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Armando Ortiz, IBM | IBM Think 2019


 

>> Live from San Francisco, it's theCUBE! Covering IBM Think 2019, brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back to intermittently sunny San Francisco, this is theCUBE, the leader in live tech coverage. We're here at day four at IBM Think. My name is Dave Vellante. I am here with Stu Miniman. John Furrier is also here. Wall to wall coverage Stu. The second Think, first big show really of the year at Moscone. The new Moscone, Armando Ortiz is here. He is the vice president and partner from Mobile & Extended Reality Leader at IBM iX. An interesting part of IBM that you may not know about. Armando, welcome to theCUBE, thanks for coming on. >> Thanks for having me. >> So tell us a little bit about iX. >> So IBM iX is a part of IBM services. We focus on user experiences, whether it's a consumer experience or an employee experience. And the we look at user experience it really kind of sticks together and allow you to unlock the value of all the technology investments that companies are making. >> So, you guys are not making headsets, or are you? >> No we don't make hardware, we just put hardware to work. >> So talk a little bit about the sort of state of whether its augmented reality or extended reality. Lay out the terminology for us if you would. >> Sure, sure. As part of the role I have I lead our mobile practice as well as the extended reality practice and this kind of all related together. We use the term extended reality to kind of encompass all of the different technologies along that spectrum from augmented reality to mixed reality to virtual reality. Of course there are a lot of technologies whether it's the glasses on your face like the wearables or it's in your hand as a lot of mobile platforms today like Apple's ARKit and Google's ARCore allow you to have AR experienced within your mobile apps. >> Yeah, I wonder if you can expand a little bit on that? We're all ready for the role out of 5G and that's going, holds the promise at least for a lot more band width and a lot more applications and that's one of the lynch pins we understand kind of make your world more of a reality. When do we see that role out? What devices are going to happen? You got a preview of the next iPhone for us? >> I certainly don't have a preview of the next iPhone, even though I do lead the Apple partnership for us in North America, the Apple IBM partnership. When you look at 5G, obviously some of the use cases for extended reality in enterprise are around field services and 5G will have an amazing impact on the ability. Not only because of the band width but also the low latency that you have for 5G. So we're excited to see that role out in the different markets around the world and you know the pilots and things that are starting this year. There are going to be a lot of great devices and I think for handsets all the way to the wearables. It'll really allow us to put more use cases on these devices. >> Can you walk us through some of those use cases? Any specific customer examples you have that may make our audience understand a little bit more what's really available today. Sure, I mean in the XR space or in the extended reality space there's a lot that we learned through what we've done in mobile for years. I mean, even our Apple partnership for the past five years and things we've done across the 16 industries we work on. But the initial sort of wave one use cases that we're really seeing today kind of follow along these categories of work related use cases that are like in field services, training related use cases that go all the way from virtual reality immersive training like teaching someone how to do something in a dangerous situation where you want to simulate that. All the way to on the job sort of training and step-by-step guidance that you can get with AR. Step one attach the cable here. Step two, check this over here. Those kind of use cases and then into use cases related to shopping and retail. If you look at what augmented reality is going to do for shopping and retail allow people to assess sort of fit and purpose of something they want to buy. Does it fit in my home? Does it fit in my life? And then also even in the stores as people in retail sort of navigate a store they can use AR to help understand. Add all that metadata to the in store experience that we're gotten used to in our online experiences. And the last broad category we sort of call it share ideas or sharing of ideas, which kind of expands the game from collaboration to even having AR brochures and augmented realty tools to help people understand a product or a service that you're offering. Imagine that we can just kind of expand a piece of equipment here on the table, walk through it and help understand how that piece of equipment is going to help your business. >> You're giving me flashbacks. I remember IBM had a huge initiative in like Second Life and it was like come build an island and we're going to do recruiting and things like that. So, tell us why this generation is, going to be better for business and not have everyone put some money in and have it stolen by you know. >> Not as goofy. >> It's funny you should ask that, the Second Life topic actually came up with someone I was speaking to yesterday. It's come up before. I think there is a significant difference between what Second Life was trying to be and what extended reality is going to be and it already is. I mean when you look at extended reality today, I think one important thing to think about this is not future tech, this is not some sort of dream of sort of Ready Player One type of situation. But more, it's looking at real enterprise use cases that are already driving a value; time savings on inspections, productivity enhancements for people assembling, consistency and increase safety. All the key performance indicators and value drivers we have for mobile. So there's a real path to business value and the uses are much clearer than it might have been in the days of Second Life. >> Less mistakes, less rework. Armando, what kind of infrastructure would a consumer need? You gave the example of retail for instance, what kind of infrastructure would I need? Am I just, is it just my mobile home? Am I going to wear headsets, what does that look like? >> So when we talk about extended reality, we tend to keep one foot in today and one foot in the future cause its changing so fast. When you talk about retail there is a sale associate side of things that might be helping you decide an automotive. Maybe you're looking at configuring a car right in front of you or in a retail store maybe you're looking to look at a piece of furniture or something that's not on the show room floor. Now those experiences can start today with tablets and iPhones and other devices. But we see also as well devices that people be wearing wearables that are available today and that trend moving that glass kind of from your hand to your face is going to be something that is really going to be accelerated. >> So, this is maybe how a piece of clothing will fit or what a couch might look like in a particular room, is that right? >> Yeah. >> And you would envision that people will purchase this infrastructure for a variety of uses. Not only to see how things look but maybe there's gaming. So it's a multi-use kind of environment or not necessarily? Is it more specialized to use it? >> No absolutely, it's important, it's a good thing that you brought up sort of gaming as well. Because, obviously we all know that gaming has been kind of at the fore front for virtual reality but when you look at gaming and entertainment those are also going to include many use cases. When we look at the enterprise side we're kind of focused on those other wave one use cases. But I also expect in the sort of share ideas category I spoke of marketing and sales activities will also include AR experienced to help people understand the product or service that you're positioning. >> What's the state of adoption? We always joke about google glass. Remember the movie The Jerk with the Opti-Grab and the guy was cross-eyed? So that didn't take off but what's the state of hardware and hardware adoption today? >> So I think what's unique about this technology and what's happening now, the technology we already all have in our hands on our mobile phones is already there and that's where you're going to see it happen first. I think the numbers by next year are like 3.4 billion phones will have an AR capability so the technology is already with us. The next sort of technology set that we're talking about is getting to the wearables and of course we see things today in the VR space that's much more available in the consumer side, things like the oculus go. In the enterprise space you also have headsets from many manufacturers that maybe grew up doing things in the military that are now more commercially available. Things like someone trying to repair something that needs to be hand free. We're seeing those technologies readily available in the enterprise. >> Tell about how AI fits into this new world? >> That's a great question. If you think about it its really kind of a really great combination. You take XR, extended reality, so whether its AR or VR and you add AI to it you can kind of give AI the ability to kind of enter the 3D space. So as you think about AI solutions that we had in the mobile world where you might be using AI to solve a problem, diagnose a problem, visual diagnostics, acoustic detection AI can kind of give sort of super powers to an employee. At the same time we see that the experiences that we have in the extended reality space get really enhanced because you now have the ability to democratize expertize with AI. You take all of the expertize of your organization and that one technician whose only been there for 10 days now has the power of your entire collective knowledge. >> What about privacy? Anytime you hear some of these and I think about you can have wearables out there, there is concern about you know with facial recognition is going to be everywhere my privacy is going to be invaded. What's IBM positioning? Where does that fit in this whole environment? >> Of course we take privacy very seriously. When we talk about our AI and Watson you know your data is your data. If you look at some of the things, I mean, you'll make decisions, enterprises will make decisions on the same way they do with mobile devices. Is it okay to have a camera in this environment? And if I do have a camera in this environment, what's my cloud strategy and where am I going to host this data to make sure that I have not just privacy but also IP concerns, considered? All of the same things we've learned in the mobile world are going to apply to this and it'll get even a little more important as you think of the different types of sensors that are required to make these experiences happen. >> I wonder if you could help us understand about the pre-requisites to do things like technician actually trouble shooting a problem. Many of us have seen, we put on the glasses you walk around a show floor and you look at a new system or something and its really very cool. You can look inside and inspect the different layers. What has to be done, I'm inferring from what you're saying that a technician would be able to inspect live, real time a device and identify problems on that device. So what has be done? It has to be instrumented? It has to have cameras installed? What does the infrastructure build out look like? >> Sure, when you look at. Lets take the technician scenario for a moment and unpack that. When you look at that there are a couple of things that are already happening like a lot of major pieces of equipment are instrumented. So you have the internet of things data, sort of the data streams coming off of that. How do you make that available to that technician in the moment, sort of the vital signs of that piece of equipment that you might be operating on? So, having all that information like temperature and all the things from an IOT perspective, that's one angle of it. The other side of it really is when you think of failure of equipment usually at some point there's a situation that technician may not have encountered before but maybe someone else has. Maybe you've already had a bunch of closed tickets on that three years ago. So having all that information available and using cognitive processing to kind of navigate that unstructured data, that will let you navigate that. Voice will be part of this interface as well. I think voice is an important part because you're going to be hands free and you're going to be having a dialogue with Watson, let's say to help diagnose a problem. >> How about healthcare? It's not something we've really talked about a lot. Just in terms of applications, whether its for the operating room of the future, remote guidance from doctor, training. Do you see those kind of use cases emerging? >> Yeah absolutely, all the way from training through execution of surgery and other things. This is where the 5G topic really comes into play because low latency is really required if you're talking about surgery and things like that. >> Give me a few minutes. >> You get that round trip of that signal going back and forth. I think when you think about the VR side of things for training is immensely powerful. The AR side for during execution of procedures will also be powerful as well and it comes back to that general theme od democratizing expertize. One expert that's physically on this part of the world can serve many people that need their services around the world. >> It sounds like there are a lot of uncertainties in terms of how this is going to evolve. First of all od the a fair statement? Given that, not withstanding that can you give us a sense of expectations for how it will evolve and the adoption levels that you expect over the next two to five years. >> Five years is a long horizon for this technology. >> Too long, too long perhaps so what's more fair, 18 months? >> Lets talk more immediate. I think when you look at, there may be some uncertainty in terms of which use cases will drive the most value but there are already many use cases that companies are probably sharing information out. Like some companies, especially inspection use cases, you know there is a company that published 96% savings on time because really you are using AR to document. Okay inspect this point, this point, this point, this point. Assembly use cases, diagnostics with AI and AR are working together. All of these are already happening, so what I think is going to happen is enterprises are going to be able to more and more easily justify the spend to make these investments because the RY is rapid. Just like the RY in mobile was rapid for enterprise, the RY in XR will be extremely rapid. >> Armando for people who didn't come to IBM Think, give them a little taste of what they missed from an iX stand point. Some of the conversations that you've been having. >> Yeah, when we look at, I mean iX across the IBM Think we've had a lot of conversations and a lot of sessions around how experience is really driving the business value and also around marketing technologies and marketing services and all of the things that relate to experience on the consumer side and the employee side. We're really enjoyed some great show casing of our client stories and the works we've done. Everything from mobile to commerce to marketing platforms to sales floors across everything we do in the IBM services part that we're in. >> How long has this been around? >> IBM iX? >> Yeah. >> IBM iX has been a part of IBM originally since the 96 Olympics in Atlanta. I've been with IBM about 25 years and this space is kind of like really evolved in terms of the position of user experience and design. IBM has become really a design focused company and you look at enterprise design thinking in everything we do so this is really a part of our business that's really become focal point as companies start thinking more about design. >> Wow, it's been a long time but it's certainly not mature but it's a revenue generating business obviously. >> Yeah and a very high growth part of the company. >> Awesome, well Armando thanks so much for sharing this part of IBM that's not well known. Really exciting futures and I really appreciate you coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you very much, I appreciate being here. >> Alright, keep it right there everyone. Stu and I will be back. Day four, IBM Think, we're at Moscone. Stop by, we're at Moscone North. I'm Dave Vellante, Stu Miniman and John Furrier is here. We'll be right back, you're watching theCUBE. (techno music)

