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Jane wong, Splunk


 

>>Welcome to the Cubes Coverage of Splunk.com 2021. My name is Dave Atlanta and the Cube has been covering.com events since 2012 and I've personally hosted many of them. And since that time we've seen the evolution of Splunk as a company and also the maturation in the way customers analyzed, protect and secure their organizations, data and applications. But the forced march to digital over the past 19 months has brought more rapid changes to sec UP teams than we've ever seen before. The adversary is capable. They're motivated and they're deploying very sophisticated techniques that have pressured security pros like never before. And with me to talk about these challenges and how Splunk is helping customers respond as jane wang is the vice president of security products that Splunk jane. Great to have you on the cube. Thanks for coming on. >>Very nice to meet you. Thank you for having me. >>You're very welcome. So how d how can you think about or how do you think about the fact that the imperative to accelerate digital transformation has impacted security teams? How has it impacted sec ops teams in your view? >>Yeah. Well, just going back to our customers and what I've learned from all the customer conversations I have every every week many of our customers are under a massive digital transformation. They're moving to the cloud and the cloud opens up more attack surface, more attack work surface, there's more threats that come over cloud, new workspaces to attack services, new api is to manage secure and protect and our customers are really struggling to gain the visibility they need to really manage and secure across all that infrastructure. >>Yeah. And we've also seen the whole, obviously the work from home trend, the hybrid work movement, you know, people aren't set up for that. I mean, you remember people were ripping out literally ripping out desktops and bringing them home and you know, the home network had to be upgraded. So lots of changes there. And we've we've talked a lot in the cube jane about the fragmentation of tooling and the lack of qualified talent when we talked to see. So as you ask him, the number one problem, I can't get, I can't hire enough talent in the field of of cybersecurity. So I wonder if you can address how this has made it more difficult for security teams to maintain end to end visibility across their environments. What's the fundamental challenge there? >>Yeah, well you're really you're really nailing this. The fundamental challenges that many security products are not built to integrate seamlessly with one another. When I'm talking to customers, their frontline security operations teams often have 30 different consoles open on their monitor at one time and there really manual disjointed processes, the copying and pasting hash names and iP addresses from one consults the other. It slows them down. It really slows them down in protecting those threats. So because those products aren't assigned to integrate together and all that data from each of those security tools isn't brought into one place. It just exacerbates the challenge for security operations seems makes their job really, really hard to do. Which takes time. It takes time. It makes it harder to detect and respond to threats quickly and today more than ever we need to be able to detect and respond to threats quickly. >>Yeah, I do a weekly program called Breaking Analysis and once a quarter I look at the cyberspace and I use a chart to emphasize this complexity. It's it's a from a company called operative, I don't know if you've ever seen it but it's this eye chart, it's this taxonomy of the security landscape and it's mind blowing how much complexity there is. So how to Splunk help organization organizations address these challenges. >>Yeah, so I think bringing, we have one security operations platform cloud native cloud delivered. There are many parts of being able to streamline workflows for when you're first detect a threat or a potential threat right through to when teams close and immediate that threatened the changes in their environment to ensure they're protected. So the whole thing is helping security teams detects faster, investigate faster and respond faster to threat. There are four parts to that in our security operations, platform Splunk security cloud. The first one is advanced security analytics. So the nature of threats is evolving. They're becoming more sophisticated. We have very smart, well funded Attackers whose day job who spend all their time trying to break into organizations. So you need really advanced security analytics to detect those threats, then we need to automate security operations so that it's not so manual, so you don't have poor folks sitting in front of multiple consoles doing manual tasks to respond to those threats and make sure their organizations are protected. One key thing is that this year Splunk acquired true Star so that we can bring in d do rationalize multiple sources of threat intelligence and apply that threat intelligence both to our analytics and our operations so that you have broader insights from the security community outside Splunk and that intelligence can really help and speed both detection and response. And the last thing that's been true about Splunk since spunk became Splunk many many years ago is that we are committed to partners and we deeply integrate with many other security tools uh in a very seamless way. So whatever investments customers have made within their security operations center, we will integrate and bring together those tools in one workspace. So there's the big advantages I think you get when, when you run your security operations said transplant security cloud, >>that's a nice little description. And having followed Splint for so many years, it's sort of, it tracks the progression of your ascendancy. You know, you started you you we we used to have log analytics that were just impossible. You sort of made that much easier took that to advanced kind of use big data techniques even though Splunk really never used that term. But but you were like the leader and big data um in terms of being able to analyze um uh data to help remediate issues. The automation key is p pieces key the acquisitions. You've made a very interesting um you mentioned around de doop threat intelligence but also you've done some cool stuff in the cloud and we always used to say jane watch for the ecosystem. We early too early, you know, last decade we saw you as a really hot company. We said one of the keys to your growth is going to