Real World Experiences with HPE GreenLake, Paulo Rego & Carlos Leite
>>Hello, uh, welcome to everyone. Uh, my name is Carlos lights. I'm a HP managing director, Portugal. Um, I have the privilege today where we make Hable, which is the business to business director for Altis Portugal. Uh, Paul, thank you very much. I want to start by faith you for your presence and availability to be with us today and to be able to share a few words about our partnership in particular use of our it consumption model, uh, as a service. So HP ring like, Oh, uh, maybe it's a good, uh, is a good way to start explaining a little bit about Altis right out. This is a multinational organization. Uh, you have presence in four countries, France, Portugal, Israel, and Dominica in a week, but today we will focus on, uh, on Portugal. Right. So could you please polo, uh, tell us about the Altis Portugal and, uh, your company's vision follow. >>Okay. Hello, Carlos, thank you very much for the invitation and regarding your question. Well, all this protocol was born as a telephone operator and after a few decades of transformation, namely on the B2B markets is now the leading Portuguese player in ICT. We have positioned ourselves as the preferred partner for digital transformation of organizations, both private and public. We have a large portfolio of an ICT portfolio of products and customized solutions from IOT, BPO, security payments, and many other areas. And we are committed to achieve a more competitive, collaborative, digital, and low carbon economy through our in-house products and our partner solutions like HBA, uh, regarding cloud. We have a decade of cloud presence in the market, uh, based on five data centers network that we have here in Portugal that are operating since 1999. Uh, so we have made this cloud journey with a strong focus on managing value added services, serving both in years and also top organizations. Uh, we started to believe that as a country, we cannot achieve the level of modernization and automation of operational models, or even the relation of company's cost structure without the throng and widespread adoption of a model as a set of display, as you go a lot of liken services, >>Paul, um, you know, um, as well, companies are currently, uh, facing many challenge, uh, and looking for solutions that address to their needs, but also, uh, should be future proof. Right? So how do you see everybody's cloud role on the elping, uh, achieve business goals and requirements? >>Well, uh, cloud approach is, are becoming a priority on organizations and customers are increasingly aware of the, of their solutions to their needs. So what coffee has shown us is how important is the agility flexibility, and thank to markets we all needed to bring, as far as you could, new solutions to the market, increase digital means and accomplished the use new workplace information because we are all working now, I'm in the office, I mean at house. And so what we see here in Portugal is that cloud enabled organizations were better prepared to this challenge and prior management visitations within companies, I think that will probably be now overcome by new decision-makers and some, so some verticals like healthcare banking got public administration, they have tight retirements, tight requirements on compliance that the security control. And I think that these are some of the verticals where only in a nightmarish cloud approach we'll compare unite with all these called VC cities. >>And so I think that under the present situation, budgets constraints, efficiency, and predictability are even more present at decision-making process. And I don't think that traditional it models will no longer cope with this challenge. And so therefore, uh, every thought strategy are presently delivering customers the best of both worlds. They want simplified it provisioning and operational LSD city, but never, but then nevertheless are compelled to keep that close to home when that the protection is critical and compliance, and that the governments are to shop every cloud service services supported by the right partners tools like GreenLake central. I think that will be the key to achieve a single as a service experience from edge to plow. They allow the security and of control of a non-brand model, along with the corporate agility and the OPEX flexibility so much demanded by our clients. >>So BOLO, uh, regarding the experience, uh, fortunately we have a ready common contracts and common customers, right? And the, well, from your experience, uh, what do you think are the benefits customers are getting from each beaming? Like, can you share some examples use cases? >>Okay. Of course. Well, uh, as I said before, HBA brings to the table a key differentiator, which is the GreenLake central. We have one portal to manage all cloud on prem having at the same time, the control, the easy to use and better capacity to plan future needs. So it serves both it finance and legal teams giving the proper visibility to all of these stakeholders. In terms of examples, we have customers that are using GreenLake to suppose, suppose private and public sector. We have implementations both at Altis and customers' premises that the centers on a very diverse type of business apps from mission critical help, sometimes legacy to SAP or some cloud native apps. For instance, we have solutions of stars as a service for the energy sector on the transport sector and a data center as a service on public administration on customers that need to keep the it on prem because of compliance, but look for the cloud flexibility and the model as a service. >>Good. I see, uh, I see in fact, uh, a positive, a very positive future, uh, in our partnership, but, uh, w what is your opinion about that, uh, uh, how you see the partnership with HP and, uh, and the position to, to give you the ability to even have more success? >>Well, I'm putting this question, talking a little bit about the near future. I think that the short to medium term, the future, uh, will be concentrating on solving possible endemic crisis and sell both customers and ourselves service providers. Uh, we faced this challenge and I think that we were able to cope with these challenges on 2021. And we are very supported on technology and digital solutions. And I think that with the help of HPA, we are being able to, to pass this reality check, uh, and under such critical circumstances. But now we need to step forward. We need to leverage the increase e-comm levels. Remote work breath is a way of in there. So we need to go towards the digital transformation of organizations. We need to extend the infrastructure to where business happens. Uh, we have to infuse cloud closer to the network. We are telco allowing for a new class of cloud native and innovative applications for customers. >>Some verticals where LTC is aiming for a new position, also urge for closer collaboration with called partners like HPA, for instance, e-health will bring us new opportunities in the near future. And the proper ICT foundations are crucial for the new health care services, patient focused approaches and that the driven decisions and being cloud markets made sure. Now, I think that some companies still count on their partners to facilitate the cloud journey, helping them underline the business cases on cloud users apart consulting skills to facilitate change, bring peers use cases that can easily apply NHPA is the most value for out. It says much to bring the new cloud technology, but also the existing experience, the use casing, the use cases and helping us go through the learning curve in other markets. So, uh, for the future, we hope for the best, and we will count on a leading partner like HPA to drivers too, >>On these uncertain, but promising future. Good. I want to reinforce the, thank you very much for your shares. Share this content, this information with us. Uh, it was a real, it is a real pleasure to work with you. Uh, it's a pleasure for all your work without these as a company, but as well, personally, we, your follow and the, because I think it's important to wherever address relationship, and we have now the trust relationship with the organization and with personally as well. So thank you very much, Paulo, and have a nice day. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much..
SUMMARY :
I want to start by faith you for your presence and availability We have a decade of cloud presence in the market, uh, everybody's cloud role on the elping, uh, achieve business goals and requirements? flexibility, and thank to markets we all needed to bring, as far as you And I don't think that traditional it models will no longer cope with this challenge. at the same time, the control, the easy to use and better capacity to plan future needs. uh, uh, how you see the partnership with HP and, uh, I think that the short to medium term, the future, uh, will be concentrating So, uh, for the future, we hope for the best, and we will count on a leading partner like HPA I want to reinforce the, thank you very much for your shares.
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Paulo Rosado, OutSystems | OutSystems NextStep 2020
>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of out systems. Next Step 2020 Brought to you by Out Systems Hi and welcome to the Cubes coverage of out systems. Next step. I'm your host stew Minimum and happy toe. Welcome back to the program. He's relatively fresh off the keynote stage. He's also a cube alum. Eso happy to welcome paella risotto. He's the founder and CEO of Out systems. Hello, Thanks so much for joining us. And thanks for having the queue. But your event >>now it's a pleasure to glad to be here. >>So you know your keynote. You know, one of the big themes we've been talking about for quite a while in the industry, of course, is the growth and importance of developers Onda, something that I heard loud and clear from what you and your team are talking about. It's really about helping companies, you know. It's move faster, it's be more agile, and it's really X. It's banding. Uh, you know, we need mawr developers. We need them to be ableto on ramp faster. Uh, on especially here in 2020. As I said, you and I spoke earlier this year at kind of the early stages of the global pandemic. Right now we know it's, you know, we can't have people slow down even when they can't go to the office, even though a lot of developers were dispersed as it is. So if you could see, you know, give us you know it did this your high level, you know, your customers, the developer community that that you're welcoming here to the show? >>No, Absolutely. I mean, we're really excited about this event is a This has gone way beyond our wildest expectations in terms of tendency and all of that. It's bean to an absolutely fantastic e mean what what we've seen. What we've seen is a growing demand from enterprises for solutions that are extremely differentiated. Um, you can actually get software. You can get digital systems out off out of the box, but there's a new increasing number of systems like portals and the work flows and applications that you actually have to infuse with your with your business process with your intellectual property with you as a business and therefore you have to build your own software. And so the the amount of software that's being built inside organizations is increasing its zits, increasing to a point where these these enterprises are facing all sorts of issues related to to to proliferation to skill. Set the fact that they cannot hire enough developers enough architect and offset cops people. I mean, the skill sets that just staggering and they heard, because they are they want to build this software, but they have a lot of difficulties in finding the tools and the skill sets. >>Yeah, it's great to come to an event like this and hear people. They're excited about building applications. They're they're they're getting into code. Um, it's been almost too easy this year, Palo to say, Uh, there's so many challenges, you know, at home everyone's fighting over bandwidth and space. Andi, there's those challenges. So, you know, we need to be able to see kind of that, that joy into what I can win. I can build things and get things done. So, you know, how are you seeing that? You know what? What feedback are you getting? Um and you know, as we said, 2020 we all know is a challenging year. >>Yeah, it's It's been a challenging gear. But it's also, you know, it's also been a near off year off opportunities. And we see that, uh, all over are we stall based on our prospect days and our partners and our community. And in general, these things events. Adult systems have a very different vibe from your typical corporate event, because one of one of the things that Z that's unique about our systems is everyone who comes to this event have built something unique. And so and it it zvehr e gratifying. When you're talking with customers and you're talking with developers, the one thing they want to talk about is how they fixed one particular, very unique problem that they face using our systems and the exchange these war stories, about how fast they were and how quickly they managed to overcome a particular challenge. Or, uh, when they got the change request from the business, that was, we need to do this in in two hours or 24 hours, whatever horrible timeline that they get and they were able to do it. It's these stories that get exchange around the next step floor in this event, and this one has been going on exactly as we've seen. The other ones which were physical events in the past. >>S O Paulo. On the keynote stage, you talked about the fact that you've now got over 1400 customers. You've got 300 partners. Uh, you're not just some, you know, New startup out system's been around for two decades. Now, talk a little bit about, you know, your growth. Some of the innovations that air that air driving customers in increasing, you know where they're coming houses. >>No, absolutely. I mean, the major major innovations that we have been doing is we we we we have been focused a lot on addressing the need for speed. I mean, the cycles of innovation have been compressing in the past years, and every year there is Ah, there is a further compression of the cycle. And so business are coming back to developers are coming back to i. T. They are some of these business. Uh, some of these business folks departments are completely autonomous in terms of what? Of building some digital systems, and all of them have this need for speed for very high productivity. And so we've bean Ah, lot of our investment has bean first and foremost in, how can we make all these folks way more productive? And we've been doing a tremendous amount of research into the anatomy of building these these applications understanding what are the the typical, most common patterns abstracting them, making them really use using a lot of ai and machine learning to create, uh, to create a almost like a a artificial bots that can help developers move quicker and create serious applications with big architectures without making mistakes. But very, very quickly, Um, and therefore, uh, when When we we provide these things extreme speed, we make sure at the same time. And this is where a lot of our innovation also comes along is ah, is this notion of building these applications right? Which is you. You have to be fast, but not at the expense of lack of security, lack of scalability, lack of availability, non observe ability. You know all these things that are that you don't really pay attention when you just want to create a nap and put some functional requirements designed something into either a nap or workflow, whatever. But when you're scaling from 20 users toe one million users. You need to make sure that you can do that. When you're exposing a portal to the external world, you need to make sure that you're not going to be attacked by hackers. Are you going to have the now service attack or at your mobile application is completely shielded and secure and cannot be penetrated. All of these things are things that are all part that cannot be at the expense of speed. And so that's what we try to do. We try to bring together the speed increasing speed, but at same time building fast building it right and making sure that as you evolve that your application is evergreen doesn't create technical debt. So build it for the future. And we focus a lot on this reason. >>Yeah, definitely heard that team loud and clear. Looking forward to actually, I've got so g your head of products toe walk through. Some of the announcement also got your head of a I in that really fascinating stuff as, uh, you know, like emails. Do they kind of, you know, start making suggestions and, you know, it feels like the tech technology is getting better. It's not like it was a few years ago where it was like I just want to turn that off because the suggestions were slowing me down rather than speeding me up, but moved faster. Um, you know, you see what I want to get to You talked about that flexibility of change, Really. One of the big challenges you know right now is that there's always new technologies. There's new opportunity. I need to move fast. So how do I make sure that I could do something today and not be, you know, locked out of that next new thing thing or be able to make a change? So how do you make sure that you, you know, you've got an architect? We said that that's now been around for decades, but, you know, meeting the needs of developers helping to bring on new developers. Um, that you make sure that you can stay, you know, always modern, if you will. >>Now that's that's a That's a fantastic question. It's a really good point. I mean, one of the trade offs of, uh, one of the easy ways of building these these type of products or platforms is you actually your visual modeling your obstructions, Uh, the things that you build so that you increase productivity in a lot of, um in a lot of scenarios. The easiest path is towards linking whatever technology you're going toe power these applications to the way you build the modeling. Um, and one of the things that that out systems as as has always done we design our platform from day one with the perspective that we knew the underlying technology. Name it. Web stacks to kubernetes toe on premise. Virtual machines to containers serverless, uh, technologies, micro application servers. All of these things we knew they were going to dramatically change in the next years. And we've been proven right in the sense that not only take underneath technology or technology that that's used to build these applications have been changing, but they've been changing faster. And the turmoil of technologies that you can build applications is accelerating at creating a huge problem for enterprises that once a certain level of stability. But they don't also want to become whole old. And so the art systems platform allows you to build your applications at the layer where we adult systems we can replace the underlying technology without you having to rewrite the application and because of our technology, you can basically just republish or we upgrade our platforms and automatically your applications will run on the next best of breed technology that's now hot and that is providing you extra scalability, extra security, extra high availability. We take care of that and we show you how we do it because we were following those type of standards. But it's really around the architectures off of the product at the same time, Ato level of the development of the modeling and a lot of these things. We make sure that there is a certain level of stability and we keep on improving it so that we can bring developers into our community. And those sets are constantly relevant as they move from customer to customer as they move from simpler applications toe highly complex ones. All the investment that they've made on our systems gets rewarded in the next 2357 years. We have a community. We have members of argument that have been with us for more than 15 years and we want to keep it that way >>well, that That's impressive. I'm curious. You know, we've We've had this discussion, I guess. How many years ago was it that now that mark injuries and said that software is eating the world? Palo eso So many companies now you're talking about, you know, building software building that application needs to be a key thing. You know, the role of I t. Just servicing the business isn't enough. I t needs to be tightly. I'd with the business and that capability of building software, doing things fast and reacting eyes so important. So what does this kind of these waves coming together? I mean, for out systems the growth of the company. And, you know, I would have to expect that some of your your newer customers look a little bit different than the ones that have been with you for 15 years. >>You know what? It z actually interesting that the problem that we solving is is a very basic, very old problem. And so it's just that what what has changed in in the recent years is that before it was acceptable for a 19 person to go to the business and say this project is going to take three years or this new report that this change that you want to put in your application is going to take a six months or three months to go into production. And today that's an unacceptable answer. Um, and so today, with these type of platforms, like out systems, this provides it provides a tremendous, uh, pleasant life for the guys who are actually developing and delivering thes digital systems. These applications, because the relationship with the business is a much more constructive one. Instead of you saying no Oh, I want this. I want this new mobile app and, uh, and someone coming back to you. Okay, give me two million and give me 12 months or 14 months to build this this app. Now you can go back and say, OK, well, that that's going to take me one week and I have off a guy ready to build that for you. That first version and they can work together with you so that we get those requirements right, because we know that the model application is going to be it. The first version we're going to produce is not going to be the one that you want And so we want to reiterate that conversation is the holy Grail of what we always wanted in the relationship between 90 and the business and now way have it with without systems. And that's the That's the alert. Now, if you look into the tens of industries, this particular type of characteristic is this dynamic between business I t and building. These things exist in every industry, and that's why our target addressable market is so huge. And that's why we're growing so fast at this point, because it's a it's a capability that everyone wants and before it just looks magic now, before it was considered impossible. And that's why people didn't ask for >>it. Paolo talking about that, that growth in that potential? What's your commentary on? You know the skill gaps out there, You know, how do we onboard Mawr developers, You know what's what's the opportunity and the challenge that you see out there just really when you talk about the future of jobs in this space? >>Well, um, what what we've seen is that, for instance, we measured we're very scientific. Adult systems about looking had the anatomy of skills and the what are the skill sets needed to build what type of systems. And it's not all or nothing thing. A lot off. People try to sometimes simplify and say there is this notion of the professional developer on the business developer or or even the cities and developer, which is a term we don't really enjoy it out systems that much. Um, but it's this very binary separation, and what we've seen in reality is that there is, ah, continuum. A spectrum of skill sets that we can pile up. And we can create and develop tools and capabilities, for instance, in the out systems platform that allow us to take an increasingly larger number of backgrounds and people to build an increasingly larger number of more complex applications. And so it z kind of a moving target. But the potential is that the shortage of computer science grads that exist today in the world on its not Onley in the Western world is it's all over Asia Latin America places where you'd consider that you have enough talent to fulfill the demand. Demand is huge compared with that supply of developers and so being able to, for instance, happening on on the stem, Um, the science majors being able to tap on social grads like architectural, uh, architect's and normal civil architects and the, uh, social engineers and and and all of that, all of those profiles we have found that we can bring them into the out systems community, and then they have them complement the sum of their natural skills with some technical skills and being able to actually produce these systems. And so we by doing that, we multiplied by 10 the pool of available resources to our to our customers and to to the enterprises want to build software. But they're facing this issue of the skills shortened. >>Oh, Paula, we We've got a great lineup for our coverage with the Cube. I've got a couple of your customers. I mentioned some of the executives. I've got your head of developer and community on there, but want to give you the final word. You know, takeaways you want. You know that the the audience out there toe have to understand about out systems today in the strategy going forward. >>Well, I think what what I wanted to say is that we've we've proven that we've been around for some time. And the reason for this is because it takes a while to build a product that's truly comprehensive and powerful enough that you can build complex, serious applications very quickly, but that are also that do not, uh, that you don't have to be facing a wall of security, of scalability and all of that. So this is a platform that takes a long time to get right. It takes a lot of input from our from our install base. Takes a lot off. Ah, lot of learnings from all the, uh, hundreds of thousands of applications and projects we've seen. But today our customers can take that benefits and move forward very, very quickly. Andi, we're going to stay around for many years to come because it's such a pleasurable job to be able to help all of these enterprises become as innovative as they can and as fast as they can. So I'm really excited about being in this position as we have today. >>Well, Paulo, really pleasure for us toe Be part of this event. Thanks so much and definitely looking forward to talking to the rest of your your team's your customer in the ecosystem. >>Thank you too. >>Stay with us for more coverage. Jumps to minimum. And thanks. As always, for watching. Thank you.
SUMMARY :
Next Step 2020 Brought to you by Out Systems Hi something that I heard loud and clear from what you and your team are talking about. and applications that you actually have to infuse with your with Palo to say, Uh, there's so many challenges, you know, at home everyone's fighting over bandwidth But it's also, you know, it's also been a near off On the keynote stage, you talked about the fact that you've now got over 1400 customers. and making sure that as you evolve that your application is evergreen doesn't One of the big challenges you know right now is that there's always new technologies. We take care of that and we show you how we do it because look a little bit different than the ones that have been with you for 15 years. that this change that you want to put in your application is going to take a six months You know the skill gaps out there, You know, how do we onboard Um, the science majors being able to tap on You know that the the audience that you don't have to be facing a wall of definitely looking forward to talking to the rest of your your team's your customer in the ecosystem. Jumps to minimum.
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Paulo Rosado, OutSystems | CUBE Conversation, April 2020
>> Announcer: From theCUBE studios in Palo Alto and Boston, connecting with thought leaders all around the world, this is a CUBE Conversation. >> Hi, I'm Stu Miniman, and welcome to a CUBE Conversation. We always love talking to founders of companies. We love supporting the Boston-area community, but even more, right now, we're of course talking to leaders in the industry about some of the challenges facing with the global pandemic, so, happy to welcome to the program first-time guest Paulo Rosado, who is the founder and CEO of OutSystems. You are based in Boston, your company is global. Paulo, thanks so much for joining us, and let's start out talking about kind of the age we are in right now and how you are supporting your customers, your employees, and the developer community that you engage with. >> Absolutely, and it's a pleasure to be here, Stu. Actually, since the 23rd of March, that our 1,100 employees are all working remote, so we've had more than 1,000 Zoom calls logged, at least among the people that I know. And we have dogs and kids everywhere, and we have to adjust, 'cause we have a lot of new parents, so the kids are all over them and whatever. But actually, productivity and morale is really at a high rate. The business is going really, really well. However, as in a very OutSystems type of way, actually, because we're so fast building these digital solutions that we've launched a program with our partners. We asked them for ideas, we got more than 200 ideas coming in, and we're sponsoring 20 of those ideas. One of them is with Deloitte, for instance, where we fundamentally, in one week, they've created a full logistics system to manage all the supplies within 16 municipalities, including ventilators, masks, PPEs and the like. >> Well, that's great to hear, right. So if people want to find out more on the OutSystems website, it's the COVID-19 Community Response Program, and love to see, Paulo, we're going to talk a bit about OutSystems and what you're doing for customers. Of course, the speed of development of new applications is what your company's been doing for a long time, and it kind of becomes a little bit bromide that we talk about, "Oh, well, software's eating the world." Well, in challenging times, how is software hoping to meet the challenges that communities, municipalities, employees, companies need to survive in these challenging situations? So anything else you want to talk about, kind of the community program? >> Yeah, well, so what we did is we opened up the community, worldwide community, actually, because today we serve about 60 countries, and so we wanted to have projects that really add impact. We had a couple from Germany, and some from Asia, and it's amazing. Today, we have sponsored 14, so we have 14 scalable installations already running. Some of these projects have gone live, some are still in development. But what's interesting is that the 200,000-plus communities, that they're getting together. We have all these virtual teams, subject matter experts, relationships with house officers and house offices, and developers, and we're just churning away. And the innovation of the people when they have, actually, something that they can build real solutions fast, they can iterate on top, it's absolutely amazing. And it's our contribution, also, to the world here, really. >> Yeah, very important, Paulo, thank you for doing that. Boy, I think, Paulo, you started the company back in 2001. The discussion around software and developers was rather nascent back in those days. So bring us a little bit through the journey of the company, if you would, and some of the major things that are different now in, really, you're entering the third decade of the company, so bring us back to some of the early days, as well as, what is significantly different today? >> Actually, the idea that we had initially was very much the one that has become truth. We were just about 14 years ahead of the market. So the company's called OutSystems because at the time, we believed that a large percent of systems would migrate out of the data center. That is what today is called the cloud. We believed, at the time, based on all the evidence, that a lot of software that companies were going to be building needed to be done in a very agile way, which is, you need to build fast, but not only build fast, but change very, very fast. And it took us a while until we reached about three to four years ago, when suddenly, everything became agile. Suddenly, everything that you build, all the software that you build, you no longer had one year or 18 months to build this project. Now, you had weeks, and those times have been compressing. And so, what's happening now is we encounter ourselves in a world where companies increasingly want to build more software because they want to be differentiated, they want to compete, but the talent available and the speed they have to build these pieces of software are becoming more and more challenging, and we help a lot in doing that. We are the most mature, the most advanced no-code/low-code platform in the market. And so, it's a great time for us now. >> Yeah, Paulo, I'd like to help understand software development, application modernization are very important topics for a number of years now. I think back to last year, Satya Nadella on stage at Microsoft Ignite, and he was talking about just the massive amounts of new applications that would be built over the next few years. And it's interesting, a company like Microsoft that, you go back 10 years ago, it'd be like, "Well, you'll be using all of our software, "not thinking about building your own software." So you've got partnerships with the public cloud providers, there's all sorts of new partners as well as competitors entering the space. So help us understand kind of where OutSystems fits in this ecosystem and differentiates itself from some of the other noise that's out there. >> No, absolutely. Well, we've woken up a lot of giants, definitely, with this approach. One of the differentiators is that these platforms are actually pretty hard to build, and so, if you look into what Satya said in that particular conference, he was mentioning the fact that fundamentally, every company needs to become a cloud software company. But in order for you to become a cloud software company, you need a very large number of talent skills. You need good web developers, front-end developers, back-end developers. You need to have people who understand DevOps, you need to understand scalability, security, all of these things. You can do that with the tens and even hundreds of tools that are in the market, but what the platform like OutSystems stands up by doing is ends up abstracting a lot of debt and just gives you a very fast capacity for you to build your mobile applications, your pricing engines, your workflows, your portals, in a very fast way. So leveraging the people that you have, leveraging the unique knowledge of the business that you have, and letting you catch up to disruptors that really have all those technical skill sets that today are so rare. >> Yeah, and I'd love to hear, tell us a little bit about your customer base. So you've been around for many years, so I'm sure it is quite diverse, but how many customers does OutSystems have? If you've got a key use case or two that might help us understand where this low-code/no-code solution is helping them through their journey. >> Oh, absolutely, we have companies like Safeway, Chevron, T-Mobile. All of them have somehow different use cases, because we are in the business of innovation, and so, whatever you want to innovate with, you innovate typically with OutSystems. We have a particular company which is the largest oil and gas terminal management company in the world. They have 73 terminals. And one of the things they built was a full ERP, a full platform, digital platform, to manage all logistics of the tankers that come into the ports, deploy the oil in the reservoirs, and then having trucks that come and take the oil away. It's a very complex business, and they were looking at, fundamentally, a four- to six-year project to build this, and they did it in seven months. And so, these type of compressions of time for these very large systems is a huge, huge differentiator. Then we have, on the other hand, companies that have built their front ends, typically mobile applications integrated with web applications, and those applications change, fundamentally, almost every day or every week. We have a bank, for instance, that's releasing a version per day in their applications. That speed of development gives them a huge competitive advantage but puts a lot of pressure on the stack and all the IT that's needed, and we help there because of the platform. >> Yeah, Paulo, we've been talking for years about some of the transformations that companies are going through, and that application transformation really is one of the bigger challenges that they face along those lines. In some of the events I go to, the communities I look at, there's a lot of talk about how containerization in Kubernetes is helping to move the infrastructure team to get ready for this. Of course, we've talked a bit already about how public cloud's changing things. Serverless is a different paradigm for how application developers should think about the platforms they're living on. How does OutSystems kind of plug in to these trends which have come along in the time since you've been out there? >> Oh, very well. The way these platforms work, at least, the way the OutSystems platform works, is that we have an automation layer who's responsible, fundamentally, for compressing time and making things increasingly easier. Basically, just give an IT department or company the capacity to build things 100 times faster. But underneath, we actually use the newest architectures that give us high scalability, also scaling resilience, 99.999% of uptime. And in those cases, for instance, for that, we use containers, Linux, Docker, all of those type of technologies. We run standard on AWS, we also run on Azure. And so, we can provide automation, but underneath, we're fundamentally using the same tools that all enterprise-grade architects are using. >> Okay, great, Paulo. Last question I have for you, give us a little bit your outlook on the future of software development, what we should be looking at when it comes to OutSystems and your community. >> Well, actually, it's not only about OutSystems, it's all about development of the software. We believe, and we see evidence of it, that while software development used to be done by some elites about 10, 15 years ago, today, every company needs to build their own software. And more than 65% of new software that's going to be built in the next three to five years is going to be done with a no-code or low-code platform. That's just too much, you just need that speed, you don't have enough talent. And actually, what we see, and we're doing a lot of research there, is that complementing the developers, we're seeing more and more AI bots that actually assist development in a lot of the boring tasks that are part of the development and deployment cycle, like validation of code, automatic testing, creating the right patterns of architecture for high scalability and maintainability. We're introducing a lot of those things in the platform. So in the next years, we believe we'll see more and more developers being helped by artificial intelligence bots, therefore progressing in that 100X to 1,000X automation productivity enhancement. >> Well, I tell you, you're hitting on one of our favorite topics to talk about. (Paulo chuckles) We did an event years ago with Andy McAfee and Erik Brynjolfsson from MIT, talking about how it really is about racing with the machines. So I've seen things that said, "Oh, computer programmers, you're the next things "that are going to be replaced by robots." And what I'm hearing from you is, of course, what we know is that really it is the combination of people plus this software that are really going to supercharge things going forward. And you're nodding, so you would agree. >> That's exactly it. And we already have evidence of that because we have a lot of our AI is already deployed inside the platform, and so we're measuring, we're learning with it. And we can see tremendous, almost exponential improvements. It's almost as if a developer, as they're creating these functional requirements, gets augmented with an extra brain. So it really works, and it's time now, it's reaching time for AI to be used to help the software development cycle. >> Right, well, Paulo, thank you so much for the conversation. Absolutely we hope that these kind of technologies are the ones that are going to help the global economy as we hopefully move forward from the results of the current global situation here. So thank you so much for joining us, and definitely look forward to keeping track of the company in the future. All right-- >> Thank you, Stu, it was a pleasure. Thank you very much. >> Thanks, I'm Stu Miniman, and as always, check out theCUBE.net for all of the digital events, as well as the archives of interviews that we've done, reach out to us if you have any questions, and as always, thank you for watching theCUBE. (upbeat electronic music)
SUMMARY :
connecting with thought leaders all around the world, and the developer community that you engage with. Absolutely, and it's a pleasure to be here, Stu. kind of the community program? And the innovation of the people of the company, if you would, and some and the speed they have to build these pieces of the other noise that's out there. So leveraging the people that you have, Yeah, and I'd love to hear, tell us a lot of pressure on the stack and all about some of the transformations the capacity to build things 100 times faster. to OutSystems and your community. of the boring tasks that are part of the development And what I'm hearing from you is, of course, inside the platform, and so we're measuring, are the ones that are going to help Thank you very much. reach out to us if you have any questions,
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Karl Soderlund, Palo Alto Networks | Palo Alto Networks Ignite22