Published Date : Feb 14 2019

SUMMARY :

Covering IBM Think 2019, brought to you by IBM. An interesting part of IBM that you may not know about. And the we look at user experience it really kind of sticks Lay out the terminology for us if you would. all of the different technologies along that spectrum of the lynch pins we understand kind of make markets around the world and you know the pilots and step-by-step guidance that you can get with AR. put some money in and have it stolen by you know. I mean when you look at extended reality today, You gave the example of retail for instance, of you or in a retail store maybe you're looking to look And you would envision that people will purchase But I also expect in the sort of share ideas category and the guy was cross-eyed? In the enterprise space you also have headsets from the mobile world where you might be using AI to solve Anytime you hear some of these and I think about you can All of the same things we've learned in the mobile world the pre-requisites to do things like technician of that piece of equipment that you might be operating on? room of the future, remote guidance from doctor, training. Yeah absolutely, all the way from training through I think when you think about the VR side of things First of all od the a fair statement? and more easily justify the spend to make Some of the conversations that you've been having. services and all of the things that relate to experience is kind of like really evolved in terms of the position Wow, it's been a long time but it's certainly not mature appreciate you coming on theCUBE. Stu and I will be back.

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Brian Shield, Boston Red Sox | Acronis Global Cyber Summit 2019


 