be the ecosystem. And you've you've clearly made some progress there. I wonder if you could tell us more About the announcements that you're making here at.com. >>Yeah. Well we're going back everything that we do on the security team, every line of code every engineer writes is all around helping detect, investigate and respond faster to really secure organizations. So if I look at those intern I start with faster time to detect what have we done. So bringing in the threat intelligence that I mentioned again, that's really gonna help to take new threats and to take them really, really quickly. You don't have to spend time going and looking manually at external sources of threat intelligence. It will be brought right in to enterprise security at your fingertips. So that that's pretty huge. We're bringing other more advanced content right into our stem enterprise security. So that will help detect threats that our research team sees as emerging again. This is going to just bring bring that intelligence right to customers where they work every day, um faster time to investigate. So this is this is really exciting uh back in november we reduced and we are really something called risk based alerting. That is an amazing new capability that we've iterated on ever since. And we have more iterations that we're announcing um tomorrow actually. And so risk based alerting pulls together what may have been single atomic alerts that can often be overwhelming to a sock brings those together into one overarching alert that helps you see the whole pattern of an attack, the whole series of things that happened over time. That might be an attack on your organization. One customer told us that that reduced the time it took for them to do an investigation from eight hours down to 10 minutes to really helping faster time to investigate. And then the next one is faster time to respond. So we have a new visual playbook editor for our sore security orchestration and response to which is in the cloud but also available on prayer. But that new visual playbook editor really reduces the need for custom code. Makes playbooks more modular, so it can help anyone in the security operations team respond to threats really, really quickly. So faster time to detect, investigate and respond those are, those are really cool for us. And then there's some exciting partnerships that I want to talk about just to really focus on reducing the burden of all those disparate tools on consoles and bringing them down and and integrating them together. So we'll have some announcements. There are new integrations that we're releasing with Mandiant Aziz scalar and detects. I'm personally very excited about a fireside chat that Kevin Mandia, the Ceo and president of Mandiant, we'll be having tomorrow with our Ceo Doug merit. So those are some of the things we're announcing. It's a big year for security. Very excited >>to tell you that's, that's key. I want to just kind of go through and follow up on some of the faster time to detect with the threat intelligence. That's so important because we read about how long it takes sometimes for for organizations to even find out that somebody has infiltrated their environment. This risk based learning, it sounds like and you're so right, it's like paper cuts having a bottoms up analysis. It's almost overwhelming. You don't have a sense as to really where the focus should be. So if you can have more of a top down, hey start here and sort of bucket ties things. It's gonna, it's gonna accelerate and then the faster response time. The thing that strikes me jane with your visual playbook editor is as you well know, the the way in which bad guys get in now they're very stealthy, you almost have to be stealthy in your response. So if you have to write custom code that's going to alert the bad guys that they're they're seeing now seeing code that they've never seen before, they must have detected us and then they escalate, you know, they get you in a harder, tighter headlock. Uh and I love the partnerships, you know, we, we followed the trend toward remote security. Cloud security, where's the scale is a big player, Amanda you mentioned. So that's that's great too. I mean it feels like the puzzle pieces are coming together. It's it's almost like a game of constant, you know, you're never there but you've got to stay vigilant. >>I really think so today. I mean it's been a great 12 months that's blank. We have done so much over the past year leading up to this.com. I'm very excited to talk to folks about it. I think one thing I didn't really mention that I kind of touched on earlier in the talk that we're having was around cloud security monitoring. So holistic cloud security monitoring. We've got some updates there as well with deeper integrations into G C P A W S Azure, one dr SharePoint box net G drive. Like customers are using many, many cloud services today and they don't have a holistic view across all those services I speak to see so every week that tell me they just really need one view. Not to go into each of those cloud service providers or cloud services, one at a time to look at the security posture, they need that all in a central location. So we normalize, we ingest and normalize data from each of those cloud services so you can see threats consistently across each of them. I think that's really, really something different that Splunk is doing um that other security offerings are not doing. >>I think that's a super important point and I do hear that a lot from CsoS where they say look we have so many different environments, so many different tools and they each have their own little framework so we have to go in and and investigate and then come back out and then our teams have to go into a new sort of view and come back out and and they just run out of time and they just don't again, lack of lack of skills to actually do this, can't hire half fast enough, can't train fast enough. So so that higher level view but still the ability to drill down and understand what those root causes. That's it's a it's a it's a top down bottoms up type of approach and and so as opposed to just throwing grains of sand at the second teams and then hoping, you know, they find the pearl, so jane, I'll give you the last word, Maybe some final thoughts. >>No, I just wanted to thank everyone for listening. I want to thank everyone for joining dot com 21. We're very excited to hear from you and speak with you. So thank you very much. >>Excellent. Great having you in the cube, keep it right there, everybody for more coverage of the cube. Splunk dot com 21. We'll be right back, >>Yeah.

