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Steven Jones, AWS | VMware Explore 2022


 

>>Okay, welcome back to everyone. Cube's live coverage of VMware Explorer, 2022. I'm John fur, host of the cube. Two sets three days of live coverage. Dave Ante's here. Lisa Martin, Dave Nicholson, all host of the cube 12 interviews today, just we're with Rocklin and rolling, getting down to the end of the show. As we wind down and look back and look at the future. We've got Steven Jones. Here's the general manager of the VMware cloud on AWS. He's with Amazon web service. Steven Jones. Welcome to the cube. >>Thanks John. >>Welcome back cube alumni. I've been on many times going back to 2015. Yeah. >>Pleasure to be here. Great >>To see you again. Thanks for coming on. Obviously 10 years at AWS, what a ride is that's been, come on. That's fantastic. Tell me it's been crazy. >>Wow. Learned a lot of stuff along the way, right? I mean, we, we, we knew that there was a lot of opportunity, right? Customers wanting the agility and flexibility of, of the cloud and, and we, we still think it's early days, right? I mean, you'll hear Andy say that animals say that, but it really is. Right. If you look at even just the amount of spend that's being spent on, on clouds, it's in the billions, right. And the amount of, of spend in it is still in the trillion. So there's, there's a long way to go and customers are pushing us hard. Obviously >>It's been interesting a lot going on with VM. We're obviously around with them, obviously changing the strategy with their, their third generation and their narrative. Obviously the Broadcom thing is going on around them. And 10 years at abs, we've been, we've been, this'll be our ninth year, no 10th year at reinvent coming up for us. So, but it's 10 years of everything at Amazon, 10 years of S three, 10 years of C two. So if you look at the, the marks of time, now, the history books are starting to be written about Amazon web services. You know, it's about 10 years of full throttle cube hyperscaler in action. I mean, I'm talking about real growth, like >>Hardcore, for sure. I'll give you just one anecdote. So when I first joined, I think we had maybe two EC two instances back in the day and the maximum amount of memory you could conversion into one of these machines was I think 128 gig of Ram fast forward to today. You literally can get a machine with 24 terabytes of Ram just in insane amounts. Right? My, my son who's a gamer tells me he's got 16 gig in his, in his PC. You need to, he thinks that's a lot. >>Yeah. >>That's >>Excited about that. That's not even on his graphics card. I mean, he's, I know it's coming next. The GPU, I mean, just all >>The it's like, right? >>I mean, all the hardware innovation that you guys have done, I mean, look at every it's changed. Everyone's changed their strategy to copy AWS nitro, Dave ante. And I talk about this all the time, especially with James Hamilton and the team over there, Peter DeSantos, these guys have, are constantly going at the atoms and innovating at the, at the level. I mean that, that's how hardcore it is over there right now. I mean, and the advances on the Silicon graviton performance wise is crazy. I mean, so what does that enabling? So given that's continuing, you guys are continuing to do great work there on the CapEx side, we think that's enabling another set of new net new applications because we're starting to see new things emerge. We saw snowflake come on, customer of AWS refactor, the data warehouse, they call it a data cloud. You're starting to see Goldman Sachs. You see capital one, you see enterprise customers building on top of AWS and building a cloud business without spending the CapEx >>Is exactly right. And Ziggy mentioned graviton. So graviton is one of our fastest growing compute families now. And you know, you mentioned a couple of ISVs and partners of ours who are leaning in heavily on porting their own software. Every event Adam announced that we're working with SAP to, to help them port their HANA cloud, which is a, a database of service offering HANA flagship to graviton as well. So it's, it's definitely changing. >>And I think, you know, one of the, and we're gonna circle back to VMware is kind of a point to this. This conversation is that, is that if you look at the trends, right, okay. VMware really tried hard to do cloud and they had a good shot at it V cloud air, but it just, they didn't have the momentum that you guys had at AWS. We saw a lot, lot of other stragglers try to do cloud. They fell off the road, OpenStack, HP, and the list goes on and on. I don't wanna get into that, but the point is, as you guys become more powerful and you're open, right? So you have open ecosystem, you have people now coming back, taking advantage and refactoring and picking up where they left off. VMware was the one of the first companies that actually said, you know what pat Gelsinger said? And I was there, let's clear up the positioning. Let's go all in with AWS. That's >>Right >>At that time, 2016. >>Yeah. This was new for us, for >>Sure. And then now that's set the standard. Now everybody else is kind of doing it. Where is the VMware cloud relationship right now? How is that going out? State's worked. >>It's working well very well. It's I mean, we're celebrating, I think we made the announcement what, five years ago at this conference. Yeah. 2016. So, I mean, it's, it's been a tremendous ride. The best part are the customers who were coming and adopting and proving to us that our vision back then was the right vision. And, and, and what's been different. I think about this relationship. And it was new for us was that we, we purposely went after a jointly engineered solution. This wasn't a, we've got a, a customer or a partner that's just going to run and build something on us. This is something where we both bring muscle and we actually build a, a joint offering together. Talk about, about the main difference. >>Yeah. And that, and that's been