>> Announcer: From Miami Beach, Florida, it's The Cube, covering Acronis Global Cyber Summit 2019. Brought to you by Acronis. >> Welcome back everyone. We are here with The Cube coverage for two days. We're wrapping up, getting down on day one in the books for the Acronis Global Cyber Summit 2019. I'm John Furrier, your host of The Cube. We are in Miami Beach, the Fontainebleau Hotel. I'm personally excited for this next guest because I'm a huge Red Sox fan, even though I got moved out to California. Giants is in a different area. National League is different than American League, still my heart with the Red Sox. And we're here with an industry veteran, seasoned professional in IT and data, Brian Shield. Boston Red Sox Vice President of Technology and IT. Welcome to The Cube, thanks for joining us. >> Thank you. It's great to be here. >> John: So congratulations on the rings. Since I moved out of town, Red sox win their World Series, break the curse of the Bambino. >> Hey we appreciate that. Thank you. >> My family doesn't want me back. You got to show >> Yeah, maybe I'll put this one up for the, maybe someone can zoom in on this. Which camera is the good one? This one here? So, there ya go. So, World Series champs for at least for another week. (laughter) >> Bummer about this year. Pitching just couldn't get it done. But, good team. >> Happens. >> Again, things move on, but you know. New regime, new GM going to come on board. >> Yup. >> So, but in general, Red Sox, storied franchise. Love it there. Fenway Park, the cathedral of baseball parks. >> Brian: Defnitely. >> And you're seeing that just play out now, standard. So just a great place to go. We have tickets there. So, I got to ask you. Technology, sports, really is modernized faster than I think any category. And certainly cyber security forced to modernize because of the threats. But sports, you got a business to run, not just IT and making the planes run on time. >> Sure. >> Scouts, money, whatever. >> Fans. >> You got fan experience. >> Stadium opportunities. >> Club management, scouts are out there. So you got business, team, fans. And data's a big part of it. That's part of your career. Tell us what the cutting edge innovation is at the Red Sox these days. >> I think baseball in general, as you indicated, it's a very evolving kind of environment. I mean historically I think people really sort of relish the nostalgia of sports and Fenway Park being as historic as it is, was probably the pinnacle of that, in some respects. But Red Sox have always been leaders and baseball analytics, you know. And everyone's pretty familiar with "Moneyball" and Brad Pitt. >> John: Is that a true story, he turned down the GM job? >> I'm told it is. (laughter) I don't know if I fully vetted that question. But over the last six, seven years, you know we've really turned our attention to sort of leveraging sort of technology across the businesses, right? Not just baseball and analytics and how we do scouting, which continues to evolve at a very rapid pace. But also as you pointed out, running a better business, understanding our fans, understanding fan behavior, understanding stadiums. There's a lot of challenges around running an effective stadium. First and foremost to all of us is really ensuring it's a great fan experience. Whether it's artificial intelligence, or IoT technologies or 5G or the latest Wifi, all those things are coming up at Fenway Park. You and I talked earlier about we're about to break ground for a new theater, so a live theater on the outside, beyond the bleachers type of thing. So that'll be a 5,400-seat arena, 200 live performances a year, and with e-sports, you know, complementing it. It just gives you an example of just how fast baseball is sort of transitioning. >> And the theater, is that going to be blown out from where that parking garage is, structure and going towards >> So the corner of Landsdown and Ipswich, if you think of that sort of corner back there, for those that are familiar with the Fenway area. So it's going to be a very big change and you'll see the difference too from within the ballpark. I think we'll lose a couple of rows of the bleachers. That'll be replaced with another gathering area for fans and things like that, on the back end of that theater. So build a great experience and I think it really speaks to sort of our ability to think of Fenway as more of a destination, as a venue, as a complementary experience. We want people to come to the area to enjoy sports and to enjoy entertainment and things. >> You know Brian, the consumerization of IT has been kicked around. Last decade, that was a big buzzword. Now the blending of a physical event and digital has certainly consumed the world. >> Absolutely. >> And we're starting to see that dynamic. You speak to a theater. That's a physical space. But digital is also a big part of kind of that complementary. It's not mutually exclusive for each other. They're integrated business models. >> Absolutely. >> So therefore, the technology has to be seamless. The data has to be available. >> Yup. >> And it's got to be secure. >> Well the data's got to be ubiquitous, right? I mean you don't want to, if we're going to have fans attending theater and then you're going to go to Fenway Park or they leave a game and then go to some other event or they attend a tour of Fenway Park, and beyond maybe the traditional what people might think about, is certainly when you think about baseball and Fenway Park. You know we have ten to twelve concerts a year. We'll host Spartan games, you know. This Christmas, I'm sorry, Christmas 2020 we now have sort of the Fenway Bowl. So we'll be hosting the AAC ACC championship games there with ESPN. >> John: Hockey games? >> Hockey games. Obviously we have Liverpool soccer being held there so it's much more of a destination, a venue for us. How we leverage all the wonderful things about Fenway Park and how we modernize, how we get basically the best of what makes Fenway Park as great as it is, yet as modern as we can make it, where appropriate to create a great fan experience. >> It's a tough balance between balancing the brand and having things on brand as well. >> Sure. >> Does that come into your job a lot around IT? Saying being on brand, not kind of tearing down the old. >> Yeah absolutely. I think our CEOs and leadership team, I mean it's not success for us if you pan to the audience and everyone is looking at their phone, right? That's not what we aspire to. We aspire to leverage technology to simplify people's experience of how do you get to the ballpark, how do I park, how do I get if I want to buy concessions or merchandise, how do I do it easily and simply? How do we supplement that experience with maybe additional data that you may not have had before. Things like that, so we're doing a lot of different testing right now whether it's 4D technologies or how we can understand, watch a play from different dimensions or AI and be able to perhaps see sort of the skyline of Boston since 1912, when Fenway Park launched... And so we sort of see all these technologies as supplemental materials, really kind of making it a holistic experience for fans. >> In Las Vegas, they have a section of Las Vegas where they have all their test beds. 5G, they call it 5G, it's really, you know, evolution, fake 5G but it's a sandbox. One of the challenges that you guys have in Boston, I know from a constraint standpoint physically, you don't have a lot of space. How do you sandbox new technologies and what are some of the things that are cool that people might not know about that are being sandboxed? So, one, how do you do it? >> Yeah. >> Effectively. And then what are some of the cool things that you guys are looking at or things they might not know about that would be interesting. >> Sure. Yeah so Fenway Park, we struggle as you know, a little bit with our footprint. You know, honestly, I walk into some of these large stadiums and I get instant jealousy, relative to just the amount of space that people have to work with and things. But we have a great relationship with our partners so we really partner, I think, particularly well with key partners like Verizon and others. So we now have 5G partially implemented at Fenway Park. We expect to have it sort of fully live come opening day next year. So we're really excited about that. We hope to have a new version of Wifi, the latest version of Wifi available, for the second half of the year. After the All-Star Break, probably after the season's over. But before our bowl game hopefully. We're looking at some really interesting ways that we can tease that out. That bowl game, we're really trying to use that as an opportunity, the Fenway Bowl, as an opportunity to make it kind of a high-tech bowl. So we're looking at ways of maybe doing everything from hack-a-thons to a pre-egaming sort of event to some interesting fan experiential opportunities and things like that. >> Got a lot of nerds at MIT, Northeastern, BU, Bentley, Babson, all the schools in the area. >> Yeah, so we'll be reaching out to colleges and we'll be reaching out to our, the ACC and AACs as well, and see what we can do to kind of create sort of a really fun experience and capitalize on the evolving role of e-sports and the role that technology can play in the future. >> I want to get to the e-sports in a second but I want to just get the plug in for Acronis. We're here at their Global Cyber Summit. You flew down for it, giving some keynote speeches and talks around security. It's a security company, data protection, to cyber protection. It is a data problem, not a storage appliance problem. It's a data problem holistically. You get that. >> Sure. Sure. >> You've been in the business for a long time. What is the security kind of posture that you guys have? Obviously you want to protect the data, protect privacy. But you got to business. You have people that work with you, supply chain, complex but yet dynamic, always on environment. >> That's a great question. It's evolving as you indicated. Major League Baseball, first and foremost, does an outstanding job. So the last, probably last four plus years, Major League Baseball has had a cyber security program that all the clubs partake in. So all 30 clubs are active participants in the program. They basically help build out a suite of tools as well as the ability to kind of monitor, help participate in the monitoring, sort of a lot of our cyber security assets and logs And that's really elevated significantly our posture in terms of security. We supplement that quite a bit and a good example of that is like Acronis. Acronis, for us, represents the ability for us to be able to respond to certain potential threats like ransom-ware and other things. As well as frankly, what's wonderful about a tool like this is that it allows us to also solve other problems. Making our scouts more efficient. We've got these 125 scouts scattered around the globe. These guys are the lifeblood of our, you know, the success of our business. When they have a problem, if they're in Venezuela or the Dominican or someplace else, in southeast Asia, getting them up and running as quickly as we can, being able to consume their video assets and other things as they're scouting prospects. We use Acronis for those solutions. It's great to kind of have a partner who can both double down as a cyber partner as well as someone who helps drive a more efficient business. >> People bring their phone into the stadiums too so those are end points now connecting to your network. >> Definitely. And as you pointed out before, we've got great partnerships. We've got a great concession relationship with Aramark and they operate, in the future they'll be operating off our infrastructure. So we're in the point of rolling out all new point-of-sale terminals this off-season. We're excited about that 'cause we think for the first time it really allows us to build a very comprehensive, very secure environment for both ourselves and for all the touchpoints to fans. >> You have a very stellar career. I noticed you were at Scudder Investments back in the '80s, very cutting-edge firm. FTD that set the whole standard for connecting retailers. Again, huge scale play. Can see the data kind of coming out, they way you've been a CIO, CTO. The EVP CIO at The Weather Channel and the weather.com again, first mover, kind of pioneer. And then now the Red Sox, pioneering. So I got to ask you the modernization question. Red Sox certainly have been cutting-edge, certainly under the last few owners, and the previous Henry is a good one, doing more and more, Has the business model of baseball evolved, 'cause you guys a franchise. >> Sure. >> You operate under the franchisor, Major League Baseball, and you have jurisdictions. So has digital blurred the lines between what Advanced Media unit can do. You got communities developing outside. I watch the games in California. I'm not in there but I'm present digitally. >> Sure. Sure. >> So how has the business model flexed with the innovation of baseball? >> That's a great question. So I mean, first off, the relationship between clubs like ours and MLB continue to evolve. We have a new commissioner, relatively new commissioner, and I think the whole one-baseball model that he's been promoting I think has been great. The boundaries sometimes between digital assets and how we innovate and things like that continues to evolve. Major League Baseball and technology groups and product groups that support Major League Baseball have been a fantastic partner of ours. If you look at some of the innovations with Statcast and some of the other types of things that fans are now becoming more familiar with. And when they see how fast a runner goes or how far a home run goes and all those sort of things, these kinds of capabilities are on the surface, but even like mobile applications, to make it easy for fans to come into ballparks and things like that really. What we see is really are platforms for the future touchpoints to all of our customers. But you're right, it gets complicated. Streaming videos and people hadn't thought of before. >> Latin America, huge audience for the Red Sox. Got great players down there. That's outside the jurisdiction, I think, of the franchise agreement, isn't it? (laughs) >> Well, it's complicated. As this past summer, we played two games in England, right? So we enjoy two games in London, sadly we lost to the Yankees in both of those, but amazing experience and Major League Baseball really hats off to those guys, what they did to kind of pull that together. >> You mentioned Statcast. Every year when I meet with Andy Jassy at AWS, he's a sports fan. We love to talk sports. That's a huge, kind of shows the power of data and cloud computing. >> No doubt. >> How do you guys interface with Statcast? Is that an Amazon thing? Do they come to you? Are they leveraging dimensions, camera angles? How does that all work? Are you guys involved in that or? >> Brian: Oh yeah, yeah. >> Is that separate? >> So Statcast is just one of many data feeds as you can imagine. One of the things that Major League Baseball does is all that type of data is readily available to every club. So every club has access to the data. The real competitive differentiator, if you will, is how you use it internally. Like how your analysts can consume that data. We have a baseball system we call Beacon. We retired Carmine, if you're familiar with the old days of Carmine. So we retired Carmine a few years ago with Beacon. And Beacon for us represents sort of our opportunity to effectively collapse all this information into a decision-making environment that allows us to hopefully to kind of make the best decisions to win the most games. >> I love that you're answering all these questions. I really appreciate it. The one I really want to get into is obviously the fan experience. We talked about that. No talent on the field means no World Series so you got to always be constantly replenishing the talent pool, farm system, recruiting, scouting, all these things go on. They're instrumental. Data's a key driver. What new innovations that the casual fan or IT person might be interested in what's going on around scouting and understanding the asset of a human being? >> Right. Sure. I mean some of this gets highly confidential and things, but I think at a macro level, as you start to see both in the minor leagues and in some portions of the major leagues, wearable technologies. I think beyond just sort of player performance information that you would see traditionally with you might associate it with like Billy Beane, and things like that with "Moneyball" which is evolved obviously considerably since those days. I mean understanding sort of player wellness, understanding sort of how to get the most out of a player and understanding sort of, be able to kind of predict potential injuries and accelerate recoveries and being able to use all of this technology where appropriate to really kind of help sort of maximize the value of player performance. I mean, David Ortiz, you know, I don't know where we would have been in 2018 without, you know, David. >> John: Yeah. >> But like, you know >> Longevity of a player. >> Absolutely. >> To when they're in the zone. You wear a ring now to tell you if you're sleeping well. Will managers have a visual, in-the-zone, don't pull 'em out, he can go an extra inning? >> Well, I mean they have a lot of data. We currently don't provide all that data to the clubhouse. I mean, you know, and so If you're in the dugout, that information isn't always readily available type of thing. But players know all this information. We continue to evolve it. At the end of the day though, it's finding the balancing act between data and the aptitudes of our coaching staff and our managers to really make the wise decisions. >> Brian, final question for you. What's the coolest thing you're working on right now? Besides the fan having a great experience, 'cause that's you kind of touched on that. What's the coolest thing that you're excited about that you're working on from a tech perspective that you think is going to be game-changing or interesting? >> I think our cloud strategy coming up in the future. It's still a little bit early stage, but our hope would be to kind of have clarity about that in the next couple months. I think is going to be a game-changer for us. I think having, you know, we enjoy a great relationship with Dell EMC and yet we also do work in the cloud and so being able to leverage the best of both of those to be able to kind of create sort of a compelling experience for both fans, for both player, baseball operations as well as sort of running an efficient business, I think is really what we're all about. >> I mean you guys are the poster child for hybrid cloud because you got core, data center, IoT, and >> No doubt. So it's exciting times. And we're very fortunate that with our relationship organizations like Dell and EMC, we have leading-edge technologies. So we're excited about where that can go and kind of what that can mean. It'll be a big step. >> Okay two personal questions from me as a fan. One is there really a money-counting room like in the movie "The Town"? Where they count a big stack of dollar bills. >> Well, I'm sure there is. I personally haven't visited it. (laughs) I know it's not in the room that they would tell you it is on the movie. (laughter) >> And finally, can The Cube get press passes to cover the games, next to NESN? Talk tech. >> Yeah, we'll see what we can do. >> They can talk baseball. We can talk about bandwidth. Right now, it's the level five conductivity. We're looking good on the pipes. >> Yeah we'll give you a tech tour. And you guys can sort of help us articulate all that to the fans. >> Thank you so much. Brian Shield, Vice President of Technology of the Boston Red Sox. Here talking about security and also the complications and challenges but the mega-opportunities around what digital and fan experiences are with the physical product like baseball, encapsulates kind of the digital revolution that's happening. So keep covering it. Here in Miami, I'm John Furrier. We'll be right back after this short break. (techno music)