Published Date : Oct 29 2021

SUMMARY :

Great to have you on the cube. Very nice to meet you. So how d how can you think about or how do you think about the fact that the imperative and our customers are really struggling to gain the visibility they need to really manage and secure So as you ask him, the number one problem, I can't get, I can't hire enough talent in the field of So because those products aren't assigned to integrate together and all that data from each So how to Splunk that threat intelligence both to our analytics and our operations so that We said one of the keys to your growth is going to be the ecosystem. So bringing in the threat intelligence that I mentioned again, that's really gonna help to take to tell you that's, that's key. one at a time to look at the security posture, they need that all in a central location. and and so as opposed to just throwing grains of sand at the second teams and then hoping, So thank you very much. Great having you in the cube, keep it right there, everybody for more coverage of the cube.

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Mike Hineline, Accenture | Splunk .conf19


 

>>live from Las Vegas. It's the Cube covering Splunk dot com. 19. Brought to you by spunk. >>Welcome back to the Cube, everyone. I'm John Ferrier with an angle on the Cube here in Las Vegas for Splunk dot com. 19. It's there 10 years of their customer main event. All the top customers and partners were here and, of course, accuse. Been covering dot com for seven years at a great guests from a censure. Mike Heinlein. Ecosystem Adventures. Global Analytics Plays and offerings lead a century Now. First of all, welcome to the Q. Thank you, John says. You're always has >>long titles. It's a very long title. Your lead. That's a mouthful. Offerings. Yeah, this >>meanings to these titles of the century. This, like >>Esso, I'm part of the Ecosystem Adventures Group, which helps to incubate our various different channel partners. And Dr Service is with those partners and then within the splint partnership. I'm focused on driving analytics offerings with various different practices that are already considering analytics and taking those >>to market. So you guys have a relation with spunk is evolving pretty quickly. >>It is >>what's the future look like? What's the current path >>Well, as you may be aware, we recently renewed our partnership with Bronco back in February. After two and 1/2 years, we had achieved most of our goals. And where we were starting to see is that where our initial objective was to help our clients to get Maur costs takeout and risk associated with their I T and Security operations way also learned a few things along the way, which is the Splunk Analyze politics engine can also be used outside of I t and Security and we can start to take it into industry verticals. And so one of the exciting things that we're doing is we brought our digital practice into the tent with us. We renewed in February, way have a couple of years. We're looking into the future, and we're gonna not only double down in i t and Security, but we're also going to start to build business analytics and io ti type solutions on top of within the vertical industries that were focused on one >>of those industries. Can you share them? >>Yeah. Yeah, so? So it would be things like energy utilities where power line analytics to reduce the amount of vegetation that might take out power lines cause fires cause outages. Patient flow, which would be how to help accelerate getting patients through the e. R and also increase throughput. Four Hospitals within supply Chain We're doing number of different things way have four different offerings that focus on technology, telecom, retail, consumer goods and manufacturing. So, like industrial type clients, >>so pretty much standard vertical industry that we normally see that's cracking in the business. Yeah, so I'll get your thoughts on this. One of the observations I want to share with you and get your reaction is is that with cloud and with data, it's interesting these day. There's a really key part of all this you mentioned. I I t and Security. Obviously, it's pretty straightforward. You see, that way started adding machine learning and a I and the things that domain expertise of these verticals become the pacing item the ke ke i t, if you will with scale of that what's going on? That's right level. Are you seeing that this is a fertile ground for opportunities that how you guys see it? Can you >>you Absolutely I think I think where it centuries strong is in our industry, Ackerman not just to 19 security, but within different industry verticals on. Then you take our digital practice, which is where our data science is live, where they're developing advanced analytics models and essentially working with a lot of the open source modeling tools like python that integrates very well a Splunk. It gives us the opportunity to take that data that could be bundled up. It could be data rest, maybe three years of sales data, and we create a forecast with it and do that on top of spunk. Or maybe something where within a supply chain or a flow within a hospital, were able to use machine learning to start to move some of the computer and thought from human beings to machines >>were some of the innovative service is you guys have built on top of Splunk because they're enabling platform. So again, opportunities. What are you guys doing in the >>soles? So both in the retail and in the technology space, we've created a couple of punishment engines. When you think of a supply chain, I need to know what my forecast is. What do I plan to sell? How many items. Do I need to have an inventory in the warehouse and in the store? And then how am I gonna get those items? And then how many should I order the next day? So we're using Splint to figure all of that out. >>What sort of surprise? Learnings You've got a deal with flunk because has always seems to be a new revelation when people get data and they start playing with insights. Beyond that, some sort of business breakthroughs are weird. Things happen when you start playing with data. Any anecdotal surprises, their learnings. You've seen >>a, well, a tremendous number. And in fact, what what happens is when you start to open up the silos. So most of our clients are stuck with a lot of legacy technologies that they've acquired over the last two or three decades. Splunk enables to open that Optimus get insights that we couldn't before. So it could be it could be. I could get a patient through a particular process, you know, twice as fast is what historically had been able to do. Or maybe for examples, something that Doug Merit mentioned yesterday, which is where we're partying very closely with Splunk for human trafficking. We've created an offering where split it already gone out created Data Lake of a lot of data from educational entities. Ngo's government agencies we took that builds a machine learning on top of it and able to identify high value targets or establishments that have a high risk of human trafficking, which is already starting to get results. In Florida, >>you mentioned health care no multiple times, someone of your key verticals. >>It is one that's emerging is very exciting. And it's kind of evidence of where we're working really well, a sponge. A lot of cases we've developed things that we take into Splunk, and we go to market together. In this particular case, Splunk created patient flow, took it to us. And now we're working to identify about a dozen different hospitals where we're gonna go meet with their CEOs and talk to him about what we can do to help them increased profit and patient satisfaction at the same time. >>What some of those conversations, like when you go and knock on the doors and say, Hey, I got a new secret weapon to solve your problems because this is its new things that people have these problems that couldn't have attacked before