Jed Ayres, Igel | CUBEConversation, August 2018
(intense orchestral music) >> Welcome back everybody, Jeff Frick here with theCUBE, we're in our Palo Alto studio havin' a CUBEConversation, we're getting ready for the madness of the fall conference season to hit us full force, so we're excited to have things a little bit quiet this week and have a special guest, he's Jed Ayres, he is the North American CEO, and the Global CMO for IGEL, great to see you. >> Well, great to be here, thanks for inviting me, I know a lot of luminaries in the tech industry have sat in this chair so, >> That's right. >> It's an honor to have a chance to chat with you today. >> Well thank you, I appreciate that. So give a, for the people that aren't familiar with IGEL, give us kind of the IGEL 101. >> Yeah, so I wasn't actually that familiar with IGEL two years ago, and I've spent, you know over a decade in the end user compute space, so they were a little bit of a mystery I think to most people in the US; however, the companies been around for over 20 years, they're actually the number one Thin Client player in Germany since 2006. So what they really specialize in is a Linux, read-only operating system, that's fused to a management console that just really works for these cloud delivered desktops and applications, right? And so, a little bit shrouded in sort of this world of Thin Client hardware, but the company is really a software company. And so, the opportunity for me was to really help them build their US operation, but probably more importantly, put the right sort of US marketing prowess and kind of English first, we got out and kind of re-wrote their marketing playbook, and we really have exposed the IP of this beautiful, light, Linux OS, and the management tool which you know couldn't have been at a better time in terms of what's happening in the industry. >> So just to call those three things out specifically, so it's a light OS, that's Linux based, for x86 devices, >> Exactly. >> And so you're workin' with Citrix and VMware, and a lot of those platforms. >> I mean there's 17 different protocols that it works with out of the box, so, really when you think about you know Microsoft RDP, Parallels, Ericom, some of the, some things that you know, back in the history of end user compute, we still, out of the box, are synced up with those technologies. But the primary ones today are Citrix, and VMware, and Microsoft, and yeah we'll soon be doing some things with Amazon as well workin' with them to be their first Linux client for workspaces, so. >> So, we talked a little bit before we turned the cameras on, you know the bring your own device thing, we saw it first in mobile phones in a big, big way, you know people are bringing their laptops and all kinds of interesting stuff. At the same time you've got kind of this cloud move with the centralized control, and you don't have all this kind of rogue stuff, and you know some of the clouds like I don't have the right excel spreadsheet on this laptop, it's on my home desktop. So you guys are kind of riding that wave, but enabling a really interesting play on it, you enable a BYOD, but you actually have an opportunity to basically supplant that, overlay, I don't know what's the right verb, to enable a secure, lightweight, centralized control. >> Yeah, so there's really three ways to get this operating system, right? You can get it on the traditional hardware form factors that you find for most Thin Clients, right, we've got kind of a entry level, mid, high-level all in one. And then we have the ability to convert a device, so we would actually wipe the entire operating system off the device, and just, you'll have a last boot to the IGEL OS. But then, really what, two years ago we came out with this, and this is what we call the UD Pocket, it's about the size of your thumbnail, it's a hardened USB read-only stick, it has the same OS that the hardware has and the converter software has, it's just a bootable, right? So I could plug this into that laptop you have there, and you would boot to a secure Linux operating system, and we'd point it to whatever cloud delivery service that you're, you know, theCUBE was using, so if it was Citrix or VMware, so. Yeah, this has opened up a lot of new use cases, it's sort of changed how people think about Thin Clients too right, you sort of think Thin Client, kiosk task worker, not necessarily the CEO of a company or a knowledge worker, or a physician running an emergency room might want to have their own device, same device they use at home. So yeah, this has opened up a lot of interesting use cases: contractors, interns, we even see it being used for people in environments, in hospitals, where they keep a stash of these, for high availability, I guess ransomware. Right, you've seen these hospitals basically being attacked, what they would do is go and put these in, boot to a secondary epic or server environment, and you know this is kind of their way of not knowing which device is infected, they can just easily bypass that device, boot to this read-only operating system. >> It's a real game changer in terms of opening up >> It really is. >> Not only, not only, removing all the vulnerabilities that come with with kind of a classic laptop situation, but even giving the things new life, right, enabling them to kind of be reborn, really as a Thin, or excuse me as