the cube presents ignite 22. brought to you by Palo Alto Networks hey guys and girls welcome back to Las Vegas it's thecube we are live at Palo Alto networks ignite 22. this is day one of two days of cube coverage Lisa Martin here with Dave vellante Dave we've had great conversations today talking with Executives the partner ecosystem is evolving it's growing at Palo Alto networks going to be digging into that next well we heard a lot of talk about you know Palo Alto you know the goal 100 billion dollar you know market cap company and to me a way and I think a critical way in which you get there is partner with the ecosystem because you can't do it alone the power of many versus the resources of one agree completely agree we've got Carl Sutherland with us SVP of North America ecosystem sales at Palo Alto networks welcome to the cube thanks so much for having me it's great being here so here we are the first full day of the conference actually started yesterday with the partner Summit give the audience a flavor of the partner Summit who was there what was talked about what's the current voice of the partner these days yeah great questions so we had a 150 Partners from around the globe representing all of our different routes to Market and for us our partner Community is expanding we work with system integrators we work with gsis we work with service providers Distributors traditional value-added resellers so it was a whole host of partners that were there it was a c-level audience and we really talked about the direction of where we're going as a company how they can continue to invest with us and have greater success long term and so from a voice of the partner standpoint what they're here to do is share with us where they want to engage more how we can enable them to be successful you talked about the Power of One Versus a community we're really looking at a segment of the marketplace right now for us to scale and hit our aspirational goals we can't do it with Palo Alto Network employees we have an employee base of 12 000 people if you take our ecosystem it's over a hundred thousand employees so if we can get them aligned and selling and motivated it's going to be a good day for all of us what so what are they telling you where do they want to spend their time where do they want to add value where are they winning yeah that's a great question so there's a transformation that's going on right now in the partner Community what's happening is a lot of Partners going that are transitioning from what would be traditional transactional Partners or resale Partners to being services-led and the Market's driving them there and what I mean by that is that customers are in a desperate dire State needing assistance figuring out and solving these very complex security problems so if there is a subset of Partners out there that have the skill set and capabilities that can come in from a consultative standpoint help them to develop the structure through deployment a full-blown management and do life cycle management that's a tremendous value I mean the numbers you hear thrown around in the industry right now is up to seven million uh security I.T jobs right now that are out there the open head count is tremendous people can't hire people fast enough all of us in the industry are going through and trying to find early in career or college graduates so we can train quickly or cross-train from other segments to get them into cyber security so if our part of the community can continue to get skilled and expand it's only going to help and the cloud is obviously where does the cloud fit in Carl because you know a lot of the partners when the clouds really start on the Steep part of the s-curve are like we have an opportunity here and by the way if we don't transition our business we could get commoditized yes so that you know that but you were talking about the transactional we can help people move to the cloud and a big part of that has got to be we can secure them in the cloud because it's a more in a lot of ways you know Cloud security is great but in a lot of ways it adds complexity what are you hearing from the party yeah so we are fortunate at Palo Alto networks when you look across the three loud largest cloud service provider from a Google AWS and Microsoft Azure we're either their number one isv or absolutely their number one security ISP so we've got a great uh relationships with them now our partners are coming along and saying how do we transact how do we add value a lot of times that value to your question is wrapping services around it to make sure it's a successful deployment because exactly what you stated the complexity is an all-time high so how do we make sure that we can solve a complex problem in a short term while increasing their security posture and that's really the goal and so where there there's sometimes complexity and mystery there's opportunity and partners can be profitable in doing that I wrote a piece once chaos is cash I have a security you know the criminals and vendors as well yes yes where there is is challenge and complexity there is great opportunity yeah talk about some of the partner program Evolution and some of the things that were announced with respect to the next wave program just yesterday yeah so at next wave um the program's been around for 12 years we constantly are looking to make enhancements and how we make those enhancements are by going out and speaking with these partners and listening to what they need so I have the honor to get to represent what their needs are and how we bring it to market for them so a couple interesting announcements that we made yesterday first of all we announced a new structural format for the program which is really going to allow our different route to markets to have a program that's fit for them because in the past when we were just traditionally a firewall company when the ecosystem just meant resale it was an easy model to have it's complex right now sometimes it's resale sometimes it's influence sometimes its services only we really need to be flexible and credible so we announced a Services only path so if you are a consulting company if you are a insurance company and you want to bring opportunities and leads to Palo Alto Network and you want to provide the services if you're not interested in the transaction you don't want to get involved in that we now have a pathway for you to support you to enable you and Kennedy to give you recognition within Palo Alto networks from an alignment standpoint so we're super excited about that uh as I know you guys speak quite a bit about the managed Services industry so it's a red hot area within Palo Alto networks one of the needs out there was that all not all managed Service Partners are created equally and so some have fantastic capabilities some have gaps we were calling it a P2P part of the partner program within managed services so our two managed Services Partners can actually work together to solve the problem that the end user has and give them a better outcome and fill each other's gaps so candidly it's been going on for a while the partnering but we've never really recognized it so we really built a program around it and now are sponsoring and supporting it versus people doing it on a sidebar so those guys were here in force yesterday yes sir right and and so obviously a lot of energy I'm sure do you see a day where they're here in force on the show floor yeah and and how do you see that evolving so they are here enforcement just right here you see a few of them I'm looking at AWS who's our you know we are their largest isv I'm looking at CDW we had them on the floor is our if not largest second largest partner globally right now and continuing to grow at a rate well they will probably be our first billion dollar partner to think about the size and scale of that relationship and where we've come from um their name CDW don't they never really thought of CDW right as a as a security firm wow what a transformation but please carry on and think about that let's talk about CDW saying think about reach that CDW has it's a 23 billion dollar organization and in a way an inside out sales model meaning there's a tremendous reach they have from their inside sales team and the relationships that they have traditionally historically they were procurement relationships in a way and I said this to the CDW team they were the easy button in the past now what they're doing is they made Seven Acquisitions over the last two years all of them Services oriented so now they're coming in as a consultative Viewpoint and solving a lot of complex problems and I see Google Cloud right here another great partner for us that we continue to invest in we have a great amount of integration and Technology integration with them and so and those are the three that I'm seeing just looking over my left shoulder right if I turn around I'll probably name five more so the majority of this room are the partners that fall within our ecosystem today fantastic so okay so what's your vision for where you want to take this ecosystem because as I said at the top I mean ecosystems are sort of the Hallmark of a I guess you're not a cloud company see I think you of you as a cloud company and so okay good so and I know you don't own your own public cloud and you know your history is you had your own data centers but yeah but you're the security Cloud yeah and so a security Cloud any Cloud needs a great ecosystem so what's your vision for the ecosystem let's go you know five plus years out sure you we start with the end in mind and what I mean by that is we always start with the end user what's the end user's needs the end user today needs flexibility with how they consume the technology they need help in how they support and deploy the technology they need guidance in how they plan out for their future and what their growth is so what we're doing is building a very diverse set of Partners in our ecosystem that all have special skills that they bring to the table so when nikesh sits up here and talks about being a 10 billion or a 20 billion or a 50 billion dollar company we absolutely cannot do it without our ecosystem and without having a very diverse ecosystem that all has different skills that can help us scale because again Palo Alto does not want to be a services company right let's work with the people who are the best at that when we think about the deloittees and accentures and the value they have within the end user base and our joint customer base what a fantastic time to to partner together and solve those boardroom challenges and that's where I really see the vision is that at the boardroom we're building out a plan that's three to five years that's going to continue to increase their security posture because we're not thinking if we're not forward thinking like that will be left behind because the Bad actors are thinking about how they find the different areas to penetrate they're getting so sophisticated the badocracy adversaries they are well funded they're motivated Grant the ransomware attack numbers in terms of the Velocity the complexity yes no longer are we going to get if it's when yeah uh big challenge for organizations Acro across I mean really across an organization regardless of Industry are you guys having any conversations with boards in the partner organization to help align the board with the executive level and really not just have security as a board level initiative but actually being able to execute a strategy yeah and you you nailed it it's not an initiative the initiative to me means there's a beginning and an end right a strategy means there's going to be a comprehensive approach how you continue to improve and we are very fortunate that a lot of our largest Partners around the globe have that position within the boards where they are the trusted advisor so what we're doing now is enabling them and giving them the skills so they can have a more comprehensive conversation around our platform approach around the challenges you know BJ I knew who was with you earlier today likes to say that the average customer he goes and sees has 50 to 70 disparate Technologies within their environment how do you manage that how do you maintain it how do you do renewals oh and by the way most likely the people who actually initially procured that aren't with you anymore they're in a different company so the need for a platform approach is there more so than ever but the decision for the platform quite often has to come from the most senior levels within the organization because again I'm going to go back to your what was your chaos line that you said chaos is Cash chaos is Cash well also chaos is job security so if you're at at the lower level within an organization that chaos and that magic gives you a little job security but that's a short term long term you really need to think about how you're protecting the environment holistically so it is a boardroom decision down that we need to have and you know that chaos the the motivation for that piece that I wrote was from the criminals standpoint right and then I was like okay but there's great opportunities for the technology industry but but I think that you know where we're headed I wonder if I get your thoughts on thoughts on this Carlos we always talk about the Board Room I think we're going now Beyond it here I am you know I'm hypersensitive about my security I got password managers two-factor authentication I don't want SMS based two-factor authentication I want my own authenticator and that's still not enough yeah I got air gaps yeah you know for my crypto you know and I'm super paranoid my point is I think the the individuals are getting much more Savvy about security why because we've all been hacked you know it's like when you lost your data in the because you weren't backed up you know that never happens anymore it's in the cloud or you know some people have multiple backups so it's it's becoming a cultural Trend beyond the board and it's because of the board lord said hey this is really important and so I think it's not only top down I think you're going to see bottom up and middle out and the exciting part for Palo Alto networks is and maybe for you as well is there any more exciting environment to talk about that's rapidly changing and constantly changing you could come back next week and our conversation is going to change as far as what we're doing we constantly need to be thinking three steps ahead of where we're going to move and be flexible and dynamic enough to change and that's what's going to keep us ahead of the economy yeah there's no segment as Dynamic I mean data is dynamic but not as fast changing as cyber I mean because of the adversary as you mentioned I mean so smart so now now they have open adversary ecosystems I mean the adversaries are building ecosystems right absolutely insane I've got peers that are bad guys yeah right right chaos is Cash what's your favorite partner story that you think really demonstrates the value of the ecosystem that Palo Alto networks has built yeah so without sharing names I'll talk about a large U.S national partner that was very uh that was founded on a networking business and partnered with a very large networking company and built that business and was successful doing that they wanted to Pivot into the security space and very early on they made a commitment to Paulo and Ulta networks to say we're going to learn we're going to invest we're going to align with your sales force and we're going to work together and right now they are our largest partner globally and they grew 70 year over year wow so think about that this is not on a small base we're talking about a half a billion dollars in Revenue growing at 70 year over year because to your point earlier it wasn't an initiative it was a strategy and they're executing on the strategy so I tell a lot of we call War Stories like that to other partners that are looking to invest from different markets it could be a large service provider that's you know trying to transform themselves into a security player and talk about the potential of what it could be in for their Marketplace and by the way I say publicly quite often Palo Alto networks will be your most profitable relationship that you have because of the total addressable Market that we're going after because of the solutions that we bring to Market and because of the opportunity within the end users right now and we're excited I want to come back to the mssp in that in its context so we've seen the rise of the mssp and particularly you know we were talking earlier I think it was with Wendy that uh no it was with CDW like 50 of the organizations in North America don't even have a sock yeah right so they need a service provider to come out so you said we you don't want to be in the services business right you're a product company right and that's from a financial standpoint that's phenomenal you're roughly 50 billion dollar market cap company let's let's call it six billion in Revenue so that's a nice Revenue multiple 8X you know and and and the Market's down so you're a 10x Revenue multiple company typically services companies are a 1x or a 2X are you seeing a change there where technology is giving these service providers operating leverage where they're able to scale whether it's because of the cloud because of the Partnerships the Eco would you call it before the the peer-to-peer ecosystem yes like the Gap fillers yes are you do you see the economics of services changing yeah from a baseline economic standpoint not looking at the valuations but let's look at it from a an opportunity to be profitable with Palo Alto networks we know if you are just doing the transaction you have a certain range of margin that you're going to make in the opportunity we know if you wrap services around it you're going to get 3x to 4X that margin we know that if it's managed services and there's life cycle management you're talking 5x to 8X that initial transaction and by the way it's recurring revenue for them so when you think about it if you just do a transaction you're only recurring revenue is a renewal that's predictable but it's not extremely profitable now we're saying the operating leverage you get is if you wrap that services and you're going to have an increased opportunity for a greater margin and it's sticky it's hard to replace a partner who's adding value to your team and A lot of times you walk in the end user you can't tell who the partner is and who the end user is because they are one team that's value yes and that's going to drive ebit yep for your partners and that's going to drive valuation you know you know I want to come back to valuation not that I'm not you can do that okay but because I was I predicted I do my prediction post every year and I predicted last year that we're going to see you know a Spate of MSS mssps I predicted you're going to see someone go public nobody's going public these days but I still think it's a great business yeah that's an untapped opportunity it's not an 8X or it's not a software marginal economics or but it's really sticky super high value yeah and I think it has you know long-term potential yeah to your point if you want to talk valuations for a second let's look at what's happened to the marketplace over the last 12 to 18 months the large majority of the non-public partners that we work with have taken on Capital from private Equity the private Equity that has come in has challenged them to go through a transformation that transformation is you we need you to be Services LED and that service is value because they believe there's going to is going to be a great greater evaluation from that end and they'll be able to scale and grow and stay ahead of the market doing that so when we have conversations when I have conversations yes I'm talking about the technology and the direction of the company but I'm also in there as a consultant saying where's the direction of your company and how do we have this great platform and how do we build it into your business and you wrap services around it and those are the conversations that CEOs want to have when I'm sitting down with our partner CEOs I bet they don't want to talk about our product being better than someone else's product they want to talk about the direction and health of their business yeah it's their business that's a business discussion business decision and they're thinking about okay what's my five-year strategic plan because they got to make bets yeah they're going to bet on a platform that they can add value to that creates that flywheel effect and they get a bet on your ecosystem as well correct oh correct absolutely good to be the leader it's good to be a leader and you know I'm sure as you've heard a few times we believe that economic headwinds are going to favor the market leaders and economic headwinds are going to favor the platform approach so we're going in more aggressive with our partner Community than ever before and there's just so much energy and excitement I feel like I keep on using that term over and over again but that's really what we walk away with last question for you is we have about 30 seconds left a lot of momentum in the partner ecosystem as you've described eloquently what's next what's next what's next yeah so when I I rolled out the strategy for what's next and what it is is a foundational platform that is going to allow flexibility for the partners and for them to decide where they want to invest and it can be in new areas it can be I went online closer with the cloud service providers it could be I want to build a managed Services business can you help us do this it could be I want to go through and I want to drive greater penetration into geographical areas we haven't been before so again we're almost acting as a consultant looking at what they're going from the direction and building a program and a platform where we can grow and work with them it's exciting it's fun it's great highly collaborative highly collaborative highly collaborative thank you for joining us on the program on the partner program the ecosystem Better Together what you guys are doing and ultimately how it benefits the end user customer we really appreciate your insights excellent thank you thank you so much appreciate it all right our pleasure for our guests and Dave vellante I'm Lisa Martin you're watching the cube the leader in live Enterprise and emerging Tech coverage [Music]
SUMMARY :
it's good to be a leader and you know
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Kirk Bresniker, HPE | SuperComputing 22
>>Welcome back, everyone live here at Supercomputing 22 in Dallas, Texas. I'm John for host of the Queue here at Paul Gillin, editor of Silicon Angle, getting all the stories, bringing it to you live. Supercomputer TV is the queue right now. And bringing all the action Bresniker, chief architect of Hewlett Packard Labs with HP Cube alumnis here to talk about Supercomputing Road to Quantum. Kirk, great to see you. Thanks for coming on. >>Thanks for having me guys. Great to be >>Here. So Paul and I were talking and we've been covering, you know, computing as we get into the large scale cloud now on premises compute has been one of those things that just never stops. No one ever, I never heard someone say, I wanna run my application or workload on slower, slower hardware or processor or horsepower. Computing continues to go, but this, we're at a step function. It feels like we're at a level where we're gonna unleash new, new creativity, new use cases. You've been kind of working on this for many, many years at hp, Hewlett Packard Labs, I remember the machine and all the predecessor r and d. Where are we right now from your standpoint, HPE standpoint? Where are you in the computing? It's as a service, everything's changing. What's your view? >>So I think, you know, you capture so well. You think of the capabilities that you create. You create these systems and you engineer these amazing products and then you think, whew, it doesn't get any better than that. And then you remind yourself as an engineer. But wait, actually it has to, right? It has to because we need to continuously provide that next generation of scientists and engineer and artists and leader with the, with the tools that can do more and do more frankly with less. Because while we want want to run the program slower, we sure do wanna run them for less energy. And figuring out how we accomplish all of those things, I think is, is really where it's gonna be fascinating. And, and it's also, we think about that, we think about that now, scale data center billion, billion operations per second, the new science, arts and engineering that we'll create. And yet it's also what's beyond what's beyond that data center. How do we hook it up to those fantastic scientific instruments that are capable to generate so much information? We need to understand how we couple all of those things together. So I agree, we are at, at an amazing opportunity to raise the aspirations of the next generation. At the same time we have to think about what's coming next in terms of the technology. Is the silicon the only answer for us to continue to advance? >>You know, one of the big conversations is like refactoring, replatforming, we have a booth behind us that's doing energy. You can build it in data centers for compute. There's all kinds of new things. Is there anything in the paradigm of computing and now on the road to quantum, which I know you're involved, I saw you have on LinkedIn, you have an open rec for that. What paradigm elements are changing that weren't in play a few years ago that you're looking at right now as you look at the 20 mile stair into quantum? >>So I think for us it's fascinating because we've had a tailwind at our backs my whole career, 33 years at hp. And what I could count on was transistors got at first they got cheaper, faster and they use less energy. And then, you know, that slowed down a little bit. Now they're still cheaper and faster. As we look in that and that Moore's law continues to flatten out of it, there has to be something better to do than, you know, yet another copy of the prior design opening up that diversity of approach. And whether that is the amazing wafer scale accelerators, we see these application specific silicon and then broadening out even farther next to the next to the silicon. Here's the analog computational accelerator here is now the, the emergence of a potential quantum accelerator. So seeing that diversity of approaches, but what we have to happen is we need to harness all of those efficiencies and yet we still have to realize that there are human beings that need to create the application. So how do we bridge, how do we accommodate the physical of, of new kinds of accelerator? How do we imagine the cyber physical connection to the, to the rest of the supercomputer? And then finally, how do we bridge that productivity gap? Especially not for people who like me who have been around for a long time, we wanna think about that next generation cuz they're the ones that need to solve the problems and write the code that will do it. >>You mentioned what exists beyond silicon. In fact, are you looking at different kinds of materials that computers in the future will be built upon? >>Oh absolutely. You think of when, when we, we look at the quantum, the quantum modalities then, you know, whether it is a trapped ion or a superconducting, a piece of silicon or it is a neutral ion. There's just no, there's about half a dozen of these novel systems because really what we're doing when we're using a a quantum mechanical computer, we're creating a tiny universe. We're putting a little bit of material in there and we're manipulating at, at the subatomic level, harnessing the power of of, of quantum physics. That's an incredible challenge. And it will take novel materials, novel capabilities that we aren't just used to seeing. Not many people have a helium supplier in their data center today, but some of them might tomorrow. And understanding again, how do we incorporate industrialize and then scale all of these technologies. >>I wanna talk Turkey about quantum because we've been talking for, for five years. We've heard a lot of hyperbole about quantum. We've seen some of your competitors announcing quantum computers in the cloud. I don't know who's using these, these computers, what kind of work they're being used, how much of the, how real is quantum today? How close are we to having workable true quantum computers and what can you point to any examples of how it's being, how that technology is being used in the >>Field? So it, it remains nascent. We'll put it that way. I think part of the challenge is we see this low level technology and of course it was, you know, professor Richard Fineman who first pointed us in this direction, you know, more than 30 years ago. And you know, I I I trust his judgment. Yes. You know that there's probably some there there especially for what he was doing, which is how do we understand and engineer systems at the quantum mechanical level. Well he said a quantum mechanical system's probably the way to go. So understanding that, but still part of the challenge we see is that people have been working on the low level technology and they're reaching up to wondering will I eventually have a problem that that I can solve? And the challenge is you can improve something every single day and if you don't know where the bar is, then you don't ever know if you'll be good enough. >>I think part of the approach that we like to understand, can we start with the problem, the thing that we actually want to solve and then figure out what is the bespoke combination of classical supercomputing, advanced AI accelerators, novel quantum quantum capabilities. Can we simulate and design that? And we think there's probably nothing better to do that than than an next to scale supercomputer. Yeah. Can we simulate and design that bespoke environment, create that digital twin of this environment and if we, we've simulated it, we've designed it, we can analyze it, see is it actually advantageous? Cuz if it's not, then we probably should go back to the drawing board. And then finally that then becomes the way in which we actually run the quantum mechanical system in this hybrid environment. >>So it's na and you guys are feeling your way through, you get some moonshot, you work backwards from use cases as a, as a more of a discovery navigational kind of mission piece. I get that. And Exoscale has been a great role for you guys. Congratulations. Has there been strides though in quantum this year? Can you point to what's been the, has the needle moved a little bit a lot or, I mean it's moving I guess to some, there's been some talk but we haven't really been able to put our finger on what's moving, like what need, where's the needle moved I >>Guess in quantum. And I think, I think that's part of the conversation that we need to have is how do we measure ourselves. I know at the World Economic Forum, quantum Development Network, we had one of our global future councils on the future of quantum computing. And I brought in a scene I EEE fellow Par Gini who, you know, created the international technology roadmap for semiconductors. And I said, Paulo, could you come in and and give us examples, how was the semiconductor community so effective not only at developing the technology but predicting the development of technology so that whether it's an individual deciding if they should change careers or it's a nation state deciding if they should spend a couple billion dollars, we have that tool to predict the rate of change and improvement. And so I think that's part of what we're hoping by participating will bring some of that road mapping skill and technology and understanding so we can make those better reasoned investments. >>Well it's also fun to see super computing this year. Look at the bigger picture, obviously software cloud natives running modern applications, infrastructure as code that's happening. You're starting to see the integration of, of environments almost like a global distributed operating system. That's the way I call it. Silicon and advancements have been a big part of what we see now. Merchant silicon, but also dpu are on the scene. So the role role of silicon is there. And also we have supply chain problems. So how, how do you look at that as a a, a chief architect of h Hewlett Packard Labs? Because not only you have to invent the future and dream it up, but you gotta deal with the realities and you get the realities are silicon's great, we need more of that quantums around the corner, but supply chain, how do you solve that? What's your thoughts and how do you, how, how is HPE looking at silicon innovation and, and supply chain? >>And so for us it, it is really understanding that partnership model and understanding and contributing. And so I will do things like I happen to be the, the systems and architectures chapter editor for the I eee International Roadmap for devices and systems, that community that wants to come together and provide that guidance. You know, so I'm all about telling the semiconductor and the post semiconductor community, okay, this is where we need to compute. I have a partner in the applications and benchmark that says, this is what we need to compute. And when you can predict in the future about where you need to compute, what you need to compute, you can have a much richer set of conversations because you described it so well. And I think our, our senior fellow Nick Dubey would, he's coined the term internet of workflows where, you know, you need to harness everything from the edge device all the way through the extra scale computer and beyond. And it's not just one sort of static thing. It is a very interesting fluid topology. I'll use this compute at the edge, I'll do this information in the cloud, I want to have this in my exoscale data center and I still need to provide the tool so that an individual who's making that decision can craft that work flow across all of those different resources. >>And those workflows, by the way, are complicated. Now you got services being turned on and off. Observability is a hot area. You got a lot more data in in cycle inflow. I mean a lot more action. >>And I think you just hit on another key point for us and part of our research at labs, I have, as part of my other assignments, I help draft our AI ethics global policies and principles and not only tell getting advice about, about how we should live our lives, it also became the basis for our AI research lab at Shewl Packard Labs because they saw, here's a challenge and here's something where I can't actually believe, maintain my ethical compliance. I need to have engineer new ways of, of achieving artificial intelligence. And so much of that comes back to governance over that data and how can we actually create those governance systems and and do that out in the open >>That's a can of worms. We're gonna do a whole segment on that one, >>On that >>Technology, on that one >>Piece I wanna ask you, I mean, where rubber meets the road is where you're putting your dollars. So you've talked a lot, a lot of, a lot of areas of, of progress right now, where are you putting your dollars right now at Hewlett Packard Labs? >>Yeah, so I think when I draw, when I draw my 2030 vision slide, you know, I, for me the first column is about heterogeneous, right? How do we bring all of these novel computational approaches to be able to demonstrate their effectiveness, their sustainability, and also the productivity that we can drive from, from, from them. So that's my first column. My section column is that edge to exoscale workflow that I need to be able to harness all of those computational and data resources. I need to be aware of the energy consequence of moving data, of doing computation and find all of that while still maintaining and solving for security and privacy. But the last thing, and, and that's one was a, one was a how one was aware. The last thing is a who, right? And is is how do we take that subject matter expert? I think of a, a young engineer starting their career at hpe. It'll be very different than my 33 years. And part of it, you know, they will be undaunted by any, any scale. They will be cloud natives, maybe they metaverse natives, they will demand to design an open cooperative environment. So for me it's thinking about that individual and how do I take those capabilities, heterogeneous edge to exito scale workflows and then make them productive. And for me, that's, that's where we were putting our emphasis on those three. When, where and >>Who. Yeah. And making it compatible for the next generation. We see the student cluster competition going on over there. This is the only show that we cover that we've been to that is from the dorm room to the boardroom and this cuz Supercomputing now is elevating up into that workflow, into integration, multiple environments, cloud, premise, edge, metaverse. This is like a whole nother world. >>And, and, but I think it's, it's the way that regardless of which human pursuit you're in, you know, everyone is going to be demand simulation and modeling ai, ML and massive data m l and massive data analytics that's gonna be at heart of, of everything. And that's what you see. That's what I love about coming here. This isn't just the way we're gonna do science. This is the way we're gonna do everything. >>We're gonna come by your booth, check it out. We've talked to some of the folks, hpe obviously HPE Discover this year, GreenLake with center stage, it's now consumption is a service for technology. Whole nother ballgame. Congratulations on, on all this. I would say the massive, I won't say pivot, but you know, a change >>It >>Is and how you guys >>Operate. And you know, it's funny sometimes you think about the, the pivot to as a services benefiting the customer, but as someone who has supported designs over decades, you know, that ability to to to operate and at peak efficiency, to always keep in perfect operating order and to continuously change while still meeting the customer expectations that actually allows us to deliver innovation to our customers faster than when we are delivering warranted individual packaged products. >>Kirk, thanks for coming on Paul. Great conversation here. You know, the road to Quantum's gonna be paved through computing supercomputing software integrated workflows from the dorm room to the boardroom to Cube, bringing all the action here at Supercomputing 22. I'm Jacque Forer with Paul Gillin. Thanks for watching. We'll be right back.
SUMMARY :
bringing it to you live. Great to be I remember the machine and all the predecessor r and d. Where are we right now from At the same time we have to think about what's coming next in terms of the technology. You know, one of the big conversations is like refactoring, replatforming, we have a booth behind us that's And then, you know, that slowed down a little bit. that computers in the future will be built upon? And understanding again, how do we incorporate industrialize and true quantum computers and what can you point to any examples And the challenge is you can improve something every single day and if you don't know where the bar is, I think part of the approach that we like to understand, can we start with the problem, lot or, I mean it's moving I guess to some, there's been some talk but we haven't really been able to put And I think, I think that's part of the conversation that we need to have is how do we need more of that quantums around the corner, but supply chain, how do you solve that? in the future about where you need to compute, what you need to compute, you can have a much richer set of Now you got services being turned on and off. And so much of that comes back to governance over that data and how can we actually create That's a can of worms. a lot of, a lot of areas of, of progress right now, where are you putting your dollars right And part of it, you know, they will be undaunted by any, any scale. This is the only show that we cover that we've been to that And that's what you see. the massive, I won't say pivot, but you know, a change And you know, it's funny sometimes you think about the, the pivot to as a services benefiting the customer, You know, the road to Quantum's gonna be paved through
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Mattia Baldassarre, Epico Pay | Monaco Crypto Summit 2022
(upbeat music) >> Okay, welcome back everyone. It's the CUBE's live coverage from Monaco for the Monaco Crypto Summit. I'm John Furrier, host of the CUBE. We're getting all the action here as the world goes decentralization as assets from the physical world connect with virtual to hybrid steady state. But Mattia Baldassarre's here, founder and CEO of Epico Play. Welcome to the CUBE! >> Thank you, John >> So I love to have you on. I love the Italian accent. Get a little European going here. We're from Silicon valley, where you're in Italy. Great to have you on. So Epico Play, what is it? >> So Epico Play is an innovative startup with the aim to digitalize the sport industry, to support clubs, federation leagues, to move into the digital era. Right? So we build up a technology. It is, actually two heads. One is a kind of white label technology for, you know, small, bigger club and then a B2C platform api-play.com where you actually can open up your own engaging channel straight away and allow clubs to have a digital infrastructure, to engage directly with their community, to monetize it and to make together some let's say two way engagement experience. Because we are used today, to just, you know a communication usually by this brand that has one way. So I tell you something, here is something, you know we create something together between the brand that is a club and the community itself. So it's kind of our ability to lump these experiences. >> Yeah. So I saw something on YouTube a day and a half ago. Roma soccer team introduced a new player and the fans were going crazy. They had a little light show. He comes out with the Big Digital Bits logo on this jersey. I forgot who the player was. You know, it was a young player. >> Dybala. Paulo Dybala. >> Yes. And the fans packed the place. And I know he's got the sponsorship with Digital Bits. So Digital Bits is sponsoring that club, but then the underlying technology. Are you over the top? Are you building apps on top of digital bits? >> Yes. I mean, that's also one of the, you know touching point of our partnership. Digital Bits today we announce our partnership with them, with Digital Bits Foundation. They're going to become, you know, our blockchain partner. They will support us on offering the token service to clubs. And for sure, we are going to, we are aiming to create our own token for Epico Play Platform which will always be the substances of the Digital Bits blockchain. And a second step will be for sure optimizing the relationship of Digital Bits, you know, also around the world. >> Yeah. >> But on ourself already has, you know a big pipeline of clubs onboarding. And I was telling before in the in the Summit is not just, we don't want just the top clubs. Right? That's easy. They have money. We want to help, you know, smaller club to go into this new era. Otherwise they're going to lose a lot of audience. They're going to lose a lot of revenue. >> It's interesting Mattia. I was telling earlier guests we had on about the meta version, sports. Sports clubs have been savvy around data for a decade, over a decade, all the big clubs that have TV contracts, certainly. They know how to manage, use technology to manage the team. They have technology to manage the stadiums and they have technology to manage the fan experience which was normally ticketing and, you know, I got a beer, I go to my seat, get stuff delivered, get a shirt, you know spot pricing, being smart. >> Sure. >> So with data. So, okay. That's good. That's a nice foundation. Now with the digital side of things and NFTs you've got assets and you've got a whole other level of interaction on the assets, the player, the brand the fan who can be a player and a fan. And so like now the multiple dimensions of new use cases. >> Completely. It is I believe it is, is like the game A New Hero, you know? So the touching point are much more our, let's say the Gen-Z, you know, the teenager, like they need more, much more input during the week. You know, for our, for my generation going to the stadium was the most exciting thing. So we were waiting for Sunday to go to the stadium, right? Now, the kids, they have so much information that if you don't engage them through this kind of fun engagement during the week, they will play PlayStation, you know or play whatever gaming on Sunday instead of watching the live match. >> But so to get that example let's stay with that for a second. You use your personal experience. Because I felt the same way for sports. If they could reach you during the week you'd be engaging with them. >> Exactly. You collect more data. >> You were ready. >> Exactly, you collect more data and mostly you have a higher quality of the data itself because you see how they behave. You see what they like, not just on the offline pitch. Right? But you can track everything here. So it's a, I think the big step that we bringing also into, into sports >> You know, I did a talk over 15 years ago at MIT and I said, web one was about information. Web two is about connections. And web three is about relationships. Okay, not just who you, you know connected to with devices, relationships. And guess what? Community, NFTs, self-expression, engagement, and the engagement patterns are changing as well. You're talking about things that aren't around right now. >> Yeah, exactly. >> This is new, new benefits. >> It's a new benefit, completely >> New benefits of everybody >> Completely for everybody. And especially, you know, actions that clubs need to do if they want to evolve, you know, that's I think really crucial for them. >> Great. You're building on Digital Bits. Where are you with the company? Talk about the origination story. How did it get started? Did you wake up one day and the apple fell on your head and you said, well, what happened? What's going on? >> So the story is this one, I worked in media, into sport media industry with a big group in London for a long time. And then I was also the CEO of a sport, OTT broadcaster. It is international, but I was taking care of Italy. While I was getting along with clubs, federation leagues, I said, there is a missing here. Right? They still not consider this as a main aspect. They always scared of investment or investing money in this. Right? So that's why we say, okay, you know what when I quit my job, we say, okay, I want, I'm going to... >> You just quit your job. Say I'm going to quit. >> Okay, no, I finished the season. Then I say, okay, done. Now I'm, I'm already thinking about what's going on. And then I open Epico Play. We also, with these mission say, okay there is an opportunity. There is a need in the market. And again, John, I'm not talking about just the top three teams of each league. I'm talking about all the teams. >> All the teams. >> All the teams, professional clubs, being basketball and volleyball. You know, all the sports need these changes. >> Yeah, some are bigger than others, but it's the power law. They all have communities. >> But if you aggregate all the small and medium teams, you know, right, You reach 1.5 billion fans. Right. So huge amount of data. And again, with our technology, we are able to give this environment without an investment from the club. So they are more open. They feel more like comfortable. And we are going to make money together with that. >> And they contribute the assets. So they're partner. >> Yeah. We are completely partner. So we build ecosystem, we then, for them and we make money together. >> It's a joint venture kind of, not formally but it's a win-win. >> It's a win. >> Not a lot of money out of pocket. They put a little bit probably to integrate in, but not big numbers. >> Not a lot of impact on the cash flow because in their mind is still for sure. The pitch, not the field is the most important thing. >> Yes. >> So that's why, okay, then we will help them. Okay. Don't worry. >> It's all upside for them. Do they have a rev share on things too? >> Yes. Exactly. >> So they do a business deal on their side? >> Yes >> So they're happy. They have the option for the future and... >> We build up everything for the future. Then we keep starting and keep monetizing together. So into different ways. >> So can you get some good tickets when the CUBE is in town? >> Whenever you want John. (laughs) >> Of course. What's next for you? Take us through your fundraising. You're building your team. Take a minute to put a plug in for your company. >> We actually, at the end, like seen around 1.2 million. Between, you know, an investment group that we're working with. This other venue, you know, one big TECHO company and some angel, strategic angel investor. Now we are also closing another bridge round to go then in 2023 to make a big round, you know, and scale internationally. So already, now we are approaching five to seven countries new countries, especially, you know, also going to South America where there is a massive adoption of this kind of opportunity, especially in terms of data. Then straight after we're going to, you know, make this fundraising and expand our business. Be really aggressive. As I told you before on the fact that, okay you know what we do the investment. Just let's build us your ecosystem together. >> Yes. >> And then we see, you know can be a different element between eventually other competitors will come out after. >> Okay. Great venture. Congratulations. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for coming on the CUBE. We'll see you at the yacht club later today. >> Thank you so much. >> The big gala event. Stay right there. We're wrapping it up here. I'm John for you here live in Monaco with the CUBE, Monaco Crypto Summit. All the next generation, new wave of businesses being refactored with new technologies, bring in value. That's what decentralization is, web three all coming together. Of course the Cube's covering it like a blanket. I'm John Furrier. We'll be back in more coverage after this short break. (upbeat music)
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I'm John Furrier, host of the CUBE. So I love to have you on. So I tell you something, and the fans were going crazy. And I know he's got the They're going to become, you in the Summit is not just, we a decade, all the big clubs level of interaction on the the Gen-Z, you know, the Because I felt the same way for sports. You collect more data. of the data itself because and the engagement patterns And especially, you know, Talk about the origination story. So the story is this one, Say I'm going to quit. There is a need in the market. You know, all the sports others, but it's the power law. and medium teams, you know, right, So they're partner. So we build ecosystem, we then, It's a joint venture kind of, to integrate in, but not big numbers. Not a lot of impact on the cash flow then we will help them. Do they have a rev share on things too? They have the option for the future and... So into different ways. Whenever you want John. Take a minute to put a in 2023 to make a big round, you know, And then we see, you know Thank you for coming on the CUBE. I'm John for you here live in Monaco
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Daisy Urfer, Algolia & Jason Ling, Apply Digital | AWS Startup Showcase S2 E3