in the past. Now they have potential capabilities. What are some of those conversations? Take out there like Come on in, educate me. I want to buy right away or door slammed in your face and get his attention. >>Well, so way just had a really exciting meeting with a very large brochure in the Midwest. And as was explaining the different things that we could do a Splunk she actually the head of supply chain. Excuse me. It almost seems like fairy dust to me. In other words, the hardest challenge that I have sometimes is able to say, Look, you're used to doing this 24 months, maybe 36 months. I think I could do it free in less than six, and that's just so hard for them to absorb. So So a lot of cases it's it's transitioning to Well, let us figure out how we could prove that to you. Doing some kind of a concept or a pilot. >>You know, it's interesting is that you know, when you see people get set up with data platform, it's kind of editor of stage. Let's set the foundation. Let's make sure things flowing in you well. And then they started getting some discoveries here and there, and then they get business value, and then it kind of goes to another level. I think this is where things I see you guys doing well and others here in the ecosystem floor, and that is that It's a workflow optimization issue, I think. Wait a minute, way have all this data. Well, let's go do this. That's a little bit more of a ballistic business process or some sort of. >>That's right. Your >>challenge. Is that how >>you Yes. So I would say you always have a business process, at least in the industry verticals, and you have a lot of data that silo on. Then you crack those silos open on, then it's really basically intersection of what we would call planning and execution, which is, for example, maybe I have on oil rig and I have a ship that is taking materials and people back and forth. But now I know that I have actual things. Head into that port where if I send this ship now, I'm gonna have to come back in the next 24 hours. If I hold that ship off for two or three hours, then I can get more materials and people on board, and I don't have to come back for another 48 hours. So now I've just reduced greatly my operating costs. >>And I think that's interesting. Is that you think about what you just said, Yeah, go back 15 years. What's the data base scheming and make that happen. Date is over there, it's over. They're gonna write a query that Leighton see. It never happens. >>It's Jackie, right? So we're kind of out of the business of trying to fit square pegs into relational round holes, which takes the better part of maybe 50% of a lot of projects to implement those solutions. And so, with spunk, you're basically dumping the date end and you're layering your scheme on top of it, which enables you to accelerate delivery. And additionally, I don't have to cobble together and stitched together multiple technologies to do ingestion analytic storage visualization so I could mobilize teams much more quickly. Then it would traditional solutions. >>You know, Mike, I'd love your thoughts on the center's transformation because looking at you. What you guys have done is a company. It's been interesting, a lot of successes. But firm's been around for a while, right? So impressed. Different names don't back the old school back minicomputers. You know, rolling out projects had long arises. Multiyear. Now the speedy a name has completely changed clouds. Here you got data. How has the Splunk on these Modern technology has changed the centers engagement practices. >>I think you're touching on what we would probably call agile delivery, right or continuous delivery, where our clients don't want to push off from shore into a big bang project where they don't get to see the results for 12 to 24 months. That's a lot of risk for them. So what's book enables us to do, really is to do a delivery and deliver value in Angel's sprints in three 12 you know, 16 weeks sprints where we're literally be giving them value. We also don't have to understand all of the data. If you're using relational databases, you pretty much have to understand everything before you push off from shore with spunk. I can no minimal amount and start and deliver value, and then as I go, I'm learning more about my data. I could deliver more use cases and more value. >>It's interesting, you know, go back to the old enterprise sales model. You know, you do a pilot or a POC poc that a pilot with pilots, a date and that's what months and then Then the decision makes. And then you got to start over for the time that it'll happen in about months. A year. Yeah, technology changes. >>That's right. >>You guys are doing essentially agile sprints that are kind of like a little Mini p O sees. That's that's correct. Docs are actually really work. >>That's right. That's >>the new seems like the new sales model is that >>Well, I would say it's something that, with the rapid prototyping capability, like a sponge that gives us that flexibility todo depending on what we're doing, we may not have that flexibility. We may be limited by the technology. >>How would you describe the strength of censure Splunk partnership? >>It's a very strong So like I mentioned before, we way started to a nap three years ago. Way just renewed that relationship in February, and we've added more practices from within Accenture like digital practice. So now we have strategy, digital technology and security. We're focusing in doubling down and security in our I T markets, but also then starting to explore new industry verticals in Business analytics and Io Ti. As I explained earlier, we're bringing things to Splunk in there helping us cell, and they're bringing things to Austin. We're helping themselves, and there's a lot of excitement. I mean, I think it's really a combination of the right people with the right industry knowledge at the right time with the right technology. >>Final question in the industry For a while, you see the waves pretty big wave run now. Lot of confluence coming together. Multiple different Durant cloud data scale, everything speed. What's exciting you these days? What's the big story that people should pay attention to right now? Well, in this space, I >>think it really dovetails into Doug Steam, and I don't mean Thio, really, you know, piggyback on that. But it's true, and that is that so many of our clients, you know, still have a lot of technical debt from decades ago, and we get to come in there and say, Look in a matter of weeks and months, we could help You make sense of this way, can help you capture revenue you couldn't capture before Dr Out costs that you couldn't drive out before and reduce risk that you couldn't reduce before. So I mean, it's it's probably the best time of my entire career. >>Frankly, Cooper, daddies and certainly containers helps. Yeah, make those legacy workloads somewhat compatible with modern infrastructure. When you have those technical debt conversations with customers kind of realizing like I'm on the verge of bankruptcy, what do I do it? Is it more advisor? You guys come in, more counseling slash get developed? >>Yeah, yeah, A lot of times it's It's helping them to come in and assess what their situation is. Help them build a road map into the future. Sometimes it's rationalizing some of the technical debt. Sometimes it's how can we augment what you already have? And then and then in the future is that reaches end of life. We almost just turn it off. But you're up and running, you know, on this other platform that we've augmented into that ecosystem >>So tech flow positive. >>There you go. >>Yeah, cash flow positive take from technical debt from checked bag. Mike. Thanks for coming up. Appreciate it. Thanks for the knights. Thanks for having me. Great insights. You get all the data and the insights here. Workflow is rocking the cube. Second day of three days. I'm John Barrymore coverage after this short break.

