you get a network effect going on there's a good social vibe going on talk about that dynamic it's kind of qualitative and then be might be some numbers so save it but talk about that the the network effect of that viral growth if you will I think you sort of have it's now a important and good and rewarded thing to do right but I also think there's a millennial factor there yeah right so what we've been able to see is as our tech women come in off a campus they're beginning to get opportunities that change the game around women in the community right so we brought a number of two-year three-year out women with us and have them help us in the planning of being here all the way from designing our website to putting together the booth to submitting and speaking at so they got speaker slots which gives them amazing exposure with then sentenced that social dynamic in a number of ways right you have them wanting to other people wanting to emulate it you have leaders reaching out to me and say wow we didn't know Emily you know Emily did that that is great right she spoke to 900 people yesterday and so that changes the social landscape acceptable it certainly does it's great amplification so as we wrap here at Lisa I think that's a great segue talk about the Grace Hopper celebration of women in computing it's a very different kind of conference it's a very different kind of feel why is it important to pwc why do you guys invest in this show and you know the example you caves just a great lead into it I think it's for a number of reasons it's a great source of recruits right so so we want to be here we want to meet the young people coming off of campus so maybe we might not meet in our structured campus environment right I think the second is it's a great opportunity for our young women to promote and develop themselves and gain skills that we would never gain I think the third is just to empower our women just like being here and even the emails i'm getting from our women who are not here and our men who are not here the fact that we are here has sort of had a little bit of a viral offensive foam oh you're missing out you're missing out it's an amazing experience it's really helped put in some ways women in technology in a little different league right a lot of the alliances and a lot of the conference's we do are we do 15 major conferences now and we support leadership for women events at all of them but this is one of the few that's not alliance space it's not being at SI p with us AP or being an owl with Oracle which are great things for us to do but this is for the women about the women and the development of the women it's an exciting time and we're excited to document and thanks for spending the time sharing your insights and data and perspective here on the cube well thank you so much John and jeff bennett me having me whereas our pleasure was so inspired so really awesome and if you want to be part of the cube we are hiring looking for women digital scientists data analyst on-air host and we've been shamed a little bit for having an all-male team here I was just gonna ask ya we are looking for powerful strong smart women who want to join the cube we're hiring so contact us offline thanks for watching me right back with more live coverage here in Houston Texas at the Grace Hopper celebration be right back

Published Date : Oct 17 2015

**Summary and Sentiment Analysis are not been shown because of improper transcript**

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
JohnPERSON

0.99+

Lisa DougalPERSON

0.99+

Jeff FrickPERSON

0.99+

Lisa DugalPERSON

0.99+

5-footQUANTITY

0.99+

Carnegie MellonORGANIZATION

0.99+

one footQUANTITY

0.99+

John furrierPERSON

0.99+

EmilyPERSON

0.99+

five-footQUANTITY

0.99+

six-footQUANTITY

0.99+

USLOCATION

0.99+

john ferryPERSON

0.99+

BrianPERSON

0.99+

Jeff fridgePERSON

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

150 leadersQUANTITY

0.99+

16 footQUANTITY

0.99+

three kidsQUANTITY

0.99+

Houston TexasLOCATION

0.99+

900 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

UNORGANIZATION

0.99+

1400 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

GaryPERSON

0.99+

SiliconANGLEORGANIZATION

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

University of VirginiaORGANIZATION

0.99+

80sDATE

0.99+

second yearQUANTITY

0.99+

thirdQUANTITY

0.99+

first timeQUANTITY

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.98+

two-yearQUANTITY

0.98+

gartnerORGANIZATION

0.98+

four footQUANTITY

0.98+

eightiesDATE

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

2015DATE

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

first pointQUANTITY

0.97+

first conversationQUANTITY

0.97+

jeff bennettPERSON

0.97+

30 womenQUANTITY

0.97+

NataliaPERSON

0.97+

secondQUANTITY

0.97+

EileenPERSON

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.97+

Merv AdrianPERSON

0.96+

15 major conferencesQUANTITY

0.96+

CelestePERSON

0.96+

AdamPERSON

0.96+

one commentQUANTITY

0.96+

one issueQUANTITY

0.96+

about 50 50 womenQUANTITY

0.96+

Monday morningsDATE

0.96+

hundreds of womenQUANTITY

0.96+

one exampleQUANTITY

0.95+

methanolPERSON

0.95+

ProfessorPERSON

0.94+

six months a yearQUANTITY

0.93+

three-yearQUANTITY

0.92+

ten-by-QUANTITY

0.9+

two yearsQUANTITY

0.89+

firstQUANTITY

0.88+

#GHC15EVENT

0.88+

one womenQUANTITY

0.88+

FacebookORGANIZATION

0.88+

eachQUANTITY

0.88+

Grace HopperPERSON

0.88+

10-15 yearQUANTITY

0.87+

a lot of developersQUANTITY

0.87+

APORGANIZATION

0.86+

facebookORGANIZATION

0.86+

about two and a half years agoDATE

0.84+

a lot of milkQUANTITY

0.83+

Grace HopperORGANIZATION

0.79+

first few daysQUANTITY

0.78+

PwC AdvisoryORGANIZATION

0.77+