(introductory riff) >> Hey everyone. Welcome to theCUBE's presentation of the "AWS Startup Showcase." This is Season 2, Episode 3 of our ongoing series that features great partners in the massive AWS partner ecosystem. This series is focused on, "MarTech, Emerging Cloud-Scale Customer Experiences." I'm Lisa Martin, and I've got two guests here with me to talk about this. Please welcome Daisy Urfer, Cloud Alliance Sales Director at Algolia, and Jason Lang, the Head of Product for Apply Digital. These folks are here to talk with us today about how Algolia's Search and Discovery enables customers to create dynamic realtime user experiences for those oh so demanding customers. Daisy and Jason, it's great to have you on the program. >> Great to be here. >> Thanks for having us. >> Daisy, we're going to go ahead and start with you. Give the audience an overview of Algolia, what you guys do, when you were founded, what some of the gaps were in the market that your founders saw and fixed? >> Sure. It's actually a really fun story. We were founded in 2012. We are an API first SaaS solution for Search and Discovery, but our founders actually started off with a search tool for mobile platforms, so just for your phone and it quickly expanded, we recognize the need across the market. It's been a really fun place to grow the business. And we have 11,000 customers today and growing every day, with 30 billion searches a week. So we do a lot of business, it's fun. >> Lisa: 30 billion searches a week and I saw some great customer brands, Locost, NBC Universal, you mentioned over 11,000. Talk to me a little bit about some of the technologies, I see that you have a search product, you have a recommendation product. What are some of those key capabilities that the products deliver? 'Cause as we know, as users, when we're searching for something, we expect it to be incredibly fast. >> Sure. Yeah. What's fun about Algolia is we are actually the second largest search engine on the internet today to Google. So we are right below the guy who's made search of their verb. So we really provide an overall search strategy. We provide a dashboard for our end users so they can provide the best results to their customers and what their customers see. Customers want to see everything from Recommend, which is our recommended engine. So when you search for that dress, it shows you the frequently bought together shoes that match, things like that, to things like promoted items and what's missing in the search results. So we do that with a different algorithm today. Most in the industry rank and they'll stack what you would want to see. We do kind of a pair for pair ranking system. So we really compare what you're looking for and it gives a much better result. >> And that's incredibly critical for users these days who want results in milliseconds. Jason, you, Apply Digital as a partner of Algolia, talk to us about Apply Digital, what it is that you guys do, and then give us a little bit of insight on that partnership. >> Sure. So Apply Digital was originally founded in 2016 in Vancouver, Canada. And we have offices in Vancouver, Toronto, New York, LA, San Francisco, Mexico city, Sao Paulo and Amsterdam. And we are a digital experiences agency. So brands and companies, and startups, and all the way from startups to major global conglomerates who have this desire to truly create these amazing digital experiences, it could be a website, it could be an app, it could be a full blown marketing platform, just whatever it is. And they lack either the experience or the internal resources, or what have you, then they come to us. And and we are end-to-end, we strategy, design, product, development, all the way through the execution side. And to help us out, we partner with organizations like Algolia to offer certain solutions, like an Algolia's case, like search recommendation, things like that, to our various clients and customers who are like, "Hey, I want to create this experience and it's going to require search, or it's going to require some sort of recommendation." And we're like, "Well, we highly recommend that you use Algolia. They're a partner of ours, they've been absolutely amazing over the time that we've had the partnership. And that's what we do." And honestly, for digital experiences, search is the essence of the internet, it just is. So, I cannot think of a single digital experience that doesn't require some sort of search or recommendation engine attached to it. So, and Algolia has just knocked it out of the park with their experience, not only from a customer experience, but also from a development experience. So that's why they're just an amazing, amazing partner to have. >> Sounds like a great partnership. Daisy, let's point it back over to you. Talk about some of those main challenges, Jason alluded to them, that businesses are facing, whether it's e-commerce, SaaS, a startup or whatnot, where search and recommendations are concerned. 'Cause we all, I think I've had that experience, where we're searching for something, and Daisy, you were describing how the recommendation engine works. And when we are searching for something, if I've already bought a tent, don't show me more tent, show me things that would go with it. What are some of those main challenges that Algolia solution just eliminates? >> Sure. So I think, one of the main challenges we have to focus on is, most of our customers are fighting against the big guides out there that have hundreds of engineers on staff, custom building a search solution. And our consumers expect that response. You expect the same search response that you get when you're streaming video content looking for a movie, from your big retailer shopping experiences. So what we want to provide is the ability to deliver that result with much less work and hassle and have it all show up. And we do that by really focusing on the results that the customers need and what that view needs to look like. We see a lot of our customers just experiencing a huge loss in revenue by only providing basic search. And because as Jason put it, search is so fundamental to the internet, we all think it's easy, we all think it's just basic. And when you provide basic, you don't get the shoes with the dress, you get just the text response results back. And so we want to make sure that we're providing that back to our customers. What we see average is even, and everybody's going mobile. A lot of times I know I do all my shopping on my phone a lot of the time, and 40%-50% better relevancy results for our customers for mobile users. That's a huge impact to their use case. >> That is huge. And when we talked about patients wearing quite thin the last couple of years. But we have this expectation in our consumer lives and in our business lives if we're looking for SaaS or software, or whatnot, that we're going to be able to find what we want that's relevant to what we're looking for. And you mentioned revenue impact, customer churn, brand reputation, those are all things that if search isn't done well, to your point, Daisy, if it's done in a basic fashion, those are some of the things that customers are going to experience. Jason, talk to us about why Algolia, what was it specifically about that technology that really led Apply Digital to say, "This is the right partner to help eliminate some of those challenges that our customers could face?" >> Sure. So I'm in the product world. So I have the wonderful advantage of not worrying about how something's built, that is left, unfortunately, to the poor, poor engineers that have to work with us, mad scientist, product people, who are like, "I want, make it do this. I don't know how, but make it do this." And one of the big things is, with Algolia is the lift to implement is really, really light. Working closely with our engineering team, and even with our customers/users and everything like that, you kind of alluded to it a little earlier, it's like, at the end of the day, if it's bad search, it's bad search. It just is. It's terrible. And people's attention span can now be measured in nanoseconds, but they don't care how it works, they just want it to work. I push a button, I want something to happen, period. There's an entire universe that is behind that button, and that's what Algolia has really focused on, that universe behind that button. So there's two ways that we use them, on a web experience, there's the embedded Search widget, which is really, really easy to implement, documentation, and I cannot speak high enough about documentation, is amazing. And then from the web aspect, I'm sorry, from the mobile aspect, it's very API fort. And any type of API implementation where you can customize the UI, which obviously you can imagine our clients are like, "No we want to have our own front end. We want to have our own custom experience." We use Algolia as that engine. Again, the documentation and the light lift of implementation is huge. That is a massive, massive bonus for why we partnered with them. Before product, I was an engineer a very long time ago. I've seen bad documentation. And it's like, (Lisa laughing) "I don't know how to imple-- I don't know what this is. I don't know how to implement this, I don't even know what I'm looking at." But with Algolia and everything, it's so simple. And I know I can just hear the Apply Digital technology team, just grinding sometimes, "Why is a product guy saying that (mumbles)? He should do it." But it is, it just the lift, it's the documentation, it's the support. And it's a full blown partnership. And that's why we went with it, and that's what we tell our clients. It's like, listen, this is why we chose Algolia, because eventually this experience we're creating for them is theirs, ultimately it's theirs. And then they are going to have to pick it up after a certain amount of time once it's theirs. And having that transition of, "Look this is how easy it is to implement, here is all the documentation, here's all the support that you get." It just makes that transition from us to them beautifully seamless. >> And that's huge. We often talk about hard metrics, but ease of use, ease of implementation, the documentation, the support, those are all absolutely business critical for the organization who's implementing the software, the fastest time to value they can get, can be table stakes, and it can be on also a massive competitive differentiator. Daisy, I want to go back to you in terms of hard numbers. Algolia has a recent force or Total Economic Impact, or TEI study that really has some compelling stats. Can you share some of those insights with us? >> Yeah. Absolutely. I think that this is the one of the most fun numbers to share. We have a recent report that came out, it shared that there's a 382% Return on Investment across three years by implementing Algolia. So that's increase to revenue, increased conversion rate, increased time on your site, 382% Return on Investment for the purchase. So we know our pricing's right, we know we're providing for our customers. We know that we're giving them the results that we need. I've been in the search industry for long enough to know that those are some amazing stats, and I'm really proud to work for them and be behind them. >> That can be transformative for a business. I think we've all had that experience of trying to search on a website and not finding anything of relevance. And sometimes I scratch my head, "Why is this experience still like this? If I could churn, I would." So having that ability to easily implement, have the documentation that makes sense, and get such high ROI in a short time period is hugely differentiated for businesses. And I think we all know, as Jason said, we measure response time in nanoseconds, that's how much patience and tolerance we all have on the business side, on the consumer side. So having that, not just this fast search, but the contextual search is table stakes for organizations these days. I'd love for you guys, and on either one of you can take this, to share a customer example or two, that really shows the value of the Algolia product, and then also maybe the partnership. >> So I'll go. We have a couple of partners in two vastly different industries, but both use Algolia as a solution for search. One of them is a, best way to put this, multinational biotech health company that has this-- We built for them this internal portal for all of their healthcare practitioners, their HCPs, so that they could access information, data, reports, wikis, the whole thing. And it's basically, almost their version of Wikipedia, but it's all internal, and you can imagine the level of of data security that it has to be, because this is biotech and healthcare. So we implemented Algolia as an internal search engine for them. And the three main reasons why we recommended Algolia, and we implemented Algolia was one, HIPAA compliance. That's the first one, it's like, if that's a no, we're not playing. So HIPAA compliance, again, the ease of search, the whole contextual search, and then the recommendations and things like that. It was a true, it didn't-- It wasn't just like a a halfhearted implementation of an internal search engine to look for files thing, it is a full blown search engine, specifically for the data that they want. And I think we're averaging, if I remember the numbers correctly, it's north of 200,000 searches a month, just on this internal portal specifically for their employees in their company. And it's amazing, it's absolutely amazing. And then conversely, we work with a pretty high level adventure clothing brand, standard, traditional e-commerce, stable mobile application, Lisa, what you were saying earlier. It's like, "I buy everything on my phone," thing. And so that's what we did. We built and we support their mobile application. And they wanted to use for search, they wanted to do a couple of things which was really interesting. They wanted do traditional search, search catalog, search skews, recommendations, so forth and so on, but they also wanted to do a store finder, which was kind of interesting. So, we'd said, all right, we're going to be implementing Algolia because the lift is going to be so much easier than trying to do everything like that. And we did, and they're using it, and massively successful. They are so happy with it, where it's like, they've got this really contextual experience where it's like, I'm looking for a store near me. "Hey, I've been looking for these items. You know, I've been looking for this puffy vest, and I'm looking for a store near me." It's like, "Well, there's a store near me but it doesn't have it, but there's a store closer to me and it does have it." And all of that wraps around what it is. And all of it was, again, using Algolia, because like I said earlier, it's like, if I'm searching for something, I want it to be correct. And I don't just want it to be correct, I want it to be relevant. >> Lisa: Yes. >> And I want it to feel personalized. >> Yes. >> I'm asking to find something, give me something that I am looking for. So yeah. >> Yeah. That personalization and that relevance is critical. I keep saying that word "critical," I'm overusing it, but it is, we have that expectation that whether it's an internal portal, as you talked about Jason, or it's an adventure clothing brand, or a grocery store, or an e-commerce site, that what they're going to be showing me is exactly what I'm looking for, that magic behind there that's almost border lines on creepy, but we want it. We want it to be able to make our lives easier whether we are on the consumer side, whether we on the business side. And I do wonder what the Go To Market is. Daisy, can you talk a little bit about, where do customers go that are saying, "Oh, I need to Algolia, and I want to be able to do that." Now, what's the GTM between both of these companies? >> So where to find us, you can find us on AWS Marketplace which another favorite place. You can quickly click through and find, but you can connect us through Apply Digital as well. I think, we try to be pretty available and meet our customers where they are. So we're open to any options, and we love exploring with them. I think, what is fun and I'd love to talk about as well, in the customer cases, is not just the e-commerce space, but also the content space. We have a lot of content customers, things about news, organizations, things like that. And since that's a struggle to deliver results on, it's really a challenge. And also you want it to be relevant, so up-to-date content. So it's not just about e-commerce, it's about all of your solution overall, but we hope that you'll find us on AWS Marketplace or anywhere else. >> Got it. And that's a great point, that it's not just e-commerce, it's content. And that's really critical for some industry, businesses across industries. Jason and Daisy, thank you so much for joining me talking about Algolia, Apply Digital, what you guys are doing together, and the huge impact that you're making to the customer user experience that we all appreciate and know, and come to expect these days is going to be awesome. We appreciate your insights. >> Thank you. >> Thank you >> For Daisy and Jason, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching "theCUBE," our "AWS Startup Showcase, MarTech Emerging Cloud-Scale Customer Experiences." Keep it right here on "theCUBE" for more great content. We're the leader in live tech coverage. (ending riff)
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and Jason Lang, the Head of Give the audience an overview of Algolia, And we have 11,000 customers that the products deliver? So we do that with a talk to us about Apply Digital, And to help us out, we and Daisy, you were describing that back to our customers. that really led Apply Digital to say, And one of the big things is, the fastest time to value they and I'm really proud to work And I think we all know, as Jason said, And all of that wraps around what it is. I'm asking to find something, and that relevance and we love exploring with them. and the huge impact that you're making We're the leader in live tech coverage.
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Fernanda Spinardi, AWS & Cindy Polin, AWS | Women in Tech: International Women's Day
(upbeat music) >> Hello, welcome to theCUBE's presentation of Women in Tech, Global Event, celebrating International Women's Day. I'm John Furrier, your host of theCUBE here in Palo Alto, California. We got two great guests. Cindy Polin, head of Solution Architects for Public Sector in Mexico for AWS. And Fernanda Spinardi, who's also the head of Solution Architects for Public Sector in Brazil, both with AWS. Thanks for coming, appreciate your time. >> Thanks for the invitation. >> Thank you, John. >> So we're celebrating International Women's Day this week, and this month, and pretty much every day, I think we're going to be doing a lot of good stuff. But today's a special day. And talking about people's careers, their roles, the gender gap, is a big theme this year. These are all the topics that are going on and being discussed. So, it's a been a lot of fun when learning a lot, I have to ask you guys with AWS, Cindy we'll start with you. How is AWS addressing the gender gap in its technical teams? Because solution architects, they're technical. And we need more women in there. How is AWS addressing the gender gap with its technical teams? >> Yes, for sure, thank you very much. Let me start with a quick note about what is the situation in Mexico. Let me go first into a report published by IMCO, and this is talking about this gender gaps in a STEM career. So let me tell you that three out of 10 professionals who choose careers related with the STEM, with the science technology, engineering and mathematics, are women. So, can you imagine this difference, It's really critical because for sure, we have few women. And in the moment that you try to reach people, to be part of the company, it's difficult. So it's important for AWS to be very very supportive in this initiative and also to be supporting diverse teams. So, that's why we are very supportive in bringing diverse talent in the company. >> There's a lot of focus on getting people early into the pipe lining. Is that some another big area? Did the study show anything there? >> Well, basically it's that we are studying to push harder, to bring more information to the ladies, to the women in general. And also to start developing the technical skills. Because it's really difficult and in the moment that you try to do this, it start like seeing these behaviors or stigmas about this is only for men, it's not for women. So we are trying to start breaking this point in general. >> Fernanda, we had a great chat about Latin America reinvent on theCUBE with your leader over there and, we were talking about the broader community and how you guys are partnering with external organizations and customers. How is Amazon Web Services, AWS, aiming to foster better balance and gender balance and technology partnerships in Latin America? >> Sure, so while the situation in Brazil is not different from the situation that Cindy was mentioning in Mexico right? Our research shows that women only represent around 37% of the workforce where in the country we have over 51-52% of women as part of our population. While we can take this from a gap perspective, also, we can take it from an opportunity perspective. There is such a huge unexplored workforce that we can bring to be part of AWS in the technology world, right? So for us on AWS and Amazon, it's part part of our day one culture. So we are still learning, right? And we are still trying, experimenting to see how we can bring more women to the tech world. One of the things that we are investing in Brazil and in Latin America, are the early in career talent programs. This is something that we have the opportunity to work with the students. And in LATAM, it's a little bit different from the US. We have the opportunity to work with them for one year sometimes for two years in a role while they work they are still in the university and we prepare that talent really early in their career and bring them to be part of Amazon. So yeah, I'm super excited with those programs, I can, talk more about it, but this is one of the initiatives that we are betting that will maybe be a game changer for us in the technology. >> Yeah, those are very interesting stats, 37% of the workers in country where women represent over half of the population. So definitely a lot of work to be done. I got to ask both of you. Amazon has a leadership principle that says that they want to strive to be the world's, or earth's best employer earth being, Earth Day and all that sustainability as well. Diversity, inclusion and equity is a big part of that mission more. And also Amazon's also known for high performing work environment. So, so having the best diversity and inclusion you know, is a, is a, as some say and many are saying is a force multiplier in performance. How is that going in your areas? Can you talk about how the culture that you're in, the countries that you're in and the Amazonian leadership principles tie together? Can you share your thoughts and experiences? >> Sure. I can, I can get started maybe with that one. So, although we have a new leadership principle from my perspective, we have we have always had leadership principles that foster diversity and, and inclusion, right. Pick up, earn trust as an example like it says, listen carefully, right. And speak candidly, this is for me it's the baseline for any, any inclusion conversation. Right. And also you have things like have backbone, disagree and commit. Like you are empowering people to actually have an opinion and bring back that opinion and be heard. Right. So it was already there. I think the thing now is that we have a very specific leadership principle so that there is no, no room for interpretation. Right. It's right there saying that there is a mission a mission to, to be the best employer. Right. And, and I'm, I'm very excited about it. >> John: Cindy, share your thoughts too. I like that comment because you know, Amazon culture's known for, you know, debate then align. Okay. And now you got that cultural factor. Now it's in the leadership principle. What's your reaction? >> Yes. And, and let me add a comment on that about Fernanda's point is that this LP is giving us like the empower to give this environment to prepare, to to give this space to the team and also to be more creative. And also to be more diverse is really important for us to have this space with a lot of empathy, with the in the space to have a lot of fun. And it's important to keep all the time in mind that are we doing the right thing for our employees? Are we are empowering them to be the best of, of the world? So, that is something that is critical for us and, and well that is something that we are right now working on it. >> Okay. So first of all I'm very impressed by both of you. You're inspiring. And I can also tell you that being a solution architect is not an easy job. But it's also in high demand. A lot of people want to, they need solution architects. It's one of the most coveted positions in the industry right now. So how do we get more women in that role? What ideas do you guys have besides being great role models, yourselves? How do we get more solution architects? Because it's super valuable and everyone wants to hire them. >> Fernanda, did you want to start? >> It's you guys. >> You touched a very important point, John. It's about having, having good examples. Like, I mean, it's about you seeing yourself in the role right? You, you believing that it's, it's possible. It's for everyone. If you have a spirit where you, you want to build things if you have this spirit of exploring new possibilities if you like to experiment, well, then you have all that we need in a solution architect, right? It's just then a matter of, you know, know learning technical, learning technology, technical stuff. But this is, this is about having fun on your journey as as a solution architect as well. >> And, and let me tell you something that we are also investing in trainings. Training is online for the for the women that they are, that has this interest that they want to learn more about the technology. They want to have a deeper knowledge about the technical stuff. So we are supporting these initiatives and that is something that they can do background and in their own pace. >> And this is an important role because they need the leadership as head of solution architects. It's a good thing. Is, is there any ways that you found that's a best practice for identifying or advice for people to know if they have what it takes or they have an affinity towards technology? Sometimes it's math. Because cloud is great levels it out. I mean, cloud is new, is more jobs open now that didn't exist years ago, couple years ago. So anyone can rise to the top. >> Yeah. I think that's the beauty of the cloud. There is so much space when we say technology I think this is such a, a broad word, right? It means so much, right. It can be someone that likes to develop code. It can be someone that likes to work with infrastructure. It can be someone that likes machine learning or databases or someone that is inspired about applications for the education world or to research genomes or cure cancer. So, yeah, I don't think that there is like any more like a specific profile. I think it's very open for everyone to explore what they love doing. And even from a technology perspective AWS is working to simplify access to the technology. If we take our services on machine learning. For instance, they are for people, for business people like you don't have to know much about algorithms, right. To use some of the AWS services. So I think we're experiencing the democratization of the technology, and with that more opportunity for people to join us. >> A lot of people are changing careers into cloud. So Cindy, I want to ask you guys also if you can share how the mentoring process works there. Is there mentoring? How does that work? Do you match people? Have you found a nice formula for providing some mentoring and some pathways as people come in? >> Yes, we have many ways but one is very important, is that we have user groups. That is a way that we have like a community with internal and external people, and we share advices, guidance, best practices for the people that is interested in this matter. So for one side as I already mentioned, we have training online that you can reach. We have a lot of free courses. Maybe you can start jumping into artificial intelligence. IUT whatever you want to, to, to want that given them. But in the other hand, we have this option to have this kind of support. We have AWS Girl Chile user groups. We have AWS women, Colombian user groups girls in Argentina, we have many of them. We have four hundreds of user communities. So, that is the way that we can keep in touch. >> Any other programs? I mean, Amazon Web Service and Amazon has very strong representation of women. There's a lot of pockets of women groups in all over the world. How does it come together? Because you also have customers in the user groups. You have partners in the partner network. You have technologists learning. So you have this ecosystem of people. It's not just AWS. How are you guys extending that gap into those areas? >> Exactly. And those conversations are getting more and more constant with our customers, right? So we used to talk about technology, we used to talk about business problems, now we talk about diversity. We talk about improving representation and improving the sentiment of inclusion within our customers as well. And one of the things that I can bring, we have been working with a number of our customers in Brazil just to mention New Bank, one of our customers there in building programs. between AWS and the customer, where we train people, and we expose that people to the market, even if it's inside AWS, inside New Bank or any other partner in that ecosystem. So we are building talent not only for us, but for for the entire ecosystem to benefit from. >> Okay, so I have to ask you guys How did you guys get into the tech, Cindy? What was your way? Did it just jump at you? Did it grab you? Did you kind of discover it early? When did you kind of get into the tech? >> That's a good question. I was remembering this moment that when I was seven years old I just started like working with cars and also with that kind of companies, literally companies. And in that moment say, "I want to be part of this technology work." And after that in high school, I have the opportunity to touch a computer. In that moment I said, "This is the thing that I want to do in the rest of my life." >> Yeah. that's it right there. You got the diction, you taste it. Fernanda, what about you? What's your story? How did you get into it? What was the moment? Was there an exact moment or did it just surround you? >> Yeah, I think I was always curious about how things work. I was not thinking about a career in tech honestly. I was thinking about becoming a lawyer, but at some point in time just clicked, right? And I had actually to fight my way into the technical world literally because, I had this very important university close to my house, like maybe 15 minutes from my house. But at that point in time in Brazil, that particular institution was not accepting women. And believe me, it was not like a hundred years ago. Like it was.... (laughing) >> Yeah, you're young, it's just recently. >> Yeah, so I had to move out out of my hometown, back to the city, to Sao Paulo, which is our biggest city in Brazil to find a place for me on an university that would take women. So yeah, I had to fight my way into technology, but I am very proud of that I was able to. >> Yeah, you know what's great now is you have YouTube, you have all these resources, these videos are going to be going everywhere. We're going to put this out there. There's communities where people can learn and see people like themselves out in positions of leadership and technology. So more and more contents being out there. And I think hopefully no one will have to fight to get into tech. If they like it, they're in it. One of the leaders at AWS she said, "We're in a nerd native environment now, the young generation is natively technical." And, I believe that, I see that. I think that's going to be a really exciting trend and seeing leaders like yourselves out there is really wonderful, so thank you for spending the time with us here on theCUBE. Final question I'll ask you, what's next for you Cindy and Fernanda? What's next in your journey? >> Okay, I think the next for me is to keep pushing the women in Mexico to keep installing and also to start thinking into what is the next step in my career? Where should I go? So I think that is the point that I want to do. >> Cindy, what's next for you? >> I feel I'm just starting. (laughing) So much to do, so much to do. I mean, there is a big business for us to make happen in Brazil right now, and we are looking for talent. So, if the video's going to go on YouTube, I would like everybody there to know that yeah, we are looking for talents in Brazil with opportunities all over the world actually. And yeah, that's building, building and building. >> And there's some rig twitch channels by the way too on some developer programmings, tons of programming, it's all out there. Congratulations, and we're looking forward to following up with you both in the future to get an update and thank you for spending the time and sharing your your stories here on theCUBE I really appreciate, thank you. >> Thank you too. >> Thank you so much. >> Okay, theCUBE presentation of Women in Tech, Global Events celebrating International Women's Day. This is the beginning of more programming. We're going to see more episodes from theCUBE, I'm John Furrier, your host. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)
SUMMARY :
for Public Sector in Mexico for AWS. I have to ask you guys with AWS, And in the moment that into the pipe lining. and in the moment that you try to do this, and how you guys are partnering This is something that we have How is that going in your areas? that we have a very specific I like that comment in the space to have a lot of fun. And I can also tell you all that we need in a that we are also investing in trainings. Is, is there any ways that you about applications for the education world So Cindy, I want to ask you guys also But in the other hand, we have this option in all over the world. And one of the things that I can bring, And in that moment say, You got the diction, you taste it. And I had actually to fight my way Yeah, so I had to move I think that's going to in Mexico to keep installing and we are looking for talent. to following up with This is the beginning of more programming.
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The New Data Equation: Leveraging Cloud-Scale Data to Innovate in AI, CyberSecurity, & Life Sciences
>> Hi, I'm Natalie Ehrlich and welcome to the AWS startup showcase presented by The Cube. We have an amazing lineup of great guests who will share their insights on the latest innovations and solutions and leveraging cloud scale data in AI, security and life sciences. And now we're joined by the co-founders and co-CEOs of The Cube, Dave Vellante and John Furrier. Thank you gentlemen for joining me. >> Hey Natalie. >> Hey Natalie. >> How are you doing. Hey John. >> Well, I'd love to get your insights here, let's kick it off and what are you looking forward to. >> Dave, I think one of the things that we've been doing on the cube for 11 years is looking at the signal in the marketplace. I wanted to focus on this because AI is cutting across all industries. So we're seeing that with cybersecurity and life sciences, it's the first time we've had a life sciences track in the showcase, which is amazing because it shows that growth of the cloud scale. So I'm super excited by that. And I think that's going to showcase some new business models and of course the keynotes Ali Ghodsi, who's the CEO Data bricks pushing a billion dollars in revenue, clear validation that startups can go from zero to a billion dollars in revenues. So that should be really interesting. And of course the top venture capitalists coming in to talk about what the enterprise dynamics are all about. And what about you, Dave? >> You know, I thought it was an interesting mix and choice of startups. When you think about, you know, AI security and healthcare, and I've been thinking about that. Healthcare is the perfect industry, it is ripe for disruption. If you think about healthcare, you know, we all complain how expensive it is not transparent. There's a lot of discussion about, you know, can everybody have equal access that certainly with COVID the staff is burned out. There's a real divergence and diversity of the quality of healthcare and you know, it all results in patients not being happy, and I mean, if you had to do an NPS score on the patients and healthcare will be pretty low, John, you know. So when I think about, you know, AI and security in the context of healthcare in cloud, I ask questions like when are machines going to be able to better meet or make better diagnoses than doctors? And that's starting. I mean, it's really in assistance putting into play today. But I think when you think about cheaper and more accurate image analysis, when you think about the overall patient experience and trust and personalized medicine, self-service, you know, remote medicine that we've seen during the COVID pandemic, disease tracking, language translation, I mean, there are so many things where the cloud and data, and then it can help. And then at the end of it, it's all about, okay, how do I authenticate? How do I deal with privacy and personal information and tamper resistance? And that's where the security play comes in. So it's a very interesting mix of startups. I think that I'm really looking forward to hearing from... >> You know Natalie one of the things we talked about, some of these companies, Dave, we've talked a lot of these companies and to me the business model innovations that are coming out of two factors, the pandemic is kind of coming to an end so that accelerated and really showed who had the right stuff in my opinion. So you were either on the wrong side or right side of history when it comes to the pandemic and as we look back, as we come out of it with clear growth in certain companies and certain companies that adopted let's say cloud. And the other one is cloud scale. So the focus of these startup showcases is really to focus on how startups can align with the enterprise buyers and create the new kind of refactoring business models to go from, you know, a re-pivot or refactoring to more value. And the other thing that's interesting is that the business model isn't just for the good guys. If you look at say ransomware, for instance, the business model of hackers is gone completely amazing too. They're kicking it but in terms of revenue, they have their own they're well-funded machines on how to extort cash from companies. So there's a lot of security issues around the business model as well. So to me, the business model innovation with cloud-scale tech, with the pandemic forcing function, you've seen a lot of new kinds of decision-making in enterprises. You seeing how enterprise buyers are changing their decision criteria, and frankly their existing suppliers. So if you're an old guard supplier, you're going to be potentially out because if you didn't deliver during the pandemic, this is the issue that everyone's talking about. And it's kind of not publicized in the press very much, but this is actually happening. >> Well thank you both very much for joining me to kick off our AWS startup showcase. Now we're going to go to our very special guest Ali Ghodsi and John Furrier will seat with him for a fireside chat and Dave and I will see you on the other side. >> Okay, Ali great to see you. Thanks for coming on our AWS startup showcase, our second edition, second batch, season two, whatever we want to call it it's our second version of this new series where we feature, you know, the hottest startups coming out of the AWS ecosystem. And you're one of them, I've been there, but you're not a startup anymore, you're here pushing serious success on the revenue side and company. Congratulations and great to see you. >> Likewise. Thank you so much, good to see you again. >> You know I remember the first time we chatted on The Cube, you weren't really doing much software revenue, you were really talking about the new revolution in data. And you were all in on cloud. And I will say that from day one, you were always adamant that it was cloud cloud scale before anyone was really talking about it. And at that time it was on premises with Hadoop and those kinds of things. You saw that early. I remember that conversation, boy, that bet paid out great. So congratulations. >> Thank you so much. >> So I've got to ask you to jump right in. Enterprises are making decisions differently now and you are an example of that company that has gone from literally zero software sales to pushing a billion dollars as it's being reported. Certainly the success of Data bricks has been written about, but what's not written about is the success of how you guys align with the changing criteria for the enterprise customer. Take us through that and these companies here are aligning the same thing and enterprises want to change. They want to be in the right side of history. What's the success formula? >> Yeah. I mean, basically what we always did was look a few years out, the how can we help these enterprises, future proof, what they're trying to achieve, right? They have, you know, 30 years of legacy software and, you know baggage, and they have compliance and regulations, how do we help them move to the future? So we try to identify those kinds of secular trends that we think are going to maybe you see them a little bit right now, cloud was one of them, but it gets more and more and more. So we identified those and there were sort of three or four of those that we kind of latched onto. And then every year the passes, we're a little bit more right. Cause it's a secular trend in the market. And then eventually, it becomes a force that you can't kind of fight anymore. >> Yeah. And I just want to put a plug for your clubhouse talks with Andreessen Horowitz. You're always on clubhouse talking about, you know, I won't say the killer instinct, but being a CEO in a time where there's so much change going on, you're constantly under pressure. It's a lonely job at the top, I know that, but you've made some good calls. What was some of the key moments that you can point to, where you were like, okay, the wave is coming in now, we'd better get on it. What were some of those key decisions? Cause a lot of these startups want to be in your position, and a lot of buyers want to take advantage of the technology that's coming. They got to figure it out. What was some of those key inflection points for you? >> So if you're just listening to what everybody's saying, you're going to miss those trends. So then you're just going with the stream. So, Juan you mentioned that cloud. Cloud was a thing at the time, we thought it's going to be the thing that takes over everything. Today it's actually multi-cloud. So multi-cloud is a thing, it's more and more people are thinking, wow, I'm paying a lot's to the cloud vendors, do I want to buy more from them or do I want to have some optionality? So that's one. Two, open. They're worried about lock-in, you know, lock-in has happened for many, many decades. So they want open architectures, open source, open standards. So that's the second one that we bet on. The third one, which you know, initially wasn't sort of super obvious was AI and machine learning. Now it's super obvious, everybody's talking about it. But when we started, it was kind of called artificial intelligence referred to robotics, and machine learning wasn't a term that people really knew about. Today, it's sort of, everybody's doing machine learning and AI. So betting on those future trends, those secular trends as we call them super critical. >> And one of the things that I want to get your thoughts on is this idea of re-platforming versus refactoring. You see a lot being talked about in some of these, what does that even mean? It's people trying to figure that out. Re-platforming I get the cloud scale. But as you look at the cloud benefits, what do you say to customers out there and enterprises that are trying to use the benefits of the cloud? Say data for instance, in the middle of how could they be thinking about refactoring? And how can they make a better selection on suppliers? I mean, how do you know it used to be RFP, you deliver these speeds and feeds and you get selected. Now I think there's a little bit different science and methodology behind it. What's your thoughts on this refactoring as a buyer? What do I got to do? >> Well, I mean let's start with you said RFP and so on. Times have changed. Back in the day, you had to kind of sign up for something and then much later you're going to get it. So then you have to go through this arduous process. In the cloud, would pay us to go model elasticity and so on. You can kind of try your way to it. You can try before you buy. And you can use more and more. You can gradually, you don't need to go in all in and you know, say we commit to 50,000,000 and six months later to find out that wow, this stuff has got shelf where it doesn't work. So that's one thing that has changed it's beneficial. But the second thing is, don't just mimic what you had on prem in the cloud. So that's what this refactoring is about. If you had, you know, Hadoop data lake, now you're just going to have an S3 data lake. If you had an on-prem data warehouse now you just going to have a cloud data warehouse. You're just repeating what you did on prem in the cloud, architected for the future. And you know, for us, the most important thing that we say is that this lake house paradigm is a cloud native way of organizing your data. That's different from how you would do things on premises. So think through what's the right way of doing it in the cloud. Don't just try to copy paste what you had on premises in the cloud. >> It's interesting one of the things that we're observing and I'd love to get your reaction to this. Dave a lot** and I have been reporting on it is, two personas in the enterprise are changing their organization. One is I call IT ops or there's an SRE role developing. And the data teams are being dismantled and being kind of sprinkled through into other teams is this notion of data, pipelining being part of workflows, not just the department. Are you seeing organizational shifts in how people are organizing their resources, their human resources to take advantage of say that the data problems that are need to being solved with machine learning and whatnot and cloud-scale? >> Yeah, absolutely. So you're right. SRE became a thing, lots of DevOps people. It was because when the cloud vendors launched their infrastructure as a service to stitch all these things together and get it all working you needed a lot of devOps people. But now things are maturing. So, you know, with vendors like Data bricks and other multi-cloud vendors, you can actually get much higher level services where you don't need to necessarily have lots of lots of DevOps people that are themselves trying to stitch together lots of services to make this work. So that's one trend. But secondly, you're seeing more data teams being sort of completely ubiquitous in these organizations. Before it used to be you have one data team and then we'll have data and AI and we'll be done. ' It's a one and done. But that's not how it works. That's not how Google, Facebook, Twitter did it, they had data throughout the organization. Every BU was empowered. It's sales, it's marketing, it's finance, it's engineering. So how do you embed all those data teams and make them actually run fast? And you know, there's this concept of a data mesh which is super important where you can actually decentralize and enable all these teams to focus on their domains and run super fast. And that's really enabled by this Lake house paradigm in the cloud that we're talking about. Where you're open, you're basing it on open standards. You have flexibility in the data types and how they're going to store their data. So you kind of provide a lot of that flexibility, but at the same time, you have sort of centralized governance for it. So absolutely things are changing in the market. >> Well, you're just the professor, the masterclass right here is amazing. Thanks for sharing that insight. You're always got to go out of date and that's why we have you on here. You're amazing, great resource for the community. Ransomware is a huge problem, it's now the government's focus. We're being attacked and we don't know where it's coming from. This business models around cyber that's expanding rapidly. There's real revenue behind it. There's a data problem. It's not just a security problem. So one of the themes in all of these startup showcases is data is ubiquitous in the value propositions. One of them is ransomware. What's your thoughts on ransomware? Is it a data problem? Does cloud help? Some are saying that cloud's got better security with ransomware, then say on premise. What's your vision of how you see this ransomware problem being addressed besides the government taking over? >> Yeah, that's a great question. Let me start by saying, you know, we're a data company, right? And if you say you're a data company, you might as well just said, we're a privacy company, right? It's like some people say, well, what do you think about privacy? Do you guys even do privacy? We're a data company. So yeah, we're a privacy company as well. Like you can't talk about data without talking about privacy. With every customer, with every enterprise. So that's obviously top of mind for us. I do think that in the cloud, security is much better because, you know, vendors like us, we're investing so much resources into security and making sure that we harden the infrastructure and, you know, by actually having all of this infrastructure, we can monitor it, detect if something is, you know, an attack is happening, and we can immediately sort of stop it. So that's different from when it's on prem, you have kind of like the separated duties where the software vendor, which would have been us, doesn't really see what's happening in the data center. So, you know, there's an IT team that didn't develop the software is responsible for the security. So I think things are much better now. I think we're much better set up, but of course, things like cryptocurrencies and so on are making it easier for people to sort of hide. There decentralized networks. So, you know, the attackers are getting more and more sophisticated as well. So that's definitely something that's super important. It's super top of mind. We're all investing heavily into security and privacy because, you know, that's going to be super critical going forward. >> Yeah, we got to move that red line, and figure that out and get more intelligence. Decentralized trends not going away it's going to be more of that, less of the centralized. But centralized does come into play with data. It's a mix, it's not mutually exclusive. And I'll get your thoughts on this. Architectural question with, you know, 5G and the edge coming. Amazon's got that outpost stringent, the wavelength, you're seeing mobile world Congress coming up in this month. The focus on processing data at the edge is a huge issue. And enterprises