working, but now here at this show, if you look at, if you squint through the multi-cloud thing, which is like just, I think positioning for, you know, what could happen in, in a post broad Broadcom world, the cloud native has traction they're Tansu where, where customers were leaning in. So their enterprise customer is what I call the classic. It, you know, mainstream enterprise, which you guys have been doing a lot of business with. They're now thinking, okay, I'm gonna go on continu, accelerate on, in the public cloud, but I'm gonna have hybrid on premise as well. You guys have that solution. Now they're gonna need cloud native. And we were speculating that VMware is probably not gonna be able to get 'em all of it. And, and that there's a lot more cloud native options as customers want more cloud native. How do you see that piece on Amazon side? Because there's a lot of benefits between the VMware cloud on AWS and the services that you guys have natively in your cloud. So we see customers really taking advantage of the AWS goodness, as well as expanding the cloud side at VMware cloud on AWS. >>Yeah. There's probably two ways I would look at this. Right? So, so one is the combination of VMware cloud on AWS. And then both native services just generally brings more options to customers. And so typically what we're seeing now is customers are just able to move much faster, especially as it comes to data center, evacuations, migrating all their assets, right? So it used to be that, and still some customers they're like, I I've gotta think through my entire portfolio of applications and decide what to refactor. And the only way I can move it to cloud is to actually refactor it into some net new application, more and more. We're actually seeing customers. They've got their assets. A lot of them are still on premises in a VMware state, right. They can move those super quick and then modernize those. And so I think where you'll see VMware and AWS very aligned is on this, this idea of migrate. Now you need to get the benefits of TCO and, and the agility that comes with being in the cloud and then modernize. We took a step further, which is, and I think VMware would agree here too, but all of the, the myriad of services, I think it's 200 plus now AWS native services are for use right alongside any that a customer wants to run in VMware. And so we have examples of customers that are doing just, >>And that's, that's how you guys see the native and, and VMware cloud integrating in. Yeah, that's, that's important because this, I mean, if I always joke about, you know, we've been here 12 years listening in the hallways and stuff, you know, on the bus to the event last night, walking the parties and whatnot, listening in the streets, there's kind of two conversations that rise right to the top. And I wanna get your reaction to this Steven, because this seems to be representative of this demographic here at VMware conference, there's conversations around ransomware and storage and D dub and recovery. It's all, a lot of those happen. Yeah. Clearly a big crowd here that care about, you know, Veeam and NetApp and storage and like making sure stuff's secure and air gapped. And a lot of that kind of, I call nerdy conversations and then the other one is, okay, I gotta get the cloud story. >>Right. So there's kind of the operational security. And then there's like, okay, what's my path to true cloud. I need to get this moving. I need to have better applications. My company is the application now not it serves some sort of back office function. Yeah. It's like, my company is completely using technology as its business. So the app is the business. So that means everything's technology driven, not departmental siloed. So there's a, that's what I call the true cloud conversation. How do you, how do you see that evolving because VMware customers are now going there. And I won't say, I won't say they're behind, but they're certainly going there faster than ever before. >>I think, I think, I mean, it's an interesting con it's an interesting way to put it and I, I would completely agree. I think it's, it's very clear that I think a lot of customer companies are actually being disrupted. Right. And they have to move fast and reinvent themselves. You said the app is now becoming the company. Right. I mean, if, if you look at where not too many years back, there were, you know, big companies like Netflix that were born in the cloud. Right. Airbnb they're disruptors. >>There's, that's the >>App, right? That's the app. Yeah. So I, I would exactly agree. And, and that's who other companies are competing with. And so they have to move quickly. You talked about some, some technology that allows them to do that, right? So this week we announced the general availability of a NetApp on tap solution. It's been available on AWS for some time as a fully managed FSX storage solution. But now customers can actually leverage it with, with VMC. Now, why is that important? Well, there's tens of thousands of customers running VMware. On-premises still, there's thousands of them that are actually using NetApp filers, right? NetApp, NetApp filers, and the same enterprise features like replication. D do you were talking about and Snapp and clone. Those types of things can be done. Now within the V VMware state on AWS, what's even better is they can actually move faster. So consider replicating all this, you know, petabytes and petabytes of data that are in these S from on-premises into AWS, this, this NetApp service, and then connected connecting that up to the BMC option. So it just allows customers much, much. >>You guys, you guys have always been customer focus. Every time I sat down with the Andy jazzy and then last year with Adam, same thing we worked back from, I know it's kind of a canned answer on some of the questions from media, but, but they do really care. I've had those conversations. You guys do work backwards from the customer, actually have documents called working