Image Title

Search Results for thousand of agents:

Parminder Khosa & Martin Schirmer | IFS Unleashed 2022


 

(upbeat music) >> Hey everyone, welcome back to theCUBE live in Miami on the floor of IFS Unleashed. I'm your host, Lisa Martin. Had some great conversations. Have more great conversations coming your way. I have two guests joining me. Please welcome Martin Schirmer, the President of Enterprise Service Management, IFS Assyst. And Parminder Khosa, the Senior IT Manager at Parexel. Guys, it's great to have you on the program. >> Lovely to be here. >> It's good to be here. >> Martin, talk to me a little bit... tell the audience a little bit about Assyst so that that get that context before we start asking questions. >> Yeah. Absolutely. So IFS Assyst is a recent acquisition. It's an acquisition we made about a year ago. And fundamentally, it's a platform that takes care of IT service management, enterprise service management and IT operations management. So think of it, of managing sort of the ERP for IT and then broadening that out into the sort of enterprise where you're driving enterprise use cases for all lines of businesses like HR, finance, facilities, so on and so forth. >> Got it. And then Parminder, give the audience just a little bit of a flavor of Parexel, who you guys are, what you do. >> Sure. >> Maybe the impact that you make. >> Yeah, so Parexel is a clinical research organization. And what that means is that we manage drug trials for big pharmaceutical companies. So we're a big company. We're 25,000 people. We have offices in 150 locations all the way from Japan and the east through to the West Coast of the USA. >> Big company. >> Yeah, we are. We are a lot of people. >> And let's start chatting now Martin with some of the questions that you have so we get the understanding of how IFS and Parexel are working together. >> Yeah. Absolutely. I suppose... I mean the first thing is and thank you for traveling here all the way from the UK. (Lisa chuckles) Appreciate it and great energy and vibe. So just what the first question I had really was, you're customer of ours for the last 15 years plus. Maybe just give the audience a bit of context into your journey and how you've evolved from the sort of early years to where you're going into the future. >> Sure. So our history, I was part of a company that Parexel acquired that was already using Assyst. And as Parexel acquired us, they were in the process of also buying Assyst. So it became a kind of natural fit where I carried on with Assyst. And we started relatively small, sort of just the service desktop. And throughout the ongoing 15 years or so, we've just grown and expanded into kind of being a critical tool for Parexel right now. >> Okay, that's fantastic. I mean part of that journey, I know you started in sort of the more they call a ticketing space or IT service management space. Expand a little bit how you've expanded out of that and really moved into the enterprise. >> Sure. So yeah. So when we first rolled Assyst out, it was as I say, purely IT. And eventually we reached out to other business units to say asking questions like, Are you managing your workload through email? Are you managing your workload through Excel spreadsheets? In which case, if you are, we've got a solution for you that will make it a much better experience for your customers. They're all internal. It'll make it much easier for you because you will have official tracking going on through our system. I'll make it better for your management because we can drive metrics from all of the data that we're getting. So if you imagine finance we're getting, kind of 200 miles a day because of the size of our company. And they were just working through them one by one responding, and they becomes just a mess. So we developed forms for them to say, "Okay, Larry raise all your requests here. We will pick it up. We will manage it. We will communicate with you. And once the piece of work that you've asked for is done, we will let you know." And as we go through that process, we'll make it better for us because as I say we're getting those metrics. And we'll make it better for you because we can spot where our gaps are. If a request is taking three days, and of that three days, two days is waiting for someone on our end to respond to you or is waiting for us waiting for a customer to respond, we can iron those out and make it a much better experience for everyone. >> That's fantastic. It's really music to my ears because we always pushing the industry to say move away from just the IT side and really get into the enterprise. And it sounds like you've really gotten a lot of sort of productivity and efficiency gains out of that. >> Definitely, definitely. And it becomes kind of a happy circle. So the finance guys will work with the procurement guys. And they also look... Well, we're doing all of our work through Assyst now. So procurement's a little turnaround. So, well we're using this big spreadsheet to manage all of ours. Can we do the same? And they'll reach out to us and we'll say, "Of course we can. What is your process?" For example, they will say, okay, if someone asks for a new laptop, we need to get the approval from their line manager, from the supplier. We need to do our own internal work and then we will send it out. So imagine if you're doing that in a an email chain. It just becomes chaos. >> Yeah. >> So we will build all of that out for them. And then procurement will talk to HR and it just becomes a snowball. And before you know it, we are doing about 4,000 tickets per day in our Assyst system. And of those, 50% perhaps maybe more than 50% now will be non IT related. >> Oh, that's fantastic. Really music to my ears. And it really breaking down the boundaries or silos within an organization. It's really good. Let the teams work together. Right? >> Definitely. And that's one of the key things that we've learned is that we have to engage completely with our business partners. And our business partners are becoming more and more IT literate as well. So for example, we had a recent big HR solution provided to us. And as part of that, we know there are going to be questions, and queries and perhaps even issues to do with our HR system. So we have to work with us guys, the Assyst front end, the IT HR guys who look after the databases, all of the technology in the background. Then there'll be IT HR who are Workday experts. And then