are now going to be commercial part of that. So architecture decisions are being made in enterprises right now. And this is a big issue. So you mentioned multi-cloud, so tools versus platforms. Now I'm an enterprise buyer and there's no more RFPs. I got all this new choices for startups and growing companies to choose from that are cloud native. I got all kinds of new challenges and opportunities. How do I build my architecture so I don't foreclose a future opportunity. >> Yeah, as I said, look, you're actually right. Cloud is becoming even more and more something that everybody's adopting, but at the same time, there is this thing that the edge is also more and more important. And the connectivity between those two and making sure that you can really do that efficiently. My ask from enterprises, and I think this is top of mind for all the enterprise architects is, choose open because that way you can avoid locking yourself in. So that's one thing that's really, really important. In the past, you know, all these vendors that locked you in, and then you try to move off of them, they were highly innovative back in the day. In the 80's and the 90's, there were the best companies. You gave them all your data and it was fantastic. But then because you were locked in, they didn't need to innovate anymore. And you know, they focused on margins instead. And then over time, the innovation stopped and now you were kind of locked in. So I think openness is really important. I think preserving optionality with multi-cloud because we see the different clouds have different strengths and weaknesses and it changes over time. All right. Early on AWS was the only game that either showed up with much better security, active directory, and so on. Now Google with AI capabilities, which one's going to win, which one's going to be better. Actually, probably all three are going to be around. So having that optionality that you can pick between the three and then artificial intelligence. I think that's going to be the key to the future. You know, you asked about security earlier. That's how people detect zero day attacks, right? You ask about the edge, same thing there, that's where the predictions are going to happen. So make sure that you invest in AI and artificial intelligence very early on because it's not something you can just bolt on later on and have a little data team somewhere that then now you have AI and it's one and done. >> All right. Great insight. I've got to ask you, the folks may or may not know, but you're a professor at Berkeley as well, done a lot of great work. That's where you kind of came out of when Data bricks was formed. And the Berkeley basically was it invented distributed computing back in the 80's. I remember I was breaking in when Unix was proprietary, when software wasn't open you actually had the deal that under the table to get code. Now it's all open. Isn't the internet now with distributed computing and how interconnects are happening. I mean, the internet didn't break during the pandemic, which proves the benefit of the internet. And that's a positive. But as you start seeing edge, it's essentially distributed computing. So I got to ask you from a computer science standpoint. What do you see as the key learnings or connect the dots for how this distributed model will work? I see hybrids clearly, hybrid cloud is clearly the operating model but if you take it to the next level of distributed computing, what are some of the key things that you look for in the next five years as this starts to be completely interoperable, obviously software is going to drive a lot of it. What's your vision on that? >> Yeah, I mean, you know, so Berkeley, you're right for the gigs, you know, there was a now project 20, 30 years ago that basically is how we do things. There was a project on how you search in the very early on with Inktomi that became how Google and everybody else to search today. So workday was super, super early, sometimes way too early. And that was actually the mistake. Was that they were so early that people said that that stuff doesn't work. And then 20 years later you were invented. So I think 2009, Berkeley published just above the clouds saying the cloud is the future. At that time, most industry leaders said, that's just, you know, that doesn't work. Today, recently they published a research paper called, Sky Computing. So sky computing is what you get above the clouds, right? So we have the cloud as the future, the next level after that is the sky. That's one on top of them. That's what multi-cloud is. So that's a lot of the research at Berkeley, you know, into distributed systems labs is about this. And we're excited about that. Then we're one of the sky computing vendors out there. So I think you're going to see much more innovation happening at the sky level than at the compute level where you needed all those DevOps and SRE people to like, you know, build everything manually themselves. I can just see the memes now coming Ali, sky net, star track. You've got space too, by the way, space is another frontier that is seeing a lot of action going on because now the surface area of data with satellites is huge. So again, I know you guys are doing a lot of business with folks in that vertical where you starting to see real time data acquisition coming from these satellites. What's your take on the whole space as the, not the final frontier, but certainly as a new congested and contested space for, for data? >> Well, I mean, as a data vendor, we see a lot of, you know, alternative data sources coming in and people aren't using machine learning< AI to eat out signal out of the, you know, massive amounts of imagery that's coming out of these satellites. So that's actually a pretty common in FinTech, which is a vertical for us. And also sort of in the public sector, lots of, lots of, lots of satellites, imagery data that's coming. And these are massive volumes. I mean, it's like huge data sets and it's a super, super exciting what they can do. Like, you know, extracting signal from the satellite imagery is, and you know, being able to handle that amount of data, it's a challenge for all the companies that we work with. So we're excited about that too. I mean, definitely that's a trend that's going to continue. >> All right. I'm super excited for you. And thanks for coming on The Cube here for our keynote. I got to ask you a final question. As you think about the future, I see your company has achieved great success in a very short time, and again, you guys done the work, I've been following your company as you know. We've been been breaking that Data bricks story for a long time. I've been excited by it, but now what's changed. You got to start thinking about the next 20 miles stair when you look at, you know, the sky computing, you're thinking about these new architectures. As the CEO, your job is to one, not run out of money which you don't have to worry about that anymore, so hiring. And then, you got to figure out that next 20 miles stair as a company. What's that going on in your mind? Take us through your mindset of what's next. And what do you see out in that landscape? >> Yeah, so what I mentioned around Sky company optionality around multi-cloud, you're going to see a lot of capabilities around that. Like how do you get multi-cloud disaster recovery? How do you leverage the best of all the clouds while at the same time not having to just pick one? So there's a lot of innovation there that, you know, we haven't announced yet, but you're going to see a lot of it over the next many years. Things that you can do when you have the optionality across the different parts. And the second thing that's really exciting for us is bringing AI to the masses. Democratizing data and AI. So how can you actually apply machine learning to machine learning? How can you automate machine learning? Today machine learning is still quite complicated and it's pretty advanced. It's not going to be that way 10 years from now. It's going to be very simple. Everybody's going to have it at their fingertips. So how do we apply machine learning to machine learning? It's called auto ML, automatic, you know, machine learning. So that's an area, and that's not something that can be done with, right? But the goal is to eventually be able to automate a way the whole machine learning engineer and the machine learning data scientist altogether. >> You know it's really fun and talking with you is that, you know, for years we've been talking about this inside the ropes, inside the industry, around the future. Now people starting to get some visibility, the pandemics forced that. You seeing the bad projects being exposed. It's like the tide pulled out and you see all the scabs and bad projects that were justified old guard technologies. If you get it right you're on a good wave. And this is clearly what we're seeing. And you guys example of that. So as enterprises realize this, that they're going to have to look double down on the right projects and probably trash the bad projects, new criteria, how should people be thinking about buying? Because again, we talked about the RFP before. I want to kind of circle back because this is something that people are trying to figure out. You seeing, you know, organic, you come in freemium models as cloud scale becomes the advantage in the lock-in frankly seems to be the value proposition. The more value you provide, the more lock-in you get. Which sounds like that's the way it should be versus proprietary, you know, protocols. The protocol is value. How should enterprises organize their teams? Is it end to end workflows? Is it, and how should they evaluate the criteria for these technologies that they want to buy? >> Yeah, that's a great question. So I, you know, it's very simple, try to future proof your decision-making. Make sure that whatever you're doing is not blocking your in. So whatever decision you're making, what if the world changes in five years, make sure that if you making a mistake now, that's not going to bite you in about five years later. So how do you do that? Well, open source is great. If you're leveraging open-source, you can try it out already. You don't even need to talk to any vendor. Your teams can already download it and try it out and get some value out of it. If you're in the cloud, this pay as you go models, you don't have to do a big RFP and commit big. You can try it, pay the vendor, pay as you go, $10, $15. It doesn't need to be a million dollar contract and slowly grow as you're providing value. And then make sure that you're not just locking yourself in to one cloud or, you know, one particular vendor. As much as possible preserve your optionality because then that's not a one-way door. If it turns out later you want to do something else, you can, you know, pick other things as well. You're not locked in. So that's what I would say. Keep that top of mind that you're not locking yourself into a particular decision that you made today, that you might regret in five years. >> I really appreciate you coming on and sharing your with our community and The Cube. And as always great to see you. I really enjoy your clubhouse talks, and I really appreciate how you give back to the community. And I want to thank you for coming on and taking the time with us today. >> Thanks John, always appreciate talking to you. >> Okay Ali Ghodsi, CEO of Data bricks, a success story that proves the validation of cloud scale, open and create value, values the new lock-in. So Natalie, back to you for continuing coverage. >> That was a terrific interview John, but I'd love to get Dave's insights first. What were your takeaways, Dave? >> Well, if we have more time I'll tell you how Data bricks got to where they are today, but I'll say this, the most important thing to me that Allie said was he conveyed a very clear understanding of what data companies are outright and are getting ready. Talked about four things. There's not one data team, there's many data teams. And he talked about data is decentralized, and data has to have context and that context lives in the business. He said, look, think about it. The way that the data companies would get it right, they get data in teams and sales and marketing and finance and engineering. They all have their own data and data teams. And he referred to that as a data mesh. That's a term that is your mock, the Gany coined and the warehouse of the data lake it's merely a node in that global message. It meshes discoverable, he talked about federated governance, and Data bricks, they're breaking the model of shoving everything into a single repository and trying to make that the so-called single version of the truth. Rather what they're doing, which is right on is putting data in the hands of the business owners. And that's how true data companies do. And the last thing you talked about with sky computing, which I loved, it's that future layer, we talked about multi-cloud a lot that abstracts the underlying complexity of the technical details of the cloud and creates additional value on top. I always say that the cloud players like Amazon have given the gift to the world of 100 billion dollars a year they spend in CapEx. Thank you. Now we're going to innovate on top of it. Yeah. And I think the refactoring... >> Hope by John. >> That was great insight and I totally agree. The refactoring piece too was key, he brought that home. But to me, I think Data bricks that Ali shared there and why he's been open and sharing a lot of his insights and the community. But what he's not saying, cause he's humble and polite is they cracked the code on the enterprise, Dave. And to Dave's points exactly reason why they did it, they saw an opportunity to make it easier, at that time had dupe was the rage, and they just made it easier. They was smart, they made good bets, they had a good formula and they cracked the code with the enterprise. They brought it in and they brought value. And see that's the key to the cloud as Dave pointed out. You get replatform with the cloud, then you refactor. And I think he pointed out the multi-cloud and that really kind of teases out the whole future and landscape, which is essentially distributed computing. And I think, you know, companies are starting to figure that out with hybrid and this on premises and now super edge I call it, with 5G coming. So it's just pretty incredible. >> Yeah. Data bricks, IPO is coming and people should know. I mean, what everybody, they created spark as you know John and everybody thought they were going to do is mimic red hat and sell subscriptions and support. They didn't, they developed a managed service and they embedded AI tools to simplify data science. So to your point, enterprises could buy instead of build, we know this. Enterprises will spend money to make things simpler. They don't have the resources, and so this was what they got right was really embedding that, making a building a managed service, not mimicking the kind of the red hat model, but actually creating a new value layer there. And that's big part of their success. >> If I could just add one thing Natalie to that Dave saying is really right on. And as an enterprise buyer, if we go the other side of the equation, it used to be that you had to be a known company, get PR, you fill out RFPs, you had to meet all the speeds. It's like going to the airport and get a swab test, and get a COVID test and all kinds of mechanisms to like block you and filter you. Most of the biggest success stories that have created the most value for enterprises have been the companies that nobody's understood. And Andy Jazz's famous quote of, you know, being misunderstood is actually a good thing. Data bricks was very misunderstood at the beginning and no one kind of knew who they were but they did it right. And so the enterprise buyers out there, don't be afraid to test the startups because you know the next Data bricks is out there. And I think that's where I see the psychology changing from the old IT buyers, Dave. It's like, okay, let's let's test this company. And there's plenty of ways to do that. He illuminated those premium, small pilots, you don't need to go on these big things. So I think that is going to be a shift in how companies going to evaluate startups. >> Yeah. Think about it this way. Why should the large banks and insurance companies and big manufacturers and pharma companies, governments, why should they burn resources managing containers and figuring out data science tools if they can just tap into solutions like Data bricks which is an AI platform in the cloud and let the experts manage all that stuff. Think about how much money in time that saves enterprises. >> Yeah, I mean, we've got 15 companies here we're showcasing this batch and this season if you call it. That episode we are going to call it? They're awesome. Right? And the next 15 will be the same. And these companies could be the next billion dollar revenue generator because the cloud enables that day. I think that's the exciting part. >> Well thank you both so much for these insights. Really appreciate it. AWS startup showcase highlights the innovation that helps startups succeed. And no one knows that better than our very next guest, Jeff Barr. Welcome to the show and I will send this interview now to Dave and John and see you just in the bit. >> Okay, hey Jeff, great to see you. Thanks for coming on again. >> Great to be back. >> So this is a regular community segment with Jeff Barr who's a legend in the industry. Everyone knows your name. Everyone knows that. Congratulations on your recent blog posts we have reading. Tons of news, I want to get your update because 5G has been all over the news, mobile world congress is right around the corner. I know Bill Vass was a keynote out there, virtual keynote. There's a lot of Amazon discussion around the edge with wavelength. Specifically, this is the outpost piece. And I know there is news I want to get to, but the top of mind is there's massive Amazon expansion and the cloud is going to the edge, it's here. What's up with wavelength. Take us through the, I call it the power edge, the super edge. >> Well, I'm really excited about this mostly because it gives a lot more choice and flexibility and options to our customers. This idea that with wavelength we announced quite some time ago, at least quite some time ago if we think in cloud years. We announced that we would be working with 5G providers all over the world to basically put AWS in the telecom providers data centers or telecom centers, so that as their customers build apps, that those apps would take advantage of the low latency, the high bandwidth, the reliability of 5G, be able to get to some compute and storage services that are incredibly close geographically and latency wise to the compute and storage that is just going to give customers this new power and say, well, what are the cool things we can build? >> Do you see any correlation between wavelength and some of the early Amazon services? Because to me, my gut feels like there's so much headroom there. I mean, I was just riffing on the notion of low latency packets. I mean, just think about the applications, gaming and VR, and metaverse kind of cool stuff like that where having the edge be that how much power there. It just feels like a new, it feels like a new AWS. I mean, what's your take? You've seen the evolutions and the growth of a lot of the key services. Like EC2 and SA3. >> So welcome to my life. And so to me, the way I always think about this is it's like when I go to a home improvement store and I wander through the aisles and I often wonder through with no particular thing that I actually need, but I just go there and say, wow, they've got this and they've got this, they've got this other interesting thing. And I just let my creativity run wild. And instead of trying to solve a problem, I'm saying, well, if I had these different parts, well, what could I actually build with them? And I really think that this breadth of different services and locations and options and communication technologies. I suspect a lot of our customers and customers to be and are in this the same mode where they're saying, I've got all this awesomeness at my fingertips, what might I be able to do with it? >> He reminds me when Fry's was around in Palo Alto, that store is no longer here but it used to be back in the day when it was good. It was you go in and just kind of spend hours and then next thing you know, you built a compute. Like what, I didn't come in here, whether it gets some cables. Now I got a motherboard. >> I clearly remember Fry's and before that there was the weird stuff warehouse was another really cool place to hang out if you remember that. >> Yeah I do. >> I wonder if I could jump in and you guys talking about the edge and Jeff I wanted to ask you about something that is, I think people are starting to really understand and appreciate what you did with the entrepreneur acquisition, what you do with nitro and graviton, and really driving costs down, driving performance up. I mean, there's like a compute Renaissance. And I wonder if you could talk about the importance of that at the edge, because it's got to be low power, it has to be low cost. You got to be doing processing at the edge. What's your take on how that's evolving? >> Certainly so you're totally right that we started working with and then ultimately acquired Annapurna labs in Israel a couple of years ago. I've worked directly with those folks and it's really awesome to see what they've been able to do. Just really saying, let's look at all of these different aspects of building the cloud that were once effectively kind of somewhat software intensive and say, where does it make sense to actually design build fabricate, deploy custom Silicon? So from putting up the system to doing all kinds of additional kinds of security checks, to running local IO devices, running the NBME as fast as possible to support the EBS. Each of those things has been a contributing factor to not just the power of the hardware itself, but what I'm seeing and have seen for the last probably two or three years at this point is the pace of innovation on instance types just continues to get faster and faster. And it's not just cranking out new instance types because we can, it's because our awesomely diverse base of customers keeps coming to us and saying, well, we're happy with what we have so far, but here's this really interesting new use case. And we needed a different ratio of memory to CPU, or we need more cores based on the amount of memory, or we needed a lot of IO bandwidth. And having that nitro as the base lets us really, I don't want to say plug and play, cause I haven't actually built this myself, but it seems like they can actually put the different elements together, very very quickly and then come up with new instance types that just our customers say, yeah, that's exactly what I asked for and be able to just do this entire range of from like micro and nano sized all the way up to incredibly large with incredible just to me like, when we talk about terabytes of memory that are just like actually just RAM memory. It's like, that's just an inconceivably large number by the standards of where I started out in my career. So it's all putting this power in customer hands. >> You used the term plug and play, but it does give you that nitro gives you that optionality. And then other thing that to me is really exciting is the way in which ISVs are writing to whatever's underneath. So you're making that, you know, transparent to the users so I can choose as a customer, the best price performance for my workload and that that's just going to grow that ISV portfolio. >> I think it's really important to be accurate and detailed and as thorough as possible as we launch each one of these new instance types with like what kind of processor is in there and what clock speed does it run at? What kind of, you know, how much memory do we have? What are the, just the ins and outs, and is it Intel or arm or AMD based? It's such an interesting to me contrast. I can still remember back in the very very early days of back, you know, going back almost 15 years at this point and effectively everybody said, well, not everybody. A few people looked and said, yeah, we kind of get the value here. Some people said, this just sounds like a bunch of generic hardware, just kind of generic hardware in Iraq. And even back then it was something that we were very careful with to design and optimize for use cases. But this idea that is generic is so, so, so incredibly inaccurate that I think people are now getting this. And it's okay. It's fine too, not just for the cloud, but for very specific kinds of workloads and use cases. >> And you guys have announced obviously the performance improvements on a lamb** does getting faster, you got the per billing, second billings on windows and SQL server on ECE too**. So I mean, obviously everyone kind of gets that, that's been your DNA, keep making it faster, cheaper, better, easier to use. But the other area I want to get your thoughts on because this is also more on the footprint side, is that the regions and local regions. So you've got more region news, take us through the update on the expansion on the footprint of AWS because you know, a startup can come in and these 15 companies that are here, they're global with AWS, right? So this is a major benefit for customers around the world. And you know, Ali from Data bricks mentioned privacy. Everyone's a privacy company now. So the huge issue, take us through the news on the region. >> Sure, so the two most recent regions that we announced are in the UAE and in Israel. And we generally like to pre-announce these anywhere from six months to two years at a time because we do know that the customers want to start making longer term plans to where they can start thinking about where they can do their computing, where they can store their data. I think at this point we now have seven regions under construction. And, again it's all about customer trice. Sometimes it's because they have very specific reasons where for based on local laws, based on national laws, that they must compute and restore within a particular geographic area. Other times I say, well, a lot of our customers are in this part of the world. Why don't we pick a region that is as close to that part of the world as possible. And one really important thing that I always like to remind our customers of in my audience is, anything that you choose to put in a region, stays in that region unless you very explicitly take an action that says I'd like to replicate it somewhere else. So if someone says, I want to store data in the US, or I want to store it in Frankfurt, or I want to store it in Sao Paulo, or I want to store it in Tokyo or Osaka. They get to make that very specific choice. We give them a lot of tools to help copy and replicate and do cross region operations of various sorts. But at the heart, the customer gets to choose those locations. And that in the early days I think there was this weird sense that you would, you'd put things in the cloud that would just mysteriously just kind of propagate all over the world. That's never been true, and we're very very clear on that. And I just always like to reinforce that point. >> That's great stuff, Jeff. Great to have you on again as a regular update here, just for the folks watching and don't know Jeff he'd been blogging and sharing. He'd been the one man media band for Amazon it's early days. Now he's got departments, he's got peoples on doing videos. It's an immediate franchise in and of itself, but without your rough days we wouldn't have gotten all the great news we subscribe to. We watch all the blog posts. It's essentially the flow coming out of AWS which is just a tsunami of a new announcements. Always great to read, must read. Jeff, thanks for coming on, really appreciate it. That's great. >> Thank you John, great to catch up as always. >> Jeff Barr with AWS again, and follow his stuff. He's got a great audience and community. They talk back, they collaborate and they're highly engaged. So check out Jeff's blog and his social presence. All right, Natalie, back to you for more coverage. >> Terrific. Well, did you guys know that Jeff took a three week AWS road trip across 15 cities in America to meet with cloud computing enthusiasts? 5,500 miles he drove, really incredible I didn't realize that. Let's unpack that interview though. What stood out to you John? >> I think Jeff, Barr's an example of what I call direct to audience a business model. He's been doing it from the beginning and I've been following his career. I remember back in the day when Amazon was started, he was always building stuff. He's a builder, he's classic. And he's been there from the beginning. At the beginning he was just the blog and it became a huge audience. It's now morphed into, he was power blogging so hard. He has now support and he still does it now. It's basically the conduit for information coming out of Amazon. I think Jeff has single-handedly made Amazon so successful at the community developer level, and that's the startup action happened and that got them going. And I think he deserves a lot of the success for AWS. >> And Dave, how about you? What is your reaction? >> Well I think you know, and everybody knows about the cloud and back stop X** and agility, and you know, eliminating the undifferentiated, heavy lifting and all that stuff. And one of the things that's often overlooked which is why I'm excited to be part of this program is the innovation. And the innovation comes from startups, and startups start in the cloud. And so I think that that's part of the flywheel effect. You just don't see a lot of startups these days saying, okay, I'm going to do something that's outside of the cloud. There are some, but for the most part, you know, if you saw in software, you're starting in the cloud, it's so capital efficient. I think that's one thing, I've throughout my career. I've been obsessed with every part of the stack from whether it's, you know, close to the business process with the applications. And right now I'm really obsessed with the plumbing, which is why I was excited to talk about, you know, the Annapurna acquisition. Amazon bought and a part of the $350 million, it's reported, you know, maybe a little bit more, but that isn't an amazing acquisition. And the reason why that's so important is because Amazon is continuing to drive costs down, drive performance up. And in my opinion, leaving a lot of the traditional players in their dust, especially when it comes to the power and cooling. You have often overlooked things. And the other piece of the interview was that Amazon is actually getting ISVs to write to these new platforms so that you don't have to worry about there's the software run on this chip or that chip, or x86 or arm or whatever it is. It runs. And so I can choose the best price performance. And that's where people don't, they misunderstand, you always say it John, just said that people are misunderstood. I think they misunderstand, they confused, you know, the price of the cloud with the cost of the cloud. They ignore all the labor costs that are associated with that. And so, you know, there's a lot of discussion now about the cloud tax. I just think the pace is accelerating. The gap is not closing, it's widening. >> If you look at the one question I asked them about wavelength and I had a follow up there when I said, you know, we riff on it and you see, he lit up like he beam was beaming because he said something interesting. It's not that there's a problem to solve at this opportunity. And he conveyed it to like I said, walking through Fry's. But like, you go into a store and he's a builder. So he sees opportunity. And this comes back down to the Martine Casada paradox posts he wrote about do you optimize for CapEx or future revenue? And I think the tell sign is at the wavelength edge piece is going to be so creative and that's going to open up massive opportunities. I think that's the place to watch. That's the place I'm watching. And I think startups going to come out of the woodwork because that's where the action will be. And that's just Amazon at the edge, I mean, that's just cloud at the edge. I think that is going to be very effective. And his that's a little TeleSign, he kind of revealed a little bit there, a lot there with that comment. >> Well that's a to be continued conversation. >> Indeed, I would love to introduce our next guest. We actually have Soma on the line. He's the managing director at Madrona venture group. Thank you Soma very much for coming for our keynote program. >> Thank you Natalie and I'm great to be here and will have the opportunity to spend some time with you all. >> Well, you have a long to nerd history in the enterprise. How would you define the modern enterprise also known as cloud scale? >> Yeah, so I would say I have, first of all, like, you know, we've all heard this now for the last, you know, say 10 years or so. Like, software is eating the world. Okay. Put it another way, we think about like, hey, every enterprise is a software company first and foremost. Okay. And companies that truly internalize that, that truly think about that, and truly act that way are going to start up, continue running well and things that don't internalize that, and don't do that are going to be left behind sooner than later. Right. And the last few years you start off thing and not take it to the next level and talk about like, not every enterprise is not going through a digital transformation. Okay. So when you sort of think about the world from that lens. Okay. Modern enterprise has to think about like, and I am first and foremost, a technology company. I may be in the business of making a car art, you know, manufacturing paper, or like you know, manufacturing some healthcare products or what have you got out there. But technology and software is what is going to give me a unique, differentiated advantage that's going to let me do what I need to do for my customers in the best possible way [Indistinct]. So that sort of level of focus, level of execution, has to be there in a modern enterprise. The other thing is like not every modern enterprise needs to think about regular. I'm competing for talent, not anymore with my peers in my industry. I'm competing for technology talent and software talent with the top five technology companies in the world. Whether it is Amazon or Facebook or Microsoft or Google, or what have you cannot think, right? So you really have to have that mindset, and then everything flows from that. >> So I got to ask you on the enterprise side again, you've seen many ways of innovation. You've got, you know, been in the industry for many, many years. The old way was enterprises want the best proven product and the startups want that lucrative contract. Right? Yeah. And get that beach in. And it used to be, and we addressed this in our earlier keynote with Ali and how it's changing, the buyers are changing because the cloud has enabled this new kind of execution. I call it agile, call it what you want. Developers are driving modern applications, so enterprises are still, there's no, the playbooks evolving. Right? So we see that with the pandemic, people had needs, urgent needs, and they tried new stuff and it worked. The parachute opened as they say. So how do you look at this as you look at stars, you're investing in and you're coaching them. What's the playbook? What's the secret sauce of how to crack the enterprise code today. And if you're an enterprise buyer, what do I need to do? I want to be more agile. Is there a clear path? Is there's a TSA to let stuff go through faster? I mean, what is the modern playbook for buying and being a supplier? >> That's a fantastic question, John, because I think that sort of playbook is changing, even as we speak here currently. A couple of key things to understand first of all is like, you know, decision-making inside an enterprise is getting more and more de-centralized. Particularly decisions around what technology to use and what solutions to use to be able to do what people need to do. That decision making is no longer sort of, you know, all done like the CEO's office or the CTO's office kind of thing. Developers are more and more like you rightly said, like sort of the central of the workflow and the decision making process. So it'll be who both the enterprises, as well as the startups to really understand that. So what does it mean now from a startup perspective, from a startup perspective, it means like, right. In addition to thinking about like hey, not do I go create an enterprise sales post, do I sell to the enterprise like what I might have done in the past? Is that the best way of moving forward, or should I be thinking about a product led growth go to market initiative? You know, build a product that is easy to use, that made self serve really works, you know, get the developers to start using to see the value to fall in love with the product and then you think about like hey, how do I go translate that into a contract with enterprise. Right? And more and more what I call particularly, you know, startups and technology companies that are focused on the developer audience are thinking about like, you know, how do I have a bottom up go to market motion? And sometime I may sort of, you know, overlap that with the top down enterprise sales motion that we know that has been going on for many, many years or decades kind of thing. But really this product led growth bottom up a go to market motion is something that we are seeing on the rise. I would say they're going to have more than half the startup that we come across today, have that in some way shape or form. And so the enterprise also needs to understand this, the CIO or the CTO needs to know that like hey, I'm not decision-making is getting de-centralized. I need to empower my engineers and my engineering managers and my engineering leaders to be able to make the right decision and trust them. I'm going to give them some guard rails so that I don't find myself in a soup, you know, sometime down the road. But once I give them the guard rails, I'm going to enable people to make the decisions. People who are closer to the problem, to make the right decision. >> Well Soma, what are some of the ways that startups can accelerate their enterprise penetration? >> I think that's another good question. First of all, you need to think about like, Hey, what are enterprises wanting to rec? Okay. If you start off take like two steps back and think about what the enterprise is really think about it going. I'm a software company, but I'm really manufacturing paper. What do I do? Right? The core thing that most enterprises care about is like, hey, how do I better engage with my customers? How do I better serve my customers? And how do I do it in the most optimal way? At the end of the day that's what like most enterprises really care about. So startups need to understand, what are the problems that the enterprise is trying to solve? What kind of tools and platform technologies and infrastructure support, and, you know, everything else that they need to be able to do what they need to do and what only they can do in the most optimal way. Right? So to the extent you are providing either a tool or platform or some technology that is going to enable your enterprise to make progress on what they want to do, you're going to get more traction within the enterprise. In other words, stop thinking about technology, and start thinking about the customer problem that they want to solve. And the more you anchor your company, and more you anchor your conversation with the customer around that, the more the enterprise is going to get excited about wanting to work with you. >> So I got to ask you on the enterprise and developer equation because CSOs and CXOs, depending who you talk to have that same answer. Oh yeah. In the 90's and 2000's, we kind of didn't, we throttled down, we were using the legacy developer tools and cloud came and then we had to rebuild and we didn't really know what to do. So you seeing a shift, and this is kind of been going on for at least the past five to eight years, a lot more developers being hired yet. I mean, at FinTech is clearly a vertical, they always had developers and everyone had developers, but there's a fast ramp up of developers now and the role of open source has changed. Just looking at the participation. They're not just consuming open source, open source is part of the business model for mainstream enterprises. How is this, first of all, do you agree? And if so, how has this changed the course of an enterprise human resource selection? How they're organized? What's your vision on that? >> Yeah. So as I mentioned earlier, John, in my mind the first thing is, and this sort of, you know, like you said financial services has always been sort of hiring people [Indistinct]. And this is like five-year old story. So bear with me I'll tell you the firewall story and then come to I was trying to, the cloud CIO or the Goldman Sachs. Okay. And this is five years ago when people were still like, hey, is this cloud thing real and now is cloud going to take over the world? You know, am I really ready to put my data in the cloud? So there are a lot of questions and conversations can affect. The CIO of Goldman Sachs told me two things that I remember to this day. One is, hey, we've got a internal edict. That we made a decision that in the next five years, everything in Goldman Sachs is going to be on the public law. And I literally jumped out of the chair and I said like now are you going to get there? And then he laughed and said like now it really doesn't matter whether we get there or not. We want to set the tone, set the direction for the organization that hey, public cloud is here. Public cloud is there. And we need to like, you know, move as fast as we realistically can and think about all the financial regulations and security and privacy. And all these things that we care about deeply. But given all of that, the world is going towards public load and we better be on the leading edge as opposed to the lagging edge. And the second thing he said, like we're talking about like hey, how are you hiring, you know, engineers at Goldman Sachs Canada? And he said like in hey, I sort of, my team goes out to the top 20 schools in the US. And the people we really compete with are, and he was saying this, Hey, we don't compete with JP Morgan or Morgan Stanley, or pick any of your favorite financial institutions. We really think about like, hey, we want to get the best talent into Goldman Sachs out of these schools. And we really compete head to head with Google. We compete head to head with Microsoft. We compete head to head with Facebook. And we know that the caliber of people that we want to get is no different than what these companies want. If you want to continue being a successful, leading it, you know, financial services player. That sort of tells you what's going on. You also talked a little bit about like hey, open source is here to stay. What does that really mean kind of thing. In my mind like now, you can tell me that I can have from given my pedigree at Microsoft, I can tell you that we were the first embraces of open source in this world. So I'll say that right off the bat. But having said that we did in our turn around and said like, hey, this open source is real, this open source is going to be great. How can we embrace and how can we participate? And you fast forward to today, like in a Microsoft is probably as good as open source as probably any other large company I would say. Right? Including like the work that the company has done in terms of acquiring GitHub and letting it stay true to its original promise of open source and community can I think, right? I think Microsoft has come a long way kind of thing. But the thing that like in all these enterprises need to think about is you want your developers to have access to the latest and greatest tools. To the latest and greatest that the software can provide. And you really don't want your engineers to be reinventing the wheel all the time. So there is something available in the open source world. Go ahead, please set up, think about whether that makes sense for you to use it. And likewise, if you think that is something you can contribute to the open source work, go ahead and do that. So it's really a two way somebody Arctic relationship that enterprises need to have, and they need to enable their developers to want to have that symbiotic relationship. >> Soma, fantastic insights. Thank you so much for joining our keynote program. >> Thank you Natalie and thank you John. It was always fun to chat with you guys. Thank you. >> Thank you. >> John we would love to get your quick insight on that. >> Well I think first of all, he's a prolific investor the great from Madrona venture partners, which is well known in the tech circles. They're in Seattle, which is in the hub of I call cloud city. You've got Amazon and Microsoft there. He'd been at Microsoft and he knows the developer ecosystem. And reason why I like his perspective is that he understands the value of having developers as a core competency in Microsoft. That's their DNA. You look at Microsoft, their number one thing from day one besides software was developers. That was their army, the thousand centurions that one won everything for them. That has shifted. And he brought up open source, and .net and how they've embraced Linux, but something that tele before he became CEO, we interviewed him in the cube at an Xcel partners event at Stanford. He was open before he was CEO. He was talking about opening up. They opened up a lot of their open source infrastructure projects to the open compute foundation early. So they had already had that going and at that price, since that time, the stock price of Microsoft has skyrocketed because as Ali said, open always wins. And I think that is what you see here, and as an investor now he's picking in startups and investing in them. He's got to read the tea leaves. He's got to be in the right side of history. So he brings a great perspective because he sees the old way and he understands the new way. That is the key for success we've seen in the enterprise and with the startups. The people who get the future, and can create the value are going to win. >> Yeah, really excellent point. And just really quickly. What do you think were some of our greatest hits on this hour of programming? >> Well first of all I'm really impressed that Ali took the time to come join us because I know he's super busy. I think they're at a $28 billion valuation now they're pushing a billion dollars in revenue, gap revenue. And again, just a few short years ago, they had zero software revenue. So of these 15 companies we're showcasing today, you know, there's a next Data bricks in there. They're all going to be successful. They already are successful. And they're all on this rocket ship trajectory. Ali is smart, he's also got the advantage of being part of that Berkeley community which they're early on a lot of things now. Being early means you're wrong a lot, but you're also right, and you're right big. So Berkeley and Stanford obviously big areas here in the bay area as research. He is smart, He's got a great team and he's really open. So having him share his best practices, I thought that was a great highlight. Of course, Jeff Barr highlighting some of the insights that he brings and honestly having a perspective of a VC. And we're going to have Peter Wagner from wing VC who's a classic enterprise investors, super smart. So he'll add some insight. Of course, one of the community session, whenever our influencers coming on, it's our beat coming on at the end, as well as Katie Drucker. Another Madrona person is going to talk about growth hacking, growth strategies, but yeah, sights Raleigh coming on. >> Terrific, well thank you so much for those insights and thank you to everyone who is watching the first hour of our live coverage of the AWS startup showcase for myself, Natalie Ehrlich, John, for your and Dave Vellante we want to thank you very much for watching and do stay tuned for more amazing content, as well as a special live segment that John Furrier is going to be hosting. It takes place at 12:30 PM Pacific time, and it's called cracking the code, lessons learned on how enterprise buyers evaluate new startups. Don't go anywhere.