backwards. But one of the things that I observed, we talked about here yesterday on the cube was the observations of reinvent versus say, VM world. Now explore is VM world's ecosystem was very partner-centric in the sense of the partners needed to rely on VMware. And the customers came here for both more of the partners, not so much VMware in the sense there wasn't as much, many, many announcements can compare that to the past, say eight years of reinvent, where there's so much Amazon action going on the partners, I won't say take as a second, has a backseat to Amazon, but the, the attendees go there generally for what's going on with AWS, because there's always new stuff coming out. >>And it's, it's amazing. But this year it starts to see that there's an overlap or, or change between like the VMware ecosystem. And now Amazon there's, a lot of our interviews are like, they're on both ecosystems. They're at Amazon's show they're here. So you start to see what I call the naturalization of partners. You guys are continuing to grow, and you'll probably still have thousands of announcements at the event this year, as you always do, but the partners are much more part of the AWS equation, not just we're leasing all these new services and, and oh, for sure. Look at us, look at Amazon. We're growing. Cause you guys were building out and look, the growth has been great. But now as you guys get to this next level, the partners are integral to the ecosystem. How do you look at that? How has Amazon thinking about that? I know there's been some, some, a lot of active reorgs around AWS around solving this problem or no solve the problem, addressing the need and this next level of growth. What's your reaction to >>That? Well, I mean, it's, it's a, it's a good point. So I have to be honest with you, John. I, I, I spent eight of my 10 years so far at AWS within the partner organization. So partners are very near and dear to my heart. We've got tens of thousands of partners and you are you're right. You're starting to see some overlap now between the VMware partner ecosystem and what we've built now in AWS and partners are big >>By the way, you sell out every reinvent. So it's, you have a lot of partners. I'm not suggesting that you, that there's no partner network there, but >>Partners are critical. I mean, absolutely naturally we want a relationship with a customer, but in order to scale the way we need to do to meet the, the needs of customers, we need partners. Right. We, we can't, we can't interact with every single customer as much as we would like to. Right. And so partners have long built teams and expertise that, that caters to even niche workloads or opportunity areas. And, and we love partners >>For that. Yeah. I know you guys do. And also we'll point out just to kind of give props to you guys on the partner side, you don't, you keep that top of the stack open on Amazon. You've done some stuff for end to end where customers want all Amazon, but for the most part, you let competition come in, even on, so you guys are definitely partner friendly. I'm just observing more the maturization of partners within the reinvent ecosystem, cuz we're there every year. I mean, it's, I mean, first of all, they're all buzzing. I mean, it's not like there's no action. There's a lot of customers there it's sold out as big numbers, but it just seems that the partners are much more integrated into the value proposition of at a AWS because of the, the rising tide and, and now their enablement, cuz now they're part of the, of the value proposition. Even more than ever before >>They, they really are. And they, and they're building a lot of capabilities and services on us. And so their customers are our customers. And like you say, it's rising tide, right. We, we all do better together. >>Okay. So let's talk about the VMware cloud here. What's the update here in terms of the show, what's your, what's your main focus cuz a lot of people here are doing, doing sessions. What's been some of the con content that you guys are producing here. >>Yeah. So the best part obviously is a always the customer conversations to partner conversations. So a, a lot of, a lot of sessions there, we did keynote yesterday in Ryan and I, where we talked about a number of announcements that are, I think pretty material now to the offering a joint announcement with NetApp yesterday as well around the storage solution I was talking about. And then some, some really good technical deep dives on how the offering works. Customers are still interested in like how, how do I take what I've got on premises and easily move into AWS and technology like HSX H CX solution with VMware makes it really easy without having to re IP applications. I mean, you know, it is super difficult sometimes to, to move an application. If you've got figure out where all the firewall rules are and re iPing those, those things source. But yeah, it's, it's been fantastic. >>A lot of migrations to the cloud too. A lot of cloud action, new cloud action. You guys have probably seen an uptake on services right on the native side. >>Yes. Yes. For sure. So maybe I just outlined some of the, some of the assets we made this week. So absolutely >>Go ahead. >>We, we announced a new instance family as a, a major workhorse underneath the VMware cloud offering called I, I, you mentioned nitro earlier, this is on, based on our latest generation of nitro, which allows us to offer as you know, bare metal instances, which is, which is what VMware actually VMware was our first partnership and customer that I would say actually drove us to really get Nira done and out the door. And we've continued to iterate on that. And so this I four, I instance, it's based on the, the latest Intel isolate processor with more than double the Ram double the compute, a whopping 75 gigabytes per second network. So it's a real powerhouse. The cool thing is that with the, with the NetApp storage solution that we, we discussed, we're now disaggregating the need