kind of not necessarily at the bottom of the chain will be the HR people themselves who are in their own way, experts in their area, experts in IT in a certain way. So all of those people have to work together. We become the front end, but we have to work with all of those parts of the business. >> That's really great. It's basically what you just said is taking business, IT processes and underpinning solutions. Effectively digital transformation, right? >> Exactly. Yeah. So HR is a great example. They used to have paper flying around with leave request, with sickness requests, with all of those kind of issues. And you said, well if you have an issue with your HR system, you can't raise a leave request, or you can't raise a sickness request, tell us. We will take care of it. We will fix it for you. We will give you the instructions. And we will get rid of all of that paper. >> That's brilliant. Just sort of turning the attention. And all of that, how do you drive the sort of, we'll talk about the autonomous enterprise. How do you drive automation in that process? >> Yeah. Of course, we have to map all of those processes out. Because we're not the experts in HR or procurement or whatever the business area may be. We have to really dig into their work methods, their working areas. What is necessary for them? What is a must have? What is a like to have? What is we don't really need? So we really drive into that processes. Once we've got those, we will automate them. We will build them out in Assyst with the process designer. It's very intuitive now. The latest version is really good to work with. We will do some pretty clever stuff in there. We'll say, okay the manager approval. If the manager is not there, then escalate it to the next person. Then we go to HR and say, okay HR have taken two days to do this. We're not particularly okay with that. So we will escalate it to the next person. And all of that process is completely automated, completely in Assyst. >> Brilliant. I mean obviously, we have a codeless workflow engine with a designer. And if you look at one of the trends from post covid is a war in talent in particular developers. The IDC says there's going to be around 4 million shortage of developers. What is your view on, how easy... Do I need developers? Is it easy, is it difficult to do these workflow extensions and automations? >> Definitely not, no. So the two key areas that you mentioned that with the customizer to develop the forms to make them available to our end users, drag and drop. Really easy to do. You can put some nice filters in there. You can put some nice variables in there. You can drive intelligent drive the forms from there as well. So if option A is correct, then don't show me option B, show me option C. And all of that is codeless, entirely codeless. I don't need to type any code. And when we move on to a process designer that hooks in nicely with the form customizer because we can say, "Okay, if option B on that form is selected, then runs this process." And all of that process is entirely codeless as well. Drag and drop. Creates some tasks. Create some decisions. >> Fantastic. >> Brilliant. >> Sounds really good. Switching gears a little bit. You spoke about experience, and that's also obviously very topical post, well, Covid becoming a remote workforce. Clearly, we need to be digitally connected to our business and organization because the hybrid workforce, as we all know, is here to stay. And that employee experience is fundamental because it is their sort of channel to the engagement of the organization. Of course, that has retention impacts and productivity impact. So just from your perspective, how was Covid, from your perspective, and how easy or difficult was it to get your employees engaged and productive and working? >> Yeah. And for us, it's a double edged sword Covid was. Because of the nature of our business. We do covid stuff. We do drug stuff. So we may have issues with some trials that are related to that. So we need to escalate those. We need to be aware of them and move them to the top of the chain as soon as possible. And then Assyst becomes a source of truth. Everybody knows that if I've got an issue with the current environment that we're living in, I can raise it in Assyst. And everybody knows that's where that information is. There's no need to have huge conference calls or huge email chains to try and follow those around. So with our Assyst platform, with our employees as well, everybody knew that this is where the source of truth was. We didn't have any dropouts. We didn't have any concerns with our system or performance. We knew it was there. We had to do some work like, as I say, around covid issues just to make sure they get pushed up to the top of the chain. But otherwise, we were fine. And great credit to our IT operations team as well who managed that pretty much seamlessly. >> That's brilliant. That's good news. >> Yeah. >> It really is. Just taking a little bit further and talking a little bit about what next. My team has been, I know, talking to your team about the whole area of asset management. Maybe talk to us a little bit about that journey. >> Sure, sure. So we're an ITOM customer as well. So all of our hardware data is stored within the ITOM platform. So we've pushed out the agents to all of our end user machines, so 25,000 agents. And we're in the process of integrating that into our Assyst platform to make that the single source of truth. And that part of that we're working on the software asset management side as well. So we've got a really good idea of where our software assets are. It comes to all license auditing, we know exactly how much we've got there. And the more complex side of it is of course server. So software management management as well. So we're in the process of getting all of that data as well. So once we've done all that, there is other all as the next step. The next step will be to perhaps do monitoring or pushing out software using the ITOM platform and getting rid of some of the disparate systems that we have right now. >> Well that's good news. And I think I saw a study. I think, every single person as an employee carries around 15 or 20 assets with him at any one time. Be it from a PC, phone, physical software licenses, so on and so forth. In that context, I can imagine the business case around it. >> Definitely. Yeah. And every, again, we map every user to their assets and (indistinct) their assets. And again Assyst as a source of truth for that. So if you want to look at my record, so, all right. Pam's got a laptop. He's got a mobile phone. We're thinking about giving him a tablet, but we'll find out. That he's in the process of getting a tablet as well. So I can have a look at my user record and know exactly what I've got with all of the asset tags and the various links that it has to the software pieces so it becomes a big tree of my assets. >> That's wonderful. Just the question I had was, we spoke about breaking down silos and the enterprise use cases and the effect that has. Do you envisage that Assyst can really get to being enterprisewide as, when I say enterprisewide, everybody in the organization effectively using this tool as their sort of source of experience, and level of automation of process? >> Definitely, definitely. As I say, we're getting... We're really pushing to get to that. As I say, 4,000 tickets a day with a user base of 25,000 kind of means that everybody will interact with the system perhaps every two weeks or so. So we're getting to that point and with the new functionality that's coming out with the Assyst product, with the team's integration, and the bot and everything that will bring to us because we are a big. We use teams. We use bots. We use that kind of technology. It will just fit in seamlessly. And trying to break down the silos, as I say finance, procurement, all of the big beasts within our company already are using the Assyst tool. And we want to bring in more and more of those processes as we mature. >> Brilliant. I think Omnichannel's critical. We want to connect from any device from anywhere. It's just the way we work. So I think that's critical. Teams is of course a a tool that most of us have become too familiar with. >> Yup. (chuckles) >> To be fair. (chuckles) It's better to be here in person finally, right? >> Yeah. >> So I think, that's all exciting news. And it's really fantastic. >> Great. >> So I suppose maybe in the time that we have left, what's next? >> What's next for us is that we're in the process of migrating our solution to the cloud, to the IFS cloud. That will open up a huge new user base for us. If we think all of our customers, all of our people who work on studies will have the ability to connect to Assyst and ask questions. That's a lot of it is just ask a question, or raise an issue or ask for something. So we're talking, it could be expanded by hundreds of thousands of new users that will meet more people on the backend to manage those requests as well. So yeah. It's just going to get bigger and bigger. And as you say, with the CMDB work that we're doing as well, that's another big ongoing stream for us. >> It's great because as you know, with Assyst we have a disruptive licensing model. >> Yeah. >> We have a t-shirt size pricing. All you can need based a number of employees. So there's no barriers to entry for you. >> There really is. And that really helps us because as I said initially, particularly when finance came on board and now they're expanding, there is no cost implication for it. The more that we use it, the better it is for. The more bang for buck that we get. >> Yep. That's our mantra. Enterprise users, right? For the price of a cup of coffee, for the price of a user. That's our mantra. >> I love it. You guys have done such a great job of articulating the synergies in the relationship that IFS Assyst has with Paraxel. You talked about the great outcomes that you're achieving. And it's all about Martin, I know, from IFS Assyst perspective, it's all about helping customers achieve those outcomes and those moments of service that are so critical to your customers on the other end staying with you, doing more business. Whether it's the end user customer, whether it's the actual employee. You talked a lot about the customer experience, the employee experience, and what you guys are doing together to enable that. And I always think that the employee experience and the customer experience are like this. They're inextricably linked. You can't, you shouldn't. Otherwise you're going to have problems. >> Yeah, no, absolutely. And there's actually a study on that saying that, 70% of customers generally don't feel they get what they want from organizations. >> 70. Wow! >> And if you take that one step further to what you said, the interconnectivity between customer employee, employee shops on Amazon, right? It's on those websites. So you can't be rolling out and digitally connect to the employee with something that is clunky and has the wrong experience. Like I said, it really affects that level of engagement the employee has with the company which happens to be largely these days remote. >> It does. Last question Martin, is for you. Talk to us about what's next for IFS Assyst. Obviously, we're back in person. There's a lot of momentum about the company. I was talking with Darren, the growth and first half was great. He kind of gave us some teaser about second half, but what's next from your perspective? >> Yeah. So what's next for us is achieving our goal. We are here to disrupt the industry. It's an industry that's dominated by one player and a fair amount of legacy players. We've disrupted the business model as I've told you. We here to do more because it's a simple thing. And that's the word simple. We want to keep things simple. We're going to keep engineering and driving our product forward, right? We've made sure that our platform is up there with the best. Yeah. We've just been certified by pink. Pink is a verification of ITIL four they call it. So it's a body. And the top level is you can get 20 out of 20. We got 17 out of 20. There's only one other vendor that has more than us and it's only by little. And after it's a big white space, the next one is 14. So we on the right track. We are going to of course drive and capture the market. So watch this space. We here to grow. >> We will watch this space. Congratulations on being that disrupter. >> Thank you. >> Parminder great work with what you guys are doing. You did a great job of articulating, as I said, the customers tour here. We appreciate your insights, your time. >> Thank you very much. >> Pleasure. >> All right, my pleasure. >> Thank you. For my guests, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching The Cube live from Miami on the show floor of IFS Unleashed. We'll be back after a short break.