SUMMARY :
on the latest innovations and solutions How are you doing. are you looking forward to. and of course the keynotes Ali Ghodsi, of the quality of healthcare and you know, to go from, you know, a you on the other side. Congratulations and great to see you. Thank you so much, good to see you again. And you were all in on cloud. is the success of how you guys align it becomes a force that you moments that you can point to, So that's the second one that we bet on. And one of the things that Back in the day, you had to of say that the data problems And you know, there's this and that's why we have you on here. And if you say you're a data company, and growing companies to choose In the past, you know, So I got to ask you from a for the gigs, you know, to eat out signal out of the, you know, I got to ask you a final question. But the goal is to eventually be able the more lock-in you get. to one cloud or, you know, and taking the time with us today. appreciate talking to you. So Natalie, back to you but I'd love to get Dave's insights first. And the last thing you talked And see that's the key to the of the red hat model, to like block you and filter you. and let the experts manage all that stuff. And the next 15 will be the same. see you just in the bit. Okay, hey Jeff, great to see you. and the cloud is going and options to our customers. and some of the early Amazon services? And so to me, and then next thing you Fry's and before that and appreciate what you did And having that nitro as the base is the way in which ISVs of back, you know, going back is that the regions and local regions. And that in the early days Great to have you on again Thank you John, great to you for more coverage. What stood out to you John? and that's the startup action happened the most part, you know, And that's just Amazon at the edge, Well that's a to be We actually have Soma on the line. and I'm great to be here How would you define the modern enterprise And the last few years you start off thing So I got to ask you on and then you think about like hey, And the more you anchor your company, So I got to ask you on the enterprise and this sort of, you know, Thank you so much for It was always fun to chat with you guys. John we would love to get And I think that is what you see here, What do you think were it's our beat coming on at the end, and it's called cracking the code,
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Paula D'Amico, Webster Bank | Io Tahoe | Enterprise Data Automation
>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of enterprise data automation, an event Siri's brought to you by Iot. Tahoe, >>my buddy, We're back. And this is Dave Volante, and we're covering the whole notion of automating data in the Enterprise. And I'm really excited to have Paul Damico here. She's a senior vice president of enterprise data Architecture at Webster Bank. Good to see you. Thanks for coming on. >>Hi. Nice to see you, too. Yes. >>So let's let's start with Let's start with Webster Bank. You guys are kind of a regional. I think New York, New England, uh, leave headquartered out of Connecticut, but tell us a little bit about the bank. >>Yeah, Um, Webster Bank >>is regional Boston And that again, and New York, Um, very focused on in Westchester and Fairfield County. Um, they're a really highly rated saying regional bank for this area. They, um, hold, um, quite a few awards for the area for being supportive for the community and, um, are really moving forward. Technology lives. They really want to be a data driven bank, and they want to move into a more robust Bruce. >>Well, we got a lot to talk about. So data driven that is an interesting topic. And your role as data architect. The architecture is really senior vice president data architecture. So you got a big responsibility as it relates to It's kind of transitioning to this digital data driven bank. But tell us a little bit about your role in your organization, >>right? Um, currently, >>today we have, ah, a small group that is just working toward moving into a more futuristic, more data driven data warehouse. That's our first item. And then the other item is to drive new revenue by anticipating what customers do when they go to the bank or when they log into there to be able to give them the best offer. The only way to do that is you >>have uh huh. >>Timely, accurate, complete data on the customer and what's really a great value on off something to offer that or a new product or to help them continue to grow their savings or do and grow their investment. >>Okay. And I really want to get into that. But before we do and I know you're sort of part way through your journey, you got a lot of what they do. But I want to ask you about Cove. It how you guys you're handling that? I mean, you had the government coming down and small business loans and P p p. And huge volume of business and sort of data was at the heart of that. How did you manage through that? >>But we were extremely successful because we have a big, dedicated team that understands where their data is and was able to switch much faster than a larger bank to be able to offer. The TPP longs at to our customers within lightning speeds. And part of that was is we adapted to Salesforce very, for we've had salesforce in house for over 15 years. Um, you know, pretty much, uh, that was the driving vehicle to get our CPP is loans in on and then developing logic quickly. But it was a 24 7 development role in get the data moving, helping our customers fill out the forms. And a lot of that was manual. But it was a It was a large community effort. >>Well, think about that. Think about that too. Is the volume was probably much, much higher the volume of loans to small businesses that you're used to granting. But and then also, the initial guidelines were very opaque. You really didn't know what the rules were, but you were expected to enforce them. And then finally, you got more clarity. So you had to essentially code that logic into the system in real time, right? >>I wasn't >>directly involved, but part of my data movement Team Waas, and we had to change the logic overnight. So it was on a Friday night was released. We've pushed our first set of loans through and then the logic change, Um, from, you know, coming from the government and changed. And we had to re develop our our data movement piece is again and we design them and send them back. So it was It was definitely kind of scary, but we were completely successful. We hit a very high peak and I don't know the exact number, but it was in the thousands of loans from, you know, little loans to very large loans, and not one customer who buy it's not yet what they needed for. Um, you know, that was the right process and filled out the rate and pace. >>That's an amazing story and really great support for the region. New York, Connecticut, the Boston area. So that's that's fantastic. I want to get into the rest of your story. Now let's start with some of the business drivers in banking. I mean, obviously online. I mean, a lot of people have sort of joked that many of the older people who kind of shunned online banking would love to go into the branch and see their friendly teller had no choice, You know, during this pandemic to go to online. So that's obviously a big trend you mentioned. So you know the data driven data warehouse? I wanna understand that. But well, at the top level, what were some of what are some of the key business drivers there catalyzing your desire for change? >>Um, the ability to give the customer what they need at the time when they need it. And what I mean by that is that we have, um, customer interactions in multiple ways, right? >>And I want >>to be able for the customer, too. Walk into a bank, um, or online and see the same the same format and being able to have the same feel, the same look, and also to be able to offer them the next best offer for them. But they're you know, if they want looking for a new a mortgage or looking to refinance or look, you know, whatever it iss, um, that they have that data, we have the data and that they feel comfortable using it. And that's a untethered banker. Um, attitude is, you know, whatever my banker is holding and whatever the person is holding in their phone, that that is the same. And it's comfortable, so they don't feel that they've, you know, walked into the bank and they have to do a lot of different paperwork comparative filling out paperwork on, you know, just doing it on their phone. >>So you actually want the experience to be better. I mean, and it is in many cases now, you weren't able to do this with your existing against mainframe based Enterprise data warehouse. Is is that right? Maybe talk about that a little bit. >>Yeah, we were >>definitely able to do it with what we have today. The technology we're using, but one of the issues is that it's not timely, Um, and and you need a timely process to be able to get the customers to understand what's happening. Um, you want you need a timely process so we can enhance our risk management. We can apply for fraud issues and things like that. >>Yeah, so you're trying to get more real time in the traditional e g W. It's it's sort of a science project. There's a few experts that know how to get it. You consider line up. The demand is tremendous, and often times by the time you get the answer, you know it's outdated. So you're trying to address that problem. So So part of it is really the cycle time, the end end cycle, time that you're pressing. And then there's if I understand it, residual benefits that are pretty substantial from a revenue opportunity. Other other offers that you can you can make to the right customer, Um, that that you, you maybe know through your data. Is that right? >>Exactly. It's drive new customers, Teoh new opportunities. It's enhanced the risk, and it's to optimize the banking process and then obviously, to create new business. Um, and the only way we're going to be able to do that is that we have the ability to look at the data right when the customer walks in the door or right when they open up their app. And, um, by doing, creating more to New York time near real time data for the data warehouse team that's giving the lines of business the ability to to work on the next best offer for that customer. >>Paulo, we're inundated with data sources these days. Are there their data sources that you maybe maybe had access to before? But perhaps the backlog of ingesting and cleaning and cataloging and you know of analyzing. Maybe the backlog was so great that you couldn't perhaps tap some of those data sources. You see the potential to increase the data sources and hence the quality of the data, Or is that sort of premature? >>Oh, no. Um, >>exactly. Right. So right now we ingest a lot of flat files and from our mainframe type of Brennan system that we've had for quite a few years. But now that we're moving to the cloud and off Prem and on France, you know, moving off Prem into like an s three bucket. Where That data king, We can process that data and get that data faster by using real time tools to move that data into a place where, like, snowflake could utilize that data or we can give it out to our market. >>Okay, so we're >>about the way we do. We're in batch mode. Still, so we're doing 24 hours. >>Okay, So when I think about the data pipeline and the people involved, I mean, maybe you could talk a little bit about the organization. I mean, you've got I know you have data. Scientists or statisticians? I'm sure you do. Ah, you got data architects, data engineers, quality engineers, you know, developers, etcetera, etcetera. And oftentimes, practitioners like yourself will will stress about pay. The data's in silos of the data quality is not where we want it to be. We have to manually categorize the data. These are all sort of common data pipeline problems, if you will. Sometimes we use the term data ops, which is kind of a play on Dev Ops applied to the data pipeline. I did. You just sort of described your situation in that context. >>Yeah. Yes. So we have a very large data ops team and everyone that who is working on the data part of Webster's Bay has been there 13 14 years. So they get the data, they understand that they understand the lines of business. Um, so it's right now, um, we could we have data quality issues, just like everybody else does. We have. We have places in him where that gets clans, Um, and we're moving toward. And there was very much silo data. The data scientists are out in the lines of business right now, which is great, cause I think that's where data science belongs. We should give them on. And that's what we're working towards now is giving them more self service, giving them the ability to access the data, um, in a more robust way. And it's a single source of truth. So they're not pulling the data down into their own like tableau dashboards and then pushing the data back out. Um, so they're going to more not, I don't want to say a central repository, but a more of a robust repository that's controlled across multiple avenues where multiple lines of business can access. That said, how >>got it? Yes, and I think that one of the key things that I'm taking away from your last comment is the cultural aspects of this bite having the data. Scientists in the line of business, the line of lines of business, will feel ownership of that data as opposed to pointing fingers, criticizing the data quality they really own that that problem, as opposed to saying, Well, it's it's It's Paulus problem, >>right? Well, I have. My problem >>is, I have a date. Engineers, data architects, they database administrators, right, Um, and then data traditional data forwarding people. Um, and because some customers that I have that our business customers lines of business, they want to just subscribe to a report. They don't want to go out and do any data science work. Um, and we still have to provide that. So we still want to provide them some kind of regimen that they wake up in the morning and they open up their email. And there's the report that they just drive, um, which is great. And it works out really well. And one of the things is why we purchase I o waas. I would have the ability to give the lines of business the ability to do search within the data. And we read the data flows and data redundancy and things like that help me cleanup the data and also, um, to give it to the data. Analysts who say All right, they just asked me. They want this certain report, and it used to take Okay, well, we're gonna four weeks, we're going to go. We're gonna look at the data, and then we'll come back and tell you what we dio. But now with Iot Tahoe, they're able to look at the data and then, in one or two days of being able to go back and say, yes, we have data. This is where it is. This is where we found that this is the data flows that we've found also, which is that what I call it is the birth of a column. It's where the calm was created and where it went live as a teenager. And then it went to, you know, die very archive. Yeah, it's this, you know, cycle of life for a column. And Iot Tahoe helps us do that, and we do. Data lineage has done all the time. Um, and it's just takes a very long time. And that's why we're using something that has AI and machine learning. Um, it's it's accurate. It does it the same way over and over again. If an analyst leads, you're able to utilize talked something like, Oh, to be able to do that work for you. I get that. >>Yes. Oh, got it. So So a couple things there is in in, In researching Iot Tahoe, it seems like one of the strengths of their platform is the ability to visualize data the data structure and actually dig into it. But also see it, um, and that speeds things up and gives everybody additional confidence. And then the other pieces essentially infusing AI or machine intelligence into the data pipeline is really how you're attacking automation, right? And you're saying it's repeatable and and then that helps the data quality, and you have this virtuous cycle. Is there a firm that and add some color? Perhaps >>Exactly. Um, so you're able to let's say that I have I have seven cause lines of business that are asking me questions and one of the questions I'll ask me is. We want to know if this customer is okay to contact, right? And you know, there's different avenues, so you can go online to go. Do not contact me. You can go to the bank and you can say I don't want, um, email, but I'll take tests and I want, you know, phone calls. Um, all that information. So seven different lines of business asked me that question in different ways once said okay to contact the other one says, you know, customer one to pray All these, You know, um, and each project before I got there used to be siloed. So one customer would be 100 hours for them to do that and analytical work, and then another cut. Another analysts would do another 100 hours on the other project. Well, now I can do that all at once, and I can do those type of searches and say, Yes, we already have that documentation. Here it is. And this is where you can find where the customer has said, you know, you don't want I don't want to get access from you by email, or I've subscribed to get emails from you. >>Got it. Okay? Yeah. Okay. And then I want to come back to the cloud a little bit. So you you mentioned those three buckets? So you're moving to the Amazon cloud. At least I'm sure you're gonna get a hybrid situation there. You mentioned Snowflake. Um, you know what was sort of the decision to move to the cloud? Obviously, snowflake is cloud only. There's not an on Prem version there. So what precipitated that? >>Alright, So, from, um, I've been in >>the data I t Information field for the last 35 years. I started in the US Air Force and have moved on from since then. And, um, my experience with off brand waas with Snowflake was working with G McGee capital. And that's where I met up with the team from Iot to house as well. And so it's a proven. So there's a couple of things one is symptomatic of is worldwide. Now to move there, right, Two products, they have the on frame in the offering. Um, I've used the on Prem and off Prem. They're both great and it's very stable and I'm comfortable with other people are very comfortable with this. So we picked. That is our batch data movement. Um, we're moving to her, probably HBR. It's not a decision yet, but we're moving to HP are for real time data which has changed capture data, you know, moves it into the cloud. And then So you're envisioning this right now in Petrit, you're in the S three and you have all the data that you could possibly want. And that's Jason. All that everything is sitting in the S three to be able to move it through into snowflake and snowflake has proven cto have a stability. Um, you only need to learn in train your team with one thing. Um, aws has is completely stable at this 10.2. So all these avenues, if you think about it going through from, um, you know, this is your your data lake, which is I would consider your s three. And even though it's not a traditional data leg like you can touch it like a like a progressive or a dupe and into snowflake and then from snowflake into sandboxes. So your lines of business and your data scientists and just dive right in, Um, that makes a big, big win. and then using Iot. Ta ho! With the data automation and also their search engine, um, I have the ability to give the data scientists and eight analysts the the way of they don't need to talk to i t to get, um, accurate information or completely accurate information from the structure. And we'll be right there. >>Yes, so talking about, you know, snowflake and getting up to speed quickly. I know from talking to customers you get from zero to snowflake, you know, very fast. And then it sounds like the i o Ta ho is sort of the automation cloud for your data pipeline within the cloud. This is is that the right way to think about it? >>I think so. Um, right now I have I o ta >>ho attached to my >>on Prem. And, um, I >>want to attach it to my offering and eventually. So I'm using Iot Tahoe's data automation right now to bring in the data and to start analyzing the data close to make sure that I'm not missing anything and that I'm not bringing over redundant data. Um, the data warehouse that I'm working off is not a It's an on Prem. It's an Oracle database and its 15 years old. So it has extra data in it. It has, um, things that we don't need anymore. And Iot. Tahoe's helping me shake out that, um, extra data that does not need to be moved into my S three. So it's saving me money when I'm moving from offering on Prem. >>And so that was a challenge prior because you couldn't get the lines of business to agree what to delete or what was the issue there. >>Oh, it was more than that. Um, each line of business had their own structure within the warehouse, and then they were copying data between each other and duplicating the data and using that, uh so there might be that could be possibly three tables that have the same data in it. But it's used for different lines of business. And so I had we have identified using Iot Tahoe. I've identified over seven terabytes in the last, um, two months on data that is just been repetitive. Um, it just it's the same exact data just sitting in a different scheme. >>And and that's not >>easy to find. If you only understand one schema that's reporting for that line of business so that >>yeah, more bad news for the storage companies out there. Okay to follow. >>It's HCI. That's what that's what we were telling people you >>don't know and it's true, but you still would rather not waste it. You apply it to, you know, drive more revenue. And and so I guess Let's close on where you see this thing going again. I know you're sort of part way through the journey. May be you could sort of describe, you know, where you see the phase is going and really what you want to get out of this thing, You know, down the road Midterm. Longer term. What's your vision or your your data driven organization? >>Um, I want >>for the bankers to be able to walk around with on iPad in their hands and be able to access data for that customer really fast and be able to give them the best deal that they can get. I want Webster to be right there on top, with being able to add new customers and to be able to serve our existing customers who had bank accounts. Since you were 12 years old there and now our, you know, multi. Whatever. Um, I want them to be able to have the best experience with our our bankers, and >>that's awesome. I mean, that's really what I want is a banking customer. I want my bank to know who I am, anticipate my needs and create a great experience for me. And then let me go on with my life. And so that is a great story. Love your experience, your background and your knowledge. Can't thank you enough for coming on the Cube. >>No, thank you very much. And you guys have a great day. >>Alright, Take care. And thank you for watching everybody keep it right there. We'll take a short break and be right back. >>Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
SUMMARY :
of enterprise data automation, an event Siri's brought to you by Iot. And I'm really excited to have Paul Damico here. Hi. Nice to see you, too. So let's let's start with Let's start with Webster Bank. awards for the area for being supportive for the community So you got a big responsibility as it relates to It's kind of transitioning to And then the other item is to drive new revenue Timely, accurate, complete data on the customer and what's really But I want to ask you about Cove. And part of that was is we adapted to Salesforce very, And then finally, you got more clarity. Um, from, you know, coming from the government and changed. I mean, a lot of people have sort of joked that many of the older people Um, the ability to give the customer what they a new a mortgage or looking to refinance or look, you know, whatever it iss, So you actually want the experience to be better. Um, you want you need a timely process so we can enhance Other other offers that you can you can make to the right customer, Um, and the only way we're going to be You see the potential to Prem and on France, you know, moving off Prem into like an s three bucket. about the way we do. quality engineers, you know, developers, etcetera, etcetera. Um, so they're going to more not, I don't want to say a central criticizing the data quality they really own that that problem, Well, I have. We're gonna look at the data, and then we'll come back and tell you what we dio. it seems like one of the strengths of their platform is the ability to visualize data the data structure and to contact the other one says, you know, customer one to pray All these, You know, So you you mentioned those three buckets? All that everything is sitting in the S three to be able to move it through I know from talking to customers you get from zero to snowflake, Um, right now I have I o ta Um, the data warehouse that I'm working off is And so that was a challenge prior because you couldn't get the lines Um, it just it's the same exact data just sitting If you only understand one schema that's reporting Okay to That's what that's what we were telling people you You apply it to, you know, drive more revenue. for the bankers to be able to walk around with on iPad And so that is a great story. And you guys have a great day. And thank you for watching everybody keep it right there.
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Leigh Phillips, SaverLife | CUBE Conversation, February 2020
(funky music) >> Hi, and welcome to this CUBE conversation from theCUBE Studios in Paulo Alto, California. I'm your host, Sonia Tagare, and today we're joined by Leigh Phillips, president and CEO of SaverLife. Leigh, welcome to theCUBE. >> Hi, thanks so much for having me. >> Absolutely. So, tell us more about SaverLife and how it works. >> So, SaverLife is a non-profit organization. We work nationally, but we're based here in San Francisco, and our mission is to help working American families to save money, and to invest in themselves and their futures. So, we do that by making it engaging, rewarding, and fun for people to start saving, and leveraging financial technology to achieve scale. >> And you were previously known as EARN, so what spurred this change in branding? >> Well, it was more than a change in branding. It was actually a big shift towards technology. So, EARN, or, now known as SaverLife, has actually been around since 2001. So, we are not new, we're not a starter, we've been helping low to moderate income working families to save money for a long time. But what we've realized in recent years is that the size of the problem is really quite significant. So, about half of American families don't have $400. So they couldn't cover a $400 expense without having to borrow the money. As EARN, we were helping a lot of families here in the Bay Area, but maybe, you know, a thousand families a year at our peak, and when you have half of America that's financially insecure, we knew that the solution that we had wasn't big enough. So, a couple of years ago, the organization decided to make a pivot, and to make a pivot towards technology. I came onboard about four and a half years ago to lead that transition, and we launched SaverLife as a product, and we reached a quarter of a million people in a couple years, and decided that the people know best, and that we would rebrand the whole organization as SaverLife. So that's kind of how that came about. >> That's awesome. >> Yeah. >> So who is SaverLife specifically targeting, and are there any specific challenges with this target group? >> So, SaverLife is specifically targeting working American families, mostly low income families, so as I mentioned, financial insecurity is a really big problem here in the US, and so we hear about that a lot in the news, about income inequality, wealth inequality, but one of the most troubling statistics came out from the Federal Reserve Bank, they found that about 42% of American families couldn't cover a $400 expense without going into debt. And that's an issue that affects lots of people in different ways. So, SaverLife is really targeting low income people who are struggling to save money, and need a little help getting started with that. So, most of our clients are women, they're all across the United States and on average make about 25 thousand dollars a year or less. >> So let's talk about the current savings crisis in America. According to Bankry, 20% of Americans don't have emergency savings, and only 18% of Americans can live off their savings for only six months. So, tell us more about this crisis, and what do you think the underlying issue is? >> Yeah, it's a great question, and there are many issues that play into that, and most of them are systemic, you know. The way that people are making money and the gap between income and expenses. So, what we see is that larger numbers of people don't have basic emergency savings, and what that means is that you can't get through a financial emergency, right? And so that can have a real downward spiral effect on your life. So imagine a scenario where you have to miss a day or two of work because your child is sick, and you don't have sick leave, like a lot of people don't. And so you miss a couple days of income. Or, you get a flat tire, or a parking ticket. Those are the types of things that can really spiral out of control, so then you lose income, then you can't pay your rent, you're at risk of eviction, and all of these other problems. So what we know is that having relatively small amount of money, so even just 250 to $750 in savings is found to reduce those risks of things like eviction, or falling behind on bills or utilities really significantly. So, we're focused on getting people to that point, so that they can get through challenges. So one of the big things that we see in our population, isn't just that wages are low, which remains a really big problem in the US right now, but that income is really inconsistent. So if you're making an hourly wage job, or maybe you work in retail, or you work in a warehouse, or something like that, and you drive for Uber, whatever the case may be, your money that's coming in, you're not getting the same amount of money in your paycheck every two weeks, right? Like many of us do. And in fact, for SaverLife clients, we're seeing these swings of income of around a thousand dollars a month, month over month. So sometimes you earn more and sometimes you earn less. So in that scenario, it's really hard to stay on track towards saving, because you don't know how much money's coming in, and then you're getting hit with all these increasing expenses at the same time. >> Right. And, can you tell us a little bit about how people can save their way to financial independence, is it viable, and how have challenges changed since the disappearance of defined-benefit retirement packages? >> Yeah, so, it is possible, but it's challenging, and, you know, I do think that we need to be aware of those kind of bigger issues, right? And to focus on helping people have more consistency in their income, and reducing some of those large expenses, whether or not in, the very obviously, the cost of housing, medical care, child care, transportation, all of these things that are really holding families back. But, you know, the good news is that people are remarkable. People are resilient, and people are remarkable. And I can share a couple of stories with you about that. So, at SaverLife we encourage people to save with prizes and cash rewards, right? So we make it really easy for people to get started. We also have a really supportive online community, so this is an issue that affects half of us, right? It's not something that people should be ashamed of. This is a really big and endemic issue here in the US. So we don't judge people, you know, it's all about starting small and starting today. So what we do at SaverLife is encourage people to save what they can when they can, and then we use behavioral economics to design programmatic interventions, so features on the website, that encourage people to save. So you can save five bucks a week if that's what works for you, and then you have the chance to win prizes. We also do a tax time quest, so that's happening right now. So, tax season is one of the times when people will get a larger infusion of cash, right? Particularly low income people, who maybe are qualified for tax credits and other benefits. So, what we do is encourage people to save a portion of that refund. So we ask people to start thinking about it before they get the refund, right? That's really clear, cause once the money is in, it's usually already spent. So we start talking to people in December, why don't you pledge to save your refund? You can win prizes just for pledging. And what we've found is that getting people to think about and commit to savings resulted, last year, in 80% of those people actually putting money into savings, and saving on average 16 hundred dollars from their tax refunds. >> Sonia: Wow. That's incredible. I love how you're incentivizing this whole savings thing, because, like, that essentially just makes people want to do it more. >> Leigh: Yeah. >> So, how should people bucket their savings? Should they have an emergency fund, a college fund, a retirement fund, how should they do that? >> So what we find at SaverLife is, or what we promote, is the idea that your money should really align with your values. And what's important to you, and what you want to achieve for yourself and for your family. So we don't tell people what to save for, and we don't tell them what to spend their money on, right? So, the biggest thing that people save for with the program is emergencies. So, really having that financial cushion, so, your car breaks down, or whatever the case may be, you can take care of it without going into debt, right? 'Cause that's the cycle that we want to avoid. But then we also see people really staying on track to save for big goals. And unsurprisingly, those are still the kind of goals that we talk about a lot in this country. So, an education, for yourself or for your children, and home ownership. Those remain, kind of the most popular things that people are focused on. >> So when it comes to prioritizing how you should save, like especially for someone who's just coming off that one paycheck away from the street, kind of space, how would you recommend prioritizing your savings? >> Leigh: So, we focus on building a savings habit. That's kind of the number one thing that we want people to really think about. So, putting money away as consistently as you can. It's really the behavior change that we're looking to see. And that's why we encourage people to make those small, incremental steps. But we also know that life has a lot of ups and downs, right? Particularly for people who are, as you say, living paycheck to paycheck. And so, what we see in our data is that families are often making two deposits in one withdrawal. So they're putting money away, and then they're using that money when they need it to get through emergencies. So that's kind of the first thing that we really look to do is, once you have that savings habit, and we know it's hard, you know, to do that, especially if you're not making a lot of money at this moment. But that's really, whatever you can save to get into that habit of putting it away. >> And do you think people are more at risk of being one paycheck away from being on the street, or one big bill away from being on the street? >> Leigh: Yeah, absolutely, many people are, you know? And especially here in the Bay Area, right? When life is extremely expensive, the cost of housing is out of control, and those other expenses that people have to deal with. And if you layer on top of that, that inconsistency in people's income, not making a regular amount of money, we're putting a lot of people in a very, very perilous situation. >> Sonia: Right. So let's talk about financial empowerment. You were leading the office of financial empowerment in the city and county of San Francisco. So, tell us more about financial empowerment and why it's important for people to have it. So, you know, I started out working for the city over there for about 11 years, before there was a thing called financial empowerment. And we started working on a range of programs. I worked for the San Francisco treasurer, and what we're really looking to do is use the influence of the city, and the municipal government to try to make a more fair and equitable financial system for people in San Francisco. So we started with programs like Bank On San Francisco, which was access to banking for everybody. So the idea that everyone should be able to have a safe and affordable place to keep their money, and to save their money. So that was a program we worked on there. And then we went on to launch the country's first universal children's savings program. So today, every single kindergartner, actually, today, every single elementary school student in San Francisco has a savings account open for them by the city and county, to encourage families to save early and often, for college. So when we think about financial empowerment, and how local government plays a role, we're really looking at a couple of things. So, do you have the ability to have a safe place to keep your money, and deposit your paycheck, pay your bills, in a way that's affordable, that doesn't have high fees, and is transparent, so that's the first thing. Do you have access to financial education and coaching if you need it? So the city now has quite a robust individual financial coaching and counseling program that they run. Are you able to save and invest in your future? So, save for college, save for home ownership, save for those big things, be a small business owner. And then the fourth thing is, are your assets protected? So are we protecting you from predatory practices that can deplete your wealth? >> And why did you decide to go from the city, from a public organization to a more private organization, like SaverLife? >> Leigh: You know, it was a interesting story. So we had worked with SaverLife when it was known as EARN, at the city. So the organization was actually really closely partnered with us, so I knew them and I knew their work. So there was a couple of reasons. I became really intrigued by this idea that being here in Silicon Valley, we really should start putting the types of technology that are so transformative, really putting that to work for everybody, right? And I had been an advisor, on an advisory board to for-profit fintech starter. And I thought, "Oh, if we could take that type of tech, "and use it to help low income people "build wealth in the US, "that could be really transformative." So that was the first reason. The second reason was really thinking about the scope of this problem, and when you work for the local government, you see that trajectory, that, you know, the traffic ticket that turned into a lost drivers license that turned into a lost job, that turned into an eviction, right? Like, you see those types of issues play out, over and over in people's lives. So the idea that half of America doesn't have four or five hundred bucks, and we could actually do something about that, was really impactful to me. And then the third reason was, you know, I loved working for the San Francisco treasurer, who is amazing, but I kind of felt, as a woman, that I wanted to lead an organization in my own right. And that I had challenged myself that, I had a personal goal that if the opportunity came up, to be that leader that I was going to challenge myself to take it. And so when the opportunity came up, I just went for it. >> And what challenges did you face to become the CEO? >> I think, you know, a lot of the challenges first were within myself, you know? Like, there's a lot that goes into being a non-profit CEO, you know? You have, obviously, you're working on some of the biggest problems that are out there, and you're doing it with so few resources, you know? And so, is that kind of, you know that saying about Ginger Rogers doing everything that Fred Astaire did but backwards and in heels, it's kind of like that, right? You're trying to solve really, really, really big problems that are deeply entrenched, like half of America doesn't have $400. There's a lot of reasons for that, right? And then you're trying to do it by cobbling together philanthropic resources to make that happen. So, I think that was a challenge, like would it be a success? And then at the time, this organization was making in the midst of this massive transformation, you know? So going from seeing clients one on one in the office, to launching and building a scalable tech platform. And I don't have a tech background, you know? I can sometimes use my phone, you know? Like, that's, it's not my thing. But I was able to understand the potential. And so that was what really drew me there to challenge myself to be like, okay, well, there's a lot of people around here that have managed to figure this out, maybe I can figure it out, too. >> Sonia: Yeah, absolutely. So when we talk about people being unbanked, can you tell us more about what unbanked means and what it means for today? >> Leigh: Yeah, so when we talk about access to banking, and mainstream financial services, we usually separate that into two buckets, right? So you have unbanked, which means, people who have no formal relationship with a bank or credit union. So, you don't have a checking account, you don't have a savings account, you're going to a check cashing place, you're paying a fee, quite high fee, to turn your paycheck or whatever into cash, you're paying your bills with money orders, you know, that kind of thing. Then there's a larger category of people that are called underbanked. And so, those are people who may have that checking account relationship with a bank or a credit union, but they're still using these types of alternative services. So that could be money orders, it could be high cost predatory pay day lending, auto title lending, like these, kind of, systems that are outside of mainstream finance. And that actually affects quite a lot of people here in the US. About, I think, 7 to 8% of people are completely unbanked, but a much more significant portion are considered underbanked. And I think there are a lot of reasons for that, it's usually split about 50-50 between people who have never had an account before. So those may be people who don't think banks are for them, don't feel welcome in that environment, don't trust banks, you know, so those are some of the reasons. But then the other half of people who are unbanked is because they've had bad or negative experiences with banking, and they've made a decision that banking didn't work for them. It was too costly, often that's the reason, hidden fees, overdraft fees, those types of penalties, and just decided that, you know what, it was better for me to manage my money in a different way. >> And how has SaverLife helped these people feel more secure in their financial investments? >> Leigh: So when we first launched SaverLife, it's gone through so many, so much. So much transformation and change over the years, as we've been, really adopting some of those tech based practices around iteration, and being user driven, and really trying to deliver something that will work for people. So what we heard when we first launched, was, you know, I know that saving is something I need to do for myself and my family, I think pretty much everybody knows and understands that, but it's too hard for me right now, you know? Either I've lost my job, I've been, I've had an illness, or a family member's had an illness, a lot of real reasons why people are unable to do that. And so people would say, "But I really want to get there, "so what can you do to help me?" So, at SaverLife specifically, we work with large numbers of people, we have about a quarter of a million people who've signed up for SaverLife in the last three years, which is really cool. We went from serving ten thousand people in a decade, actually six thousand people in a decade, to 250 thousand people in three years, which is pretty cool. So that shows us that there's a big need and interest for this. So anyone that goes to saverlife.org and signs up is going to get weekly financial coaching content from a certified financial coach who specializes in helping people with lower incomes to build wealth. If you link your account to our platform, you're going to qualify to win prizes for saving your own money. So it's kind of like this no-lose lottery in a way, like, you gain 'cause you're saving, and you have the opportunity to win money, and it's completely free. So, there's a lot of real benefits that we have on the platform that are designed specifically to help people who are struggling financially. >> Well, that's awesome. Leigh, thank you so much for being on theCUBE and thank you for your insight. >> Thanks so much for having me. >> Absolutely. >> I enjoyed speaking with you. >> I'm Sonia Tagare, thank you for watching this CUBE conversation. See you next time. (funky music)
SUMMARY :
and today we're joined by Leigh Phillips, SaverLife and how it works. and our mission is to help here in the Bay Area, but maybe, you know, here in the US, and so we hear about that and what do you think and most of them are systemic, you know. And, can you tell us a and then you have the that essentially just makes and we don't tell them what to to do is, once you have And if you layer on top of So are we protecting you the scope of this problem, and when you And so that was what really drew me there unbanked, can you tell us more about and just decided that, you know what, So anyone that goes to and thank you for your insight. thank you for watching
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Leigh Phillips, SaverLife | CUBE Conversation, February 2020