Published Date : Oct 24 2019

SUMMARY :

19. Brought to you by spunk. All the top customers and partners were here and, of course, accuse. It's a very long title. meanings to these titles of the century. And Dr Service is with those partners and then within the So you guys have a relation with spunk is evolving pretty quickly. And so one of the exciting things that we're doing is we brought our digital practice Can you share them? So it would be things like energy utilities where power line analytics One of the observations I want to share with you and get your reaction you Absolutely I think I think where it centuries strong is in our industry, What are you guys doing in the When you think of a supply chain, I need to know what Things happen when you start playing with And in fact, what what happens is when you start to And it's kind of evidence of where we're working really well, What some of those conversations, like when you go and knock on the doors and say, Hey, So So a lot of cases it's it's transitioning to Well, let us figure out how You know, it's interesting is that you know, when you see people get set up with data platform, it's kind of editor That's right. Is that how and you have a lot of data that silo on. Is that you think about what you just said, Yeah, go back 15 years. And additionally, I don't have to cobble together and stitched together multiple technologies to do What you guys have done is a company. sprints in three 12 you know, 16 weeks sprints where And then you got to start over for the time that it'll happen in about months. You guys are doing essentially agile sprints that are kind of like a little Mini That's right. We may be limited by the technology. It's a very strong So like I mentioned before, we way started to a nap three years Final question in the industry For a while, you see the waves pretty big wave run now. out before and reduce risk that you couldn't reduce before. When you have those technical debt Sometimes it's how can we augment what you already have? You get all the data and the insights here.

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James Slaney, Dubber | Cisco Live US 2019


 