a light client. >> Yeah, we see three reasons why people are are buying IGEL today. And it's fun for me 'cause I get go out you know talk to a lot of customers and partners, you know we're 100% partner oriented organization, which is fun for me since I spent 20 years as a partner. But what's been really fun is that it's a C-level conversation, you wouldn't think Thin Client, I can go talk to a CEO or a CFO or a CIO, but this is a game changer. And it's really three things, right, we can save people money, which people like that, right, when you can save a company from having to go purchase 5000 new endpoints; we just had a hospital in Texas, they were about to buy 5000 new endpoints, that's about five million dollars, right? We walked in and sold them 5000 convertor licenses, for about a half a million dollars, so they saved four and a half million dollars in not having to buy new hardware. And then, you know the second piece is the operational headcount savings. When you think about managing Windows today, it's you know maybe great organizations one person can do 500 devices maybe; if you're lucky and you really have all the right tools. With IGEL we have numbers like one person managing 30000 devices, in retail, you know places where you don't have a lot of smart hands. And then the third reason why, you know we can talk to a lot of CSOs now too, right, as people are gravitating towards Linux, because of the challenges with Windows, and managing Windows, and securing windows. And Linux, when I first started people said kind of don't talk about Linux, you know, it's maybe kind of a bad word and people get you know scared. Today we walk in and we lead with this is a very mature Linux operating system, and we have a fantastic security roadmap... >> And 20 years of history, right? So you've got institutional, a foundation that you can build off of. It's funny on the Linux thing right, 'cause I'm sure they said the same thing when they wanted to roll Linux into the data centers back in the day. >> Exactly. (Jeff laughs) Yeah, this is the year where we believe, and IDC is tracking this pretty closely, that this is the year where on the endpoints of this Thin Client, you're going to see Windows is going to be surpassed by Linux; and that tracker that IDC does doesn't even track the ones that are being repurposed, right, where Linux is going in because it's going in on old hardware. So just on the new hardware it's going to be about 40% Linux and 40% Windows, and then there's you know some other you know operating systems out there, but. Yeah, this is, this is an exciting time to be in this space, right? We look at the challenges of managing Windows 10, we look at the security issues of GDPR, you know and people are just really gravitating towards towards this idea of a Linux OS. >> Right. It's funny, it's not, not directly related, but corollary, you know as Google really pushes Chromebooks as part of their enterprise play as a much more secure platform with central control, and in fact I think Diane mentioned at the Google Cloud show that we use like 37 different basically online applications to get work done these days, whether you're in your Salesforce application, or Marketo, or Gmail Suite, or you know. So we're all basically browser based application delivery, so it really does open up this opportunity for the incline 'cause you don't really need that much function, >> Exactly. >> But you know it's serving up that central HTTP. >> I talk to people all the time who have fancy, thousands of dollar laptops, and their like, all they do is hit a browser, right? And the reality is, is that's where we're going right, it's a pane of glass accessing data somewhere else, an application somewhere else right? But the underlying operating system still needs to be secured. If you look at sort of the priorities of CIOs today, endpoint--securities number one right, and inside of that it's typically endpoint security, as you know the most important piece of it right? And so that's really where IGEL is having a wonderful time taking tremendous market share, you know we've moved, in just the time that I've been in the US, from seven to three, just in the sort of hardware part of it. And we're just having a lot of fun growing an organization that's, you know and you're growin' in triple digits, it's kind of a Cinderella moment for your career, right, so. >> Plus different kind of challenges. (laughs) >> Exactly. Exactly. >> So is there a particular vertical, is there a particular kind of business group within the companies that you guys use as a point of entry? Or, I mean how do you, what's kind of your go-to-market, >> Yeah, so there's some very specific-- >> 'cause it's a huge opportunity right. >> Yeah, very specific verticals where we're having great success in: hospitals are number one, we've sold to 143 hospitals in the US, if you can believe that, and we're in pretty, and that was just last year. >> 140? Just in a typical, typical, average, whatever metric you want to use, is how many OS's going into a hospital? >> I mean, last quarter we sold about 10000 into one hospital, you know it's usually anywhere from 2500 to 5000, 10000. And then you know these hospitals are all merging with each other, that's another value of IGEL is that they're all kind of combing, and as they combine, IGEL can take all this heterogeneous