Published Date : Oct 15 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Acronis. We are in Miami Beach, the Fontainebleau Hotel. It's great to be here. John: So congratulations on the rings. Hey we appreciate that. You got to show Which camera is the good one? Bummer about this year. Again, things move on, but you know. Fenway Park, the cathedral of baseball parks. because of the threats. So you got business, team, fans. sort of relish the nostalgia of sports But over the last six, seven years, you know and I think it really speaks to sort of and digital has certainly consumed the world. You speak to a theater. So therefore, the technology has to be seamless. Well the data's got to be ubiquitous, right? about Fenway Park and how we modernize, and having things on brand as well. Saying being on brand, not kind of tearing down the old. that you may not have had before. One of the challenges that you guys have in Boston, that you guys are looking at Yeah so Fenway Park, we struggle as you know, Bentley, Babson, all the schools in the area. and the role that technology can play in the future. to cyber protection. What is the security kind of posture that you guys have? These guys are the lifeblood of our, you know, so those are end points now connecting to your network. for both ourselves and for all the touchpoints to fans. So I got to ask you the modernization question. So has digital blurred the lines So I mean, first off, the relationship of the franchise agreement, isn't it? really hats off to those guys, That's a huge, kind of shows the power of data One of the things that Major League Baseball does What new innovations that the casual fan or IT person and in some portions of the major leagues, You wear a ring now to tell you if you're sleeping well. and our managers to really make the wise decisions. that you think is going to be game-changing and so being able to leverage the best of both of those and kind of what that can mean. like in the movie "The Town"? I know it's not in the room that they would to cover the games, next to NESN? We're looking good on the pipes. articulate all that to the fans. and also the complications and challenges