>> Live from San Diego, California It's the queue covering Sisqo live US 2019 Tio by Cisco and its ecosystem. Barker's >> Welcome Back to San Diego. The Cube has been live here at Cisco Life for the last three days. Student a man with meat, Lisa Martin wrapping things up and we're pleased to welcome to the Cube for the first time James Slay me, the cofounder and had a product for Double James. Welcome to the Cube >> very much. >> All right, So, Deborah, before we get into who you guys are, why you started this company stew. Thought maybe this had to do with your love of dub. Step the name >> way do like that step. But it really wasn't the reason May my co founders were involved with telecommunications and the industry, and we thought the cloud was coming quite fast. And we thought, you know, we started an opportunity that as much as the telcos we're trying to move service. It's a cloud that was value weds they need to provide. And there wasn't really a quality solution for recording for uncle's. >> So came from dubbing tape to tape back in the day. For those here is can remember when we had >> the tapes the name came from. That's how I remember we came, came about The name is that we're thinking, you know, I like to set because it was dubbing and then, you know, double came out of that was available. >> So tell us our audience about call cloud based call recording tell us a little bit about that. But why? What was the impetus for you saying? You know what? There's a gap in the market. We gotta solve it. >> Yeah, So everything think traditional providers were all in on premise Catholics based servers licensing all that traditionally no software model with the transition to cloud for telephony. So unified communications or anything like that Theo ability to have a platform that could record content. Really, By switching it on where that was, we partnered with Toko. So I say, I say tacos and Australian Server that Carrie is also provided tell they want to hear about what they called connect to their network and then offer it at scale so they could switch on one user or actually switch on 100,000 users instantly. And we managed the back into that and they get to go to the service. >> Yeah, it's interesting. So Lisa and I were at the Enterprise Connect show this year, and one of the themes we got out of the week of doing that show is Well, there's always the cool new technologies were doing video, and you know, there's the E R. And you know, people use Chatbots Airways do their voices still critical. Yeah, So maybe talk about you know, your customer base and you know, the role that you're playing to help them. And, you know, still, that that voice is is such an important decent of how we communicate. Yeah, it's really interesting, >> Like way still. Look at that. The important things that I done via voice. If you've got an important customer, you know, discussion, we have you going to send him an email you're probably gonna have followed up with a phone call or initiate with a phone call on most of time. That daughter is is lost. So you know things we discuss and you don't get them back. And, you know, generally call recording. If you're looking at that, people think contact center and regulatory reasons like financial services and that's our bread and butter. But now we're seeing with exposed the more cloud based options. That is, this is a study talk to expand that used case across outside of that traditional reason and not just call recording, you know, eyes that you know, becoming more prevalent as well. >> So how are you guys infusing a I into what you're doing? And also with Sisko to not only be able to apply intelligence to the data that you're gathered from reported calls, but also Dustan, the way that also facilitates security and privacy? >> Yeah, so Security's calling way couldn't have a platform that's use it is connected. Tio, You know, 18 See's Network way got over 100 telco or carrying their ways connected globally at the moment. That's all across Europe, America, Canada and then Asia as well. And now you know, we've been chosen by Sisko for their broad cloud platform, which I recently acquired way. What we see is that because we can capture content at scale way, then can actually easily then produce transcriptions, sentiment tone from the best of the three providers around the world with my be asked. But, you know, we could use any other third party provider that customer might want to use. Use case. Then Khun B. Go towards a small business in my you know, I'll say it's more reasonable and I'll explain on enterprise in a small business, theirselves person might be speeding, made the main customer 1,000,000 customer brings up. It is not happy, and we're going to tell the boss or the team leader they could automate, literally as easy automation, saying notifications Conor, a team leader. You should call this customer back. Without that, they lose the potential of retaining that customer now that previously that's only really the large business or the only has the technology to do that, all the ability to actually get it to market with us and because we connected to the network or even on, you know easily on ah, call manager solution through Cisco, that's any size of business. Large business. We're seeing also a bank as an example there, looking to capture everything across their whole business, not just contact center and start looking for key words that I said it's a credit card or home loan, and they make sure that their agent or their employee is disclosing that product correctly to the customer to make sure they're compliant Now that they're not talking about that across the of the whole business, not just always example. 4,000 seats in a context enter but 40,000 across their whole business on any phone, they using the moment without a mobile cellular or a despondent. >> Okay, so bring us inside your customers. Is that you know you mentioned call centers? Is that the primary use case? Do you go into different verticals? You know what? What does your customer base look like? >> Way definitely go like a safe contact centers for sure on DH. That's it's it's been there for a long time. That requirement to record phone calls and do it well, uh, financial services knock. It's throughout throughout the world, in the U. S. As well in the Europe because of me fit and all those requirements compliant. But as said way are now expanding that use case because of a A and requirement access data. Also, our platform is an open, open platform if that makes sense, but everything we record or capture is encrypted. But it isn't a format that Thean customer can use a CZ that won't apply themselves. They're all looking at using a I. You know, there are other other data sources in the company because it's available. They can use it with other. Well, >> yeah, actually, I just wanted to poke it that because one of the challenges we have out there is there's a lot of