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Ajay Singh, Pure Storage | CUBEconversation


 

(upbeat music) >> The Cloud essentially turned the data center into an API and ushered in the era of programmable infrastructure, no longer do we think about deploying infrastructure in rigid silos with a hardened, outer shell, rather infrastructure has to facilitate digital business strategies. And what this means is putting data at the core of your organization, irrespective of its physical location. It also means infrastructure generally and storage specifically must be accessed as sets of services that can be discovered, deployed, managed, secured, and governed in a DevOps model or OpsDev, if you prefer. Now, this has specific implications as to how vendor product strategies will evolve and how they'll meet modern data requirements. Welcome to this Cube conversation, everybody. This is Dave Vellante. And with me to discuss these sea changes is Ajay Singh, the Chief Product Officer of Pure Storage, Ajay welcome. >> Thank you, David, gald to be on. >> Yeah, great to have you, so let's talk about your role at Pure. I think you're the first CPO, what's the vision there? >> That's right, I just joined up Pure about eight months ago from VMware as the chief product officer and you're right, I'm the first our chief product officer at Pure. And at VMware I ran the Cloud management business unit, which was a lot about automation and infrastructure as code. And it's just great to join Pure, which has a phenomenal all flash product set. I kind of call it the iPhone or flash story super easy to use. And how do we take that same ease of use, which is a heart of a Cloud operating principle, and how do we actually take it up to really deliver a modern data experience, which includes infrastructure and storage as code, but then even more beyond that and how do you do modern operations and then modern data services. So super excited to be at Pure. And the vision, if you may, at the end of the day, is to provide, leveraging this moderate experience, a connected and effortless experience data experience, which allows customers to ultimately focus on what matters for them, their business, and by really leveraging and managing and winning with their data, because ultimately data is the new oil, if you may, and if you can mine it, get insights from it and really drive a competitive edge in the digital transformation in your head, and that's what be intended to help our customers to. >> So you joined earlier this year kind of, I guess, middle of the pandemic really I'm interested in kind of your first 100 days, what that was like, what key milestones you set and now you're into your second a 100 plus days. How's that all going? What can you share with us in and that's interesting timing because the effects of the pandemic you came in in a kind of post that, so you had experience from VMware and then you had to apply that to the product organization. So tell us about that sort of first a 100 days and the sort of mission now. >> Absolutely, so as we talked about the vision, around the modern data experience, kind of have three components to it, modernizing the infrastructure and really it's kudos to the team out of the work we've been doing, a ton of work in modernizing the infrastructure, I'll briefly talk to that, then modernizing the data, much more than modernizing the operations. I'll talk to that as well. And then of course, down the pike, modernizing data services. So if you think about it from modernizing the infrastructure, if you think about Pure for a minute, Pure is the first company that took flash to mainstream, essentially bringing what we call consumer simplicity to enterprise storage. The manual for the products with the front and back of a business card, that's it, you plug it in, boom, it's up and running, and then you get proactive AI driven support, right? So that was kind of the heart of Pure. Now you think about Pure again, what's unique about Pure has been a lot of our competition, has dealt with flash at the SSD level, hey, because guess what? All this software was built for hard drive. And so if I can treat NAND as a solid state drive SSD, then my software would easily work on it. But with Pure, because we started with flash, we released went straight to the NAND level, and as opposed to kind of the SSD layer, and what that does is it gives you greater efficiency, greater reliability and create a performance compared to an SSD, because you can optimize at the chip level as opposed to at the SSD module level. That's one big advantage that Pure has going for itself. And if you look at the physics, in the industry for a minute, there's recent data put out by Wikibon early this year, effectively showing that by the year 2026, flash on a dollar per terabyte basis, just the economics of the semiconductor versus the hard disk is going to be cheaper than hard disk. So this big inflection point is slowly but surely coming that's going to disrupt the hardest industry, already the high end has been taken over by flash, but hybrid is next and then even the long tail is coming up over there. And so to end to that extent our lead, if you may, the introduction of QLC NAND, QLC NAND powerful competition is barely introducing, we've been at it for a while. We just recently this year in my first a 100 days, we introduced the flasher AC, C40 and C60 drives, which really start to open up our ability to go after the hybrid story market in a big way. It opens up a big new market for us. So great work there by the team,. Also at the heart of it. If you think about it in the NAND side, we have our flash array, which is a scale-up latency centric architecture and FlashBlade which is a scale-out throughput architecture, all operating with NAND. And what that does is it allows us to cover both structured data, unstructured data, tier one apps and tier two apps. So pretty broad data coverage in that journey to the all flash data center, slowly but surely we're heading over there to the all flash data center based on demand economics that we just talked about, and we've done a bunch of releases. And then the team has done a bunch of things around introducing and NVME or fabric, the kind of thing that you expect them to do. A lot of recognition in the industry for the team or from the likes of TrustRadius, Gartner, named FlashRay, the Carton Peer Insights, the customer choice award and primary storage in the MQ. We were the leader. So a lot of kudos and recognition coming to the team as a result, Flash Blade just hit a billion dollars in cumulative revenue, kind of a leader by far in kind of the unstructured data, fast file an object marketplace. And then of course, all the work we're doing around what we say, ESG, environmental, social and governance, around reducing carbon footprint, reducing waste, our whole notion of evergreen and non-disruptive upgrades. We also kind of did a lot of work in that where we actually announced that over 2,700 customers have actually done non-disruptive upgrades over the technology. >> Yeah a lot to unpack there. And a lot of this sometimes you people say, oh, it's the plumbing, but the plumbing is actually very important too. 