to provision, compute and storage at the same time. It used to be, if you wanted to add more storage to your VSAN array, that was on a V VMware cloud. Yeah. You'd add another note. You might not need more compute for memory. You'd have to add another note. And so now customers can simply start adding chunks of storage. And so this opens up customers. I had a customer come to me yesterday and said, there's no reason for us not to move. Now. We were waiting for something that like this, that allowed us to move our data heavy workloads yeah. Into VMware cloud. It's >>Like, it's like the, the alignment. You mentioned alignment earlier. You know, I would say that VMware customers are lined up now almost perfectly with the hybrid story that's that's seamless or somewhat seems it's never truly seamless. But if you look at like what Deepak's doing with Kubernetes and open source, you, you guys have that there talking that big here, you got vs a eight vSphere, eight out it's all cloud native. So that's lined up with what you guys are doing on your services and the horsepower. They have their stuff, you have yours that works better together. So it seems like it's more lined up than ever before. What's your take on that? Do you agree? And, and if so, what folks watching here that are VMware customers, what's, what's the motivation now to go faster? >>Look, it is, it is absolutely lined up. We are, as, as I mentioned earlier, we are jointly engineering and developing this thing together. And so that includes not just the nuts and bolts underneath, but kind of the vision of where it's going. And so we're, we're collectively bringing in customer feedback. >>What is that vision real quick? >>So that vision has to actually help an under help meet even the most demanding customer workloads. Okay. So you've got customer workloads that are still locked in on premises. And why is that? Well, it used to be, there was big for data and migration, right? And the speed. And so we continue to iterate this and that again is a joint thing. Instead of say, VMware, just building on AWS, it really is a, a tight partnership. >>Yeah. The lift and shift is a, an easy thing to do. And, and, and by the way, that could be a hassle too. But I hear most people say the reason holding us back on the workloads is it's just a lot of work, a hassle making it easier is what they want. And you guys are doing that. >>We are doing that. Absolutely. And by the way, we've got not just engineering teams, but we've got customer support teams on both sides working together. We also have flexible commercial options, right? If a customer wants to buy from AWS because they've negotiated some kind of deal with us, they can do that. They wanna buy from VMware for a similar reason. They could buy from VMware. So are >>They in the marketplace? >>They are in the market. There, there are some things in the marketplace. So you talked about Tansu, there's a Tansu offering in the marketplace. So yes. Customers can >>Contract. Yeah. Marketplaces. I'm telling you that's very disruptive. I'm Billy bullish on the market AIOS marketplace. I think that's gonna be a transformative way. People have what they procure and fully agree, deploy and how, and channel relationships are gonna shift. I think that's gonna be a disruptive enabler to the partner equation and, and we haven't even seen it yet. We're gonna be up there in September for their inaugural event. I think it's a small group, but we're gonna be documenting that. So even final question for you, what's next for you? What's on the agenda. You got reinvent right around the corner. Your P ones are done. Right? I know. Assuming all that, I turn that general joke. That's an internal Amazon joke. FYI. You've got your plan. What's next for the world. Obviously they're gonna go this, take this, explore global. No matter what happens with Broadcom, this is gonna be a growth wave with hybrid. What's next for you and your team with AWS and VMware's relationship? >>Yeah. So both of us are hyper focused on adding additional options, both from a, an instance compute perspective. You know, VMware announced some, some, some additional offerings that we've got. We've got a fully complete, like, so they're, they announce things like VMware flex compute V VMware flex storage. You mentioned earlier, there was a conversation around ransomware. There's a new ransomware based offering. So we're hyper focused on rounding out, continuing to round out the offering and giving customers even more choice >>Real quick. Jonathan made me think about the ransomware we were at reinforce Steven Schmidtz now the CSO. Now you got a CSO. AJ's the CSO. You got a whole focus, huge emphasis on security right now. I know you always have, but now it's much more public. It's PO more positive, I think, than some of the other events I've been to. It's been more Lum and doom. What's the security tie in here with VMware. Can you share a little bit real quick on the security piece update around this relationship? >>Yeah, you bet. So as you know, security for us is job zero. Like you don't have anything of security. And so what are the things that, that we're excited about specifically with VMware is, is the latest offering that, that we put together and it's called this, this ransomware offering. And it's, it's a little bit different than other ransomware. I mean, a lot of people have ransomware offerings today, just >>Air gap. >>Right, right, right. Exactly. No, that's easy. No, this one is different. So on the back end, so within VMC, there's this, this option where CU we can be to be taking iterative snapshots of a customer environment. Now, if an event were to occur, right. And a customer is like, I have to know if I'm compromised, we can actually spin up super easy. This is cloud. Remember? Yeah. We can spin up a, a copy of this environment, throw a switch, pick a snapshot with NSX. So VMware NSX firewall it off and then use some custom tooling from VMware to actually see if it's been