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>> live from San Francisco, celebrating 10 years of high tech coverage. It's the Cube covering Veum World 2019. Brought to you by VM Wear and its ecosystem partners. >> Hey, welcome back here and live here in Mosconi North. The Emerald 2019 Cube Live coverage on Shopping Day Volante Jr Jr. Who's here? EVP general manager, Telco and Edge of Cloud for Vienna. Where Thanks for coming on. Thanks for having me. I know you're super busy. We don't have a lot of time. Get right to it. Um five g a big part of the key. No discussion that's gonna enable a whole bunch of Pakal the pregame show pre gaming not even talk about that. Also. Telco on the Edge Computing Big part Michael Dell said, Edges the future Now these air to emerging areas for you guys. What's the positioning? What's the update? >> No, absolutely. I mean, if you look a tw telecom infrastructure. For the longest time, telcos have played a role just as pure basic connectivity providers. And with five g coming on board, they finally have an opportunity to break out of that and redefine the cloud off the future. So for us the big opportunity around five g is not just the better provisioning off like Higher Man With Service is to consumer for voice and data buy the whole set off new enterprise service is that can be provided on top of this five g network. And in order to be able to do that, you really need to go in with a virtualized telco Cloud architecture. Underneath that, and so we are working with carriers globally now preparing them for five G with an architecture that's going to help them deploy. New service is faster for both their consumer as well as enterprise. >> Going to be the white knight at, so to speak. For these telcos because they've been struggling for years over the top and any kind of differentiates service is even in the network layer. Exactly. I've had tons of rack and stack machine, so they're after their well, well stacked up in terms of computer storage. Also connectivity to the edge. That's the back hall. So you have back haul, which is connectivity. Companies that have massive expertise in scale but fumbling in operational cloud natives that >> by not just that, but I also think that having the idea off on application platform that allows them to go and deploy service is faster and then decide whether they're just going to play at the network connectivity level or at the application tear or a full SAS tear. These are all options that are open to them now with this notion off. Telco five G coupled with an NFI and cloud telco cloud infrastructure. Underneath that and never before have they had this option to doing that. And this is now open to them >> and the cloud native is there greenfield for AP supporter having applications on top of it. Exact icing on the cake, right? >> Exactly, Exactly. And so they're all looking at core architectures and then, potentially, their radio architectures now all being opened up toe deploying new service is that are much faster to provisions and then extending that to EJ and >> five G's deploying. So we know it's out there. So it is pre game is Pat, Guzman said. You know, not even an inning Yet in the metaphor of baseball innings, I >> gotta ask you get my phone. That's not that's fake ill. I know it >> did that with four g to >> skeptic e stands for evolution, which is coming soon. >> That's vaporware for tell Coke language. The surface area is going to radically get bigger with this capability. Yeah, security's gonna be baked in. This is the number one concern for io ti. And more importantly, industrial I ot We've been reporting on silicon angle dot com. This is a national security issue because we're under cyber attacks. Town's getting locked out with ransomware critical infrastructure exposed. We're free country, and I want to be free. We don't lock down. So you have security built into this new promiscuous landscape that is called the coyote Edge. Because you wanna have no perimeter. You want the benefits of cloud. But one whole malware is in there. One take over physical device could cost lives. >> Yeah, there's a big concern. Yeah. What's your thoughts? Yeah, No. So I think there >> are two ways of looking at it. One is the way you looked at it in terms of the security perimeter expanding and then us making sure that we have the right level off infrastructure security baked in to enable this to be an easier, manageable security architecture. This is sort of the pitch you heard from Mia Mary, even in the context of our acquisition of carbon black and how we're thinking about baking security into the infrastructure, the other way of looking at this is if you think about some of the concerns around providers off telecom infrastructure today and how there might be or might not be security back doors. This is happening in today's hardware infrastructure. Okay, so in fact, I would argue that a sick software defined architecture, er, actually ends up providing you greater levels of security. Because what you now have is the option off running all of these network functions as secured as software workloads in a policy envelope that you can introspect. And then you can decide what kind of security you want to deploy on what kind of workload. >> That's an innovative approach. But it doesn't change much, really, from an infrastructure standpoint, does it? Or does it? >> No, it does, >> because now, instead of having a hardware box where you have to worry, I mean, if it's a close, hard red box and you don't quite know what is happening there, the question is, is that more secure than a infrastructure radio running the software that you can actually introspect. I would argue that the software defined approach is more secure than having a hardware box that you don't know. >> I would buy the premise that certainly we know that supply chain concerned. You know the speculation Super Micro, which never was proved. >> It doesn't matter who the vendor is or what the country is. It really is a concern in terms of not being able to introspect what has happened Going inside >> for my tea shop. I'm running VM where operating I want developers. So now you're going to tell Coz you revitalize their business model? They had a rule out appy. Now what did you see? That connecting is gonna be connective tissue between >> I'll think about it. I didn't feel goto a telco. We look at really three stakeholders in there. One is I t the second Is there be to be or enterprise facing business and then the 3rd 1 is their core and access network or the CTO. We're now have a value proposition of having a uniform architecture across all three stakeholders with the uniform ability to create applications and drop it on top of each of these infrastructures with the ability to manage and secure these again in a uniform way, not just that, but also make this work well with other cloud infrastructures private, hyper scale, public as well as EJ. >> That's table stakes. You have to do that. These jokers have to operate whatever >> well it is, But it's not. I mean, if you think about what the infrastructure off a tailcoat today is, it's far from that, because it's it's sort of a closed environment. You can't access anything from a telco environment in order to go build an application to it, and it does not resemble anything like any club >> you could enable Telco. Just I'm just kind of thinking connecting the dots here real time in the Cube. If I'm a telco, hell, I'll take that VM wear on a deli and see model. Make me a cloud and I'll sell Cloud Service is to markets that kind of >> it is. Actually it's a very important part of our business model because most telcos would not move their own infrastructure from a network standpoint onto a public cloud. But they are eagerly awaiting the ability to operate their own network as a cloud, and if they can have somebody manage that for them, then that is very much within the >> you're enabling. An increase in the number of cloud service provides potentially the paint on the makeup of the telco tier one tier two tier three size. Pretty much >> potentially. I mean, it's taking an existing operator and having them operate in a more agile way and potentially increasing anew form off a cloud service >> provided telcos wouldn't move into the public cloud because of they want to control. And the cost is that right or it's >> mostly control. It's not about cost. It's about taking What is your sort of coordinating for, ah, packet corps or for a radio network? Yeah, and there is also an angle around competition, I think telcos our what in about the Amazons of the world and the azure eyes of the world potentially becoming a service provided >> themselves. And that's what I wanted to ask you about the business impact of all this discussion you guys were having is, you know, the cost for bits coming down. The amount of data is increasing faster. You got over the top providers just, you know, picking off the telcos. Telcos can't compete their infrastructures of so hardened. Will this all change that? >> Absolutely So. I think that it has the potential to changing all that. I don't think all the telcos will take advantage of it. Some off them might end up being more traditional and sort of sticking to where they were. But for those that are willing to make the leap, I mean, as an example, Vodafone is a customer that has actually gone in with this architecture with us. A. T and T is working with us with the Vela Cloud software from via Mary bringing a new form off branch computer branch connectivity through SD man. So these are all examples of telcos that are actually leading the >> charter. But if they don't lean in, they have this vision there either. Well, it's either because they're protected by their local government or they're going to go out of business. No, I would >> agree. I mean, it's sort of silly from our standpoint to be talking about five G and not thinking about this as the architecture for five, right? I mean, if you only focus on radio waves and your wireless network that's like a part of the problem, but you really need to have the ability to deploy these agile service's. Otherwise, you could get killed by >> the O. T. T. So how do you compete against the competition? What's the business plan that you have? C. Five G? We see that in the horizon that's evolving its evolution, so to speak. Pun intended on edge is certainly very relevant for enterprises, whether it's manufacturing or industrial or just people. Yeah, >> I'd say there are two things. One is a CZ. I'm sure you heard from folks at GM, where our vision is this notion of any any anywhere. We've talked about any cloud at any application that any device. So that becomes one of the strongest different chaining factors in terms of what V Amir can bring. Tow any of our customers compared to the competition, right? Nobody can actually make it really across these dimensions. If you then take that architecture and use that to deploy a telco cloud, we're now making investments that are telco specific that allow the tailcoat than take this and make the most out of it. As an example, we're investing in open stack we're investing in container ization. We just bought a company called Johanna and Johanna essentially allows the operator to go and provide metrics from their radio access networks. Use at that to train a learning engine and then feed that back so that the operator can tune their network to get like fewer dropped calls in the region. So if you combined technology like that with this, any cloud infrastructure that we have underneath that that's the best in class deployment methodology for any. Tell Cho to deploy >> five. Your business model metrics for you internally is get Maur deployments. What stage of development five G certainly is in a certain stage, but you know, edges there. Where is the Progress bar? If you're the kind of oh, >> it's actually mold phenomenally. I mean, every time we have conversations like this, we're moving about further in terms off. How many carriers are deploying on via mare on a telco cloud Architecture? How many subscribers are basically being serviced by an architectural like this? And then how many network functions are being deployed? Two of'em air architecture. So we are over 100 carriers now we are over. We have about 800 million subscribers, or so that about globally are being serviced by a V M Air supported network. On then, we have essentially over 120 network functions that >> are operating on top of you. Usually bring in all the same stuff that's announced that the show that stuff's gonna fold into the operating platform or Joe Chuckles have different requirements. Off course. It's >> both. We take the best of what is there from the sort of overall vehement factory and then as a team. My team then builds other widgets on top that are telco specific. >> How big is your your tam up Terry for you? >> Well, so the best way to look at it as telcos globally spend about a trillion dollars in capital investment and then probably to X that in terms of their operating expenditure over the course off all of the things that they do right? And out of that, I would say probably a tent off that. So if you take about $100 billion opportunity, opens itself up toe infrastructure investment in terms off the kinds of things that we're talking about now, they're not gonna move from like 0 200 of course. So if you take some period of time, I would say good subset off that $100 billion opportunity is gonna open itself up >> to it. This kind of business cases, eliminating that two x factor, at least reducing it. Is that exactly? That's not just that Service is that's, >> ah, cost reduction alternative. But then you have the ability to go deploy. Service is faster, so it's really a combination off both sort of carrot and the stick, right? I mean, the character here is the ability to go monetize More new service is with five G faster. The stick is that if you don't do it, Ortiz will get there faster and your costs off. Deploying your simple service is will increase his >> telcos, in your opinion, have what they have to do to get the DNA chops to actually be able to compete with the over to top OT T providers and be more agile. I mean, it's obviously sort of new skills that they have to bring in a new talent. Yeah, >> well, first and foremost, they need toe get to a point where their infrastructure is agile and they get into a business model off knowing how to monetize that agile infrastructure. So, for example, they could offer network as a service on a consume as you go basis. They could offer a platform as a service on top off that network in order for or titties to go build applications so they can do Rev shares with the forties. Or they could have offer. Full service is where they could go in and say, We are the conferencing provider for videoconferencing for enterprises. I mean, these are all models that >> the great conversation love to do. Your Palo Alto? Yes. Have you in our studio want to do more of a deep dive? We love the serious, super provocative, and it's important Final question for you. Though Pat Sr here on the Cube, lay asked him, Look back in the past 10 years. Yeah, look back in the next 10 years. What waves should everyone be riding? He said three things that working security and kubernetes humans being number one actually promoting convinced everyone for the ride, for obvious reasons, clouded. I get that, but networking Yeah, that's your world. That's changing. Which which events do you go to where you meet your audience out there in the telco because networking is a telco fundamental thing. Sure moving packets around. This is a big thing, >> eh? So far, operator networking related stuff, I would say. I mean the biggest shows that for us would be Mobile World Congress as an example, right? It's where many operators are. But I would also say that when we do our own events like this is the ember. But the movie forums in in Asia packers an example. A lot of the telco conversations I find they are best done one on one before. Yeah, the forums are our forums, but we will goto have one on one conversations or small group conversations >> with our telco customers. Locals Shakaar Thanks for spending. You get a hard stop. Very busy. >> Thank you. Thanks for having me >> here, Sugar Yaar, Who's here inside the Cube bringing down five G, which is still pregame. A few winning something first thing is gonna come up soon, but edges super hot. A lot of telco customers be back with more live coverage of the emerald after this short break