(funky music) >> Hi, and welcome to this CUBE conversation from theCUBE Studios in Paulo Alto, California. I'm your host, Sonia Tagare, and today we're joined by Leigh Phillips, president and CEO of SaverLife. Leigh, welcome to theCUBE. >> Hi, thanks so much for having me. >> Absolutely. So, tell us more about SaverLife and how it works. >> So, SaverLife is a non-profit organization. We work nationally, but we're based here in San Francisco, and our mission is to help working American families to save money, and to invest in themselves and their futures. So, we do that by making it engaging, rewarding, and fun for people to start saving, and leveraging financial technology to achieve scale. >> And you were previously known as EARN, so what spurred this change in branding? >> Well, it was more than a change in branding. It was actually a big shift towards technology. So, EARN, or, now known as SaverLife, has actually been around since 2001. So, we are not new, we're not a starter, we've been helping low to moderate income working families to save money for a long time. But what we've realized in recent years is that the size of the problem is really quite significant. So, about half of American families don't have $400. So they couldn't cover a $400 expense without having to borrow the money. As EARN, we were helping a lot of families here in the Bay Area, but maybe, you know, a thousand families a year at our peak, and when you have half of America that's financially insecure, we knew that the solution that we had wasn't big enough. So, a couple of years ago, the organization decided to make a pivot, and to make a pivot towards technology. I came onboard about four and a half years ago to lead that transition, and we launched SaverLife as a product, and we reached a quarter of a million people in a couple years, and decided that the people know best, and that we would rebrand the whole organization as SaverLife. So that's kind of how that came about. >> That's awesome. >> Yeah. >> So who is SaverLife specifically targeting, and are there any specific challenges with this target group? >> So, SaverLife is specifically targeting working American families, mostly low income families, so as I mentioned, financial insecurity is a really big problem here in the US, and so we hear about that a lot in the news, about income inequality, wealth inequality, but one of the most troubling statistics came out from the Federal Reserve Bank, they found that about 42% of American families couldn't cover a $400 expense without going into debt. And that's an issue that affects lots of people in different ways. So, SaverLife is really targeting low income people who are struggling to save money, and need a little help getting started with that. So, most of our clients are women, they're all across the United States and on average make about 25 thousand dollars a year or less. >> So let's talk about the current savings crisis in America. According to Bankry, 20% of Americans don't have emergency savings, and only 18% of Americans can live off their savings for only six months. So, tell us more about this crisis, and what do you think the underlying issue is? >> Yeah, it's a great question, and there are many issues that play into that, and most of them are systemic, you know. The way that people are making money and the gap between income and expenses. So, what we see is that larger numbers of people don't have basic emergency savings, and what that means is that you can't get through a financial emergency, right? And so that can have a real downward spiral effect on your life. So imagine a scenario where you have to miss a day or two of work because your child is sick, and you don't have sick leave, like a lot of people don't. And so you miss a couple days of income. Or, you get a flat tire, or a parking ticket. Those are the types of things that can really spiral out of control, so then you lose income, then you can't pay your rent, you're at risk of eviction, and all of these other problems. So what we know is that having relatively small amount of money, so even just 250 to $750 in savings is found to reduce those risks of things like eviction, or falling behind on bills or utilities really significantly. So, we're focused on getting people to that point, so that they can get through challenges. So one of the big things that we see in our population, isn't just that wages are low, which remains a really big problem in the US right now, but that income is really inconsistent. So if you're making an hourly wage job, or maybe you work in retail, or you work in a warehouse, or something like that, and you drive for Uber, whatever the case may be, your money that's coming in, you're not getting the same amount of money in your paycheck every two weeks, right? Like many of us do. And in fact, for SaverLife clients, we're seeing these swings of income of around a thousand dollars a month, month over month. So sometimes you earn more and sometimes you earn less. So in that scenario, it's really hard to stay on track towards saving, because you don't know how much money's coming in, and then you're getting hit with all these increasing expenses at the same time. >> Right. And, can you tell us a little bit about how people can save their way to financial independence, is it viable, and how have challenges changed since the disappearance of defined-benefit retirement packages? >> Yeah, so, it is possible, but it's challenging, and, you know, I do think that we need to be aware of those kind of bigger issues, right? And to focus on helping people have more consistency in their income, and reducing some of those large expenses, whether or not in the Bay Area obviously, the cost of housing, medical care, child care, transportation, all of these things that are really holding families back. But, you know, the good news is that people are remarkable. People are resilient, and people are remarkable. And I can share a couple of stories with you about that. So, at SaverLife we encourage people to save with prizes and cash rewards, right? So we make it really easy for people to get started. We also have a really supportive online community, so this is an issue that affects half of us, right? It's not something that people should be ashamed of. This is a really big and endemic issue here in the US. So we don't judge people, you know, it's all about starting small and starting today. So what we do at SaverLife is encourage people to save what they can when they can, and then we use behavioral economics to design programmatic interventions, so features on the website, that encourage people to save. So you can save five bucks a week if that's what works for you, and then you have the chance to win prizes. We also do a tax time quest, so that's happening right now. So, tax season is one of the times when people will get a larger infusion of cash, right? Particularly low income people, who maybe are qualified for tax credits and other benefits. So, what we do is encourage people to save a portion of that refund. So we ask people to start thinking about it before they get the refund, right? That's really clear, cause once the money is in, it's usually already spent. So we start talking to people in December, why don't you pledge to save your refund? You can win prizes just for pledging. And what we've found is that getting people to think about and commit to savings resulted, last year, in 80% of those people actually putting money into savings, and saving on average 16 hundred dollars from their tax refunds. >> Sonia: Wow. That's incredible. I love how you're incentivizing this whole savings thing, because, like, that essentially just makes people want to do it more. >> Leigh: Yeah. >> So, how should people bucket their savings? Should they have an emergency fund, a college fund, a retirement fund, how should they do that? >> So what we find at SaverLife is, or what we promote, is the idea that your money should really align with your values. And what's important to you, and what you want to achieve for yourself and for your family. So we don't tell people what to save for, and we don't tell them what to spend their money on, right? So, the biggest thing that people save for with the program is emergencies. So, really having that financial cushion, so, your car breaks down, or whatever the case may be, you can take care of it without going into debt, right? 'Cause that's the cycle that we want to avoid. But then we also see people really staying on track to save for big goals. And unsurprisingly, those are still the kind of goals that we talk about a lot in this country. So, an education, for yourself or for your children, and home ownership. Those remain, kind of the most popular things that people are focused on. >> So when it comes to prioritizing how you should save, like especially for someone who's just coming off that one paycheck away from the street, kind of space, how would you recommend prioritizing your savings? >> Leigh: So, we focus on building a savings habit. That's kind of the number one thing that we want people to really think about. So, putting money away as consistently as you can. It's really the behavior change that we're looking to see. And that's why we encourage people to make those small, incremental steps. But we also know that life has a lot of ups and downs, right? Particularly for people who are, as you say, living paycheck to paycheck. And so, what we see in our data is that families are often making two deposits in one withdrawal. So they're putting money away, and then they're using that money when they need it to get through emergencies. So that's kind of the first thing that we really look to do is, once you have that savings habit, and we know it's hard, you know, to do that, especially if you're not making a lot of money at this moment. But that's really, whatever you can save to get into that habit of putting it away. >> And do you think people are more at risk of being one paycheck away from being on the street, or one big bill away from being on the street? >> Leigh: Yeah, absolutely, many people are, you know? And especially here in the Bay Area, right? When life is extremely expensive, the cost of housing is out of control, and those other expenses that people have to deal with. And if you layer on top of that, that inconsistency in people's income, not making a regular amount of money, we're putting a lot of people in a very, very perilous situation. >> Sonia: Right. So let's talk about financial empowerment. You were leading the office of financial empowerment in the city and county of San Francisco. So, tell us more about financial empowerment and why it's important for people to have it. So, you know, I started out working for the city over there for about 11 years, before there was a thing called financial empowerment. And we started working on a range of programs. I worked for the San Francisco treasurer, and what we're really looking to do is use the influence of the city, and the municipal government to try to make a more fair and equitable financial system for people in San Francisco. So we started with programs like Bank On San Francisco, which was access to banking for everybody. So the idea that everyone should be able to have a safe and affordable place to keep their money, and to save their money. So that was a program we worked on there. And then we went on to launch the country's first universal children's savings program. So today, every single kindergartner, actually, today, every single elementary school student in San Francisco has a savings account open for them by the city and county, to encourage families to save early and often, for college. So when we think about financial empowerment, and how local government plays a role, we're really looking at a couple of things. So, do you have the ability to have a safe place to keep your money, and deposit your paycheck, pay your bills, in a way that's affordable, that doesn't have high fees, and is transparent, so that's the first thing. Do you have access to financial education and coaching if you need it? So the city now has quite a robust individual financial coaching and counseling program that they run. Are you able to save and invest in your future? So, save for college, save for home ownership, save for those big things, be a small business owner. And then the fourth thing is, are your assets protected? So are we protecting you from predatory practices that can deplete your wealth? >> And why did you decide to go from the city, from a public organization to a more private organization, like SaverLife? >> Leigh: You know, it was a interesting story. So we had worked with SaverLife when it was known as EARN, at the city. So the organization was actually really closely partnered with us, so I knew them and I knew their work. So there was a couple of reasons. I became really intrigued by this idea that being here in Silicon Valley, we really should start putting the types of technology that are so transformative, really putting that to work for everybody, right? And I had been an advisor, on an advisory board to for-profit fintech starter. And I thought, "Oh, if we could take that type of tech, "and use it to help low income people "build wealth in the US, "that could be really transformative." So that was the first reason. The second reason was really thinking about the scope of this problem, and when you work for the local government, you see that trajectory, that, you know, the traffic ticket that turned into a lost drivers license that turned into a lost job, that turned into an eviction, right? Like, you see those types of issues play out, over and over in people's lives. So the idea that half of America doesn't have four or five hundred bucks, and we could actually do something about that, was really impactful to me. And then the third reason was, you know, I loved working for the San Francisco treasurer, who is amazing, but I kind of felt, as a woman, that I wanted to lead an organization in my own right. And that I had challenged myself that, I had a personal goal that if the opportunity came up, to be that leader that I was going to challenge myself to take it. And so when the opportunity came up, I just went for it. >> And what challenges did you face to become the CEO? >> I think, you know, a lot of the challenges first were within myself, you know? Like, there's a lot that goes into being a non-profit CEO, you know? You have, obviously, you're working on some of the biggest problems that are out there, and you're doing it with so few resources, you know? And so, is that kind of, you know that saying about Ginger Rogers doing everything that Fred Astaire did but backwards and in heels, it's kind of like that, right? You're trying to solve really, really, really big problems that are deeply entrenched, like half of America doesn't have $400. There's a lot of reasons for that, right? And then you're trying to do it by cobbling together philanthropic resources to make that happen. So, I think that was a challenge, like would it be a success? And then at the time, this organization was making in the midst of this massive transformation, you know? So going from seeing clients one on one in the office, to launching and building a scalable tech platform. And I don't have a tech background, you know? I can sometimes use my phone, you know? Like, that's, it's not my thing. But I was able to understand the potential. And so that was what really drew me there to challenge myself to be like, okay, well, there's a lot of people around here that have managed to figure this out, maybe I can figure it out, too. >> Sonia: Yeah, absolutely. So when we talk about people being unbanked, can you tell us more about what unbanked means and what it means for today? >> Leigh: Yeah, so when we talk about access to banking, and mainstream financial services, we usually separate that into two buckets, right? So you have unbanked, which means, people who have no formal relationship with a bank or credit union. So, you don't have a checking account, you don't have a savings account, you're going to a check cashing place, you're paying a fee, quite high fee, to turn your paycheck or whatever into cash, you're paying your bills with money orders, you know, that kind of thing. Then there's a larger category of people that are called underbanked. And so, those are people who may have that checking account relationship with a bank or a credit union, but they're still using these types of alternative services. So that could be money orders, it could be high cost predatory pay day lending, auto title lending, like these, kind of, systems that are outside of mainstream finance. And that actually affects quite a lot of people here in the US. About, I think, 7 to 8% of people are completely unbanked, but a much more significant portion are considered underbanked. And I think there are a lot of reasons for that, it's usually split about 50-50 between people who have never had an account before. So those may be people who don't think banks are for them, don't feel welcome in that environment, don't trust banks, you know, so those are some of the reasons. But then the other half of people who are unbanked is because they've had bad or negative experiences with banking, and they've made a decision that banking didn't work for them. It was too costly, often that's the reason, hidden fees, overdraft fees, those types of penalties, and just decided that, you know what, it was better for me to manage my money in a different way. >> And how has SaverLife helped these people feel more secure in their financial investments? >> Leigh: So when we first launched SaverLife, it's gone through so many, so much. So much transformation and change over the years, as we've been, really adopting some of those tech based practices around iteration, and being user driven, and really trying to deliver something that will work for people. So what we heard when we first launched, was, you know, I know that saving is something I need to do for myself and my family, I think pretty much everybody knows and understands that, but it's too hard for me right now, you know? Either I've lost my job, I've been, I've had an illness, or a family member's had an illness, a lot of real reasons why people are unable to do that. And so people would say, "But I really want to get there, "so what can you do to help me?" So, at SaverLife specifically, we work with large numbers of people, we have about a quarter of a million people who've signed up for SaverLife in the last three years, which is really cool. We went from serving ten thousand people in a decade, actually six thousand people in a decade, to 250 thousand people in three years, which is pretty cool. So that shows us that there's a big need and interest for this. So anyone that goes to saverlife.org and signs up is going to get weekly financial coaching content from a certified financial coach who specializes in helping people with lower incomes to build wealth. If you link your account to our platform, you're going to qualify to win prizes for saving your own money. So it's kind of like this no-lose lottery in a way, like, you gain 'cause you're saving, and you have the opportunity to win money, and it's completely free. So, there's a lot of real benefits that we have on the platform that are designed specifically to help people who are struggling financially. >> Well, that's awesome. Leigh, thank you so much for being on theCUBE and thank you for your insight. >> Thanks so much for having me. >> Absolutely. >> I enjoyed speaking with you. >> I'm Sonia Tagare, thank you for watching this CUBE conversation. See you next time. (funky music)
SUMMARY :
and today we're joined by Leigh Phillips, So, tell us more about SaverLife and how it works. and our mission is to help working American families here in the Bay Area, but maybe, you know, here in the US, and so we hear about that and what do you think the underlying issue is? So in that scenario, it's really hard to stay on track And, can you tell us a little bit about how people So we don't judge people, you know, it's all about that essentially just makes people want to do it more. So we don't tell people what to save for, and we know it's hard, you know, to do that, And if you layer on top of that, that inconsistency So are we protecting you from predatory practices the scope of this problem, and when you And so, is that kind of, you know that saying about unbanked, can you tell us more about So you have unbanked, which means, people who and you have the opportunity to win money, and thank you for your insight. I'm Sonia Tagare, thank you for watching
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Team LPSN, Spain | Technovation World Pitch Summit 2019
>> from Santa Clara, California It's the Cube covering techno ovation. World Pitch Summit 2019 Brought to You by Silicon Angle Media. Now here's Sonia to Gari >> Hi and welcome to the Cube. I'm your host, Sonia to Gari, and we're here at Oracle's Agnew's campus covering techno vacations. World Pitch Summit 2019 a pitch competition in which girls from around the world developed mobile labs in order to create positive change in the world with us. Today we have teen LPs n from Spain. Welcome, and the team members are Paulo Fernandez Rosa's Sandra Cho Manual Gomez, Nouria, Peoria, the CIA, Fernandez and with the beyond Tovar. Welcome to the Cube. Thank you. So your app is called one and where tell us more about that. >> They will, when I'm were easy enough that detects anomalies when you go out to work or run am. It's to ensure woman's safety on it, obtains your location in real time. And if something happens, for example, if you stop or if you're in getting near to your destination, it calls the emergency contact or the emergency service's >> Wow, and so can you tell us how a user would would go through it. Step by step. >> Yes, A first of all you need to establish our contact am. So then you have two different Moz A the start mold, which is a for when you, for example, go running. And when do you stop the up? He takes that anomaly so it sends you a message in case off emergency it goes a the emergency contact on the other mode, it's they take me to a remote. So that's when you, for example, want to go home. And so you you don't follow your route. I am the only they up since you and alert. And in case of emergency, it's Cindy. Um, message to your contact. >> Wow. I feel like that could be really useful. Yes. Is that a big problem in Spain? >> Yes, it's He's actually well into feel better. Okay, Yeah, >> we saw this problem in our community on when they gave us the opportunity to try to help in some way. We thought while we can try to create this application on forgives on on it in our country, there have been a lot of women murdered on kidnapped ennui. A thought that it was something very >> very important. I'm That's amazing. So how did you all come up with this idea? >> A. Well, it'll be gone when we hear about their martyr off Laurel. Wilma It that made us a became aware with the magnitude of the problem, so am I. We wanted to do something that they will will be a helpful for us. So we did this >> application. Wow. And, um what problems or struggles as you go through creating this app? I >> am. Well, I think that the the worst think was the time because we had, like, a really short time to do this application to develop and to develop it because we started in February on, we had to We have a deadline in April. So for us, the time was the most difficult part. Also, the programming, the coding. But that that was because we had to learn coding. So yet the time was our our difficult >> part. If you get funding, where do you see this app in five years? >> Well, a We want to continue developing this up on improving it because we really need this up. We want to add new new languages and also introduce it in a iose to a iPhone users to use it also on in 50 years. We would like a this up to continue working about. Hopefully, maybe a this problem with disappear. >> That's great. Um, so tell us more about your experience at Tech Novation. How did you all meet? And why did you decide to join techno vacation? Tell >> me. So we discovered generation in the high school. Our technology teacher air showed as the contest, and we decided to join. And we're old friends. So it was a, like, easy to work because we already know each other. So am that's the best part. And we won't really wanted to do something that could be useful for us. So we decided to to start the Italians with that idea. >> That's awesome. What? What's been like the best experience a part of the experience so far? >> A this trip, actually, Yeah, it is being amazing. I am. It's actually one of the best rips off my life, and we're all having a great time here. >> That's also, um So, uh, thanks so much for coming on. We really appreciate it. And good luck for tonight. Thank you. This is team LPs n from Spain. Thanks so much for watching Stay tuned for more
SUMMARY :
from Santa Clara, California It's the Cube covering Welcome, and the team members And if something happens, for example, if you stop or if you're in getting near to your destination, Wow, and so can you tell us how a user would would go through it. And so you you don't follow your route. Is that a big problem in Spain? Yes, it's He's actually well into feel better. we saw this problem in our community on when they gave us the opportunity to So how did you all come up with this idea? So we did this I But that that was because we had to learn coding. If you get funding, where do you see this app in five years? Well, a We want to continue developing this up on improving it because we And why did you decide to join techno vacation? So we decided to to start the Italians with that idea. What's been like the best experience a part of the experience so far? It's actually one of the best rips off my life, And good luck for tonight.
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Dave McCann, AWS | AWS re:Inforce 2019
>> live from Boston, Massachusetts. It's the Cube covering AWS reinforce 2019. Brought to you by Amazon Web service is and its ecosystem partners. >> Okay, welcome back. It was two cubes. Live coverage in Boston, Massachusetts, for Amazon Web services reinforces A W s, his first inaugural conference around security, cloud security and all the benefits of security vendors of bringing. We're here with a man who runs the marketplace and more. Dave McCann Cube, alumni vice president of migration, marketplace and control surfaces. That's a new tail you were that you have here since the last time we talked. Lots changed. Give us the update. Welcome to the Cube. >> Great to be back, ma'am. Believe it's seven months of every event. >> Feels like this. Seven years. You know, you've got a lot new things happening. >> We do >> explain. You have new responsibility. You got the marketplace, which we talked about a great product solutions. What else do you have? >> So we've obviously been expanding our service portfolio, right? So either us is launching. New service is all the time. We have a set of service is a road in the migration of software. So I run. No, the immigration Service's team and interesting. We were sitting in Boston, and that's actually headquartered 800 yards down the road. So there's a set of surfaces around the tools to help you as a CEO. Move your applications onto the clothes. Marketplace is obviously where we want you to find short where you need to buy. And then once you get into the topic of governance, we had one product called Service Catalog and reinvent. We announced a new product. That was a preview called Control. Yesterday we went to G A full availability off control, Terror and Control term service catalog together are in the government space, but we're calling them control service is because it's around controlling the access off teams to particular resources. So that's control service. >> What people moving into the cloud and give us a sense of the the workload. I know you see everything but any patterns that you can see a >> lot of patterns and merging and migration, and they are very industry specific. But there are some common patterns, so you know we're doing migrations and frozen companies were weighed and professional service is run by. Todd Weatherby is engaged in hundreds of those migrations. But we also have no over 70 partners that we've certified of migration partners. Migration partners are doing three times as many migrations as our old professional service is. Team are doing so in collection. There's a lot going on there, one of the common patterns. First of all, everybody is moved a Web development other websites have done. They're all running on the AWS know what they're doing is they're modernizing new applications. So the building in Europe or bring enough over moving onto containers. So it was a lie that ran on a sever server on. As they move into the clothes, they're gonna reshape the throw away. Some of the court brief the court up into micro service is on. Deploy out, Let's see on E. C s, which is continuing. There's a lot of application organization, and then on the migration side, we're seeing applications clearly were migrating a lost a lot of ASAP. So the big partners like Deloitte and Accenture are doing a C P migrations, and we've done a lot of ASAP migrations. And then there are other business applications are being moved with particular software vendors. You know there's a company here in Boston called Pegasystems. They do a world leading workflow platform. We've worked with Pagan, and we have migrated loss of paga warped floors in dozens of paying customers up on the float. >> You innovated on the marketplace, which is where people buy so they can contract with software. So now you got moving to the cloud, buying on the cloud, consuming the cloud and then governing it and managing that aspect all under one cohesive unit. That's you. Is that good? >> Yeah, it's a good way to think about it. It's a san of engineering teams with Coleman purpose for the customer. So you know, one of the things we do AWS is we innovate a lot, and then we organize the engineering teams around a common customer needs. So we said, above all of the computer stories service is on. We pay attention to the application layer. We described the application, So if you think of a migration service is says, I've actually got a service called Discovery, I crawl over your servers and I find what you have way. Then what we do is we have a tool that says, Are you gonna bring and move the till. So you have to build a business case. We just bought a company in Canada called TSA Logic. They had a Super Two for building a business case that said, what would this absolutely running with either of us. >> So is the need of the business case. What's the courtney that you guys have focused on? What was that? >> So, interestingly, we run more Windows Server and the clothes when Microsoft. So you actually have to business keys here. So many windows servers are running on print. What does it look like when a run on either the U. S. And T s so logic? Really good, too. And we find our customers using it. That says, Here's your own prim Windows server configuration with an app on run the mortal What would it look like when it runs on AWS? >> But why would you just do that with a spreadsheet? What? What is the T s so logic do that you couldn't do especially >> well? First of all, you want to make a simple too Somebody has to go run a spreadsheet. They've turned it into a tool that a business years Ercan used a sales person you could use on. They've built on top of a database. So it's got a rich set of choices. You are richer than you put in. A special with a U IE is intuitive, and you're gonna learn it in 20 minutes. I'm not gonna have you made up >> this date in their best practice things like that that you can draw a library >> of what's going down, and it keeps the data store of all the ones we've done. So we're turning that into two. Were giving Old Toller solution architect. >> Well, you got a good thing going on with the marketplace. Good to see you wrapping around those needs there. I gotta ask for the marketplace. Just give us the latest stats. How many subscriptions air in the marketplace these days? What's the overall number in the marketplace? It's >> pretty exciting. Way decided just at San Francisco to announce that we now have over 1,000,000 active subscriptions in the marketplace, which is a main boggling number on its own 1,000,000 subscriptions. Ice of Scrape. Within those subscriptions, we've got over 240 foes and active accounts, you know, and the audience doors you could be an enterprise with 100 cases and in an enterprise. What we typically see is that there are seven or eight teams that are buying or using software, so we'll have seven or eight accounts that have the right to subscribe. So you could be a one team and you're in another team you're buying B I tools. You're buying security tools. So those accounts on what? We're announcing the show for the first time ever. Its security is we have over 100,000 security subscriptions. That's a while. That's a big number. Some companies only have 100 customers, and the market, please. Our customers are switched on 100,000 security. So >> many product listings is that roughly it's just security security. At 300 >> there's over 100 listings. Thing is a product with a price okay on a vendor could be Let's see Paolo off networks or crowdstrike or trains or semantic or McAfee or a brand new company like Twist located of Israel. These companies might have one offer or 20 offers, so we have over 800 offers from over 300. Vendors were having new vendors every week. >> That's the next question. How many security app developers are eyes? Do you have over 300? 300? Okay. About 100. Anyway, I heard >> this morning from Gartner that they believe that are over 1000 security vendors. So I'm only 30% done. I got a little work >> tonight. How >> do you >> govern all this stuff? I was a customer. Sort of Make sure that they're in compliance. >> Great question. Steven Smith yesterday was talking about governance once she moved things on the clothes. It's very elastic. You could be running it today, not running a tomato, running it in I d running in Sydney. So it's easy to fire up running everywhere. So how did the governance team of a company nor watch running where you know, you get into tagging, everything has to be tagged. Everything has to have a cord attached to it. And then you do want to control who gets to use what I may have bought about a cuter appliance. But I don't know that I gave you rates to use it, right, so we could have border on behalf of the company. But I need to grant you access. So we launched a couple of years ago. Service catalog is our first governance to and yesterday we went into full release over new to call the control tower. >> Right. What you announced way reinvents >> preview. And yesterday we went to Jenny. What control does is it Natural Owes me to set up a set of accounts. So if you think of it, your development team, you've got David Kay and tested and the product ain't your brand new to the company. I'm a little worried. What, you're going to get up. You >> don't want to give him the keys to the kingdom, >> so I'm actually going to grant you access to a set of resources, and then I'm gonna apply some rules, or what we call God reels is your brand. You you haven't read my manual, you're in the company. So I'm gonna put a set of God reels on you to make sure that you follow our guide length >> Just training. And so is pressing the wrong button, that kind of thing. So I gotta ask you I mean, on the buying side consumption. I heard you say in a talk upstairs on Monday. You have a buyer, buyer, lead, engineering teams and cellar Let engineering, which tells me that you got a lot of innovation going on the marketplace. So the results are obviously they mention the listings. But one of the trends that's here security conference and it was proper is ecosystems importance in monetization. So back in the old days, Channel partners were a big part of the old computer industry. You're essentially going direct with service listings, which is great. How does that help the channel? Is there sinking around channel as a buyer opportunity? How do you How does that work with the market? Is what your thinking around the relationship between the scale of a simplicity and efficiency, the marketplace with the relationships the channel partners may have with their customers? And how do you bridge that together? What's the thinking >> you've overstayed? Been around a long time? >> Uh, so you have 90 Sydney? Well, the channels have been modernizes the nineties. You think about a >> long time. It's really interesting when we conceived Market please candidly. Way didn't put the channel in marketplace, and in retrospect, that was a miss. Our customers are big customers or small customers. Trust some of the resellers. Some resellers operates surely on price. Some resellers bring a lot of knowledge, even the biggest of the global 2000 Fortune 100. They have a prepared advisor. Let's take a company record. You often got 700 security engineers that are blue chip companies in America trusts or they buy the software the adoptive recommends. So mark it, please really didn't accommodate for Let's Pick another One in Europe, it would be computer center. So in the last two years we've dedicated the data separate engineering team were actually opened up. A team in a different city on their sole customer is a reseller. And so we launch this thing called Consulting Partner Private offer. And so now you're Palo. Also, for your trained, you can authorize active or serious or s h I to be the re sailor at this corporation, and they can actually negotiate the price, which is what a role resellers do. They negotiate price in terms, so we've actually true reseller >> write software for fulfillment through the marketplace. Four partners which are now customers to you now so that they could wrap service is because that's something we talk to. People in the Channel number one conversation is we love the cloud. But how do I make money and that is Service is right. They all want to wrap Service's around, So okay, you guys are delivering this. Is that my getting that right? You guys are riding a direct link in tow marketplace for partners, and they could wrap service is around there, >> will you? Seeing two things? First of all, yes. We're lowering the resale of to sell the software for absolutely. So you re sailor, you can quote software you build rebuild for you so that I become the billing partner for a serious or a billing partner for active on active can use marketplace to fulfill clothes software for their customers. Dan Burns to see you about pretty happy. You crossed the line into a second scenario, which is condone burns attached. Service is on. Clearly, that's a use case we hear usually would we hear use cases way end up through feeling that a little, little not a use case I have enabled, but we've done >> what you're working on It. We've had what the customer. How does the reseller get into the marketplace? What kind of requirements are there. Is it? Is it different than some of your other partners, or is it sort of a similar framework? >> They have to become an approved resale or so First of all, they have to be in a peon partner. I mean, we work tightly with a p N e p M screens partners for AWS. So Josh Hoffman's team Terry Wise, his team, whole part of team screen. The reseller we would only work with resellers are screened and approved by the PM Wants the AP en approved way have no set up a dedicated program team. They work with a reseller with trained them what's involved. Ultimately, however, the relationship is between Splunk in a tree sailor, a five and a three sailor named after a tree sailor or Paulo trend or Croat straight. So it's up to the I S V to tail us that hey, computer centers my reseller. I don't control that relationship. A fulfillment agent you crow strike to save resellers, and I simply have to meet that work so that I get the end customer happy. >> So your enabler in that instance, that's really no, I'm >> really an engine, even team for everybody engineer for the Iast way, engineer for the buyer. And they have to engineer for the re. So >> you have your hands in a lot of the action because you're in the middle of all this marketplace and you must do a lot of planning. I gotta ask you the question and this comes up. That kind of put on my learning all the Amazon lingo covering reinvent for eight years and covering all the different events. So you gotta raise the bar, which is an internal. You keep innovating. Andy Jassy always sucks about removing the undifferentiated heavy lifting. So what is the undifferentiated heavy lifting that you're working toe automate for your customers? >> Great questions. Right now there's probably three. We'll see what the buyer friction is, and then we'll talk about what the sale of friction is. The buyer frustration that is, undifferentiated. Heavy lifting is the interestingly, it's the team process around choosing software. So a couple of customers were on stage yesterday right on those big institutions talked about security software. But in order for an institution to buy that software, there are five groups involved. Security director is choosing the vendor, but procurement has to be involved. Andre. No procurement. We can't be left out the bit. So yesterday we did. The integration to Cooper is a procurement system. So that friction is by subscribing marketplace tied round. Match it with appeal because the p O is what goes on the ledgers with the company. A purchase order. So that has to be a match in purchase order for the marketplace subscription. And then engineers don't Tidwell engineers to always remember you didn't tag it. Hi, this finance nowhere being spent. So we're doing work on working service catalog to do more tagging. And so the buyer wants good tagging procurement integrated. So we're working on a walk slow between marketplace service catalog for procurement. >> Tiring. So you've kind of eliminated procurement or are eliminating procurement as a potential blocker, they use another. Actually, we won't be >> apart for leading procurement. VPs want their V piece of engineering to be happy. >> This is legal. Next. Actually, Greek question. We actually tackled >> legal. First, we did something called Enterprise Code tracked and our customer advisory board Two years ago, one of our buyers, one of our customers, said we're gonna be 100 vendors to deploy it. We're not doing 100 tracks. We've only got one lawyer, You know, 6000 engineers and one lawyer. Well, lawyers, good cord is quickly. So we've created a standard contract. It take stain to persuade legal cause at risk. So we've got a whole bunch of corporations adopting enterprise contract, and we're up to over 75 companies adopting enterprise contract. But legal is apartment >> so modernizing the procurement, a key goal >> procurement, legal, security, engineering. And then the next one is I t finance. So if you think of our budgets on their course teams on AWS, everything needs to be can become visible in either of US budgets. And everything has become visible in course exporter. So we have to call the rate tags. >> I heard a stat that 6,000,000 After moving to the cloud in the next 6,000,000 3 to 5 years, security as a focus reinforces not a summit. It's branded as a W s reinforce, just like reinvents. Same kind of five year for security. What's your impression of the show so far? No, you've been highly active speaking, doing briefing started a customer's burn, the midnight oil with partners and customers What's that? What's your vibe of the show? What's your takeaway? What's the most important thing happening here? What's your what's your summary? >> So I always think you get the truth in the booth. Cut to the chase. I made a customer last night from a major media company who we all know who's in Los Angeles. His comment was weeks, either. These expectations wasn't she wanted to come because he goes to reinvent. Why am I coming to Boston in June? Because I'm gonna go to reinvent November on this. The rates of security for a major media company last night basically said, I love the love. The subject matter, right? It's so security centric. He actually ended up bringing a bunch of people from his team on, and he loves the topics in the stations. The other thing he loved was everybody. Here is insecurity, reinvent. There's lots of people from what's the functions, But everybody here is a security professional. So that was the director of security for a media company. He was at an event talking to one of the suppliers, the marketplace. I asked this president of a very well known security vendor and I said. So what's your reaction to reinforce? And he said, Frankly, when you guys told me it was coming, we didn't really want the bother. It's the end of the quarter. It's a busy time of year. It's another event, he said. I am sure glad we came on. He was standing talking to these VP of marketing, saying, We want to bring more people, make sure, So he's overjoyed. His His comment was, when I go to Rio event 50,000 people but only 5% of their own security. I can't reinforce everybody's insecurity >> in Houston in 2020. Any inside US tow? Why Houston? I have no clue what I actually think >> is really smart about the Vineyard, and this is what a customer said Last night. I met a customer from Connecticut who isn't a load to travel far. They don't get to go to reinvent in Vegas. I think what we did when we came to Boston way tapped into all the states that could drive. So there are people here who don't get to go to reinvent. I think when we go to Houston, we're going to get a whole bunch of takes its customers. Yeah, you don't get a flight to Vegas. So I think it's really good for the customer that people who don't get budget to travel >> makes sense on dry kind of a geographic beograd. The world >> if we're expanding the customers that can learn. So from an education point of view, we're just increase the audience that we're teaching. Great, >> Dave. Great to have you on. Thanks for the insights and congratulations on the new responsibility as you get more coz and around marketplace been very successful. 1,000,000 subscriptions. That's good stuff again. They were >> you reinvented and >> a couple of months, Seven days? What? We're excited. I love covering the growth of the clouds. Certainly cloud security of his own conference. Dave McCann, Vice president Marketplace Migration and Control Service is controlled cattle up. How they how you how you move contract and governed applications in the future. All gonna be happening online. Cloud Mr. Q coverage from Boston. They just reinforced. We right back with more after this short break
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Amazon Web service is That's a new tail you were that you have here since the last time we talked. Great to be back, ma'am. You know, you've got a lot new things happening. You got the marketplace, which we talked about a great product it's around controlling the access off teams to particular resources. I know you see everything but any patterns that you can see a So the building in Europe So now you got moving to the cloud, buying on the cloud, consuming the cloud and then governing it and We described the application, So if you think of a migration service is says, So is the need of the business case. So you actually have to business keys here. First of all, you want to make a simple too Somebody has to go run a spreadsheet. So we're turning that into Good to see you wrapping around those needs there. and the audience doors you could be an enterprise with 100 cases and many product listings is that roughly it's just security security. These companies might have one offer or 20 offers, so we have over 800 offers from That's the next question. So I'm only 30% done. How Sort of Make sure that they're in compliance. So how did the governance team of a company nor watch running where you What you announced way reinvents So if you think of it, your development team, So I'm gonna put a set of God reels on you to make sure that you follow our guide So back in the old days, Well, the channels have been modernizes the nineties. So in the last two years we've dedicated the data They all want to wrap Service's around, So okay, you guys are delivering this. So you re sailor, you can quote software you How does the reseller get into the marketplace? the PM Wants the AP en approved way have no set up a dedicated program team. really an engine, even team for everybody engineer for the Iast way, So you gotta raise the bar, which is an internal. So that has to be a match in purchase order for the marketplace subscription. So you've kind of eliminated procurement or are eliminating procurement as a potential blocker, apart for leading procurement. This is legal. So we've got a whole bunch of corporations adopting enterprise contract, So if you think of our budgets I heard a stat that 6,000,000 After moving to the cloud in the next 6,000,000 3 to 5 years, security as a So I always think you get the truth in the booth. I have no is really smart about the Vineyard, and this is what a customer said Last night. The world So from an education point Thanks for the insights and congratulations on the new responsibility as you get more I love covering the growth of the clouds.