compromised or not. And then iterate through that until you actually know you're clean. And that's different than just tools that do maybe a >>Little bit of scam. We had Tom gills on yesterday and, and one of the things Dave ante had to leave is taking the sun to college is last one in the house and B nester now, but Tom Gill was on. We were talking about how good their security story is ware. And they really weren't showboating it as much as they could have here. I thought they could have done a better job, but this is an example of kind of them really leaning in with you guys. That's the key part of the relationship. >>Yeah, it really is. And I think this is something is materially different than what you can get elsewhere. And it's exciting for, >>Okay. Now the, the real question I want to know is what's your plans for AWS reinvent the blockbuster end of the year, Amazon surf show that gets bigger and bigger. I know it's still hybrid now, but it's looking be hybrid, but people are back in person last year. You guys were the first event really come back and still had massive numbers. AWS summit, New York at 19,000. I heard last week in Chicago, big numbers. So we're expecting reinvent to be pretty large this year. What are you, what are you gonna do there? What's your role there? >>We are expecting, well, I'll be there. I cover multiple businesses. Obviously. We're, we're planning on some additional announcements, obviously in the VMware space as well. And one of the other businesses I run is around SAP. And you should look for some things there as well. Yeah. Really looking forward to reinvent, except for the fact that it's right after Thanksgiving. But I think it >>Always ruins my, I always get an article out. I like, why are you we're having, we're having Thanksgiving dinner. I gotta write this article. It's gotta get Adam, Adam. Leski exclusive. We, every year we do a, a CEO sit down with Andy was the CEO and then now Adam. But yeah, it's a great event to me. I think it sets the tone. And it's gonna be very interesting to see the big clouds are coming to the big cloud. You guys, and you guys are now called hyperscalers. Now, multiple words. It's interesting. You guys are providing the CapEx goodness for everybody else now. And that relationship seems to be the new, the new industry standard of you guys provide the enablement and then everyone you get paid, cuz it's a service. A whole nother level of cloud is emerging in the partner network, GSI other companies. Yeah. >>Yeah. I mean we're really scaling. I mean we continue to iterate and release regions at a fast clip. We just announced support for VMware in Hong Kong. Yeah. So now we're up to 21 regions for this service, >>The sovereign clouds right around the corner. Let's we'll talk about that soon. Steven. Thanks for coming. I know you gotta go. Thank you for your valuable time. Coming in. Put Steven Jones. Who's the general manager of the VMware cloud on AWS business. Four AWS here inside the cube day. Three of cube coverage. I'm John furrier. Thanks for watching. We'll be right back.

Published Date : Sep 1 2022

SUMMARY :

Lisa Martin, Dave Nicholson, all host of the cube 12 interviews today, just we're with Rocklin and rolling, I've been on many times going back to 2015. Pleasure to be here. To see you again. And the amount of, of So if you look at the, the marks of time, now, the history books are starting to be written about Amazon EC two instances back in the day and the maximum amount of memory you could conversion I mean, he's, I know it's coming next. I mean, all the hardware innovation that you guys have done, I mean, look at every it's changed. And you know, you mentioned a couple of ISVs and partners of ours who are leaning in And I think, you know, one of the, and we're gonna circle back to VMware is kind of a point to this. Where is the VMware The best part are the customers who were coming and adopting and proving lot of benefits between the VMware cloud on AWS and the services that you guys have natively in your cloud. And the only way I can move it to cloud is to actually refactor it into some net new application, And that's, that's how you guys see the native and, and VMware cloud integrating in. So the app is the business. I mean, if, if you look at where not And so they have to move quickly. And the customers came here for both more of the partners, So you start to see what I call the naturalization of partners. So I have to be honest with you, John. By the way, you sell out every reinvent. I mean, absolutely naturally we want a relationship Amazon, but for the most part, you let competition come in, even on, so you guys are definitely partner And like you say, it's rising tide, right. content that you guys are producing here. you know, it is super difficult sometimes to, to move an application. A lot of migrations to the cloud too. So maybe I just outlined some of the, some of the assets we made this week. the latest Intel isolate processor with more than double the Ram double So that's lined up with what you guys are doing on your services and the horsepower. And so that And the speed. And you guys are doing that. And by the way, we've got not just engineering teams, but we've got customer So you talked about Tansu, there's a Tansu offering in I think that's gonna be a disruptive enabler to the So we're hyper focused on rounding out, continuing to round out the offering I know you always have, but now it's much more public. So as you know, security for us is job zero. And a customer is like, I have to know if I'm compromised, we can actually spin up super easy. but this is an example of kind of them really leaning in with you guys. And I think this is something is materially different than what the blockbuster end of the year, Amazon surf show that And one of the other businesses I run is around SAP. And that relationship seems to be the new, the new industry standard of you guys I mean we continue to iterate and release regions at I know you gotta go.