'Cause we're in a major inflection point, when we went from spinning disk to NAND. And it's all about volumes, you're seeing this all over the industry now, you see your old boss, Pat Gelsinger, is dealing with this at Intel. And it's all about consumer volumes in my view anyway, because thanks to Steve Jobs, NAND volumes are enormous and what two hard disk drive makers left in the planet. I don't know, maybe there's two and a half, but so those volumes drive costs down. And so you're on that curve and you can debate as to when it's going to happen, but it's not an if it's a when. Let me, shift gears a little bit. Because Cloud, as I was saying, it's ushered in this API economy, this as a service model, a lot of infrastructure companies have responded. How are you thinking at Pure about the as a service model for your customers? What's the strategy? How is it evolving and how does it differentiate from the competition? >> Absolutely, a great question. It's kind of segues into the second part of the moderate experience, which is how do you modernize the operations? And that's where automation as a service, because ultimately, the Cloud has validated and the address of this model, right? People are looking for outcomes. They care less about how you get there. They just want the outcome. And the as a service model actually delivers these outcomes. And this whole notion of infrastructure as code is kind of the start of it. Imagine if my infrastructure for a developer is just a line of code, in a Git repository in a program that goes through a CICD process and automatically kind of is configured and set up, fits in with the Terraform, the Ansibles, all that different automation frameworks. And so what we've done is we've gone down the path of really building out what I think is modern operations with this ability to have storage as code, disability, in addition modern operations is not just storage scored, but also we've got recently introduced some comprehensive ransomware protection, that's part of modern operations. There's all the threat you hear in the news or ransomware. We introduced what we call safe mode snapshots that allow you to recover in literally seconds. When you have a ransomware attack, we also have in the modern operations Pure one, which is maybe the leader in AI driven support to prevent downtime. We actually call you 80% of the time and fix the problems without you knowing about it. That's what modern operations is all about. And then also Martin operations says, okay, you've got flash on your on-prem side, but even maybe using flash in the public Cloud, how can I have seamless multi-Cloud experience in our Cloud block store we've introduced around Amazon, AWS and Azure allows one to do that. And then finally, for modern applications, if you think about it, this whole notion of infrastructure's code, as a service, software driven storage, the Kubernetes infrastructure enables one to really deliver a great automation framework that enables to reduce the labor required to manage the storage infrastructure and deliver it as code. And we have, kudos to Charlie and the Pure storage team before my time with the acquisition of Portworx, Portworx today is truly delivers true storage as code orchestrated entirely through Kubernetes and in a multi-Cloud hybrid situation. So it can run on EKS, GKE, OpenShift rancher, Tansu, recently announced as the leader by giggle home for enterprise Kubernetes storage. We were really proud about that asset. And then finally, the last piece are Pure as a service. That's also all outcome oriented, SLS. What matters is you sign up for SLS, and then you get those SLS, very different from our competition, right? Our competition tends to be a lot more around financial engineering, hey, you can buy it OPEX versus CapEx. And, but you get the same thing with a lot of professional services, we've really got, I'd say a couple of years and lead on, actually delivering and managing with SRE engineers for the SLA. So a lot of great work there. We recently also introduced Cisco FlashStack, again, flash stack as a service, again, as a service, a validation of that. And then finally, we also recently did a announcement with Aquaponics, with their bare metal as a service where we are a key part of their bare metal as a service offering, again, pushing the kind of the added service strategy. So yes, big for us, that's where the buck is skating, half the enterprises, even on prem, wanting to consume things in the Cloud operating model. And so that's where we're putting it lot. >> I see, so your contention is, it's not just this CapEx to OPEX, that's kind of the, during the economic downturn of 2007, 2008, the economic crisis, that was the big thing for CFOs. So that's kind of yesterday's news. What you're saying is you're creating a Cloud, like operating model, as I was saying upfront, irrespective of physical location. And I see that as your challenge, the industry's challenge, be, if I'm going to effect the digital transformation, I don't want to deal with the Cloud primitives. I want you to hide the underlying complexity of that Cloud. I want to deal with higher level problems, but so that brings me to digital transformation, which is kind of the now initiative, or I even sometimes call it the mandate. There's not a one size fits all for digital transformation, but I'm interested in your thoughts on the must take steps, universal steps that everybody needs to think about in a digital transformation journey. >> Yeah, so ultimately the digital transformation is all about how companies are gain a competitive edge in this new digital world or that the company are, and the competition are changing the game on, right? So you want to make sure that you can rapidly try new things, fail fast, innovate and invest, but speed is of the essence, agility and the Cloud operating model enables that agility. And so what we're also doing is not only are we driving agility in a multicloud kind of data, infrastructure, data operation fashion, but we also taking it a step further. We were also on the journey to deliver modern data services. Imagine on a Pure on-prem infrastructure, along with your different public Clouds that you're working on with the Kubernetes infrastructures, you could, with a few clicks run Kakfa as a service, TensorFlow as a service, Mongo as a service. So me as a technology team can truly become a service provider and not just an on-prem service provider, but a multi-Cloud service provider. Such that these services can be used to analyze the data that you have, not only your data, your partner data, third party public data, and how you can marry those different data sets, analyze it to deliver new insights that ultimately give you a competitive edge in the digital transformation. So you can see data plays a big role there. The data is what generates those insights. Your ability to match that data with partner data, public data, your data, the analysis on it services ready to go, as you get the digital, as you can do the insights. You can really start to separate yourself from your competition and get on the leaderboard a decade from now when this digital transformation settles down. >> All right, so bring us home, Ajay, summarize what does a modern data strategy look like and how does it fit into a digital business or a digital organization? >> So look, at the end of the day, data and analysis, both of them play a big role in the digital transformation. And it really comes down to how do I leverage this data, my data, partner data, public data, to really get that edge. And that links back to a vision. How do we provide that connected and effortless, modern data experience that allows our customers to focus on their business? How do I get the edge in the digital transformation? But easily leveraging, managing and winning with their data. And that's the heart of where Pure is headed. >> Ajay Singh, thanks so much for coming inside theCube and sharing your vision. >> Thank you, Dave, it was a real pleasure. >> And thank you for watching this Cube conversation. This is Dave Vellante and we'll see you next time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Aug 18 2021