Published Date : Oct 11 2022

SUMMARY :

And Parminder Khosa, the tell the audience a sort of the ERP for IT Parminder, give the audience and the east through to We are a lot of people. with some of the questions that you have I mean the first thing is and So it became a kind of natural fit and really moved into the enterprise. from all of the data that we're getting. the industry to say move away So the finance guys will work So we will build all And it really breaking down the boundaries all of the technology in the background. It's basically what you just And we will get rid of all of that paper. And all of that, how do And all of that process And if you look at one of So the two key areas that you mentioned And that employee Because of the nature of our business. That's brilliant. talking to your team And the more complex side the business case around it. and the various links that and the enterprise use cases all of the big beasts It's just the way we work. It's better to be here And it's really fantastic. have the ability to connect It's great because as you know, So there's no barriers to entry for you. And that really helps us coffee, for the price of a user. of articulating the synergies And there's actually a the employee has with the company the growth and first half was great. And the top level is you We will watch this space. as I said, the customers tour here. on the show floor of IFS Unleashed.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

MartinPERSON

0.99+

LarryPERSON

0.99+

JapanLOCATION

0.99+

two daysQUANTITY

0.99+

MiamiLOCATION

0.99+

Martin SchirmerPERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

two daysQUANTITY

0.99+

UKLOCATION

0.99+

three daysQUANTITY

0.99+

ParexelORGANIZATION

0.99+

AssystORGANIZATION

0.99+

IFS AssystORGANIZATION

0.99+

70%QUANTITY

0.99+

20QUANTITY

0.99+

ExcelTITLE

0.99+

25,000QUANTITY

0.99+

25,000 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

150 locationsQUANTITY

0.99+

17QUANTITY

0.99+

IDCORGANIZATION

0.99+

two guestsQUANTITY

0.99+

first questionQUANTITY

0.99+

OmnichannelORGANIZATION

0.99+

IFS AssystORGANIZATION

0.99+

ParminderPERSON

0.99+

15 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

25,000 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

CMDBORGANIZATION

0.99+

The CubeTITLE

0.99+

50%QUANTITY

0.99+

ITOMORGANIZATION

0.99+

20 assetsQUANTITY

0.99+

IFSORGANIZATION

0.99+

first halfQUANTITY

0.99+

option BOTHER

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

70QUANTITY

0.98+

PinkORGANIZATION

0.98+

option C.OTHER

0.98+

more than 50%QUANTITY

0.98+

option AOTHER

0.98+

one timeQUANTITY

0.98+

first thingQUANTITY

0.98+

Parminder KhosaPERSON

0.98+

DarrenPERSON

0.97+

one playerQUANTITY

0.97+

LisaPERSON

0.97+

CovidPERSON

0.97+

option BOTHER

0.97+

Enterprise Service ManagementORGANIZATION

0.97+

two key areasQUANTITY

0.95+

pinkORGANIZATION

0.95+

2022DATE

0.94+

firstQUANTITY

0.94+

PamPERSON

0.9+

about second halfQUANTITY

0.9+

IFS UnleashedTITLE

0.89+

14QUANTITY

0.88+

hundreds of thousands of new usersQUANTITY

0.87+

200 miles a dayQUANTITY

0.86+

4,000 tickets a dayQUANTITY

0.86+

around 4 million shortageQUANTITY

0.85+

single sourceQUANTITY

0.85+

Nevash Pillay & Javier Castellanos | UiPath FORWARD 5


 