data, but how do I actually extract value out of that? So is this now a way for your customers to really unlock something that historically you just you you might have kept it for compliance. Reason to work, you know, to review some kind of training. But it was a little bit tough to get in and leverage the information that was in >> there. Yeah, you know, cos today I really they're they're assessing, You know, anything in a written format today they already losing. I want to do that Previously has been really hard to do that with voice now, because we can capture again captured at scale there. Now I can look at it and say, Can we use the same tools? Were looking for everything else in our business. I looked down and saw that the voice >> so walk us through an example of where double is integrated into an organization. If we think of a bank and you mentioned, you know, use case is one of them piqued my interest about Okay, sentiment. If there is an issue that needs to be escalated and somebody in the organization needs to call a customer, what's been recorded is indicating that is never able to integrate with, like marketing automation serum tools that that data is then pulled in a map back to that account and how it's being managed. >> Yeah, correct. Good, really good question, probably explained that way are a global platform. So we deployed everywhere in the world. So Australia's I'm from a trailer again, but U S Canada, Singapore, Japan, London, Ireland and the UK way recording that in that country we store in the country. But it is a scale. Little platform is a service, which means that way run a product, eyes a p I to open a p I, whether we've integrated with their application or the customer then can say we never want to log into doubles applications. Were you present all the daughter and our own complications already? That's already practiced today. It's available today is in ample. If they wanted to use South forces a serum looking today. Look at the contacts. You can see all the holes, All the transcriptions directly in South Force. >> That's cool. So they get that visibility in a way that that works for them? >> Yeah. Yeah, not precious. We look at ourselves a platform first, and we provide applications. We know users. Did you call recording as they expect to use it, like with permission based access team management. But in reality, we're trying to make it fit in the way that you they'll write their own business and more insights. >> Alright. So, James, we're here at Cisco Live. So explain to us how you tie into what's going on here at the show. You know, we're here in the definite zone. Curious If you talked about being an open platform, Do you know I did in the development pieces here? Yeah, >> we've We've had some really good conversations in the last three days. It's interesting to see people talk about, you know, they come up and they start talking about cool recording and way Explain what we just discussed. Relations open and they can access via Pio, and they start thinking they can see their mind. Figure out how they could apply that their own business. We've always wave always work the Cisco Way Boys work with broad Soft, which they've now acquired, and they now make that part of the business. But you know where that's called Manager. Wait. Have now announced they're doing whether it's calling, you know, we're talking to customers about cool recording through double on whether it's calling now. So if businesses you know, having a plan, Teo moved there from the UN Prem to cloud that Cisco way, make a second unified solution for them and they could make a road map for that with him. So it's a really good conversation we're having here. >> So in the development of the go to market strategy, or so I already have an established Francisco. >> Now where do you have a stress ready? We're day of Ah, we're partners, Cisco. Already we've got over 100 carries who used this go in. Their networks were really connected to them. I'm already recording in capturing content on those networks were pretty tight with this guy for sure, but you look at the enterprise that its president, although cloud yet they're really moving to that. So if they want to have a core recording solution or a solution on for him, and they might want to move to cloud future in the future, we have that in the future. So I'm doing it now is probably maintain the same service right through. >> So can you give us an example, a customer success that is leveraging Debra with Cisco whether you, you, Khun Anonymous eyes it or if you can name it? Great. But I would love to see how it's really working in action to drug business results. >> Yeah, it's going Good question. I'm trying to be the best one to give you. At the moment, I could think of a customer of ours with, you know, in the UK they're spread it costs. I think around 100 locations they're currently recording with double and using transcription to transcribe their calls are looking for patterns across the whole business and the using Cisco for the late telephony on then, looking at that and I've actually found things that just decided to save money, they've been losing some money in certain locations, and they've used the transcription. Seem patents actually implemented changes to actually sell a say that >> Awesome. So in terms of the last three days of Sisqo live, some of the announcements that have come out Cisco has been on this transition here on the hardware company network here, back in the day to now introducing AP eyes across the product portfolio, which he'd been two years ago. They didn't have to this pivot towards a software focus for a company like double born in the cloud. What does that signify to you guys? >> Uh, so you see what a sight it was. >> Yeah, what does that signify to double >> wellit's great for us, and it's really important for us to make sure we're along into that. We've already have always been an A P I first company on, you know, accessing the contents. But it's a challenge may, sometimes for businesses to embrace that way, need to make sure that we're way we're looking at Cisco and understand how they want to use Ap eyes and aligning ourselves on DH. Hopefully push him along because we're doing it for a while, eh? So we released, you know five years ago. It was cloud based, and it's good for everyone. Started talking about a pee eyes and employing them. >> Awesome. Well, James Splint. Pleasure to have you on the Cube this afternoon with stew in me. Thanks for stopping Mind sharing what Debra's doing with Cisco and to really help transform enterprises from any industry. We appreciate your time, all right. And we can't close the queue. But Sisqo live in San Diego without saying this one thing, which we're all going to do together. You ready, guys? On my count. 321 Classy. San Diego for soon. Minuteman II. Lisa. Bart, you've been watching the Cube. Thanks so much for watching. We'll see you next time.