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Chandar Pattabhiram, Coupa | Coupa Insp!re19


 

>> Announcer: From the Cosmopolitan Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, it's theCUBE. Covering Coupa Inspire 2019. Brought to you by Coupa. >> Welcome to theCUBE. Lisa Martin on the ground at Coupa Inspire '19 from the Vegas. I'm very pleased to welcome not Bono, not Sting, it's Chandar, the CMO of Coupa. Chandar, welcome to theCUBE. >> Lisa, thank you, it's great to be here today. >> This is a really cool event. Procurement is sexy. >> It is sexy. >> It can be so incredibly transformative to any organization. I loved how the last two days, what you guys have done is a great job of articulating Coupa's value in procurement, invoicing, payments, expense, through the voices of your customers and I think there's no better brand value that you can get. >> Sure, absolutely. >> Tell us a little bit about your role as the CMO of Coupa and marketing in a fast-growing company with a product that people might go, "I haven't heard of that, what is that again?" >> Yeah, it's a good question. I think if I look at it, my role is at Coupa, especially, for Coupa, what's interesting about it, as you said, is that every company makes money, every company spends money. So, invariably, Coupa can be used across a set of different companies. One from the Golden State Warriors to Procter & Gamble to the Lukemia & Lymphoma Society. Across the board. And then, from our perspective, holistically, we're looking at business, but managed from different aspects of spend. You said procurement was in expenses. So, my role is to build a marketing engine to get the flywheel effect of first you drive awareness. All marketing starts with awareness and you said people haven't heard of it. And so, to first to drive awareness in a very thoughtful way to the right contextual community we want to go after. And, two, drive acquisition, we'll drive close synergies between sales and marketing to ultimately drive pipeline and win rates and ultimately deals. And then, very importantly in today's world, is to drive the advocacy and get your most passionate customers to evangelize about the brand, so that you create the flywheel effect of awareness, acquisition, and advocacy. And, that's really what my role today is. >> And, I love how I read an article where you call that the stairway to marketing heaven. So, I thought, I wonder if you're a guitar guy, but you're right. It's how to drive awareness, but in a meaningful, thoughtful way. Especially today, with all all the technology, we wake up with it, right? Our phone is our alarm clock. We are bombarded by ads. If we're on Instagram, following our favorite celebrities or whatnot and it's scary when they have the right context, but it has to be thoughtful. We need to know our audience. So, you describe this stairway to marketing heaven, as you just mentioned, it's awareness, it's acquisition, which is key. But, I feel like a lot of companies don't forget the advocacy part, but they don't invest enough in it because that's the best salesperson for your technology, is the people that are using it successfully, right? >> Totally. Yeah, so, in fact, there was a study about a couple of years which looked at how balanced the boat is in terms of spending in presale versus post-sale. And, it's interesting that 87% of B2B marketing spend was presale. In other words, only 13% of people were investing in retention marketing, adoption mastery, customer marketing, and this is what advocacy marketing. And, in today's world, that doesn't work because you got to balance the boat because, to your point, you're getting in a peer-bond world where your existing customers are your best sellers. And, prospects who have all the buying power today are looking to your existing customers to guide them in their purchasing decisions. So, as an organization, if you balance the boat, then you're going to get the flywheel effect going for you in terms of driving the right advocacy across all channels. Just not your own channel if you earn channels to ultimately drive that acquisition going. >> Do you think that's actually more valuable? 'Cause it's one thing to have on your .com site, your social media sites, all these great things about your technologies, etc., coming from customers or from product experts, from influencers. Talk about the value. As technology advances so much and we are influenced by so many other channels, the value of the earned channel and that peer-to-peer relationship. >> Yeah, I think, as I say, that every mom says her baby is good-looking. But, in software, not every baby is really good-looking. Which means, if you take that analogy and extend it, if you're coming to your own channel, invariably, you're going to see some great customer videos about your product, you're going to see some great endorsements and testimonials, you're going to see some great quotes about your product. The reality, there's no bad news about your product on your own website, on your own channel. But, the reality is there are some, some people who might have different opinions. If you go to Glassdoor, no company gets a five on Glassdoor. And, if you take the same thing and extend it to earned channels for advocacy, folks like G2 Crowd, TrustRadius, and B2B, for example, are becoming more relevant today than before because two things. One is 85% of our customers' journey is self-directed. >> Lisa: That much? >> That much and Forrester has anywhere from 60 to 80, but reality is whether you're buying a car or you're buying Coupa. Today, a customer is discovering more journeys. And, in that process, they are looking to more of these earned channels as validation of which ones to go after than just your own channels. So, that's why we got to balance the boat and distribute our advocacy spend dollars across both your own channels and your earned channels. And, that's really important for you and the flywheel will pay off for you over time from that perspective. >> It will and that seems like a lot of the things that Suzy Irwin was talking about to the audience earlier. That's common sense. Why is it that you see these marketing budgets that are so heavily weighted towards just getting awareness, getting customers acquired, and then not thinking about retention marketing account based marketing. >> I'll tell you why. I think any smart CMO will conceptually agree with you. Nobody's going to say, of course, this is not important for me to get advocacy. The challenge comes in in terms of how that marketing department is measured. What gets measured gets funding at the end of the day. >> Lisa: That's a good point. >> And, reality is a lot of these B2B companies are still measuring marketing based on, what's the pipeline you're driving and what's at the top of the funnel metrics that you're driving? In reality, that's a little bit of a skewed thing because