Published Date : Aug 27 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by VM Wear and its ecosystem partners. Edges the future Now these air to emerging areas for you guys. is not just the better provisioning off like Higher Man With Service is to and any kind of differentiates service is even in the network layer. These are all options that are open to them now with this notion off. and the cloud native is there greenfield for AP supporter having applications on top new service is that are much faster to provisions and then extending that You know, not even an inning Yet in the metaphor of baseball innings, I gotta ask you get my phone. promiscuous landscape that is called the coyote Edge. So I think there This is sort of the pitch you heard from Mia Mary, even in the context of our acquisition of carbon black But it doesn't change much, really, from an infrastructure standpoint, running the software that you can actually introspect. You know the speculation Super Micro, being able to introspect what has happened Going inside Now what did you see? One is I t the second Is there be to be or enterprise facing business and then the 3rd You have to do that. I mean, if you think about what the infrastructure off a tailcoat today is, you could enable Telco. But they are eagerly awaiting the ability to operate their of the telco tier one tier two tier three size. I mean, it's taking an existing operator and having them operate in a more And the cost is that right of the world potentially becoming a service provided You got over the top providers just, you know, picking off the telcos. Vodafone is a customer that has actually gone in with this architecture with us. it's either because they're protected by their local government or they're going to go out of business. I mean, it's sort of silly from our standpoint to be talking about five G and the O. T. T. So how do you compete against the competition? So that becomes one of the strongest different chaining factors in terms of what V Where is the Progress bar? I mean, every time we have conversations like this, Usually bring in all the same stuff that's announced that the show that stuff's We take the best of what is there from the sort of overall vehement factory Well, so the best way to look at it as telcos globally spend about a trillion dollars in capital This kind of business cases, eliminating that two x factor, I mean, the character here is the ability to go monetize More new service I mean, it's obviously sort of new skills that they have to bring in a new talent. in order for or titties to go build applications so they can do Rev shares with the forties. the great conversation love to do. I mean the biggest shows that for us would be Mobile World Congress as an example, right? with our telco customers. Thanks for having me here, Sugar Yaar, Who's here inside the Cube bringing down five G, which is still pregame.

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Chris Bedi, ServiceNow | ServiceNow Knowledge16


 