Published Date : Jun 13 2019

SUMMARY :

Live from San Diego, California It's the queue covering The Cube has been live here at Cisco Life for the last three All right, So, Deborah, before we get into who you guys are, why you started this company stew. And we thought, you know, we started an opportunity that as much as the telcos we're trying to move So came from dubbing tape to tape back in the day. you know, I like to set because it was dubbing and then, you know, double came out of that was available. What was the impetus for you saying? So I say, I say tacos and Australian Server that Carrie is also provided tell they Yeah, So maybe talk about you know, your customer base and you you know, discussion, we have you going to send him an email you're probably gonna have followed up with a phone call or initiate with a phone really the large business or the only has the technology to do that, all the ability to actually get it to market Is that you know you mentioned call centers? Also, our platform is an open, open platform if that makes sense, but everything we record Reason to work, you know, to review some kind of training. Yeah, you know, cos today I really they're they're assessing, You know, If we think of a bank and you mentioned, you know, use case is one Were you present all the daughter and our own complications already? So they get that visibility in a way that that works for them? But in reality, we're trying to make it fit in the way that you they'll write their own business and more insights. So explain to us how you tie into what's going on here So if businesses you know, capturing content on those networks were pretty tight with this guy for sure, but you look at the enterprise So can you give us an example, a customer success that is leveraging customer of ours with, you know, in the UK they're spread it costs. What does that signify to you guys? So we released, you know five years ago. Pleasure to have you on the Cube this afternoon with stew in me.

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