then if that's what you're being measured at the board level, at the executive level, then guess what? All your funding is going to go towards that. But, really, the true measurement of marketing, one, is about, yes, you have to get pipeline. You have to influence win rates at the bottom of the funnel and that's where product marketing comes in. But, as importantly, you have to look at the number of brand advocates you create and lifetime value of a customer. >> Yes, CLV, yes. >> And, that's really, really, customer lifetime value is so important because in a SaaS business, ultimately, the Mufasa metric, I'm a Lion King fan. The Mufasa metric is really lifetime value because if a customer stays longer with you, pays you more, and is shouting from the rooftop, then, invariably, that SaaS business is doing well. And, that's why you have to balance the boat in terms of post-advocacies, post-acquisition spend into advocacy, as much as you've done in pre-acquisition. >> When you came into Coupa a couple of years ago, have you been able to shift those budgets because you're able to demonstrate the value that that advocacy piece generates with the flywheel? >> Absolutely and I have a very progressive-thinking CEO who's partners with me on this too. So, we've been absolutely able to do that. In fact, what we're trying to do at the end of the day and most software companies, the real goal should be creating a tribe. In technology, you have to create a tribe to be a titan. And, it's just not about the capability, it's about the community. And, that's really what we're trying to do at Coupa is to create the tribal community feeling. So, if the community is bigger than the brand, it is about the community itself and learning, sharing, and growing with each other and being successful. And, we're just fostering that. So, from that perspective, if you look at this conference and the investment we're making here, some of the programs we're doing in terms of advocacy, what we call spend sellers, etc., is all about that community tribal feeling and go establish that. To use some inspiration from our consumer brands, if you really think about it, people don't buy what they want. People buy what they want to be. So, let me give you what I mean by that. What I want could be a bike. It could be any motorbike, but what I want to be could be part of a very special community and that's why Harley Davidson is successful. What I want could be any stationary bike today, but what I want to be is part of some cool community like Peloton. That's why Peloton is successful. So, similarly for us, what I want could be some spend management software, but what I want to be is part of this community, this cool club, and that's the feeling we're trying to create in the post-acquisition cycle. >> I love that you said that because you talked about that this morning and I loved how you had the word community on the slide and then broke that out into communication unity. And, one of the senses that I got yesterday when-- >> Chandar: Rob was talking about it. >> Yeah, when Rob kicked off everything is this is a very collaborative community. We think about that in terms in terms even like a developer community or something like that. But, Coupa is now managing $1.2 trillion of spend through the platform that every other business that's using Coupa gets to benefit from. It's customer-centric, it's supplier-centric, but it's about applying the right technologies, AI, machine learning, to all this data, so everybody benefits. >> That's right and one of the interesting aspects of community building is one aspect of community building is that Marc Benioff had a great, evangelistic marketing was a way of community building. He would come in and really evangelize and this is where we're going and you all need to come with us. When I was at Marketo, it was interesting. Community building was through more educational marketing and doing it through this, I'm going to educate you through though leadership. Another good way of community building is through product intelligence, which is community intelligence. So, collectively, the sum of all parts are smarter than the parts themselves. And, Rob has a great line, which says, "None of us is as smart as all of us." And, the fundamental community intelligence offering is based on this first principle. So, example, if I'm the community of Coupa customers, the next customer is smarter than the previous customer because the collective intelligence grew, which means I can then go benchmark it myself. I gave an example this morning of USO, the company that provides services to the United States troops. And, when Rick Quaintance at USO benchmarked himself using community intelligence, versus the rest of the community, he realizes that his invoice cycle times are seven times lower. So, that kind of intelligence is extremely beneficial and invaluable to companies. So, that's the value of the community, is providing the collective intelligence. Waze is a great consumer example. Those of us who use Waze for traffic know that it's all community driven and each one of us is smarter because we're collectively using it. It's the same concept in applying that to B2B software. >> So, as we see, you mentioned the over 80% of the buying decision is self-directed whether we're buying a car or Coupa software. Did Coupa foresee that in the last decade to see we're going to have to go to a more community-driven collaboration because the consumer of any thing, any product or service, is going to be so empowered 'cause that's a part of the Coupa foundation. >> It is. >> Lisa: Which, we don't see a lot in companies that are 10 plus years old. >> Yeah, and credit to Rob for his vision for this. It's because I think early part of the company, he wrote into the contracts that the company can benefit. Collectively, every company can benefit by being part of this community. And, the fact is data's aggregated, abstracted, there's no information that is sensitive, etc. But, the fact is we all can collectively benefit through it. That was a great vision of Rob and early people and that's benefited us because the benefit is really over scale and time. Now, your $1.2 trillion, it is really statistically significant in each different industry to get that intelligence. And, that is one of the other reasons we launched our business spend index. It's called spendindex.com. Where we can use the billions of dollars spent in the community to provide a leading indicator of economic growth based on current business spend sentiment. You think of ADP as this payroll, it's called ADP payroll thing that comes out and the gross domestic product report comes out. Those tend to be rear-view mirror lagging indicators. But, as we're using community-based intelligence to provide a windshield, a leading indicator of where the economy is going. So, there's so many different use cases. Benefiting based on spend you're doing as well as where the economy is going and all this is based on the intelligence. >> It's so powerful because, to your point, you're not looking behind. >> Chandar: It's the windshield. >> Exactly, able to be looking forward. So, with all the announcements and the great things that have come out with the AWS expansion, what you guys are doing with Coupa Pay. I was shocked to learn the percentages of businesses that are still writing paper checks. Or, the fact that a lot of companies have 10 plus banks that