hardware, heterogeneous operating systems, homogenize it, make it easy to manage and secure. >> Putting it all back in the same spot. >> So yeah, it's definitely healthcare, healthcare's number one, but we're also doing very well in retail, very well in finance, kind of banks, really well in higher education; and like I said, we're getting to talk to at the C-level, right, they really love the savings, right? Not only are the saving on the hardware, but they can get rid of antivirus, disk encryption, they can redeploy people to do things other than patching devices. We have some brilliant things in terms of the technology; you mentioned we have the IP of 20 years, the three guys who wrote the code at the very beginning of the 20 years ago actually they were with an IGEL version before the current iteration. So literally in the end of the '90s they were, idea was let's build an operating system for the internet, which you know they may have been a bit ahead of their time in 1999, but those three guys are actually still in the building. There's a hundred engineers in Germany that are sort of iterating on this and solving for this problem, and I think they've, you know now with the US operation and the new marketing, we're kind of, it's just a perfect storm I would say. >> And then with 5G and again the increasing importance of cloud-based applications, whether it be Salesforce, or whether it be, whatever that's delivered through Amazon, I mean you guys are in a very good spot. >> Yeah, and it's, I would tell you it's not just about, you know it's this operating system fused to a management console, but then it's sort of the curation of that, right? Like okay, every 12 weeks I'm going to push you a new OS, and I have an elegant way to get that to 10's of thousands of devices. So we're also starting to see managed service providers, right, the guys that are under contract to manage millions of devices. You know the DxEs and Wipros and IBM Global Services, those guys are starting to really look at IGEL also, right, 'cause, for the same reasons the enterprises who are managing large environments; so that's been an exciting part of our growth as well. >> Yeah, and that's another huge validation point, 'cause those guys don't make small bets, they only make big bets. >> Exactly and market's sort of hardened into their architecture, which is great. >> Alright, Jed, well it sounds like a great story, and we look forward to watching it unfold over the next couple years. >> Yeah! Well hopefully, for those of the people who are out watchin' we'd love to have them come by; we're doing an event in Las Vegas inside the Mandalay Bay, at VMworld, we actually have our own event, rightfully called disrupt. And we're going to be there from the 26th to the 29th, and-- >> What venue? >> In the Border Grill, so we actually taken over this restaurant, that's kind of like right you know in the footpath of-- >> In the hallway, right? >> In the hallway yeah. >> That's the inside, I know exactly where that is. >> So yeah, we're actually takin' a page out of your book, we're going to have a little EUC TV, so we'll be interviewing people about you know what they're doing to solve for their end user compute challenges, and talkin' to the ecosystem; we have an innovation theater in the Border Grill, we're going to throw a pool party at the end, out at one of those beautiful pools that no one ever gets to go to in Vegas. (both laugh) >> We look at it though as we walk just past the Border Grill, you can find a long beautiful look at that pool. >> So we're going to try to take advantage of it, although it'll be a bit hot out there, yeah it's a hundred plus degrees in Vegas this time of year, but we're going to have some fun. You know, you got to do that a little bit, work hard, play hard. >> Alright, we'll see ya in Vegas in a couple weeks! >> Yep! Look forward to it. >> Thanks for stopping by. >> Thanks very much. >> Alright he's Jed, I'm Jeff, you're watchin' the CUBEConversation from our Palo Alto studios, thanks for watchin', I'll see ya next time. (intense orchestral music)
SUMMARY :
and the Global CMO for IGEL, great to see you. to have a chance to chat with you today. So give a, for the people that aren't familiar with IGEL, you know over a decade in the end user compute space, Citrix and VMware, and a lot of those platforms. really when you think about you know Microsoft RDP, and you know some of the clouds like and you know this is kind of their way of but even giving the things new life, right, And then, you know the second piece a foundation that you can build off of. and then there's you know some other you know as Google really pushes Chromebooks But you know it's as you know the most important piece of it right? Plus different kind of challenges. Exactly. if you can believe that, And then you know these hospitals are which you know they may have been I mean you guys are in a very good spot. you know it's this operating system Yeah, and that's another huge validation point, Exactly and market's sort of and we look forward to watching it unfold And we're going to be there from the 26th to the 29th, you know what they're doing to solve for their you can find a long beautiful look at that pool. You know, you got to do that a little bit, Look forward to it. you're watchin' the CUBEConversation
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Dheeraj Pandey, Nutanix | Nutanix .NEXT 2017