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Guy Churchward, Datera | CUBEConversation, March 2019
>> From our studios in the heart of Silicon Valley. Holloway Alto, California. It is a cube conversation. >> He will come back and ready Geoffrey here with the Cuban Interpol about those details for acute conversation. We've got a really great guess. He's been on many, many times. We're always excited. Have them on to a bunch of different companies a lot of years and really a great perspective. So we're excited. Guy. Church word. The CEO of Da Terra. Back >> in the politest. EEO guy. Great to see you. >> Thank you, Jeff. Appreciate it. >> Absolutely. So I think last time you were here, I was looking it up. Actually, Was November of twenty eighteen. You were >> kind of just getting started on your day. Terror of the adventure. Give us kind of the update. >> Yeah, I was gonna say last time we had Mark in whose CEO when found a cofounder of Data and I was edging in. So I was executive chairman at the time, you know? And obviously I found the technology. I was looking for an organization that had some forward thinking on storage. Andi, we started to get very close with a large strategic and actually We re announced it on the go to market, I think in February with HP, and I thought that myself and Mark kind of sat down, did a pinky swear and said, OK, maybe it's time for me to step in and take the CEO role just to make sure that we had that sort of marriage of innovation and then some of the operations stuff they could bring inside the business. >> So you've been at this for a >> while, but in the industry for a long time. What was it that you saw? Um, that really wanted you to get deeper in with date. Eriks. Obviously, I'm sure you have tons of opportunities coming your way. You know, to kind of move from the board seat into the CEO position. >> Yeah. Yeah, a bad bet. Maybe stupidity or being drunk. It, to be honest, it was. You know, the first thing is, I was looking for this technology that basically spanned forward, and I had this gut hunch that organizations were looking for data freedom. There's why did the Data Analytics job before that? I did security analytics, and, you know, we were looking at that when we were you know, back when we talk to things like I'm seeing Del and so from appear technology standpoint, I wanted to be in that space, but in the last few months, because you know, jobs are all about learning and then adjusting and learning and adjusting and learning. Adjusting on what I saw is a great bunch of guys, good technology. But we were sort of flapping around on DH had an idea that we were an Advanced data services platform. It's to do with multi, you know, multi cloud. And in essence, I've kind of come to this fundamental kind of understanding because I've been on both sides, which is date era is a bunch of cloud people trying to solve storage needs for what the cloud needs. But they have the experience. They walked that mile. You know, when people say you've gotta learn by walking in their shoes, right? Right on DH there, Done that versus where? Bean. In the past, where we were a ray specialists pushing towards the future that we didn't quite understand, you know, and and there is a fundamental philosopher philosophical difference between the two. Andi weirdly, my analogy or my R har moment came with the Tessler piece. And I know that, you know, you've pinned me a few times on Twitter over this, right? I'm not a tesler. Bigger to the extent of, you know, and probably am now, I should have a test a T shirt on, But I always thought it was an electric car and all they've done is electrified a car and there was on DH, You know, I've resisted it for years and bean know exactly an advocate, but I ended up buying one because I just I felt from a technology standpoint, their platform that they were the right thing. And once I started to really understand what they were about, I saw these severe differences. And, you know, we've chatted a little bit about this Onda again. It's part of the analogy of what's happening in the storage industry, but what's happening in the industry in in a global position. But if you compare contrast something like Tesler, too, maybe Volkswagon and it might be a bad example. But you know, Audi there first trance into electric vehicles was the Audi A three, and I could imagine that they were traditional car people pushing their car forward sort is a combustion engine will if I change that and put some salt powertrain in place, which is the equivalent of a you know, a system to basically drive the wheels and then a bunch of batteries Job done or good, right? Right. And I assume the test it was the same. But I had a weird experience, which is, once you get it into autopilot, you can actually set the navigation direction, and then it will indicate it'll it'Ll hint to you went to change lanes. And so, for instance, I'm driving to the office and I'm going along eight eighty and I want to go toe Wanna one? It says, You know you need to pull across. They hit the indicator will change lanes and they'LL do some of the stuff and that's all well and good. But I was up going to a board meeting on two eighty, going off for the Rosewood. You know, Sandra El Santo and I was listening to a book one of these, you know, audiobooks, and I wasn't really paying much attention. I'm in the outside lane, obviously hitting the speed limit gnome or but I wasn't paying attention. And all of a sudden the car basically indicates form A changes lanes, slows down, change lane again and then takes a junction, slows down, comes up to a junction, and you start to realize that actually Tesla's know about electrified vehicles. It's actually about the telemetry and the analytics and then feeding that back into the system. And I always thought Tesler might be collecting how faster cars going when they break. You know the usual thing. Everybody has this conversation. It's always over worked. But if you've sort of look at it and he said no, maybe they collect everything and then maybe what they're doing is they're collecting, hitting the indicator stalk. So when I'm coming out to a junction and I indicate, How long do I stay? Indicating before I break? And then I changed lanes and then I basically slow down and I go into the junction. And then what they do is they take that live information and crowdsource it, pull it back into the system, and then when they're absolutely bulletproof, that junction, then is exactly as a human would normally do this. They then let the car take over So the difference between the two junctions is one they totally understood, the other one there still learning from right when you look at it and you go done. So they're basically an edge telemetry at a micro level organization, you know, And that is a massive difference between what Tesla's doing and a lot of the other car manufacturers are doing. They're catching up, which is really why I believe that they're going to be a head for a long time. >> It's really interesting. I was >> Elektronik wholesale for ten years before come back to school. Can't got in the tech industry. And so really distribution was king from the manufacturer point of view. Always. They just like ship their products for ages, right? These distribution to break bulk thes distribution, educate the customer these distribution just to get this stuff out. But they never knew how people actually operate their products. Whether that be a car, a washing machine. Ah, cassette player, whatever. So what? What What fascinates me about thes connected devices is what, what a fundamentally different set of data. Now manufacturers have people have in how people actually use the product. But even more importantly, that as you said, they could take that data and make adjustments on the fly because since so much of its software now, we talked again before we turned on some of your software upgrades that you've gotten in the Tesla over the last six months, which we're all driven by customers. But they had a platform in place that enabled them to update functionality and to basically repurpose hardware elements for a new function, which is which is, you know, so in sync with Dev ops and kind of this dev up culture in this continuous this continuous upgrade, this continuous innovation with actual data from real people operating the products that they should come to the market. >> Andi, think once you step back. And that was really why was keen to sit down and talk. And it's not specifically around software defined storage, which is the data. A piece in our example is yes, I am the Tessler because we can do all of the analytics and all of the telemetry versus of standard array. If you scratch that away and you say let's have a look at our whole lives are macro lives. Another example was my wife and I. We've got friends of ours always banging on about these sleep by number beds and and so we went past the store wandered in, and the sales rep got us lying on a bed and he was doing there, you know, pumping the bed up to a size. It's just Well, you are sixty five, a US seventy or seventy five, and I kind of got bored of that. And I went here, Okay, I'm that and he goes, Okay, your wife's of fifty and you're a seventy five, Andi said. But let's kind of daft. And he goes, Well, here's and he shows them a map and it shows a thermal image of me lying on the bed. I'm a side sleeper back sleeper, and then what they do is they feed the information so that comes back off their edge, which is now Abed. And then what they do is they then analyzing continuously prove it to try and increase my bed sleeping patterns. So you look at it and you say what they're not doing is just manufacturing of mattress and throwing it out. What they've done is they said, we're going to treat each individual that lies on the mattress differently on, we're going to take feedback and we're going to make that experience even better. So that the same thing, which is this asset telemetry my crisis telemetry happens to be on the edge is identical to what they have, you know. And then I look at it and I go, Why don't I like the array systems? Will, because the majority of stuff is I'm a far system. My brain is inherently looking at the Dr types underneath and saying, As long as that works fine, everything that sits inside that OK, it'LL do its thing right, and that was built around the whole process and premise of an application has a single function. But now applications create data. That data has multiple functions, and as people start to use it in different ways, you need to feed that data on the way in which is processed differently. And so it all has the intelligence houses in home automation. I'm a junkie on anything that has a plug on it, and I've now got to a point where I have light switches or light fittings would have multiple bulbs on every bulb now is actually Khun B has telemetry around it, which I can adjust it dynamically based on the environment. Right? Right. And I wish it got wine. You know, I got the wine. Fridge is that's my biggest beef right now is you gotta wine, fridge. You can have Jules, you know, you have jewels climates, which means that you don't fan to one side of it and they overheat the bottom right. But it'LL break the grapes down. Would it be really cool if the cork actually had some way of figuring out what it needs to be fed? And then each of them could be individual, right? But our entire being, you know, if you think about it's not just technology or technologies driving it, but it's not the IT industry, but our entire lives. And now driven around exactly what you just described, which is manufacturers dropping something out into the wild to the edge and then having enough telemetry to be able to enhance that experience and then provide over the air, you know, enhancements, >> right? And the other thing, I think it's fascinating as it's looking up. We interviewed Derek Curtain >> from the architect council on. That's a group locally that just try work, too, along with municipalities and car manufacturers, tech companies. But >> he made a really interesting >> comment because there's the individual adjustment to you to know that you want to get off it at Page Milan or sandhill on DH. You've got a counter on your point of this is meeting the Rosewood. But >> then the other thing is, when you aggregate >> that now back up. You know, not that you're going to be sharing other people's data, but when he start to get usage patterns from a large population that you can again incorporate best practices into upgrades of the product and used a really good example of this was right after the one pedestrian got killed by the test of the lady with the bike that ran across the front of the street and it it it literally happened a week before. I think the conference so very hot topic at an autonomous vehicle conference and >> what he said, which is really important. You know, if if I get >> in an automobile accident and I'm going to learn something, the person I hits pride gonna learn something. The insurance adjusters going to take some notes and we're going to learn it's a bad intersection. I made a mistake, whatever, but when an autonomous vehicle gets in a Brack when it's connected, all that telemetry goes back up into the system to feed the system, to make improvements for the whole system. So every car learns every time one car has a problem every time one car gets into a sticky situation. So again, kind of this crowd sourced. Learning an optimization opportunity is fundamentally different than I'm just shipping stuff out, and I don't know what's going to happen to it, and maybe a couple pieces come back. So I think people that are not into this into the direct connection are so missing out on those you said this whole different level of data, this whole different level of engagement, a whole different level of product improvement and road map that's not a PR D. It's not an M R G. It's all about Get it out there, you know, get feedback from the usage and make those improvements on this >> guy finish improvements and micro analytics. I mean, even, you know, we talk back when you were adjusting how you deliver content for the Cube, you know, rather than a big blob, You really want to say, Well, I need more value for that. My clients need more value for that. So you've almost done that Mike segmentation by taking the information and then met attacking every single word in every single interview right to enrich the customer's experience, you know, And it kind of Then you Matt back and you say, We've got to the age now where the staff, the execs that we talked to over the other side, the table there, us they're living our lives. They've got the same kids as we've got the same ages we've got. They do the same person's we've got. They understand the same things and they get frustrated when things naturally don't work the way they should. Like I've got a home theater system and I've still got three remote controls. I can't get down. I've got a universal remote control, but it won't work because the components don't think so. What's happened is we've got to a world where everything's kind of interconnected and everything kind of learns and everything gets enriched when something doesn't it now stands out like a sore thumb and goes, That doesn't That is not the right way to do business on DH. Then you look that you say, translate that then into it and then into data centers. And there's these natural big red flag that says That's an old way of doing things. That's the old economy that doesn't enable me to go forward. I need to go forward. I need more agility. You know, I've got to get data freedom and then how do I solve that issue? And then what? Cos they're going to take me there because they're thinking the same ways as we are. This is why Tesler screamingly successful. This is why something like these beds are there. This is why things like Philips Hue systems are good and the list just goes on. And right now we're naturally inclined to work with products that enable us to enrich our lives and actually give feedback and then benefit us over the air. We don't like things that are too static now, and actually, there is this whole philosophy of cloud, which I think from an economic standpoint, is superb, you know? I mean, our product is Tier one enterprise storage in an SD s fashion for public private hybrid clouds. But we're seeing a lot of people doing bring backs. You know, out of the cloud is a whole thread of it right now, but I would actually say maybe it's not because the cloud philosophy is right, but it's the business model of the cloud guise of God. Because a lot of people have looked at cloud as they're setting. Forget, dump my stuff in the cloud. I get good economics. But what we're talking about now is data gets poked and prodded and moved and adjusted constantly. But the movement of the data is such that if you put in, the cloud is going to impinge you based on the business model. So that whole thing is going to mature as well, right? >> You're such a good position to because >> the, you know the growth of date is going. Bananas were just at at Arcee a couple weeks ago. In one of the conversation was about smart smart buildings, another zip zip devices on shades that tie back to the HBC, and if anybody's in the room or not, should be open should be closed. Where's the sun? But >> there was really interesting comment about >> you know, if you look at things from a software to find way you take what was an independent system that ran the elevator and independent system that ran the HBC and independent system that ran the locks? One that ran the fire alarm. But guess what? If the fire alarm goes off, baby, it would be convenient to unlock all the doors and baby. It would convenient automatically throw the elevator control system into fire mode, which is don't move. Maybe, you know so in reconnecting these things in new and imaginative ways, and then you tie it back to the I T side of the house. You know, it's it's it's it's getting a one plus one makes three effect. With all these previously silent systems that now can be, you know, connected. They can be software defined, you know, they can kind of take the operation till I would have never thought of that one hundred years. I thought that just again this fascinating twist of the Linz and how to get more value out of the existing systems by adding some intelligence and adding this back and forth telemetry. >> Yeah, and and and again, part of May is being the CEO of date era. I want advocates the right platform for people to use. But part of this is my visceral obsession of this market is moving through this software defined pattern. So it's going from being hardware resilient to software resilient to allow youto have flexibility across it. But things have to kind of interconnecting work, as you just described on SDF software to find storage as an example comes in different forms. HD is an example of it and clouds an example. I mean, everything is utterly software defined in Amazon. It so is the term gets misused, could be suffered to find you could say data centric data to find or you could say software resilient. But the whole point is what you've just described, which is open it up, allow data freedom, allow access to it and then make sure that your business is agile and whatever you do, Khun, take the feedback in a continuous loop on at lashing. Move forward as opposed to I've just got this sentence forget or lock mentality that allows me just to sort of look down the stack and say, I've got the silo. I'm owning that customer of owning the data and by the way, that's the job. It's going to doe, right? So this is just the whole concept of kind of people opening their eyes on DH. My encouragement on DI we can encourage anybody, whether customers or basically vendors, is to look around your life and figure out what enriches it from a technology standpoint. On odds on it will be something in the arena that we've just described, right? >> Do you think it's It's because I think software defined, maybe in its early days was >> just kind of an alternative thought to somebody doing it to flipping switches. But as you said in the early example, with the car, propulsion wasn't kind of a fundamentally different way to attack the problem. It was just applying a different way to execute action. What we're talking about now is a is a totally higher order of magnitude because now you've got analytics. You actually want to enable action based on the analytics based on the data for your card. Actually take action, not just a guy. Maybe you should you know, give given alert and notice that pops up on your phone. So, you know, >> maybe we need something different because it's not just redoing >> what we did a different way. It's actually elevating the whole interaction on a whole different kind of love. >> And this is this is kind of thank you for that. It was the profound kind of high got wasn't joining data and watching it. It was I got a demo off the cloud. You I the callback piece of what cloud? What data has. And I was watching a dashboard off a live data stream. You know of information that we were getting back from multiple customers and in each of the customers, it would make recommendations of, you know, how many gets on, how many times it would hear cash on DH. So it was actually coming back dynamically and recommending moving workloads across onto or flash systems. You, Khun, do things where once you've got this freedom on application, a data set isn't unknown. It's now basically in a template, and you say this is what priority has. And so you say it's got high priority. So whatever the best legacy you could give me. Give me right, You drop it onto a disk. And at the moment I've got hybrid. That's all I've got, but I decide to addle flash. So I put some all flash into the into the system. Now it becomes part of this fabric and its spots it and goes well on our second. That will disservice me better and then migrates the workload across onto it without you touching it, right? So, in other words, complete lights out so that the whole thing of this is what Mark and the team have done is looked at and said the only way forward is running this massively agile data center based on a swarm of servers that will basically be plugged together into something that would look like a fabric array. But but you can't. Then you've got to assume that you can now handle application life cycles across onto it. It'LL make recommendations like the bed thing. You know what I was saying? I was lying there and what I liked about it. So So I set my thing to fifty nine, and then it realizes I'm not sleeping very well. It's not suggested. Sixty sixty one sixty. Sleeping well, OK, that's it. And then that's good. We'LL do the same thing where an application will actually say, Here's my template. This is what it looks like. The top priority, by the way. I need the most expensive drives you've got, drops it onto it, and then it look at it and go. Actually, we could do just as good a job if there's on hybrid and then migrated across and optimize the workload, right? And so it's not again. Part of it is not. Data is the best STDs, and it is for Tier one for enterprise storage. It's the fact that the entire industry, no matter where you look at it, not just our industry but everybody is providing tech is doing is exactly the same thing, which is, and you kind of look it and you go. It's kind of edge asset micro telemetry, and then that feedback loop and then continuous adjustment allows you to be successful. That's what products are basically getting underpants. >> Just, you know, it's when he's traveling. Just No, we're almost out of time, but I just can't help it but >> say it, you know, because we used to make decisions >> based on samples of old data with samples. And it was old. And now, because of where we are on the technology lifecycle of drives and networks and CPS and GPS, we can now make decisions based on all the data now. And what a fundamentally different, different decision that's going to drive this too. And then to your point, it's like, What do you optimizing for? And you don't necessarily optimize for the same thing all the time that maybe low priority work, load optimized for cost and maybe a super high value workload optimized for speeding late in sea. And that might change >> over time when Anu workload comes in. So it's such a different way to look at the world >> and it is temporal, right? I mean, again, I know you're going kick me off now, but think about it right the old days and writing a car building a car is you thought, well, what's going to need to be in the car in three years time, put it in now, build manufacture, coming out and then with a Tesler i by the current December. Since December, I've now got pinned based authentication I've got century mode. I've got Dash Cam, They've got all free. I've got a pet mode into it now. My car's got more range. It's got high performance. This guy highest top speed, and I haven't even taken the current or it's all over the air And this is all about, continues optimization. They've done around the platform and you just go. That's the way this linked in. Recently, someone posted something said, You know, keep the eyes are dead. Well, the reason there saying that isn't because there's a stupid thing to do Q. B. Ours is because if you're not measuring your business and adjusting on a continuous basis, you're gonna be dead anyway. So our whole economy is moving this way. So you need an infrastructure architecture to support that. But where everybody's the same, we're all thinking the same. And it doesn't matter what industry or, you know, proclivity have this. This adjustment and this speed of adjustment is what you need. And like I said, I'm That's why I wanted to get to date era. That's what I'm excited about it and that is the are hard I had I kinda looked. It went Oh my God, I'm now working with cloud people who understand what they've walked in the shoes And I kind of got this way of sense of can Imagine what it had been like if you were ill on the first time You saw a hundred thousand cars worth of life data spilling in of what power you have right to adjust and to basically help your client base. And you can't do that if you are in fixed things, right? And so that's That's the world moving forward >> just in time for twenty twenty one will all have great insight in a few short months. We'LL all know >> everything Well, guy great Teo Great to >> sit down Love to keep keeping tabs on you on Twitter and social And thanks for stopping by. I >> appreciate it. All >> right. He's guy. I'm Jeff. You're watching the cube within a cube conversation Or Paulo? What? The studio's thanks for watching >> we'LL see you next time
SUMMARY :
From our studios in the heart of Silicon Valley. Have them on to a bunch of different in the politest. Actually, Was November of twenty Terror of the adventure. the go to market, I think in February with HP, and I thought that myself and Mark that really wanted you to get deeper in with date. in the last few months, because you know, jobs are all about learning and then adjusting and learning and adjusting I was the products that they should come to the market. But our entire being, you know, if you think about it's not just technology or technologies And the other thing, I think it's fascinating as it's looking up. from the architect council on. comment because there's the individual adjustment to you to know that you want to get off it at Page Milan from a large population that you can again incorporate best practices into upgrades of the product what he said, which is really important. It's not an M R G. It's all about Get it out there, you know, And it kind of Then you Matt back and you say, We've got to the age now In one of the conversation was about smart smart buildings, another zip zip and then you tie it back to the I T side of the house. could be suffered to find you could say data centric data to find or you could say software resilient. But as you said in the early example, with the car, propulsion wasn't kind of a fundamentally different It's actually elevating the whole interaction on a whole doing is exactly the same thing, which is, and you kind of look it and you go. Just, you know, it's when he's traveling. And you don't necessarily optimize for the same thing So it's such a different way to look at the world And it doesn't matter what industry or, you know, just in time for twenty twenty one will all have great insight in a few short months. sit down Love to keep keeping tabs on you on Twitter and social And thanks for stopping by. appreciate it. The studio's thanks for watching
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Joseph Jacks, OSS Capital | CUBEConversation, October 2018
(bright symphony music) >> Hello, I'm John Furrier, the founder of SiliconANGLE Media and co-host of theCUBE. We're here in Paulo Alto at our studio here. I'm joining with Joseph Jacks, the founder and general partner of OSS Capital. Open Source Software Capital, is what OSS stands for. He's also the founder of KubeCon which now is part of the CNCF. It's a huge conference around Kubernetes. He's a cloud guy. He knows open source. Very well respected in the industry and also a great guest and friend of theCUBE, CUBE alumni. Joseph, great to see you. Also known as JJ. JJ, good to see you. >> Thank you for having me on again, John. >> Hey, great to have you come on. I know we've talked many times on theCUBE, but you've got some exciting news. You got a new firm, OSS Capital. Open Source Software, not operational support like a telco, but this is an investment opportunity where you're making investments. Congratulations. >> Thank you. >> So I know you can't talk about some of the specifics on the funds size, but you are actually going to go out, talk to entrepreneurs, make some equity investments. Around open source software. What's the thesis? How did you get here, why did you do it? What's motivating you, and what's the thesis? >> A lot of questions in there. Yeah, I mean this is a really profoundly huge year for open source software. On a bunch of different levels. I think the biggest kind of thing everyone anchors towards is GitHub being acquired by Microsoft. Just a couple of weeks ago, we had the two huge hadoop vendors join forces. That, I think, surprised a lot of people. MuleSoft, which is a big opensource middleware company, getting acquired by Salesforce just a year after going public. Just a huge outcome. I think one observation, just to sort of like summarize the year 2018, is actually, starting in January, almost on sort of like a monthly basis, we've observed a major sort of opensource software company outcome. And sort of kicking off the year, we had CoreOS getting acquired by Red Hat. Brandon and Alex, the founders over there, built a really interesting company in the Kubernetes ecosystem. And I think in February, Al Fresco, which is an open source content portal taking privatization outcome from a private equity firm, I believe in March we had Magento getting acquired by Adobe, which an open source based CMS. PHP CMS. So just a lot of activity for significant outcomes. Multibillion dollar outcomes of commercial open source companies. And open source software is something like 20 years old. 20 years in the making. And this year in particular, I've just seen just a huge amount of large scale outcomes that have been many years in the making from companies that have taken lots of venture funding. And in a lot of cases, sort of partially focused funding from different investors that have an affinity for open source software and sort of understand the uniqueness of the open source model when it's applied to business, when it's applied to company building. But more sort of opportunistic and sort of affinity oriented, as opposed to a pure focus. So that's kind of been part of the motivation. I'd say the more authentically compelling motivation for doing this is that it just needs to exist. This is sort of a model that is happening by necessity. We're seeing more and more software companies be open source software companies. So open source first. They're built in a distributed way. They're leveraging engineers and talent around the world. They're just part of this open source kind of philosophy. And they are fundamentally kind of commercial open source software companies. We felt that if you had a firm basically designed in a way to exclusively focus on those kind of companies, and where the firmware actually backed and supported by the founders of the largest commercial open source companies in the world before sort of the last decade. That could actually deliver a lot of value. So we've been sort of blogging a little bit about this. >> And you wrote a great post on it. I read about open source monetization. But I think one of the things I'm seeing as well that supports your thesis, and I like to get your reaction to it because I think this is something that's not really talked about, but open source is still young. I mean, you go back. I remember the days when we used to have to hide in the shadows to get licenses and pirate stuff and do all those crazy stuff. But now, it's only a couple decades away. The leaders that were investing were usually entrepreneurs that've been successful. The Rob Bearns, the Amar Wadhwa, the guy that did Spring. All these different open source. Linux, obviously, great success story. But there hasn't any been any institutional. Yeah, you got benchmark, other things, done some investments. A discipline around open source. Where open source is now table stakes in all software development. Cloud is scaling, scaling out globally. There's no real foc- There's never been a firm that's been focused on- Just open source from a commercial, while maintaining the purity and ethos of open source. I mean, is that. >> You agree? >> That's true. >> 100%, yeah. That's been the big part of creating the firm is aligning and solving for a pure focused structure. And I think what I'll say abstractly is this sort of venture capital, venture style approach to funding enterprise technology companies, software companies in general, has been to kind of find great entrepreneurs and in an abstract way that can build great technology companies. Can bring them to market, can sell them, and can scale them, and so on. And either create categories, or dominate existing categories, and disrupt incumbents, and so on. And I think while that has worked for quite a while, in the venture industry overall, in the 50, 60 years of the venture industry, lots of successful firms, I think what we're starting to see is a necessary shift toward accounting for the fundamental differences of opensource software as it relates to new technology getting created and going, and new software companies kind of coming into market. So we actually fundamentally believe that commercial open source software companies are fundamentally different. Functionally in almost every way, as compared to proprietary closed source software companies of the last 30 years. And the way we've sort of designed our firm and we'll about ten people pretty soon. We're just about a month in. We're growing the team quickly, but we're sort of a small, focused team. >> A ten's not focused small, I mean, I know venture firms that have two billion in management that don't have more than 20 people. >> Well, we have portfolio partners that are focused in different functional areas where commercial open source software companies have really fundamental differences. If you were to sort of stack rank, by function, where commercial open source software companies are really fundamentally different, sort of top to bottom. Legal would be, probably, the very top of the list. Right, in terms of license compliance management, structuring all the sort of protections and provisions around how intellectual property is actually shipped to and sold to customers. The legal licensing aspects. The commercial software licensing. This is quite a polarizing hot topic these days. The second big functional area where we have a portfolio partner focused on this is finance. Finance is another area where commercial open source software companies have to sort of behaviorally orient and apply that function very, very differently as compared to proprietary software companies. So we're crazy honored and excited to have world experts and very respected leaders in those different areas sort of helping to provide sort of different pillars of wisdom to our portfolio companies, our portfolio founders, in those different functional areas. And we provide a really focused kind of structure for them. >> Well I want to ask you the kind of question that kind of bridges the old way and new way, 'cause I definitely see you guys definitely being new and different, which is good. Or as Andy Jassy would say, you can be misunderstood for a while, but as you become successful, people will start understanding what you do. And that's a great example of Amazon. The pattern with success is traditionally the same. If we kind of encapsulate the difference between open source old and new, and that is you have something of value, and you're disrupting the market and collecting rents from it. Or revenue, or profit. So that's commercial, that's how businesses run. How are you guys going to disrupt with open source software the next generation value creation? We know how value's created, certainly in software that opensource has shown a path on how to create value in writing software if code is value and functionality's value. But to commercialize and create revenue, which is people paying something for something. That's a little bit different kind of value extraction from the value creation. So open source software can create value in functionality and value product. Now you bring it to the market, you get paid for it, you have to disrupt somebody, you have to create something. How are you looking at that? What's the vision of the creation, the extraction of value, who's disrupted, is it greenfield new opportunities? What's your vision? >> A lot of nuance and complexity in that question. What I would say is- >> Well, open source is creating products. >> Well, open source is the basis for creating products in a different kind of way. I'll go back to your question around let's just sort of maybe simplify it as the value creation and the value capture dynamics, right? We've sort of written a few posts about this, and it's subtle, but it's easy to understand if you look at it from a fundamental kind of perspective. We actually believe, and we'll be publishing research on this, and maybe even sort of more principled scientific, perhaps, even ways of looking at it. And then blog posts and research. We believe that open source software will always generate or create orders of magnitude more value than any constituent can capture. Right, and that's a fundamental way of looking at it. So if you see how cloud providers are capturing value that open source creates, whether it's Elasticsearch, or Postgres, or MySQL or Hadoop. And then commercial open source software companies that capture value that open source software creates, whether it's companies like Confluent around Kafka, or Cloudera around Hadoop, or Databricks around Apache Spark. Or whether it's the creators of those projects. The creators of Spark and Hadoop and Elasticsearch, sometimes many of them are the founders of those companies I mentioned, and sometimes they're not. We just believe regardless of how that sort of value is captured by the cloud providers, the commercial vendors, or the creators, the value created relative to the value captured will always be orders and orders of magnitude greater. And this is expressed in another way, which this may be easier to understand, it's a sort of reinforcing this kind of assertion that there's orders of magnitude value created far greater than what can be captured. If you were to do a survey, which we're currently in the process of doing, and I'm happy to sort of say that publicly for the first time here, of all the commercial open source software companies that have projects with large significant adoption, whether, say for example, it's Docker, with millions of users, or Apache Hadoop. How many Hadoop deployments there are. How many customers' companies are there running Hadoop deployments. Or it may be even MySQL. How many MySQL installations are there. And then you were to sort of survey those companies and see how many end users are there relative to how many customers are paying for the usage of the project. It would probably be something like if there were a million users of a given project, the company behind that project or the cloud provider, or say the end user, the developer behind the project, is unlikely to capture more than, say, 1% or a couple percent of those end users to companies, to paying companies, to paying customers. And many times, that's high. Many times, 1% to 2% is very high. Often, what we've seen actually anecdotally, and we're doing principled research around this, and we'll have data here across a large number of companies, many times it's a fraction of 1%. Which is just sort of maybe sometimes 10% of 1%, or even smaller. >> So the practitioners will be making more money than the actual vendors? >> Absolutely right. End users and practitioners always stand to benefit far greater because of the fundamental nature of open source. It's permissionless, it's disaggregated, the value creation dynamics are untethered, and it is fundamentally freely available to use, freely available to contribute to, with different constraints based on the license. However, all those things are sort of like disaggregating the creating of technology into sort of an unbounded network. And that's really, really incredible. >> Okay, so first of all, I agree with your premise 100%. We've seen it with CUBE, where videos are free. >> And that's a good thing. All those things are good. >> And Dave Vellante says this all the time on theCUBE. And we actually pointed this out and called this in the Hadoop ecosystem in 2012. In fact, we actually said that on theCUBE, and it turned out to be true, 'cause look at Hortonworks and Cloudera had to merge because, again, the market changed very quickly >> Value Creation. >> Because value >> Was created around them in the immediate cloud, etc. So the question is, that changes the valuation mechanisms. So if this true, which we believe it is. Just say it is. Then the traditional net present value cash flow metric of the value of the firm, not your firm, but, like, if I'm an open source firm, I'm only one portion of the extraction. I'm a supplier, and I'm an enabler, the valuation on cash flow might not be as great as the real impact. So the question I have for you, have you thought about the valuation? 'Cause now you're thinking about bigger construct community network effects. These are new dynamics. I don't think anyone's actually crunched a valuation model around this. So if someone knew that, say for example, an open source project created all this value, and they weren't necessarily harvesting it from a cash flow perspective, there might be other ways to monetize it. Have you though about that, and what's your reaction to that concept? 'Cause capitalism would kind of shake down the system. 