they're working with. There's still so much manual processes. You must just be, the future is so bright, you got to wear shades with Coupa. But, what excites you about what you guys have announced the last coupe of days and the feedback that you're hearing from your tribe? >> I think there's two kinds of things. One is continue to set the innovation agenda for the industry. And, really, you have to look at every customer on their unique journey of maturity and maturation, so we have a very thoughtful, what we call, maturity index, The business spend management index. Whereas, you are seeing some of these customers, for example, you mentioned, may be in the first stage of this maturity, where, for them, it's just getting automation and going from paper to paperless could be the first step. But, some other customers might say, "I've gotten there, "but I want to get the next level of sophistication "to orchestrate these business spend processes." So, what's exciting for us in the feedback is we're creating product capability across this maturation journey for our customers to make them successful at each of those places. And, Coupa Pay is one example of that. Whereas, some of the other pieces we talked about, we announced about some of the community offerings that we did also is on that. So, that's one exciting piece. The other exciting piece that customers tell us at this conference is, "Foster platforms for us "to engage with each other, learn from each other, "share from each other, and grow with each other." So, even stuff that Rob talked about, which is sourced together. This concept of customers coming together to drive a sourcing process and, again, the collective intelligence in the community, that, we're getting very, very positive feedback from that perspective. And, ultimately, Rob has a really good saying that, "It is not about customer satisfaction. "It is about customer success." That's a delineation there. A customer could be very satisfied with you, but they may not be necessarily successful. And, we say, it's not about satisfaction. It's about success. And, by creating this innovation cycle and then having a post-implementation process that's getting true value, that's truly how we drive customer success. >> And, something that I've heard over and over as I've talked to a number of your customers yesterday and today is how much they're feeling Coupa is listening. Their feedback is being incorporated. They're actually influencing the development of the technology and that was loud and clear the last two days. >> Yeah, I think there is, Rob talked about the number of features that are being influenced by the community and we have these-- >> 300 plus in the last 12 months. >> Yes, 300 plus in the last 12 months. And, there's this concept of two ears, one mouth. And, listen, learn, and innovate and that's the philosophy here. But, it's a right mix of listening to customers, learning from them, and getting the right input from them for driving innovation, as well as having strategic vision on where this market is going and having the right mix of those to provide the capability to customers. >> Wow, you're on a rocket ship. Chandar, it was great to have you on theCUBE. You'll have to come back. >> Yes, Lisa, absolutely, I'll come back and it was a pleasure being here. Awesome. >> Awesome, thank you so much. For Chandar, I'm Lisa Martin and you're watching theCUBE from Coupa Inspire '19. Thanks for watching. (techno music)

Published Date : Jun 26 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Coupa. it's Chandar, the CMO of Coupa. This is a really cool event. I loved how the last two days, what you guys to get the flywheel effect of first you drive awareness. that the stairway to marketing heaven. in terms of driving the right advocacy across all channels. 'Cause it's one thing to have on your And, if you take the same thing and extend it and the flywheel will pay off for you over time Why is it that you see these marketing budgets What gets measured gets funding at the end of the day. of the funnel and that's where product marketing comes in. And, that's why you have to balance the boat And, it's just not about the capability, And, one of the senses that I got yesterday when-- but it's about applying the right technologies, and doing it through this, I'm going to educate you Did Coupa foresee that in the last decade that are 10 plus years old. in the community to provide a leading indicator It's so powerful because, to your point, and the feedback that you're hearing from your tribe? And, really, you have to look at every customer of the technology and that was loud and that's the philosophy here. Chandar, it was great to have you on theCUBE. and it was a pleasure being here. and you're watching theCUBE from Coupa Inspire '19.

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Karen Steele, Marketo | CUBEConversations


 

(upbeat music) >> Hey, welcome back everybody. Jeff Frick here with the Cube. We're having the Cube conversation in our Palo Alto studio. The conference season is taking a little bit of a break, so now we can do interviews in the studio which is a little bit more comfortable situation, and we're really excited to have first time guest Karen Steele. She's the GVP of corporate marketing at Marketo. Karen, welcome. >> Thank you, very happy to be here Jeff. >> Absolutely. So, you are talking about something that I've seen in the research coming up to this about engagement. And right, everybody talks about engagement. What is engagement? People are trying to measure engagement, >> Karen: Yep. >> But then it seems like so many people are still stuck though on the mass broadcasting kind of numbers. The want big numbers which is a very different number than engagement. So You guys are getting really into this. Obviously Marketo a leader in marketing innovation and marketing platform. Is this new? Is it renewed focus? I mean, how do you guys deal with this whole concept of engagement? >> Yeah, so thanks. It's a great opening question because we are passionate about engagement. And in fact, we believe that today, people, human beings want to be engaged with as opposed >> to marketed to. >> Right. >> So our CEO created a vision of this idea called The Engagement Economy. And the idea is that everybody and everyone is connected. Today with the digital transformation happening around us, you can touch people, touch customers anywhere and everywhere throughout their journey. You know, before they buy from you, during the sales process and post sale. So, it's all about creating experience and we think the way to do that is through engagement. >> But it's kind of interesting 'cuz the dichotomy is we're in this Google world, right? And the Google world is, you know, build great engineering, people will come. It's all about the data. It's cookies and where have you been and you know, recommendation engines. And more of this kind of, feels more machine-y And not necessarily engage-y, Which is more of a person to person than necessarily a machine to person. >> Karen: Correct. >> But yet, even the person to person is still supported by and enabled by a lot of this technology. So it's this inter, intertwining of both kind of a person to machine, or machine to person, >> excuse me. >> Yep. >> Versus really connecting with, whether it be the brand, Whether it be a person that represents >> the brand >> Right. >> So how, how do you see this kind