[Announcer] - Live from Washington D.C., it's theCUBE, covering .NEXT Conference brought to you by Nutanix. >> We're back in D.C., welcome to NextConf, this is day two of our wall-to-wall coverage and this is theCUBE, the leader in live tech coverage. My name is Dave Vellante with Stu Miniman. Dheeraj Pandey is here, he's the chairman and CEO of Nutanix. Long time CUBE alum. Great to see you again. >> Pleasure. >> So you know, I love your style, up on stage yesterday. Very philosophical, always have been humble. You sort of said, "I'm going to stay humble," and it appears that's the case. But yet, there's so much excitement around here, you have a lot to be very proud of. How do you feel? >> You know, there's no finish line in this company building, just like there's no finish line when you have a family, it never ends actually. Nutanix is a family, and we are trying to make it a bigger, happier family with more customers, more partners, more employees. I feel good, but I think this company is good right now, it's not a great company. We probably will have to spend another decade to make it a great company actually, so. >> How do you, as the chairman and CEO, how do you define "great company"? >> Great companies, for one, actually take really good care of their stakeholders. You think about employees and customers and partners and also Wall Street, so I think at the end of the day we have barely begun the journey in some of these things. Customers, sure, we have quite a few of them, but I think we can do so much more for them. At some level, even in the largest accounts, we're barely scratching the surface actually. Same thing with employees, you know, we have almost 3000 employees but still, we could do so much more for them as well in terms of wealth creation, in terms of building careers. Very early days. Same thing with Wall Street as well, very early days actually. >> Dheeraj, you're always opening to listening to feedback, but you mentioned, you've now got a lot of constituencies. I know I've interviewed you and said well you know, there's the 90-day shock clock but, we can't get distracted, we need to focus. How do you, you know, what is the filter, how do you, what do you take in and internalize to translate into the direction of the company? >> You know I talk about two things. There's delight, there's waste. Delight for main street and make sure you're cognizant of the waste with Wall Street, because if you keep growing they won't bother you. What they bother you with is waste. How are you growing, what does efficiency look like at scale? So I just learn "growth at any cost". I think these are all timely reminders for any company, so that it doesn't get too painful when recessions hit you, because there's highs and lows of any company that you have to go through. So I believe that waste is the larger ego of delight, and if you can do a really good job of delighting our customers, our partners, our employees and then figure out how to deal with all of this with waste in mind, I think we'll do a pretty good job. So what matters the most is delight, but not without figuring out what's waste-like. I think you have to keep looking at these "KPIs" and say how are we really doing at scale with respect to distribution, marketing, product development, product engineering. Now we have a pretty large engineering workforce as well. How can the company be delightful for them if you don't have "two-pizza teams", if you don't have APIs and microservices in which they actually talk to each other, still feel like they're the CTO of their company, because they all want to make independent decisions and design trade-offs and things of that nature. I think we talk about this thing which is a really important abstract thing, it's called the paradox of growth. I learned this from some of these folks who have done this book called The Founder's Mentality. Growth creates complexity and complexity kills growth, so just be aware of what you really vied for can kill you as well, and continue to release complexity to organizations in the way you deal with your customers, and I think those are the things that really matter. I look at employees as customers, I look at customers as customers, I look at partners as customers. If you have the customer-centric view, you'll probably continue to simplify things under the cover. >> One of the things that you see in great companies is early on they're able to articulate a vision, see that vision, execute on it obviously and continue to grow their team, I mean that's a big part of your job. You've dramatically, well first of all, the team that you started with was quite large. Cloud expands that enormously. So maybe talk about your vision and how you're seeing that through. >> Well I think from very early on, the mission was invisible infrastructure. And that is an infinite mission because again, no finish line actually. You can make things invisible and then probably say we still aren't invisible enough and you have to make it more invisible. When you have downer to four clicks you have to say how about three and two and one click? And finally get rid of the click because machine learning can come in and automate more things as well. So how more and more things go from humans to machines and how the human-man-machine interface becomes less frictioned is