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Day 3 Wrap Up | ServiceNow Knowledge15


 

live from Las Vegas Nevada it's the kue covering knowledge 15 brought to you by service now we're back this is Dave vellante with Jeff Frick this is the cube SiliconANGLE is continuous live production of knowledge 15 service now's awesome I have to say customer conference 9,000 people we always say Jeff that this is you know one of our favorite conference absolutely it really is it's just tremendous the innovation the excitement customer stories you never seen so many satisfied happy you know excited customers a great management story the messaging matches what's going on in the market a lot of fun cloud we heard about productivity increases expanding beyond IT some really cool new development environments some new capabilities mobile modern technologies that this company is using audience loved it and we heard today about a lot of cloud high availability ready for primetime lot going on and always the passionate customers I mean I think it's an interesting gauge for all the shows that we do to look at the percentage of customers that are on our own show and are willing to come on and talk about what they do versus just executives and partners and kind of more normal set and we continue to have just a tremendous representation here at servicenow now we've been coming for three years our third year in a row we're getting a bunch of new customers that we hadn't on before and really that's the thing that I think that's great i love that the kind of the completion of full circle of the vision that that for it talks about when he sits down he tells the story of year about building the platform that nobody wanted to buy because it was just a platform we known as budget for platform may have passed the budget for applications are solved problems put the application in play sell it be successful and then slowly that platform play comes back out as other people jump on and develop new apps new places to go and it really seems to kind of be hitting a stride not that it wasn't hitting us try it a year ago in Moscow knee remember my friend Omer Peres who was the CIO of Aetna international when I first met him in the early 2000s David floor and I had a CIO consultancy and Omer came in and was our sort of you know advisor and he worked for us many years we had a lot of fun and I used to ask him as a CIO what what's the one thing that you would want out of a software company for your IT operations and he said I want the ERP of IT so this was 2001-2002 we were like wow that's big task so not something we were going to build but that's essentially what service now has built right the ERP of IT they've used that terminology you know that whole notion of them making changes to my infrastructure and I need a single system of record that can manage those changes and document them make sure I'm in compliance with those changes have an audit for those changes and then extend into other business processes and that's exactly what these guys have built but but the neat thing is erp has with it's such a heavy connotation and big implementation and classic old-school Accenture and SI p coming in that's not going to sell best marketing right but now these guys are delivering the function but using today's modern technologies its cloud-based its continuous innovation its ongoing improvements you know the talking about rolling 30 days in not having this big monolithic let's design it let's build it let's deliver it now as we do that and push out well that's the thing they have to worry about it because people know what their platform looks like and it's like when moriches talked about the software mainframe and all the more people said oh don't use that term but essentially that's pretty powerful concept in virtualization world and I think ERP of IT is very powerful here the other interesting thing is we see service now extending into non IT domains throughout the organization we saw there was announcements Salesforce extending inward taking you know what is normally sort of their CRM system and now driving toward HR and we've been saying all week with two years ago we said wow app creator service creator that's like a pass layer that's kind of like Salesforce and interesting to see how the opportunity is going to collide down the road and that's exactly what's happening you'd expect that for a company like service now that has a 40 to 45 billion dollar Tam they're going to run into a lot of places and their advantage is they're running into those places with their what Frank sleeping calls their homies which our IT people why is that an advantage the reason why that's an advantage because I t touches every aspect of the business everybody gets an IT tax right right why do I get it's like the government they're everywhere in your life you can't get away from it the same thing with IT it's everywhere whether it's marketing finance sales logistics a chart doesn't IT technology is the substrate and touches every part of the business as a result I tea has purview over that entire view maybe not the right word but it's got visibility around the entire process is so it's going to be a really interesting dynamic as these this company grows into new spaces look at a company like Salesforce they're coming at it from a sales force right angle right very important function within the company but you know does it touch HR directly does it touch logistics that I touch you know to your effects finance but do they support the processes no so that's why i would say that service now has the advantage the flip side of that is you get a company like salesforce big company hot company huge community very very interesting dynamic emerging there yeah and it is it is kind of the base in the community from which you grow and i thought some of the interesting stories that came up over the last couple days where where is where the IT guy had an efficient process and effective process that gets people a new laptop to onboard new employees and the people in the department said hey that's pretty cool and you got that done pretty well how could we do that for some of our internal processes so you know they almost have IT now is an internal sales force we hear over and over again about the IT role changing and really building stores for their services and really getting entrepreneurial and changing the company there's just there's this a really good vibe and you know most great tech companies have a really strong leader at the helm who's got a personality that helps really define that company see it with Oracle you see it with Apple you know the jobs and and fred is ease and rock star but he's so he's such a humble guy he's so approachable he walks around and people are running up taking selfies with him and he you know he's one so humble but then too don't discount the vision the guy is super smart and still one of our favorite enemies we ever did was with Doug Leone two years ago describing his impression when he first talked two to Fred and listening to that vision and I I can't remember the exact quote but basically he's a really smart guy and he can make it a really simple and he knows where he's going well what I like about Fred laude well first of all I'm a groupie I admitted I tweeted out I'm a Fred ludie groupie and I with a bunch of our homie I guess I owe me here's the better I'm groupie I mean I am only because I just his a guy who's got tremendous vision you can talk to him about virtually any kind of technology subject obviously can talk about service now I just remember one of our interviews I think it was last year or maybe two years ago we're like Fred you know know