>> Live from Las Vegas. It's the cute covering knowledge sixteen Brought to you by service. Now here your host, Dave, Alon and Jeffrey. >> Welcome back to knowledge. Sixteen. Everybody, This is the Cube, Cuba Silicon Angles Flagship program. We go out to the events and we extract the signal from the noise We're here. This is Day two for us. Will be going wall to wall for three days. That knowledge sixteen hashtag No. Sixteen. Chris Beatty is Here's the CEO. Relatively new CEO. It's service now. Chris, Thanks for coming on the Cube. It's going to be here. So you are hosting the CEO Decisions event Yesterday >> I was an event. We had a lot of CEOs, a lot of energy in the room, you know, one of the main main themes. Wass. You know, technology change happens all the time, but really one of the leadership challenge is right and what courage is required of leaders to really break through the status quo and get to that next level. We talked a lot about the importance of getting the right culture right within it, and that's a and what it really means to have a service mindset right throughout the enterprise. And as our vocabulary becomes the same inside it and across all the departments, right, as a leader, how do you enact that change so really a lot about the human element, as opposed to, you know, the technology part of it? >> Yes. So a lot of discussions over the past several service now knowledge comes in one year, Frank said. He sort of threw down the gauntlet and CEOs. They have to be business leaders. No longer Is that just a technology roll? Others have come on. The Cuban said. Well, you know, CEOs role. They gotta choose. They're gonna choose a technical path or a business path or data path. Even Chief Date officer. What do you thoughts on the >> I mean, >> there's a >> lot of press about the role. The CEO, right? And if you go back years and anything from Seo's dead, it is a relevant right. It's going the way of the dodo bird. Teo CEOs Morse strategic than ever, disrupting and creating new business models. I think the answer is somewhere in between, and it's probably changes, you know, depending on the day of the week. Right. So CEOs have a base job which is running, you know, the technology infrastructure of any company running the applications. But I do agree with Frank in terms of CEOs up, leveling their responsibilities and taking on the responsibility for more. I could tell you what I take responsibility for, right And yes, it's I t. But the overall velocity of our business. How fast can we run with everything Hiring employees, closing our books. Every single process in the company is powered by an IT platform, right? And so high tea is really in a unique position, and it has a bird's eye view of the organization to really help. Dr Velocity and Velocity is everything. How can you outflank your competition? The other thing I see think CEOs need to take responsibility for is maximizing the productivity of every single employee in the company. Right now, if you take that on, you start to look at things a little bit differently. It's not about projects, it's really about outcomes. And you know what measurable things are we delivering? And last and certainly not least, I think, the responsibility for customer experiences again. Customer experiences are powered by platform CEOs have the ability that influence every single one of those experiences and make it great and more and more as we look towards the future with things like automated bots and augmented reality customer. Your actions are going to become human to platform, and that's going to increase its relevance in that >> so and thinking about CIA imperatives of, you know, the bromide of eighty percent of the dollars we spend is on keeping the lights on twenty percent of innovation of That's a real number, No, but nobody seems to argue with it. Yeah, you >> hear that number a lot, but I think the good organizations actually do measure that number so they actually they will know what their number is and that service. Now we've done a lot of work, so our ratio is actually sixty percent run the business forty percent on innovation, and we're driving that down. So it's uneven. Fifty fifty split. I think that where you don't want to go is spending too little time on what I call the utility computing because that's the fabric that gets work done right. It's everything from networking and email and all those basic services you still need to have. Those aren't going anywhere collaboration services. >> I'd like to split it up into a little finer grain. I wonder if you could comment run the business grow the business transformed the business. Now maybe you're maybe you're always transforming your business, I don't know. But in >> terms of have to be >> in terms of but specific spending on initiatives to transform the business is that a reasonable, reasonable way to look at your portfolio was >> absolutely right. And I think if you're not doing things that transform your business, you're you're not acting with enough urgency. So my view on it is identify the big rocks right that we need to knock down, make sure we make room for those, even if it's at the cost of the grow or run part of the budget. Because if you're not getting those things done again, back to that getting left behind things were moving too quick. You got to keep pace. So make room for the transformation somehow, and that means squeezing every bit of automation that you can. How did the run part of the business, which is something I've used service now for in my past. I used to be a customer. I bought the platform twice over before I joined the company, and we did it a lot, and I'm doing it now, now that I'm at service now, >> that's one of Frank's requirements to become a CEO. I think. How >> do you >> measure that? That split. You said you're sixty today. Like to be a fifty, a lot of CEOs going. I have no idea how to measure that. I look at my projects are, but guess how do you do it? >> And it's tough we actually use. Not surprisingly, are Ownit Financial Management module to do that. And so technology's technology would we take all of our G L data and we map it to a taxonomy of business services in certain business services we know are not transformative, but they're a run part of the business, and we do that mapping once than every month. We can look at actuals against it. We can look at our unit costs, but the other begin put his projects right, which is again also in our platform, so able to look at those two things together and data driven segmentation of our spend too many times I see ninety organizations. They do it as one time exercise as part of annual planning. Then they don't look at it again until the next year. Annual planning. But there's a lot of runway in between and decisions we're making every day, which you should be making based upon data. But instead you're doing on perhaps nine months ago information. >> So you essentially categorize the business process, the business services as run or Growler training farm and on an ongoing basis. >> Absolutely. And you do the math and the most dynamic part of it, his projects. So every one of our projects, when we look at our portfolio, we look at our project portfolio by business areas, the sales marketing HR finance so on. But then we also do categorize our portfolio by Is this just sort of keep the lights on activity? But it's a project we still need to dio, or is it growing the business in somewhere? Is it truly helping us transform the way we operate >> on reasonable people? Khun, sit down and agree on sort of what those look like and >> short, and we also adjust accordingly. Also, do a top down allocation of what percentage do we want to go into each bucket, and that's not the same for each area because different parts of our business are different maturity cars, different pressures on them. I wouldn't want to be very transfer meitiv with RGL, right? That's not an area I want to innovate on. But with our sales and marketing organization, absolutely. We want to be in high innovation. Hi, experimentation, whatever we can do to help dry. >> So that's a top down bottom up exercise with the executive team says Okay, >> sideways inputs from everywhere. You know, one of the things I think CEOs it is a coming to fund CEOs to dio is manage spend. But more importantly, where people spending their time right, that's inarguably a fixed costs. We have a set of people where they spending their time and are they spending their time on the right things? And if you get that right, the rest could get a lot easier. >> So Secretary Gates last night speaking Teo, you know, maybe roughly one hundred CEOs and your your CEO decisions Conference gave the thumbs down on consensus management, and I sense just a little bit of discomfort in the room because CEOs is a hard job. But you serve a lot of different masters if you will, and as well you've got heads of application development you got, you know, architects, you got the business to serve, and so there's a lot of consensus building. And so he got questions on How do you do it? What was your reaction to that? Your colleagues, You know, which >> one was your science? They asked him a question. And because he said Consensus building doesn't work into an outside person looking in, it would seem like by nature. Everything in the government is consensus oriented. He had a lot of examples actually, where he did things against his own team's conviction, but he felt like that change was necessary. So it's two things I think Dr Gates has dealt with monumental organizations, right? Texas A and M is the smallest organization of those the CIA and the D. O D. Department of Defense has three million people, so the scale is unlike what most enterprise CEOs are leaders have seen. So when when he talked about not being consensus oriented, he viewed it as a requirement, and I actually agree with him. If you're trying to disrupt the status quo, you can't be consensus oriented. I don't think you'LL move fast enough, and most of time you won't get very far. So I think it's incumbent upon leaders to be the ones that break the status quo and say, We've got to change. And But what? What Dr Gates did describe is that if people are informed about why, from their leader enough, even if they disagree, they can get on board. And he brought up numerous examples of where he had conversations with Congress and people within the d. O d about change. He wanted to drive, and even though they were very opposed to it, they got on board because they intellectually could understand why. And over time, he won over hearts and minds >> about your priorities. So you come in relatively new tow service now. So first of all first impressions, any any surprises, pleasant or unpleasant? And what your priorities. >> So coming in no surprises. I had had a lot of admiration for the company as a customer, and now that I'm here, I love the culture. The culture is very execution oriented, get stepped on, very customer focused. You know, when we when we talk about our go to market, we really talk a lot about what's going to be most important for our customers. What pressures are customers under what problems can be solved for him? It's really not a discussion around squeezing. You know, the maximum margin out of each customer, which I think is fantastic way drive pretty hard. But but we're also very team oriented culture, so that's been great. My priorities at service. Now, when I think about my six strategic themes that I'm focused on growth eyes hugely important that service now. Right now, it's a lot of time I spend, fails and marketing effectiveness and innovation. And what can we do to drive, help, drive growth from a night perspective? Working with our partner organization, helping our partners? I do business with us easier things like partner portals and things like that. Ah, velocity. I mentioned earlier driving velocity through every department at the Enterprise at service now and really maniacally going after business process automation. And the great thing is, we have a platform that makes it easy, right and Ivax full access to that platform. So self service catalogs and knowledge base, but really going department by department saying, How do we do that? Analytics. Obviously we want to continue to measure and improve our business. But we're starting to do a lot more with Predictive Analytics, right? And how can we use data to really predict next best actions in a variety of arenas? Uh, security is the gift that keeps on giving for every CEO never ending. It's >> just one of those things that'll Teo you got, you >> got, you got to accept it and then really focus on team, right? I think talent and team and culture hugely important. You could have the best plans, you know, on paper. But if you don't have the right talent and culture within your team to get it done, I don't think you're getting very far operational. Rigor is a big one for me and a Metrix based approach to managing our business and driving outcomes. So when I look at projects that I execute for the organization on time and on budget, that's fine. That's table stakes. Really. What I'm after is on benefit, right? Are we delivering the benefits that we said we were going to get? And last, but certainly not least a part of my job is now on now. What? What we mean by now? On now is me being our best in first customer. And that's a very strategic level, working with product management to help them, you know, with roadmap features and things like that that I think all of our CEO's would need also upgrading early. So hopefully we can iron out the bugs before all of our customers and then consuming our own your products and implement it internally, learning the lessons within our four walls that we can inform our fields they could help our customers. >> How about on benefit? What percentage of projects are on benefit? That's another one of these things. Seventy percent of the projects fail. It was a number one on the market research, even >> that even that's a problem that fail is identified as not being on time or on. But right now, I view that is interesting but not compelling. Are you delivering the outcome? And so we're early. I've only been at service now six months, but I know in the past, through rigor and even making it a metric that's important have gotten to an eighty five percent hit rate on benefit. Certainly you could do better, but some of the benefits we have realised, with our platform eighty three percent increase in productivity. Leveraging R R R R application, but examples outside of Ice D, where we've eliminated forty five hundred hours of work from our financial close by putting email and manual checklist on your platform. Eighty five percent reduction in time that we spent hours spent on on boarding new employees. I mean, the list goes on and on, but it's a requirement in my organisation. When you're doing a project, you gotta have an outcome and set an aspirational outcome. Because if you talk about ten percent improvement and anything, that's sort of easy to get it. If you tell yourself I need to get a seventy percent improvement, it forces you to really rethink things and think differently. And I think that's our job. Is leaders to set those set the bar really high and then sharp teams have the resources to go after it. >> So even if you're late and over budget, if you get that, I didn't say that I later over, but I was asked, so that's got three. So that's a that's a prerequisite to be on time and on budget, >> and we're not perfect, but our target is to be ninety five percent on time, ninety five percent on budget, knowing you're gonna have five percent, you know, wiggle room and ninety five percent on benefit. >> What is on. So when you talk to the board, switch topics about security, what should be on the CEO's checklist for communicating to the board about security? So So >> I think it's really about risk, right? And what risks do we think we have? What's the likelihood of those risks? And what's the plan to mitigate those risk? I don't think security should be talked about in a This is Donner. That's done because you're never really done right. It's risk management, and the bad guys continue to innovate faster than the good guys. So what's your current security posture? What's the state of your risks and how are you mitigating them and in what time frame you know the stuff about? You know, we have a deal. P. We have ideas. We have I ps. I mean, the list of acronyms is interesting at a more tactical level, but at a board level, I think it's really risk management. >> So I promise I wanted before Ortiz talk about mitigating risk. But is there a place for a narrative that says you'd only mitigate so much? You're going to get penetrated. It's how you respond absolutely is critical. And I can I, as the CEO can lead that response or whomever is the >> appropriate person? I think you you have to do everything you possibly can Teo secure your perimeter. But it's known that you are going to get breach. Just a fact. So then it really becomes How quickly can you identify the fact that you have anomalous activity happening on your network of data? How quickly can you mitigate it? And in the past, when I was at various sign JD issue, a lot of that was manual right You have. You know, you have a piece of bad malware on the Enterprise. You may even know what assets. Um, it's on where you think you know. Usually I think you know, and then you really find out later where it's gone. But tying those assets to risk meaning what? Business services, it is it my CFO's laptop? Or is it? You know, the the you know, the person in AP. So you treated a little bit differently. And is it the infrastructure that supports our badge reader? Or is it our ear piece system? Right, So that's the missing piece. And I do thank our security organization and our our business unit, Shawn, because they've actually built a solution. Help solve that where you can go from security incident. Piece of Alberto Asset to Business service to employ within minutes, which that used to be half a day, at least half a day is a long time in a security incident. >> Yeah, so there's that magic number of whatever it is two hundred five days to detect a penetration? Yes, very. Do you feel like your organization can compress that? Is that a viable metric to be focused on? >> It's certainly a viable metric to focus on in terms of knowledge, off again anomalous activity. I don't think we're near two hundred five days, but absolutely we are focused on it because we need to secure not only our data but the data that our customers in trust without trust, >> meaning you feel as though you could detect much in a much shorter time frame, and they have some interesting. You haven't depending >> on the wrist right? Without getting into a lot of the details. >> Yeah, So we'll see you. But implicit in that is that you have a sense of the value of your data, your assets your I p what you're saying you've got a pretty good visibility on. >> Is that right? Yeah, we d'Oh. We spent a lot of time making sure our security posture is solid again customers and trust us with their data. We take that responsibility very seriously. >> Not speaking for service now, but just general knowledge of your colleagues Do you feel as though the lack of ability to value data assets negatively affect people's ability? T appropriately spend resources >> on security? It's tough because one of the first things you need to do in security say, what do I need to secure first? And then you say, OK, well, that's my core. I pee. Where's my core I pee stored? I would argue that a lot of companies don't even know because it's scattered on different file shares and different servers, and then you don't know whether people are putting it on box or drop box or one of the many storied sites out there so keep key. First step, I think for a lot of organizations is really just getting a handle on where their I P is. >> Right? All right, Count Chris, Thank you very much. Appreciate you coming on last. Give the last word. Uh, knowledge sixteen for you. What's the kind of bumper sticker? Is the truck's pulling away from its been awesome. I mean, >> just talking with customers and fellow CEOs. You know, we're all in this journey together towards this service enabled enterprise, but it is about leadership and just courage to bust through this current status quo that were in within the enterprise to get to that next level of efficiency. >> Thanks a lot of fun. Well, congratulations on the new role on DH hosting at a hostel conference just caught the tail end of it. But it looked like great energy >> because a lot of >> had some really good discussions with some of your colleagues. So really great coming on. Thank you. Alright. Keep right there, buddy. That's the Cuba bit back from knowledge. Sixteen, Las Vegas. Right after this >> every once in a while.