the vision of this company. Now, all of this is not just graphical UI because the systems have to work, they have to be scalable, stable, reliable, available. So the back-end has to be very robust but then without a front-end it's really the same as a man-machine interface. Also the machine-machine interface, because APIs match for a lot as well, you know. If you're only thinking about man-machine, then you've lost a lot of this automation and machine learning capability as well, actually. >> I think back to some of our earliest conversations, you always talked about Nutanix is a software company and the challenge of our day is building distributed systems. The tooling and the way we build things today are very different from when you started the company. If you were starting from a bare sheet today, would you be born in the cloud, you know, how would things like containers and microservices change the way, or, and how are you taking from where you are today, which it started out in virtualization, is that a core, you've got AHV driving a lot of the pieces, versus some of those who are models? >> Yeah, I mean, look, VMware was building an operating system, but they needed a shield of EMC to go sell and distribute that. We had the compute virtualization piece that came a little bit later, but the storage virtualization, the control plane pieces, we needed to shield them, and we shield them in appliance, and that became our form factor the could give us the control of our own destiny, and that's what the appliance did to us. But you always knew you were building software, actually. And many people told us early on, just don't build appliances at all, and we would've been killed, we probably would have to sell this company early on, because it's really hard to build an OS company early on when you don't have a brand and nobody's willing to support you and customers are like, you know, if nobody else is willing to support you, how do you really build an operating system, actually? So I think if there's a method to the madness, we always knew we had to be hardware-agnostic, that's why we never built NVRAMs and FBGAs and things like that. And over time when Dell came forward and said look, you should OEM your product, I think it was a very natural decision for us two and a half, three years ago. I think there's been this controlled release of goodness of this operating system that basically not mean like oh we never thought about it, we always thought about hardware-agnosticism, hypervisor-agnosticism, all those things were there from day one in this company. But you know the question of whether we would start in the cloud today? Honestly, all companies have to start where they are in order to make money, and continue to navigate the shifting sands of time actually. I mean, you sell books, then realize it's not good enough, you go and sell, you know goods with e-commerce, and that's not good enough, you sell computing. We started an office productivity company, go and do a desktop operating system, then you go and do databases and server operating system and then all sorts of things for the family room and so on and then finally do a cloud. I think there's no, you know, change is the only constant you know, if you were to think about it, and companies that actually survive and thrive, they start someplace, and their thing, every three, four years, you just find the adjacencies, and keep navigating, you know, how the market is actually shifting and changing. >> There's a strange aura around your company. Now maybe it's the allure of the product, I don't know, but you have a lot of companies now coming into this ecosystem. We have Chad on next from Dell EMC, you know, arguably one of your larger competitors, okay, but they're here and they're happy to be here. So, it's, I say, maybe it's product, but it's also part cultural. And I'm guessing that your philosophy is it can't be a zero sum game. It's got to be a win-win for the partner, so I wonder if you could add any color to that. >> Yeah, that's a great point by the way, bring up this idea that you can be all things to all people. Somebody asked me in this analyst meetup, how about just go and build a firewall? We can, there's too deep a space in there for us to go build everything, so we need to have open APIs, where others also make money. And by the way, when you have a really flourishing ecosystem, the word of mouth, that they're also making money, the word builds a larger ecosystem, a larger operating system and so on. That's what Apple 2.0 was, because in 1.0 they were all about it's me, it's mine, no one else can do anything, and then they saw Microsoft, and how it was really building this burgeoning ecosystem with APIs, APIs, and more APIs. 90 was Microsoft's decade because of APIs actually, and partners and ecosystems, and Apple learned from them by the way, so when they came out and said we built a device, they said no no no, we've also got to build iTunes, because that's ecosystem, and then they built iCloud and app store and things like that. So I think there are lessons galore in the last 20, 25 years where if you're not a good API-driven company, you're probably not a long-lasting company actually. And the idea of a platform is incomplete without those APIs and the ecosystem itself. >> There's a change in accountant coming which is going to make you, I guess, to