you're super busy you probably got a runny goes no I got time let's keep going yeah all right right which I love I mean it's just like a lot of these you know times at these conferences that executives are so stressed out because they're being pulled in a million different directions and Fred just kind of takes it all in stride he loves talking to the people pressing the flesh people come up they want to touch him right like I lean right but you know you're that you're good analyst you study the numbers you look at this where do you think potential head winds are obviously they're growing the bigger profile they get the more targets are going to start coming on their back what do you think some of the head ones are going to come well I mean the near-term head wounds obviously our currency related and that's what sort of noctum knock service now off the of the 12 billion dollar market cap peak last Friday it has recovered that's a financial analyst this week and clearly they communicated the story in fact it's talking to Mike scarpelli CFO and he said look when you compare the the currency you know pre currency fluctuation numbers we blew it out okay and I think what the what the street did you know Ferrari was saying well the street really doesn't understand i think the street generally understands the opportunity generally right as best thing because they see high growth they see big Tim they see great management they see happy customers I mean what more do you need very own investment right and his valuation metrics obviously in cash flow but I think that that what what the street does understand is that there is a big opportunity here so i think that scarpelli and slew been communicated in a way that scared the street a little bit because they were being conservative they gave a little lighter guidance right and this street is used to service now just blowing away its numbers i said i said on friday this is a really healthy taking some air out of the bubble great love it very good good good it's a really healthy thing I like to see this kind of dynamic you get scared when companies start to you know expand beyond their their cam so so this to answer your question specifically and it sounds like cliche but I really do see that service nows headwinds and risks are execution risks I think they control their own destiny it's like a football team that can win out and make the playoffs I think that's the situation that service now is in right now its execution we heard from jay anderson i think i t scale internal IT scale is a risk and that's that's he's got a very very important job number one number two is I think you know we heard from dan McGee on the availability piece they are making some very bold claims about availability focus on security so that obviously is something that they've got to pay attention to the ability to scale their cloud but I really do see it as execution risk I don't speak competition right now as if everybody you know has said for the last 70 s all we got the ServiceNow killer we're not seeing the ServiceNow killer emerged nothing close to it you talk to customers it's very clear they're not spitting on there just admin seats and then what do you think in terms of is now we've seen you know amazon kind of lift up the covers on their cloud business and now expose that a little bit more to the street and start to break those numbers out and the impact of that on on these cloud based businesses and how they continue to to grow I think that's interesting so amazon today announced earnings in a broke out AWS 1.56 billion in revenue 256 million dollars in operating profit that's a 17-percent operating profit I have been saying for two or three years now that AWS is far more profitable than people realize everybody calls it a race 2 0.o race 20 race 20 race 20 the guys are say it's a race 20 the guys who can't compete with Amazon's cost structure seventeen percent operating profit is not erased 20 now what Jeff Bezos and Andy Jassy decide to do with that operating profit is a different story they'll pour it back into the business they'll expand their capex because the Amazon is one big lifestyle business for Jeff Bezos so but that's fine but so I have been saying and I've drawn the curves that what essentially Amazon is doing is they're they're taking the old outsourcing marginal economics of outsourcing which was my mess for less as you grow scale as you do more volume your marginal economics actually get worse there's diseconomies of scale the opposite of software and software we learned from Microsoft and the PC era the more volume you do the better your marginal economics and essentially your cost your economic marginal costs go to zero what Amazon is doing is they're taking the outsourcing line the provisioning of services you know technology services infrastructure services servers and storage and they're bringing that they're they're tracking the software curve so that means they're driving costs down lower than any I tea shop on the planet I don't care if the big banks think that they can compete with Amazon on on cost structure a long term they can't in my opinion now they can compete in other ways right you know with proprietary sort of you know value-added IP but on cost amazon google microsoft they are going to have a volume advantage and we're seeing it now in the numbers it's not a coincidence than amazon is seventeen percent AWS operating profits is because it's not a race to 0 they've got better marginal economics and so now does that have to do with service now we've heard a lot about multi-tenant versus multi-instance i think on balance from a pure infrastructure standpoint amazon is going to have better cost structure than service now but companies like service now an Oracle who have differentiable advantage through software it can sell software subscriptions or software licenses in the case of Oracle can make up that cost when my opinions that cost disadvantage in higher margin software and that's exactly what you see with service now I don't think they'll have the marginal economics of Microsoft but it's a great great business model long term yeah and the other two pieces of it that I think are really important and with bezels especially I mean the guy's a visionary and he's making enough money to execute what he wants to do and people don't believe it but they haven't believed it for 20 20 years and he continues to evolve the business and the other thing that still people have been outsourcing their payroll for how long why'd it take so long to start to outsource your IT infrastructure when people been outsourcing payroll forever I mean if you are focused on a particular business you can out execute people trying to do the same thing and that's the other advantage natick service now is they're very focused and I think some of the guests this week's agenda be a general purpose cloud we run our application and we run our application better than anyone else and it oh by the way just so happens that our application is really a platform and there's a whole lot of other applications that you can build on and beyond the ones that we did so I think it's I think it's really good opportunity I kind of like the data point that we heard this week I don't if you picked up on the nuance but several executives at servicenow said that their intelligence says that most customers are saying we want to place most of our workload over time into the public cloud now you could say service now is biased okay emc is gonna say the exact in vmware they can say the exact opposite right ibm's going to say the up no most most of the world is going to be hybrid okay so you got Andy Jassy on one side say the