'Cause why would someone be motivated to participate if they're not capturing any value? So if the value shifts, are they still going to be able to participate? You follow the logic I'm trying to- >> I definitely do. I think what I would say to that is we expect and we encourage and we will absolutely heavily invest in more business model innovation in the area of open source. So what I mean by that is, and it's important to sort of qualify a few things there. There's a huge amount of polarization and lack of consensus, lack of industry consensus on what it actually means to have or implement an open source based business model. In fact there's a lot of people who just sort of point blankedly assert that an opensource business model does not exist. We believe that many business models for monetizing and commercializing open source exist. We've blogged and written about a few of them. Their services and training and support. There's open core, which is very effective in sort of a spectrum of ways to implement open core. Around the core, you can have a thin crust or a thick crust. There's SAS. There are hardware based distribution models, things like Sourcefire, and Cumulus Networks. And there are also network based approaches. For example, project called Storj or Stor-J. Being developed and run now by Ben Golub, who's the former CEO of Docker. >> CUBE alumni. >> Ben's really great open source veteran. This is a network, kind of decentralized network based approach of sort of right sizing the production and consumption of the resource of a storage based open source project in a decentralized network. So those are sort of four or five ways to commercializing value, however, four or five ways of commercializing value, however what we believe is that there will be more business model innovation. There will be more developments around how you can better capture more, or in different ways, the value that open source creates. However, what I will say though, is it is unrealistic to expect two things. It is unrealistic and, in fact, unfair to expect that any of those constituents will contribute back to open source proportional to the value that they received from it, or the benefit, and I'm actually paraphrasing Doug Cutting there, who tweeted this a couple of years ago. Very profoundly deep, wise tweet, which I very strongly agree with. And it is also unrealistic to expect a second thing, which is that any of those constituents can capture a material portion of the value that open source creates, which I would assert is many trillions of dollars, perhaps tens of trillions of dollars. It's really hard to quantify that. And it's not just dollars in economic sense, it's dollars in productivity time saved, new markets, new areas, and so on. >> Yeah, I think this is interesting, and I think that we'll be an open book at that. But I will say that what I've observed in looking through all these CUBE interviews, I think that business model innovation absolutely is something that is an IP. >> We need it. Well, it's now intellectual property, the business model isn't, hey I went to business school, learned this at Babson or Harvard, I learned this business model. We're going to do SAS premium. Okay, I get that. There's going to be very interesting new innovations coming, and I think that's the new IP. 'Cause open source, if it's community based, there's going to be formulas. So that's going to be really inter- Okay, so now let's get back to actual funding itself. You guys are doing early stage. Can you take us through the approach? >> We're very focused on early stage, investing, and backing teams that are, just sort of welcoming the idea of a commercial entity around their open source project. Or building a business fundamentally dependent on an open source project or maybe even more than one. The reason for that is this is really where there's a lot of structural inefficiency in supporting and backing those types of founders. >> I think one of the things with ... is with that acquisition. They were pure on the open source side, doing a great job, didn't want to push the business model too hard because the open source, let's face it, you got people like, eh, I don't want to get caught on the business side, and get revenue, perverse incentives might come up, or fear of incentives that might be different or not aligned. Was a great a value. >> I think so. >> So Red Hat got a steal on that one. But as you go forward, there's going to be certainly a lot more stuff. We're seeing a lot of it now in CNCF, for instance. I want to get your thoughts on this because, being the co founder of KubeCon, and donating it to the CNCF, Kubernetes is the hottest thing on the planet, as we talked about many years ago. What's your take on that, now? I see exciting things happening. What is the impact of Kubernetes, in your opinion, to the world, and where do you see that evolving rapidly, and where is the focus here as the people should be paying attention to? >> I think that Kubernetes replaces EC2. Kubernetes is a disaggregated API for distributed computing anywhere. And it happens to be portable and able to run on any kind of computer infrastructure, which sort of makes it like a liquid disaggregated EC2-like API. Which a lot of people have been sort of chasing and trying to implement for many years with things like OpenStack or Eucalyptus. But interestingly, Kubernetes is sort of the right abstraction for distributed computing, because it meets people where they are architecturally. It's sort of aligned with this current movement around distributed systems first designs. Microservices, packaging things in small compartmentalized units. >> Good for integrating of existing stuff. >> Absolutely, and it's very composable, un-opinionated architecturally. So you can sort of take an application and structure it in any given way, and as long as it has this sort of isolation boundary of a container, you can run it on Kubernetes without needing to sort of retrofit the architecture, which is really awesome. I think Kubernetes is a foundational part of the next kind of computing paradigm in the same way that Linux was foundational to the computing paradigm that gave rise to the internet. We had commodity hardware meeting open source based sort of cost reduction and efficiency, which really Linux enabled, and the movement toward scale out data center infrastructure that supported the Internet's sort of maturity and infrastructure. I think we're starting to see the same type of repeat effect thanks to Kubernetes basically being really well received by engineers, by the cloud providers. It's now the universal sort of standard for running container based applications on the different cloud providers. >> And think having the non-technical opinion posture, as you said, architectural posture, allows it to be compatible with a new kind of heterogeneous. >> Heterogeneity is critical. >> Heterogeneity is key, 'cause it's not just within the environment, it's also within each vendor, or customer has more heterogeneity. So, okay, now that's key. So multi cloud, I want to get your thoughts on multi cloud, because now this goes into some of things that might build on top of if Kubernetes continues to go down the road that you say it does. Then the next question is, stateful applications, service meshes. >> A lot of buzz words. A lot of buzz words in there. Stateful application's real because at a certain point in time, you have a maturity curve with critical infrastructure that starts to become appealing for stateful mission critical storage systems, which is typically where you have all the crown jewels of a given company's infrastructure, whether it's a transactional system, or reading and writing core customer, or financial service information, or whatever it is. So Kubernetes' starting to hit this maturity curve where people are migrating really serious mission critical storage workloads onto that platform. And obviously we're going to start to see even more critical work loads. We're starting to see Edge workloads because Kubernetes is a pretty low footprint system, so you can run it on Edge devices, you can even run it on microcontrollers. We're sort of past the experimental, you know, fun and games was Raspberry Pi, sort of towers, and people actually legitimately doing real world Edge kind of deployments with Kubernetes. We're absolutely starting to see multi-geo, multi-replication, multi-cloud sort of style architectures becoming real, as well. Because Kubernetes is this API that the industry's agreeing upon sufficiently. We actually have agreement around this sort of surface area for distributed system style computing that if cloud providers can actually standardize on in a way that lets application specific vendors or new types of application deployment models innovate further, then we can really unlock this sort of tight coupling of proprietary services inside cloud providers and disaggregate it. Which is really exciting, and I forget the Netscape, Jim Barksdale. Bundling, un-bundling. We're starting to see the un-bundling of proprietary cloud computing service API's. Things like Kinesis, and ALB and ELB and proprietary storage services, and these other sticky services get un-bundled because of two big things. Open source, obviously, we have open source alternative data paths. And then we have Kubernetes which allows us to sort of disaggregate things out pretty easily. >> I want to hear your thoughts, one final concept, before we break, 'cause I was having a private conversation with three people besides myself. A big time CIO of a company that if I said the name everyone would go, oh my god, that guy is huge, he's seen it all going back many, many ways. Currently done a lot of innovation. A hardcore network chip guy who knows networking, old school infrastructure. And then a cloud native application founder who knows a lot about software development and is state-of-the-art cloud native. So cloud native, all experienced, old-school, kind of about my age, a cloud native app developer, a big time CIO, and a chip networking kind of infrastructure guy. And we're talking, and one thing that came out, I want to get you thoughts on this, he says, so what's going on with DevOps, how do you see this service mesh, is a stay for (mumbles) on top of the stack, no stacks, horizontally scalable. And the comment that came out was storage and networking have had this relationship with everything since day one. Network moves a packet from point A to point B, and nothing happens in between, maybe some inspection. And storage goes from here now to the then, because you store it. He goes, that premise moves up the stacks, so then the cloud native guy goes, well that's what's happening up at the top, there's a lot of moving things around, workloads and or services, provisioning services, and then from now to then state. In real time. And what dawned on the next conversation the CIO goes, well this is exactly our challenge. We have under the hood infrastructure being programmable, >> We're having some trouble with the connection. Please try again. >> My phone's calling me. >> Programmable connections. >> So you got the programmable on the top of the stack too, so the CIO said, that's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. We're trying to solve some of these network storage concepts now at an application level. Your thoughts to that. >> Well, I think if I could tease apart everything you just said, which is profound synthesis of a lot of different things, I think we've started to see application logic leak out of application code itself into dedicated layers that are really good at doing one specific thing. So traditionally we had some crud style kind of behavioral semantics implemented around business logic. And then, inside of that, you also had libraries for doing connectivity and lookups and service discovery and locking and key management and encryption and coordination with other types of applications. And all that stuff was sort of shoved into the single big application binary. And now, we're starting to see all those language runtime specific parts of application code sort of crack or leak out into these dedicated, highly scalable, Unix philosophy oriented sort of like layers. So things like Envoy are really just built for the sort of nervous system layer of application communication fabric up and down the layer two through layer seven sort of protocol transport stack, which is really profound. We're seeing things like Vault from Hashicorp handle secure key storage persistence of application dedication, authorization, metadata and information to sort of access different systems and end points. And that's a dedicated sort of stateful layer that you can sort of fragment out and delegate sort of application specific functionality to, which is really great for scalability reasons. And on, and on, and on. So we've started to see that, and I think one way of looking at that is it's a cycle. It's the sort of bundling and un-bundling aspect. >> One of the granny level services are getting a really low level- >> Yeah, it's a sort of like bundling and un-bundling and so we've got all this un-bundling happening out of application code to these dedicated layers. The bundling back may happen. I've actually seen a few Bay Area companies go like, we're going back to the monolith 'cause it actually gives us lots of efficiencies in things that we though were trade offs before. We're actually comfortable with a big monorepo, and one or two core languages, and we're going to build everything into these big binaries, and everyone's going to sort of live in the same source code repository and break things out through folders or whatever. There's a lot of really interesting things. I don't want to say we're sort of clear on where this bundling, un-bundling is happening, but I do think that there's a lot of un-bundling happening right now. And there's a lot of opportunity there. >> And the open source, obviously, driving it. So final question for you, how many deals have you done? Can you talk a little bit about the firm? And exciting things and plans that you have going forward. >> Yeah, we're going to be making a lot of announcements over the next few months, and we're, I guess, extremely thrilled. I don't want to say overwhelmed, 'cause we're able to handle all of the volume and inquiries and inbound interest. We're really honored and thrilled by the reception over the last couple weeks from announcing the firm on the first of October, sort of before the Hortonworks Cloudera merger. The JFrog funding announcement that week. The Elastic IPO. Just a lot of really awesome things happened that week. This is obviously before Microsoft open sourced all their patents. We'll be announcing more investments that we've made. We announced our first one on the first of October as well with the announcement of the firm. We've made a good number of investments. We're not able to talk to much about our first initiative, but you'll hear more about that in the near future. >> Well, we're excited. I think it's the timing's perfect. I know you've been working on this kind of vision for a while, and I think it's really great timing. Congratulations, JJ >> Thank you so much. Thanks for having me on. >> Joesph Jacks, also known as JJ, founder and general partner of OSS Capital, Open Source Software Capital, co founder of KubeCon, which is now part of the CNCF. A real great player in the community and the ecosystem, great to have him on theCUBE, thanks for coming in. I'm John Furrier, thanks for watching. >> Thanks, John. (bright symphony music)
SUMMARY :
Hello, I'm John Furrier, the founder of SiliconANGLE Media Hey, great to have you come on. on the funds size, but you are actually going to go out, And sort of kicking off the year, hide in the shadows to get licenses And the way we've sort of designed our firm that have two billion in management structuring all the sort of that kind of bridges the old way and new way, A lot of nuance and complexity in that question. Well, open source is the basis for creating products far greater because of the fundamental nature Okay, so first of all, I agree with your premise 100%. And that's a good thing. because, again, the market changed very quickly of the value of the firm, Around the core, you can have a thin crust or a thick crust. sort of right sizing the and I think that we'll be an open book at that. So that's going to be really inter- The reason for that is this is really where because the open source, let's face it, What is the impact of Kubernetes, in your opinion, Which a lot of people have been sort of chasing the computing paradigm that gave rise to the internet. allows it to be compatible with the road that you say it does. We're sort of past the experimental, that if I said the name everyone would go, We're having some trouble that's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. and delegate sort of and everyone's going to sort of live in the same source code And the open source, obviously, driving it. sort of before the Hortonworks Cloudera merger. I think it's the timing's perfect. Thank you so much. A real great player in the community and the ecosystem, (bright symphony music)
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Willie Tejada, IBM - IBM Interconnect 2017 - #ibminterconnect - #theCUBE
>> Narrator: Live from Las Vegas, it's the CUBE, covering Interconnect 2017, brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back, everyone. We're live in Las Vegas for the CUBE's coverage of Interconnect 2017. This is three days of wall-to-wall coverage. Stay with us for the entire event. This is day two. I'm John Furrier with my co-host Dave Vellante and Esques' Willie Tejada, who's the IBM chief developer advocate at IBM. Welcome to the CUBE. >> Thank you, guys. I'm really pleased to be here. >> So, love to have you on because all we do is talk about developers and what's in it for them, who's doing what, who's got the better cloud, who's enterprise ready, all that good stuff, commentating. But I love Ginny Rometty's conversation today because we just had Google Next, covered Amazon events, all the cloud events, and the thing that's been on our agenda, we've been really looking at this, is cloud readiness in the enterprise. And this is really kind of fundamental, what she was talking about, enterprise strong, data first, cognitive to the core, which kind of is their three pillars, but this is the, where the action is right now. >> Yeah you know for developers that's exactly true. You know, what you outlined is really this idea of basically there's three kind of core architectures, right? It's cloud, number one, followed by data layered on top of that, and essentially AIR cognitive on top. And what that means actually for the developer communities is that there's a new set of skill sets that are probably moving faster than we have ever seen before, right? And a lot of it's actually driven by this explosion of data, and so um, one of the things that we think that there's going to be a huge shortage of and there is a huge shortage of, is data scientists and cognitive developers. Because in those layers, what we've seen is that more and more, you operate on a data first model and by that, by just that definition, what you need to know about data is pushing towards a practitioner level of data scientists and the reality is that we think that type of core skill sets going to be needed across all of the developer communities. >> So take a minute to describe what will define a cognitive developer >> Tajeda: Sure, >> And what that, and the nuance behind it, because obviously the developers are doing really cool creative things, and then you've got the heart under the hood, production work loads and IT so where is the cognitive developer fit in those spectrums and what is the core definition from your standpoint? >> Yeah you know, the cognitive developer really is a person who's actually participating in actually the generation of a system that's fully cognitive, so you know, adding a cognitive feature is one thing, but actually building a full cognitive system is something different. You know if I use a comparison, think about how some of these roles in big data came about big data came, but we didn't have things like a data scientist, we didn't have a data engineer, and it kind of came after the fact the roles that were actually defined. Now we're onto these new cognitive systems where everything from, you have to train the system you have to have explicit knowledge of what the APIs actually do and you have to have infrastructure that actually curates data that continues this training along those lines. So you know the cognitive developers, really one that's participating in that particular ecosystem now what's really important though about that is they are usually programming in the language that their usually programming in. Whether it be Java, data scientists are using r or they're using Python, but the reality is that a cognitive developer's is that one that's applying those cognitive properties to their system that they're developing. >> So this is interesting, you mentioned the cognitive develop new tools and stuff, but there's some really good trends out there that are, that's the wind at the back of the developer right now. Cloud native is a booming trend that's actually phenomenal, you're seeing container madness continue, you've got micro services, all with kubernetes under the hood so there's some cool exciting things in the trend lines, can you unpack that for us and what this means to the developers, how does it impact their world? I mean we hear composability, lego blocks most developers know API economy is here, but now you've got these new tail winds, these new trends, >> Tajeda: Yep >> What's the, what are they, add to at, what's the impact to the developer? >> Well we talked about the new container service based on kubernetes that's allowing us to actually build to tremendous scale, and really simplify that type of development actually when you're doing native cloud development. You know, probably the most important things for developers is just accessibility of all these pieces, of course it's driven by open source, but you know if you want to learn these technologies if you want to participate and experiment with these technologies, they've never been more available than they actually are today. >> Vellante: So if I may, so Tanmay is a good example of a cognitive developer >> Absolutely. >> He's all cloud native, he's all cognitive, >> Nice shout out from the CEO today >> Yeah. >> He's also an algoithmist, you know self declared algorithmist, >> I can't even say that, >> Okay so here's Tanmay, he's never going to know anything else, right? But now, of you're a sort of mainstream developer, what do you do, you know? Where do you get the skills, what do you recommend that that individual does, and how do they get up the ramp? >> So you know, lots of times as you know the developer's learnings is not like kind of a linear pattern, right? They go to blogs basically they go and pull basic a library for them to >> Vellante: They figure it out. >> Along those lines, they go to a meet up or a hack from that stand point that's based on cognitive development and you know, so they should just go about what they normally do kind of along those lines, and then you know I think basically there's am advancement because ultimately we're publishing these things called journeys, which are really kind of use cases in the cognitive based environment so as an example, we might publish a journey on a cognitive retail chat bot, and it will combine a variety of these micro services that Watson's actually built on but give them exploration as to how they use the chat bot, how they use a service called discovery, and how they use persistence basically so that essentially they can learn from the data that they actually have and then ultimately if what they want to do is get deeper into it, there's organizations that we partner with where we give them cognitive curricullum that allows them to experience these pieces like top coder you can go on and do a cognitive challenge, right on top coder or you can go to a a cognitive course designed by galvanized one of our partners in relation to skills development. >> So that's interesting about that journey, so when you think about big data we talked about big data before, the sort of point at which at a company like IBM would engage in that journey is somebody who's exploring and maybe kicking the tires a little bit or somebody at a data warehouse that was like killing them, right? Where is, obviously there's a part of that in the cognitive world which is experimental >> Tajeda: Yep >> Is there a sort of analog to the data warehouse sort of disaffection if you will. >> Yeah, you know one of the things that we spend a lot of time on is that every organization that's going to build a cognitive system is looking for cognitive developers and data scientists, you know so essentially, >> Furrier: It's across all industries by the way, >> Absolutely >> Cyber securities to, >> Absolutely so you know, one of the key pieces is what kind of tools do you actually give that data scientist, to mess around with that data set, we provide something called a data science experience, and the idea there is essentially how do you give them an environment that allows them essentially to look into the data very quickly actually have these sets, and really kind of explore the data in a way that they never were capable of actually doing that, you know, those are the types of things that we're actually trying to that a data scientist, so that you can bridge over if you were a data engineer, or you're a business analyst, and you're looking to actually get into data science, you can actually play with some of these big data sets and actually explore what things you can do. >> Willie, I couldn't agree with you more on the whole, how developers learn it's really not a course ware online and the fiscal classroom, maybe they're offering it in college but, it's the practitional world of non linear learning through experience and these journeys are super valuable, and just for a tactical question, where do they find the journeys, or URL? >> What you'll find basically, come April first, we're going to launch a number of them, on developer.ibm.com/accelerate so they'll be focused on several different categories, number one will be just developing in the cloud cloud native, what's a journeys basically that they're kind of like common set ups that you actually need, we'll do, next one's on cognitive analytics where you pull together a set of services along those lines, and as you heard Ginny talk about, you know it's really important that a cloud have knowledge about a domain or an industry and so we'll create some journeys that are actually very industry specific, you know we announced, >> Furrier: Like they're like templates bascially, >> They are, >> People jump start it, not so much a reference implementation, >> Exactly, >> You know what I'm saying, the old days >> But you know, what it's all about is you mentioned this non linear journey that developers don't actually learn fundamentally they have a core thing that they're trying to get actually get done which is, get you help me get my stuff done faster, right? And fundamentally, when you talk about cognitive or data science, we're trying to actually deliver them tool sets or examples that do that. >> So I now got to go to the next level with that question, because it's first of all it's awesome, now how do you intersect that with community? Because now, that's super important because and you might want to take a minute to just do a plug for IBM in terms of the open source goodness you guys are doing because you guys do a great job with open source. >> Tajeda: You know we just hosted a very large, what we believe is, one of the largest open tech meet ups, right before basically InterConnect started, and we had one of the ballrooms actually full, and we talked about our new service we had Jim Basic from the Linux Foundation actually come, he stated a stat which was really interesting in open source which IBM is a large contributor to, that I think the stat that he said was Linux basically has a project now, there's 10,800 new lines of code and 1,800 lines of code that are modified every day, right? >> Furrier: Yeah, >> And that's the community. >> And that's only going to get faster, if you think about like just, the physical media like ssds, in memory, which spark the kernal, >> Vellante: The quantum, >> Linux is going evolve in a radical and killer way I mean, this is just the beginning. >> And to your point about the community, when you think about that advancement at the pace by which basically that software's actually going to move, there's not one organization that can outpace that type of community in the way they actually do it, it doesn't matter what the services actually are so, >> Well the other interesting thing is the impact on human kind, you heard Benny Hoff and Ginny talking about this morning and they were both really emphasizing machine augmented, right? But, it's like a Pac Man device, I mean there's so much human interaction that's being automated today, >> Tajeda: Yeah, abslutely, >> So, and I know IBM obviously big believer in augmentation, but it's hard to predict what things human's are going to be do, be able to do that machine's can't do, any insight on that? >> Yeah you know, I think, we like to use the word cognitive assisted, So when you think about it, I'll give one example, let's say for example in the medical profession, so, if you look at it, in the healthcare industry, about 90 percent of the data in there is not structured data, right? It's all unstructured data, a lot of it is images, so if you take a look at someone basically that's in oncology work taking a look at things like melanoma, the amount of time I think the data set said the amount of time he needed to watch or get trained on to look at all the new papers that were ever published, was probably three weeks basically, if he's thinking about that in a month. The amount of time that that person allocates to actually keeping up with all these particular trade journals is a few hours a week, and so he's constantly behind, this where something like a watson enabled, or a cognitive enabled type of application can help him actually keep up to date with all the new findings and research papers in his particular field, and do something like ingest millions of documents and understand them but actually apply that to his work, so you know what you find is doctors actually utilizing a cognitive assistant powered by Watson to help him do a better diagnosis. >> Will you're an advocate for the chief developer advocate for IBM, talk about for the last couple minutes we have, what's on your plan, we just saw the news yesterday, the 10 million dollar investment to get education out there and bring this cognitive developer category, kind of lift that up and, with Galvanize which we've supported some of those signature moment events with the Cube, where are you going to be out in the field, what's some of your go to market activities how you going to do this, and then talk about the patterns you've seen in the developer make up. >> Yeah, >> Just over the past year, what's changed, what's notable? >> Yeah, so you know what, you know some of the things that we're actually doing is number one, we're we're taking up very large presence in probably nine cities around the world with a very big emphasis on building on data science and cognitive developers, so you know, there's kind of the usual suspects, the San Franciscos, the New Yorks, the Tokyos, the Londons, some presence in Sao Paulo, we're doing Beijing, we recently basically announced a partnership of how we can actually get presence actually there and through that, we're looking actually to bring, basically this presence into those communities, so this idea that we help, actually put forth these journeys but in many cases actually be right in the presence of things, we have, in some cases we have some programs that we're actually spinning up that are all about essentially how we actually do things like IOT Thursdays, or Cognitive Tuesdays where they can actually see actual experts in those particular areas, and just come do office assignments, >> Furrier: Do Throwback Thursday, you hack on a mainframe >> Tajeda: That's it! (laughter) >> That's what they're actually looking at from that standpoint so, so yeah a lot of this stuff basically is just actually getting to some of those folks in a very very intimate way, and like you said actually kind of populating these folks where kind of where they are, and really what that's all about is actually getting the tools and tool sets in the communities that they find and the peer learning that they do, which is real, >> Furrier: Well we'll see you at some of the Galvanize events you guys got goin on we'll certainly see you at Dockercon we got a lot of Cube line ups, for this Spring tour, and the Fall ton of developer activity, the Cloud Native stuff is really an intersection point with big data colliding with cloud IOT and AI and this cognitive is just an accelerant, >> Tajeda: Absolutely, absolutely >> For the cloud, the perfect storm is a good opportunity. >> There's never been more available time in terms of technology, and the technology never moved as fast, >> I was just saying to Tanmay when he was on yesterday, "I wish I could be 13 again", coding is so much more fun now than it was when we were doing it. Well great to have you on Willie, >> Hey thanks very much, it was actually very good visiting with you guys. >> Great insight, insight from the chief developer advocate here at IBM, I'm John Furrier, Steve Vellante stay with us for more coverage, great interviews all day today, and tomorrow, here live in Las Vegas, we'll be right back.
SUMMARY :
brought to you by IBM. We're live in Las Vegas for the CUBE's coverage I'm really pleased to be here. So, love to have you on because all we do what you need to know about data and you have to have infrastructure that are, that's the wind at the back of the by open source, but you know if you want to kind of along those lines, and then you know warehouse sort of disaffection if you will. so that you can bridge over if you that you actually need, But you know, what it's all about is the open source goodness you guys are doing I mean, this is just the beginning. a lot of it is images, so if you take a look at where are you going to be out in the field, For the cloud, Well great to have you on Willie, it was actually very good visiting with you guys. Great insight, insight from the chief
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Sam Yen, SAP - Google Next 2017 - #GoogleNext17 - #theCUBE
(click) >> Hey, welcome everybody, Jeff Frick here with theCUBE. Well, it is an excited day and we're really happy to be covering big announcements coming out of Google Next today. And we wanted to get right down here to SAP Silicon Valley Headquarters and talk to Sam Yen and get his take on what's happening up in San Francisco today. So, first off, Sam great to see ya. >> Yeah, great to see you as well. >> So, Sam you are the Managing Director of SAP Silicon Valley. Obviously, you guys have a big presence in Philly, and a big presence here in Paulo Alto. And also the Chief Design Officer. So, let's just jump into it. So, Bernd Leukert was onstage with Diane Green this morning kicking off the Google Next Conference and talking about this new relationship between SAP and Google. >> I think, first of all, it's the trend in what the industry's happening right now. If you look at companies, companies are more and more willing to go to the public cloud in terms of helping them with their infrastructure needs. The market is actually really going to double between now and 2020. So, with that we have three major announcements that we announced today. The first one was SAP's flagship products running on GCP, Google's Cloud Platform. The first one is HANA. If you know anything about SAP, HANA's been our data processing engine, memory processing engine for the last number of years. It's our flagship product that we've been talking about. And that's now certified for GCP. The second thing is really more for the, it's still part of the first announcement, but for the development community bringing HANA Express which is a downloadable version of HANA that you can put on your laptop and really get to know what HANA's all about and see how easy it is to develop on top of HANA. So, that's now available on Google Cloud Launcher. Also, SAP's cloud platform is also going to be, we're working very closely together to co-innovate together with Google. The second part of the second announcement, is taking infrastructure as a service to the next level. SAP has always had a multi-cloud strategy offering customers choice in where they want to deploy on public cloud. And Google is now available from that perspective. But beyond just infrastructure to service, we want to partner with Google to take things like data privacy and protection to the next level by offering transparency over how customers monitor and understand what's going on from the governance, risk and compliance perspective on their information. The last thing, which is really exciting as well, is bringing together productivity tools together with SAP. Google's G Suite, things like Mail and Sheets and Hangouts and things like that, and making that integrate seamlessly into the SAP backend system. >> So, so many layers to these announcements. And thank you for laying it all down. The first one, just at a high level, is clearly enterprises are comfortable with public cloud. There's now more enterprisy software firm out there than SAP. And for you guys to really get together with Google and Google Cloud, that really shows that the conversation is no longer about, "Should I go to the cloud?" or "Is the cloud safe?" or "Is it appropriate for enterprise?" But enterprises are fully all in. >> That's definitely the trend. Customers are different in their journey but more and more we're seeing that. And the numbers that I talked about in terms of the investment and spend for public cloud is growing through the roof. At the end of the day, SAP from an SAP perspective, and also from a Google perspective, we want to provide as many options for customers as we can. And we think that by doing this we're providing the best potential solutions for where a customer thinks they need to be today and tomorrow. >> Right, and it's really about workloads, right? It's not even specifically about customers. 'Cause you guys still have Google Cloud, or excuse me, SAP Cloud, recently the HANA Cloud platform recently renamed. So, you still have your own cloud if they want their own kind of enterprise cloud that you're going to run for them. Obviously, they can run SAP on their own internal cloud now you're saying they can run SAP on Google's cloud. But it's really more workload and application and use case specific as opposed to a company. >> Yeah, and I think ultimately options for the customer in terms of their particular situation. Yes, SAP will continue to have our own hosting, our own cloud as well. But you also mentioned SAP Cloud Platform. So, there's many, many different ways from a platform as a service perspective, enterprise services that we provide from a SAP perspective running on Google's infrastructure. And also leveraging the Google services that they provide on their Cloud Platform as well. >> Right, another piece that you said kind of towards the end of many, many announcements happening today, is really the developer angle. Every show, we cover a hundred shows a year, and every one is fighting for the attention of the developer, and really trying to cater to the developer. 'Cause that's where the power is. And you want a robust developer ecosystem because that's what moves things forward. So, this is a pretty interesting announcement now that developers can basically download a version of HANA onto their laptop to have an appeal to help them develop more stuff for you. >> Yeah, and I think the broader statement here is we're combining the power of the SAP development ecosystem with the millions and millions of people also in the Google development ecosystem to build solutions for customers. At the end of the day, the power of your offering is really the power of your ecosystem. And it's kind of interesting, being here in a German company actually in Silicon Valley from an SAP perspective, enterprise seems to be the new black right now. There are more consumer brands that are looking at going into the enterprise. And SAP's starting to become more and more an on-ramp into the enterprise for these companies. >> And it's interesting because public clouds, traditionally, years ago weren't really thought of as a true enterprise solution or maybe test but you'd never run your production workloads. But clearly now that's going away. That said, there's a lot of very specific issues that you have to deal with with the enterprise security, compliance, the rules around the world that are different for data sovereignty, etc. So, you guys bring a real depth of experience in those areas to this new announcement. >> Yeah, I think that's the power of the partnership if you think about Google and the public cloud, the scalability, the availability, the reach of the Google public cloud and their expertise in terms of the infrastructure and the operations. And then you combine that with SAP's experience in terms of what works from a governance, risk and compliance perspective. We have an understanding both with customers and their needs. And also working with local governments and the policies that need to be in place. So, I think it's a beautiful combination of the two companies. >> Now, the next kind of big trend that cloud is helping even accelerate more is A.I. and machine learning and you know, we're kind of going to Phase Two of what was formerly known as Big Data and Hadoop and now were moving to a much more sophisticated version of that enabled by cloud. Obviously, Google's got a ton of expertise in machine learning and A.I. You guys have been doing it on the enterprise side. Again, coming together, one plus one makes three? >> Absolutely, this is one of the exciting things that we're also, we've also talked about and announced, that we are partnering with Google to really take machine learning to the enterprise use cases. There's so much information that's going through enterprise systems. More and more information as things like Big Data, and Internet of Things, and social things are bringing information in. This is really, really fruitful area where think there's a lot of collaboration. Also, from a design perspective, once you have this information, how do you expose this stuff to the users that makes sense and really amplify human capabilities when we're talking about all this technology. >> Right, so you're sitting 6,000 miles from Waldorf, 3,000 miles from Philadelphia. How does this change things for you? You said you've been at SAP for a number of years now. You're sitting in the heart of Silicon Valley. What does this mean to you, kind of personally, and to SAP's presence in Silicon Valley to do this partnership with Google who's just right down the road and clearly one of the main powers. >> Yeah, I think it really talks about the importance of SAP's presence here in Silicon Valley. Again, as an on-ramp into the enterprise. There's lots and lots of partners that want to expand their business and figure out how they can bring their services also to the enterprise. It's almost like consumerization of IT if you will. And really, that's SAP's purpose and reason for being here. >> All right, well Sam I'll give you the last word. Great event today. Really exciting but before we know it SAP Sapphire will be upon us. I presume you guys will keep working tomorrow and have something new and special for us in Sapphire. >> Yeah, Google and SAP, we're in it for the long term. This is just the beginning. And look out for exciting announcements coming in Sapphire as well. >> All right, super. He's Sam Yen, I'm Jeff Frick. You're watching theCUBE. Thanks for watching. (energetic, techno music)
SUMMARY :
and talk to Sam Yen And also the Chief Design Officer. and really get to know that really shows that the conversation in terms of the investment and spend Right, and it's really And also leveraging the Google services is really the developer angle. is really the power of your ecosystem. the rules around the and the policies that need to be in place. and you know, we're kind one of the exciting things and clearly one of the main powers. Again, as an on-ramp into the enterprise. and have something new and This is just the beginning. Thanks for watching.
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