of evolving and how can people not get too wrapped up >> in the machine-y part? >> Right. >> And actually build a relationship, another word instead of engagement, with their customers, or even take it another step, with their constituents, if you will? >> Yes. >> And their community, >> even more passionate. >> Yes. Yeah, so I think it's interesting you brought up the machine aspect, 'cuz there's sort of a positive and negative. So if you think about the space we're in, it's called Marketing Automation. And it does feel sort of process oriented and machine-like. But at the end of the day, marketing has always been about the human being and building that relationship. And technology has just simply helped facilitate that and do it through multiple channels like never before. But it still comes down to the marketer's primary role is to connect with, in a personalized way, in an authentic way and create a relationship. A relationship that's going to generate advocacy for the brand, that's going to ultimately generate revenue for their business. So it's really important that engagement is about the human being and it's about how you can create positive experience throughout the lifecycle of the journey. >> Right, it's interesting you say experiences too, 'cuz we've seen a huge shift in into customers wanting really more of an experience or an engagement that's potentially tied to a brand. But you look at great experience marketers like Red Bull, >> Yep. >> To pull one out. >> That you know, buying and drinking a Red Bull, the way they've positioned that in the marketplace is really being part of this really cool thing. It's visually stimulating, it's you know, a lot of >> adrenaline, >> Yes. >> and a lot of cool stuff. And then the other one I always think of is Harley Davidson. And the passion that that community has around that motorcycle. But it's so much more than driving that motorcycle, >> You know? >> Yep. >> It's the open road and it's all the accessories and stuff that they put. You know people brand it on their arm. >> A lot of people. >> Right. >> So, in terms of you know how, how does that translate with newer brands? How do you try to get that type of connection with your customers, hold it, and I think you've mentioned in some of the things I've looked up for the interview you know, really thinking about the lifetime value of the customer as opposed to a transactional relationship? >> Right. >> That's a one time shot. >> Yeah, I mean a lot of the examples you, you just gave are very experiential in terms of the physical aspects of seeing, and feeling, and touching a brand. But a lot of digital marketing is, is not physical. And so you're communicating with people through a lot of channels that that are bits and bytes, and they're not looking somebody in the eye. And so I think being in touch with your brand and the messages you want to deliver. Making sure they're relevant and they carry your brand promise forward, and they connect with what that person wants to hear at exactly the right times. So for us engagement is, is about being smart in terms of reaching the person. If I use a social, or excuse me, a mobile device and that's my preferred way of communicating with you, I want you to reach me through that device, and not try and get me through direct mail or an email campaign. I might not pay attention to any of those things. So having that intelligence about your customer, or your prospect, or your partner, or even your employee is going to give you a better option to engage with them and create that one to one while you're still marketing one to many. >> Right. >> In terms of >> the actual relationship. >> And the other challenge a marketer obviously has too, is, I don't know who said it, we do too many shows. But you know, when it's done well, when suggestive selling is done well and recommendation engines are working well, it's magical. >> Yep. >> Right? >> It's what I want, when I want and it's presented to me. >> Yep. >> If it's done poorly, >> it's creepy, right? >> Yep. >> I don't necessarily >> know that you want to know that that was, you know what I was looking at. And obviously the target example which now is way far in the rear view mirror. But you know just because you have all the data, doesn't mean you can use all the data. And the challenge and the nuance of knowing what to use, when and where. >> Right. >> Well now you have >> so much more, kind of ammunition in >> your quiver if you will. >> Yep. >> Is a whole different type of a challenge. >> Yeah I think it's, it's a good point, and I think you're right. You don't want it to feel like big brother and somebody's following or stalking you, that's the last thing you want. But I think paying attention to the response, paying attention to a personalized message, testing that message, seeing what comes back, and helping execute the next thing that you do. And so there's sort of a fine line, but I definitely think the marketers are using the analytics today and it's just getting smarter and smarter. And we're going to talk about adaptive coming up here, >> I hope? >> Right, right. >> And you know, the big buzz right now which is AI, you know, what does AI mean for engagement? And we have some ideas around that >> as well. >> Right. >> Okay, so you broke it down to >> the big threes >> Yep. >> of the engagement economy. So the art of story telling. >> Karen: Yep. >> Adaptive engagement, >> as you just mentioned. >> Yep. >> And then advocacy. >> Karen: Yep. >> Which you talked about earlier before. So let's, let's kind of touch base on each one of those >> things. >> Great. >> How do you define 'em? Why are they important? So start out with the story telling. >> Yeah so it comes back to what we've already been talking about, which is the one to one relationship. Understanding who you're talking to. Crafting a message that, that resonates. Having that message be front and central to what your brand value is. You know, we are more prone to buy from somebody if we value their brand. You might make choices and pay a price premium if you care about a brand or how a brand interacts with you. So crafting the art of story telling is the right message, making sure it resonates, understanding your audience, and connecting it to the brand so you can make that >> emotional connection. >> Right, right. >> So how do you >> So, done, done well, >> you can do a very good job. >> Right, and it's always interesting to me, I always think, I watch sports on TV, right? I always think of the poor guy that just got assigned, I got to do a car commercial. Like, how many car commercials have been created up till now? And I got to think of a new one. >> Right. >> But, >> But you know, kind of traditional, kind of high end TV broadcast commercials are really story telling. I mean, some of them are fascinating what they can actually convey in a 30 second >> ad. >> Right. >> Or whether it's a Coke commercial and makes you cry at the end. So that, that, and that format has, has pretty well developed. But how are you seeing it translated into all these various digital formats and really short engagements, or it's a Snapchat, or it's (snaps fingers) you know a quick hit on Instagram, or it's a Facebook post. >> Karen: Yep. >> How are you seeing some of that story telling evolve into these different kind of communication mediums, if you will? >> Yep. >> And, and you >> you have so many that you have >> to >> Right. >> Jeff: to manage, right? A huge challenge. >> Yeah, and again, I think it's the authenticity as I said, but also the personalized nature of it. I want to deliver a message that matters to you. Where you want to receive that message. I might want to deliver something different to somebody else through an entirely different channel. So, but crafting the story, having the story be based on what you stand for as a brand, and the value for that customer, or whoever the message is, you're attempting to land it on >> Right. >> is still foundational and fundamental. And I think that a lot of the marketing, because technology's automated so much, we've lost a little bit of the art of the story. And really making the story connect back to you as a brand so you deliver the best message to your customer. >> Right. So that kind of feeds into your second one which you described as adaptive engagement. Which I presume is situational, contextual. >> Correct. >> That defines the how, the when, the where, the why. >> Yeah. Yeah, and I think in terms of our vision, so yes it is about delivering the right message, at the right time, to the right person to get the response you want. That's sort of the basics of adaptive and being able to do that very flexibly with technology. But when we think about adaptive and the next generation of it, we think about the impact that AI will have on engagement or marketing. So imagine a marketer today could say to their engagement platform, let's say the Marketo engagement platform, "I want to understand an outcome "and the best way to go about it. "I want to know how I can increase sales "in a particular region, in a particular quarter." And the engagement platform, based on that outcome that I want, will help determine what the right campaign is, what creative elements you put in that campaign based on the assets you've created, and importantly, who you target. And what is the audience? And think of almost just creating that outcome, having the platform deliver that whole experience when you push a button. And that entire campaign gets executed. >> Right, right. >> So that, I think is the future of adaptive. >> Because you'll be able to run you know, A/B test is probably not a very accurate description, >> right? >> Right. >> 'Cuz it's a multi, much more multivariate test that you can run and really >> start to optimize >> Right. >> for a much tighter group of attributes of your customer. >> Than >> Right. >> you ever could >> Yeah, and we >> in the past. >> Jeff: Or try to think of every kind of variable. >> And we do that today, but I think, I think now what we're saying is the marketer's going to truly be in the power seat where they can say not just, "Here's two ideas, test one against the other." It's basically, here's the outcome I want. >> Jeff: Right. >> Tell me exactly the best way to put that message out. What channel it should go through, who it should be delivered to, and run it. And so I think that's going to be the future of adaptive. >> Interesting. And then the third A, that you have, of engagement economy is advocacy. >> Heart and soul of any brand strategy. You know customers, loyal customers, are great customers and you want to create advocacy and relationships. I think when companies talk about advocacy, they talk about "I want a customer reference. "I want somebody who's going to approve a customer story "or a quote in a press release." We go far beyond that when we think about advocacy. We want customers that are going to partner with other customers and make the community around us better. >> And so, >> Right. >> they're speaking on behalf of our brand, Marketo, but they're also making our brand stronger and the relationships they're creating around Marketo. So we have a program called Purple Select, which has about 1200 customers, that every single day you know, we're putting challenges forward for them. We're offering them places to go, you know, generate conversations in community. And as a result they give stuff back to us. >> And they >> Right, right. >> make things available to us that otherwise wouldn't be. >> It's really kind of analogous to open source, right? The fact that you know >> all the smartest people >> Yep. >> in the world, don't happen to reside in your four walls. >> And >> Yep. >> you know, if you can use your product service offering platform, store, as a basis point for an engaged community to engage around, through, with. >> Correct. >> You know, >> you get you know, one plus one makes three, or ten for that, so huge. >> Absolutely. >> Huge kind of shift in, in thinking to really kind of open it up and to share and be collaborative and find out what other people >> are doing. >> And let, >> I think that's a great point. And let the advocates be your heroes. Let them advance their careers based on learning your technology, participating in your community and taking you know, their businesses forward in terms of success from a marketing standpoint. >> So I'm just curious in terms of the holy grail of measuring engagement. You know, kind of your thoughts on that. I mean there are obviously engagement measures out there. >> Karen: Right. >> How do you, you know, what are some of the things you look at to measure engagement. Or that you tell people they should look at to measure engagement. And how do you see engagement as a metric, as an actionable metric kind of evolving? Now that we have so many more potential touchpoints, >> datapoints, >> Right. >> other ways to measure. >> Yeah, so I think in the traditional marketing automation world, which we have played a big part in over the years, the true measurement has always been about pipeline. >> 'Cuz you're >> Right. >> you're doing campaigns to generate revenue for your business. I don't think that goes away, but it gets extended to across the entire lifecycle. So it's not just new customer acquisition. It's up-sell, it's cross-sell, it's renewals if you're in a softwares as service business. So it's lifetime value, not just revenue. >> Jeff: Right, right. >> It's advocacy, not just references. It's you know, peer to peer. There's this whole idea of voice of the customer. There're new companies out there like TrustRadius and G2 Crowd which provide platforms now for customers to do reviews on products and rank companies. And making that available to users gives everybody a voice in the process. >> So. >> Right. >> There's a whole bunch of new metrics, many of them are going to be, you know, very, very much around emotional connections back to your brand. And participation in the community. Today we have the marketing nation which is a 60,000 person community. The way I can cultivate content on that and grow people's roles in participating in that dialogue, is certainly an engagement measure for us. And it will lead to stronger sales, it will lead to stronger you know, preference in terms of our brand. It will lead to premium pricing if we want to do that in the future, et cetera. >> And then I wonder too, if you could just speak to the evolving role of marketing. Not only within the company, but specifically within IT spend, and business analytics spend, and really as a driver. >> Because before >> Yep. >> the analytics was really a service provider to the rest of the company >> and we gave you >> Yep. >> your quarterlies and your weekly sales reports and you know, that was kind of the role of IT. Now we're seeing IT as a business partner