whole world's going to the public cloud you got you know joe tucci and the other end say and the most of the world's going to be hybrid you know how do you square that circle and i think that the growth workloads are very clearly going into the to the public cloud Andy there's no question about that and you know it's just the way numbers work if you got public cloud workloads growing at twenty thirty fifty percent a year and you got a private cloud workloads growing at zero percent a year a two percent a year at some point they're going to catch up right so I think the vast majority of work is going to be done over time in in the public cloud that's not to say everybody's going to you know big do a big switch there's still plenty of applications there they're 20 years old that are going to stay you know behind the four walls of the the data center within a company but the economics of doing that are not going to be as good so you have to have other reason there's got to be whether it's you know really good business value reasons competitive advantage reasons security or compliance compliance i think is up in is a huge one well i mean amazon has great security the issue with amazon is they won't do one offs service now you know we'll go belly to belly with customers and bend over backwards and do things for the enterprise customers that amazon won't this is why you saw when workday launched its analytics service on AWS nobody bought it because they said well i just negotiated an SLA and a security you know deal with you and and we've agreed on the parameters of that now you're saying to access my analytics piece I got to go with Amazon's SLA that's not cool I can't get that by my lawyers forget it it's too hard right so yeah so I think people really kind of need to think about that service now is in an interesting position to be able to do those things for the enterprise that are what Amazon would consider on natural amazon strategy is any color you want as long as it's black let's add things over time that everybody can take advantage of by the way I think that's a great strategy and it's going to it's a long term winning strategy but so the way you compete with Amazon it's interesting somebody tweeted it's it's it's kind of weird to see Dan McGee compare infrastructure-as-a-service from amazon with service now okay yes that's true on the other hand you know from a conceptual standpoint I'm putting stuff in the cloud why not think about it so what does that mean how do you compete with Amazon's ecosystem the way you compete is you have differentiable advantage with IP that allows you to capture margins that reflect the value that you're delivering service now has that I think very clearly you know Oracle has that I'd mentioned Oracle even though they don't have the volume that many of the people have in and there are many many others you know that have niches that Amazon doesn't want to try and it's for cle and it's worth a little specific right it's really it's a good focus on something well i think i'm at salesforce very clearly has that differentiable advantage in may and a work day i mean many many you know companies out there that have that but workdays winning sorry at work days winning but service now is winning you're clearly seeing amazon when the cloud ification thus asif occation of IT is here it's now and it's not going to stop no it's like a stop so we've been here for three days i think we had 45 or so interviews you're fine i'm going to get you with the i won't go bumper sticker because we know you got to fly back to boston so it would be a long drive what's your what's the flag that hangs off the back of the of the year playing your banner as you leave after 40-some odd interviews three days on our third consecutive service now knowledge show so to me it's attacking the productivity problem within organizations which by the way is a whole nother vector of discussion focused our MIT of cube action right you know so that's a whole nother discussion i have concerns about that you know what are we going to do with all this increased productivity we better put it into innovation and we better educate our young people so that they can create you know new value so that's sort of one piece i think the second to me is the innovation on the software platform the developer focus the technology behind service now and the mobile capabilities and emphasis on new tech in on real time very very impressive and then i think the third is the cloud the cloud piece the devops the cloud the the the developer ecosystem adding value for the enterprise big opportunity and I guess that stuff really that that ecosystem to me is my big takeaway of service now knowledge 15 no 15 is that ecosystem development that expansion of the ecosystem that's where this company this community gets its leverage and I think that's a winning formula yeah my takes is a slightly different angle and really just go back to dine are less guest is is people are always chasing innovation for their internal how do I get my own people not necessarily who are building our core products but who are executing our strategy we're how do i get innovation and to me what we've seen so many things in initial specifically is if you simply enable more people to be able to innovate and you lower the barriers for them to try to execute ideas just a simple math by having more people contributing you're going to get more innovation and the other piece that's really important for that is it needs to be a low cost of entry to try and if it fails you need to be able to fast fail and get out so now and you've got all these people in all these departments seeing an opportunity to build a new application that that that saves time it is a little bit more efficient than what they were doing that before you multiply that by hundreds and thousands of people suddenly you're really getting significant improvements in efficiency and met Beth what I think is the most exciting about these cloud baths cloud-based applications the software world in which we live in where the barriers to actually develop things you know a coder lyst a codeless developer is a really exciting opportunity that will enable companies to expose more innovation within their own workforce I think it's for good stuff all right I think we wrap I think we're at I want to thank service now our awesome hosts for this conference will holding this conference creating a great event and having us here now for the for the third year in a row really is a pleasure for us and the cube team to be a part of this Greg Stewart shut up a great job Patrick Leonard Thank You Matthew we hear you back there doing the countdown to thank you awesome awesome job you know as always the entire cube team John my co-host as well John furrier John is getting everything up on on YouTube and on SiliconANGLE SiliconANGLE TV go to SiliconANGLE TV where all the action is go to SiliconANGLE calm kristen nicole and her team or pumping out content Bert Lattimore's on the crowd chat Crouch at net / no 15 great job thank you for all your help and check out Wikibon premium dot Wikibon comm check out all the research will be summarized in this show you know we're always on top of things they're really appreciate everybody you know watching sending in your comments your tweets we're app thanks everybody thank you we will see you next time let's see what's next is a easy world yeah emc world two weeks back here in Vegas so again thanks to everybody in the ServiceNow knowledge community that's a wrap this is dave vellante with Jeff Frick for John furrier we'll see you next time

Published Date : Apr 24 2015

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