restate the software that you've sold through the OEMs will probably have Wall Street look at you a little bit differently. We've talked in the past before about how much you want to sell as Nutanix, how much you want to sell with partners. What's that mix that you see today going forward? How much of your product will you see, hardware, software, services, what's a good mix for you? >> Yeah, I think it's a, it's a good opportunity for the company to really think about revenue 2.0, because revenue 1.0 was what we had sort of planned out four, five years ago and 2.0 is a time when we have different form factors. We have ELAs that we started doing in the last 12 months. We're selling software in CISCO and now software in HP. Obviously Zai will happen in subscription as well. Now we have markable routes to market, you know, obviously the OEMs have actually matured, both OEMs have matured. So the question is of how do we really make it simple one more time? Because obviously there's more routes to market, so as a company we're saying now we can sell more software, and with a new accounting change, which is called ASC 606, software will have to be recognized in the same quarter, we can't defer it arbitrarily. And in some ways it's a good thing, in some ways it's bad because it takes away our goodness of the waterfall, because we could have deferred more revenue, as a company we've deferred a lot, I mean, folks know we have about $465,000,000 of deferred revenue right now, because of how good we were in actually postponing this instant gratification of cutted quarter and so on. So I think some of that will have to be brought into the current quarter but in some sense it's a good thing because we can then take the gross margin of that software and sell more appliances, so I think there's some mixing that'll happen with different margin profiles that'll have to come and kind of work with each other to say can we still grow as a company beyond a billion. >> But these are income statement gymnastics, not that you're playing, but that you're able to- >> Well, there's something about guard rails of the gross margin, because Amazon, what did Amazon say, look, your gross margin, my opportunity, right? So if you just let unbridled software go and sell itself, then our gross margins will be starting to creep up, but what if you kept it within the guard rails of around 60%, and then went and sold more appliances, because the software gave us the luxury to buy growth? I think those are the kind of architectures we are actually looking at right now. >> And the knobs that you might choose to turn, but it will have an impact on the income statement from an operating profit standpoint, I mean, right? If you're going to recognize all that deferred revenue up front you know- >> Just in subscription, we can actually do one-year terms and things like that, but obviously we don't want to completely throw the baby out of the bathwater, because a lot of subscription is a good thing, and Zai will provide subscription. Hopefully as we do this Cisco and HP on software, we can do one-year terms. >> It doesn't seem like these are distractions to you, I mean, Michael Dell always talks about the 90-day shock clock. With you, you sat down with Stu after the IPO, I was struck by your comments of "look, I'm not going to get all wound up about the stock price", you know, you're not going to obsess over it. Now it's easy not to obsess when you're growing at 60, 65% a year, but it doesn't seem like it's been a big distraction for you. >> Yeah, I think it's, just like a growing customer base can be a distraction, can be a strength, you know, because you could say, well, they're asking me not to innovate at all, and have the brute force figure out a way to have velocity and quality, because existing customers want quality, because they don't know what else you can be, like, give me a faster horse, right? And then you know from within the area we innovate that's where velocity matters. Same thing is true for Wall Street as well. Main Street wants both, Wall Street is saying look, as long as you can keep growing and grow wisely, I'm not going to touch you, actually. >> I want to ask you about your customers. We've had some great customers on. Most of the customers I've talked to that are Nutanix are what I'd call, you know, they're in the early part of the adoption, they're people that, they're taking some risks, we heard NASDAQ talk you know, forget about the fear, you've got to go forward. As you grow, how do you stop, you know, the enterprise buyer from trying to shift you, change your model? I loved that you're doing things like, you know, many companies are trying to switch to, you know, consumption models to pay as you grow, but as you try to grow that customer base, how do you pull them ahead or how do they not, you know, hold you back? >> Well I think as long as we have an authentic product, customer service, sales motion relationship they'll like us. And I think obviously there are different kind of sub-functions in the customer itself like procurement versus ID versus the business user and so on, and it's a constant hussle, there's no, again way to say that it's going to be a perfect world one day. If you can keep building great products, have great customer service, and we know that our sales motion is easy because it can, it can be a really good