Published Date : May 19 2016

SUMMARY :

sixteen Brought to you by service. So you are hosting the CEO Decisions We had a lot of CEOs, a lot of energy in the room, you know, one of the main main themes. What do you thoughts on the And if you go back years and anything of eighty percent of the dollars we spend is on keeping the lights on twenty percent of innovation of I think that where you don't want to go I wonder if you could comment run the business grow the And I think if you're not doing things that transform your business, that's one of Frank's requirements to become a CEO. I look at my projects are, but guess how do you do it? and decisions we're making every day, which you should be making based upon data. So you essentially categorize the business process, And you do the math and the most dynamic part of it, his projects. But with our sales and marketing You know, one of the things I think CEOs And so he got questions on How do you do it? Texas A and M is the smallest So you come in relatively new tow service now. I had had a lot of admiration for the company But if you don't have the right talent and culture within your team to get it done, Seventy percent of the projects fail. the bar really high and then sharp teams have the resources to go after it. So that's a that's a prerequisite to be on time and we're not perfect, but our target is to be ninety five percent on So when you talk to the board, switch topics about security, It's risk management, and the bad guys continue to innovate faster than the good guys. And I can I, as the CEO can lead that response You know, the the you know, Do you feel like your organization can compress but the data that our customers in trust without trust, meaning you feel as though you could detect much in a much shorter time frame, and they have some interesting. Without getting into a lot of the details. But implicit in that is that you have a sense of the value of your We take that responsibility very seriously. And then you say, OK, well, that's my core. What's the kind of bumper sticker? and just courage to bust through this current status quo that were in within the enterprise to get Well, congratulations on the new role on DH hosting at a hostel conference just caught the That's the Cuba bit back from knowledge.

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