stepping in to say, "Here's all these cool technologies." But now marketing and the marketing automation which is way ahead of the automation >> Right. >> in a lot of >> the other places, is really driving that, and you've got measure, measurable results, and you can connect to all the different channels that are new that weren't there two years ago when you just had newspaper and >> Yep. >> and billboards and TVs. >> So you know, as that has evolved how have you seen, you know, marketing's role change in terms of kind of, power seat at the table, driving IT, investment decisions and those types of things? >> Obviously Marketo's >> Yep. >> were those decisions for a lot of companies. >> Yeah and it's a great conversation because there's been a lot of talk about the, the hybrid CMO, and what does that look like today? Because the CIO and the CMO now have to be in lockstep. In many cases now, the CMO's technology budget is looking as large as the CIO's technology budget. >> Right, right. >> And so. >> And then there's this other notion of if marketing owns the customer experience, or all things around customer engagement, are they not, in fact, the chief customer officer? And so, there's a whole bunch of things that I think are crossing lines. But I think it's great news for the marketer, because they need to be more customer centric, they need to be more data centric, and ultimately they sit in a really pivotal place in the organization to achieve many of those things. >> Right. And it's still interesting, and for all the soft things, I'll call it a soft thing, of engagement and lifetime value and some of these, some of these things that aren't necessarily tied to the bottom line at the end of the quarter, >> Right. >> every quarter. >> We still have to respond to that. And at the end of the day there has to be some, some ties, some connection, some demonstrated >> value of these efforts. >> Right. >> It can't just be for you know, apple pie and lemonade, I forget the expression. But anyway (laughs). So, 'cuz it still has to tie back to business, right? >> Absolutely. >> Still has to pay the bills, >> still has to get more sales. >> Absolutely. >> But what you're >> saying is, is it does. Engagement does translate into sales. >> Engagement translates to sales. Engagement translates to brand preference. Engagement translates to price premium. Engagement translates to advocacy. I mean, engagement is, it's such an active way to move the market forward that I think there's going to be a whole set of new metrics that combine sales enablement and sales processes as well because as marketing and sales partner, you know, from a sales engagement standpoint to go after named accounts, the ones that are most strategic to the business we're going to see a huge shift in terms of sales, sales engagement metrics as well. >> Just as you're saying that, I'm thinking of brands, right? And always the debate about the power of brand, and does brand still have power? And I think it does, but the market's really kind of bifurcated where either the brand is super powerful, or has zero power, you know, kind of depending on the product or the engagement. It sounds like really, engagement is probably the best way to make sure your brand can't be replaced by the old white label stuff that they used to have at the grocery store. >> Karen: Yeah. >> 'Cuz people got to be connected. >> Karen: Yep. >> Jeff: Not just a label. >> And they need to care about, people need to ultimately care about the relationship. Not the one thing. You know it used to be you dropped a direct mail, it was sort of an episode and you were never having a dialogue. Today, there's so many ways and so many channels to reach people, you have to have a consistent way to engage and a consistent way to look at, did I move the needle forward? Am I ultimately renewing that customer? Or generating more loyalty from that customer? Or you know, referenceability or advocacy. And so, engagement helps you do that through all the channels. >> It's interesting 'cuz the customer can engage with you, whether you, or communicate with you, whether you >> necessarily want it or not. >> That's right. >> And in new ways that were heretofore nonexistent. >> Karen: That's right. >> Fun stuff. >> Yeah. >> Great place to be. >> Well Karen, I loved >> Yeah. >> sitting down and talking about engagement. It's a thing we talk about here all the time. >> Great. >> It's really how we should measure success, it's how we know we're getting through and look forward to a follow up. I know you have some research coming out, and some books coming out, and Marketo's up to all kinds of stuff. So we will look for that in the not so distant future. >> Awesome. >> Alright. >> Thank you. >> We look forward to it. >> Absolutely, she's Karen >> Thanks a lot. >> Steele from Marketo, I'm Jeff Frick, you're watching the Cube. Thanks for watching, we'll see ya next time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jul 21 2017

SUMMARY :

She's the GVP of corporate marketing at Marketo. something that I've seen in the research I mean, how do you guys deal with And in fact, we believe that today, And the idea is that everybody And the Google world is, you know, kind of a person to machine, or machine to person, But at the end of the day, marketing has always been Right, it's interesting you say experiences too, it's you know, a lot of And the passion that the accessories and stuff that they put. and the messages you want to deliver. And the other challenge a marketer obviously has too, and it's presented to me. And the challenge and the nuance and helping execute the next thing that you do. So the art of story telling. Which you talked about earlier before. How do you define 'em? and connecting it to the brand so you can make that Right, and it's always interesting to me, But you know, kind of traditional, and makes you cry at the end. Jeff: to manage, right? and the value for that customer, And really making the story connect back to you as a brand which you described as adaptive engagement. the how, the when, the where, at the right time, to the right person of your customer. It's basically, here's the outcome I want. And so I think that's going to be the future of adaptive. And then the third A, that you have, and make the community around us better. that every single day you know, you know, if you can use your you get you know, one plus one makes three, And let the advocates be your heroes. the holy grail of measuring engagement. of the things you look at to measure engagement. the true measurement has always been about pipeline. across the entire lifecycle. And making that available to users many of them are going to be, you know, And then I wonder too, if you could just speak and you know, that was kind of the role of IT. Because the CIO and the CMO now have to be in lockstep. place in the organization to achieve many of those things. And it's still interesting, and for all the soft things, And at the end of the day there has to be some, It can't just be for you know, Engagement does translate into sales. the ones that are most strategic to the business And always the debate about the power of brand, to reach people, you have to have a consistent way And in new ways that were It's a thing we talk about here all the time. I know you have some research coming out, I'm Jeff Frick, you're watching the Cube.

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