product and have really good customer support, but customers might hate transacting with you. I think that's the last piece that matters, and I think as computing becomes a real consumer market, that's what's happening you know with cloud, you can go and buy a computer like the way you used to buy your toothpaste or mouthwash or shampoo. I think it's becoming even more customer-centric, even more customer service-focused and so on. So I think the changing landscape of computing keeps a lot of vendors honest actually. Now, that doesn't mean that everybody will innovate, enough of them will say look, I'm done, and I think one of the things we've done well in the last five years is that the thesis of the product market fit. Like well, we know this is the product direction, this is the vision of the company, it has actually stuck. You know, people have said "I like what you guys are saying," actually. Over and over and over again, I mean, combos and acquisition, people are like "I love this". HP was one of those really audacious ideas, people said "I love this, now that I see it, I love it, when I didn't see it, I was skeptical". So I think a lot of the thesis of the company around innovation have worked in our favor. I think if we keep having that luck with ourselves, good things will happen. >> So Dheeraj, your positioning of the company has usually been a little bit ahead of the market, you know, for years it was like, ah, what, that HEI thing is a niche, and it's not really much that different, oh, enterprise cloud is nothing more than, you know, kind of vapor you know, what are the misperceptions you see today that you'd want to clarify for the market as to who Nutanix is today and where you're going? >> Well the first one is that we are a hardware company, because we are a hardware company, even though we sell a lot of software within the hardware and obviously we do a lot more software these days. And the fact that HEI's the destination, where HEIs basically was a mere milestone like five years ago or something, you know, we talk about I'd say about five years ago imagine a lot of the competition is talking about SEI today, when people are saying the compute storage form factor is interesting but not that interesting because I need to figure out how to converge clouds now, not just converge devices within my data center, I need to figure out OPEX and CAPEX, how do I meld those things, how do I burst, and things like that, you know. So the story keeps evolving because the consumers, the customers, and the competitors continue to evolve the market as well actually. So I would say that people have to look at us as an OS company, and the more they try us the more they realize why we are an OS company. They look at our networking R&D, they look at our security pieces together, storage, hypervisor, and now Zai, I think, you know, good things will happen. >> I inferred from your keynote yesterday that you're on a mission to change the operating model. Certainly Amazon has changed the operating model as we well know and it's translated into their operating profit, you know, their marginal economics as we've talked about in the past are compelling, software-like for services. As you change that operate- first of all, did I get that right? Are you on that- >> I call it a consumption model. >> Consumption model, great. So where do you see that going for customers? They're obviously taking labor costs out, how far can they take that- how much can you sort of automate in that process for your own company, taking those labor costs out to drive your margin? >> I think again, now going back to this idea of invisible infrastructure, just like it has no finish line, automation has no finish line. We used to automate 50 years ago as well. Automation as a word has existed for 200 years you know, since the industrial revolution actually. So again, there's no finish line in automation, there's no finish line for what machines can do compared to humans and I think they've constantly evolved, I mean, 200 years ago we were primarily agrarian, we would do agriculture and nothing more, and today we are doing a lot more things with our brain and I think we're becoming a more evolved species actually. So I think as machines do more, humans will also figure out a way to continue to do higher level things, so I think the best part about this company is that what we have chosen has no end to it, and the more we think we automate, the more we'll have to automate some more actually. And not just within the realm of compute, virtualization, or storage or networking or security, but also migration, portability, you know, what does it mean to really look at things on and off premise and things like that, so a lot of work is around that. Application automation is a big part of it as well. >> When I hear you say there's no finish line, it reminds me of Jeff Bezos, he says, "there is no day two, we will always be in day one". The two concerns I have, that is, number one, you can't have your employees constantly be charging, you know they run to the point where they're going to burn out and I hear Amazon is a challenging company to work for. Secondly, every customer I talk to, like, boy, they can't keep up with the six week release cycles that are coming at that, you know, remember when it used to be 18 to 24 months, you know, that was nice, we could do upgrade cycles when we want. How do you internally and with customers manage that pace of change and avoid burnout or over-complicating the environment for your customers? >> That's a great point actually, because obviously, if you don't have delighted work, it's hard. For them right now their delight, for Amazon employees, it's stock pricing. That's the only delight they have. But I look at it as a marathon of strengths. You basically have to sprint, take some rest, like after this we'll rest a little, and then say let's go and do another sprint, because NIS is another sprint, you know, and then reading all this stuff is another sprint, so I think if we can keep looking at that, and plus even do a little bit of baton-passing that'll happen, you know, I think as a company, we were all in San Jose and now some of the baton has passed to Seattle, some of the baton has passed to RDP Durham and Bangalore. We build this distributed workforce where different teams are coming in and saying "now I can run with it as well", like Bangalore could not have run with this six, seven, eight years ago, because everything was here. You know, RDP and Seattle were too small for us so I think there's critical mass emerging where the overall morale of the workforce is actually just as good as it was like five, six, seven years ago. Now, people talk about burnout a lot, but I also believe that a lot of this is choice. People who are saying "I know how to blend work and life". It's becoming hybrid, there's no such thing as work separate, life separate, it's melding into each other right now, and it's really becoming like this where people who are working smarter saying "I can figure out what that means in terms of balance". And millenials are again one of those who were born with all these things from day one. So the devices have been with them from day one, actually. They're saying "well, I can't not interact with the machine some time or the other". So I think that a lot of this is evolution for us, I mean, the eight to five way of looking at work, which is "batch processing", is now becoming multitasking and so on, so what happened to operating systems 30, 40 years ago is what's happening to humans as well actually. >> You know, we're out of time, but I wanted to share with our audience, one of the unique things about this conference is that you have advisors. A lot of people hire McKinsey and it all stays, you know, behind closed doors. Condi Rice, Robert Gates, Stephen Hadley, Deepak Malhotra, these are advisors to your company and we've met them all, many have been on theCUBE. You share with your community, your advisors, and you put them in front of your community and it's great content. I've really not seen a company be that transparent with its advisors before. Deliberate? Just sort of happens? >> It's always been like that actually, you know because the more a company learns from them, honestly, the more we've gotten out of them in turns of ROI, if you just think of it from a left wing point of view, but the right wing is that people want to build careers, not just wealth, they want to build careers, they want to actually be with folks that they can look up to you know, when the going gets tough. How do you remember somebody's words? Not just in books, but you know, in flesh and blood, you're like, wow, I talked to Condi Rice, I talked to Bob Gates, I talked to Steve Hadley, these people told me exactly what they went through, and I think there's no substitute to experience actually. To me, people like Mark Templeton and Frank Slootman, they all are great sources of energy and aspiration and ambition as well. >> Outstanding. >> No compression I've heard on experience, right Dave? >> That's right. Dheeraj, I feel calm just hanging out with you here, so thanks very much for coming back on theCUBE, it's always a pleasure to see you, and thanks for having us. Alright, keep it right there everybody, Stu and I will be back with our next guest. We're live from .Next, be right back. (electronic music)
SUMMARY :
brought to you by Nutanix. Great to see you again. So you know, I love your style, up on stage yesterday. when you have a family, Same thing with employees, you know, I know I've interviewed you and said well you know, in the way you deal with your customers, One of the things that you see in great companies is and you have to make it more invisible. and how are you taking from where you are today, which and keep navigating, you know, We have Chad on next from Dell EMC, you know, when you have a really flourishing ecosystem, how much you want to sell with partners. Now we have markable routes to market, you know, but what if you kept it within the guard rails of Just in subscription, we can actually do one-year terms going to get all wound up about the stock price", you know, because they don't know what else you can be, they're taking some risks, we heard NASDAQ talk you know, I think if we keep having that luck with ourselves, and things like that, you know. operating profit, you know, So where do you see that going for customers? and the more we think we automate, that are coming at that, you know, and now some of the baton has passed to Seattle, and you put them in front of your community Not just in books, but you know, Dheeraj, I feel calm just hanging out with you here,
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