The Cube presents UI Path Forward five. Brought to you by UI Path. >>We're back at forward five UI Paths, Big customer event. We're here in the Venetian, formerly the Sands Convention Center, Dave Ante and David Nicholson. Javier Castanos is here. He's the Robot Factory director. How's that for a title for Orange ESP Spania. And he's joined by Niva Pillow, who is Senior Director of Telecommunications Industry at UiPath. Folks, welcome to the Cube. Thank you. Thanks for coming on, Javier. Just off the keynote, it was really amazing to see what you were doing with your dashboard, how much you've operationalized automation, you really far down the journey. But I wanna start with your title. I've never seen this before. Robot Factory director, that's unique. What is that all about? >>Yeah, the Robot Factory is our brand to create the RPA journey to involve all the company in this amazing story regarding automation, because for us, automation is only a piece of the digital transformation and the culture transformation for the employees. >>Your robot factory obviously builds robots. Yeah. For employees and employees build them as well. >>Yeah, both. We have two different ways to, to build robots. We have a citizen developer program with more than 500 and employees certified in UiPath technology, and they build a small robot for the daily task for avoid repetitive task, very board. And in the other hand we have the robot factory team automating the business. The core business processes very complex in the telco industry, you know, and both teams working together, the community of employees, the best ambassadors for to find new opportunities and for discovery for robots and the robot factory are automating real complex processes to impacting our customer satisfaction. >>So if a, if a, if a citizen developer develops a robot, does the factory then have to audit it and make sure it's governed? Or do you add a, maybe I'm not such a good developer. Do you make it better? How does that collaboration work? >>The good thing is with you at Pat, you don't need to be a tech guy. You, you can be a finance guy and every morning you need a report, create an Excel, create a graph, put in a power point and send to your box. And you can create by your own a robot doing that task and going to the bending to take a coffee in, in the meantime that the robot is working. And as soon as you discover in your domain a complex tax, you can call us and say, Hey guys, I need your job because we need to ize this process. You need traceability. And we have a big savings below the desk. It's not only my health, it's the area work. >>Now, Navage, you specialize in the telecommunications industry. Now of course, the telcos are going through a massive transformation. It's almost, I call it revenge. The, the telcos now they're coming back with 5g. It's gonna be a great new future. But what kind of patterns are you seeing in the industry for automation? >>Sure. Look, as you said, telecoms going through quite a transformational era. There's this huge demand for connectivity around the whole world, and that presents opportunities and some challenges. But the key areas of focus right now is really helping the telecom achieve their strategic goals. And they include the customer experience at the most significant point, and thereafter driving a few more efficiencies and improving the employee experience. But organizations like Orange, you know, they start with the customer experience. These are large areas, but they tend to be the patterns where we are really helping telecoms transform and deliver better outcomes. >>Javi, I'm I'm curious about the concept of the citizen developer. Now you said that they don't have to have a deep technical background and they may come from finance or other places, but how do you, how do you recruit these people? What's in it for them? I, I can understand automating a process that is repetitive, mundane, something they don't want to do. But is there ever a concern that they might be automating themselves out of a job? >>Yeah, the, the people use Dex Excel and 30 years ago, Dex Excel does not assist and change our work. Your iPad technology is more or less the same. It's changing the way that you are working with your desktop every morning. You can create for your daily task a robot by yourself and executing your corporate desktop. And then you can save this time or use to improve your satisfaction as employee. Because sometimes in, in, in this kind of companies, we have a telecommunications engineering with a lot of talent making repetitive task. And with this technology, you can use your talent only to improve the processes. So we train these people in Miami, the training is very easy. A robot enter on the web searching, Google make different search regarding prices on, on device creates an Excel and only in a few hours that kind of people that we have in all companies that very easy excel some macros and these kind of things is the people prepared to jump to the next step to the robotization. So in all areas, in all departments, there are people prepared. In our company, 500 people. >>I, I'd like to get into a little mini case study if we could, and understand orange esp Spania is way deep. You should see this dashboard that Javier showed. I mean it's amazing, I think you said 7 million euro business benefit so far to date. But you can slice it and dice it and look at a lot of different angles. But where did you get started? Did you get started? Was it a bottoms up? In other words, an individual started to automate on their desktop. Was it a top down? The, the, the CEO said this is, we're gonna automate. How did it, I mean I'm sure you get this question a lot nivo, but where did it start at Orange? >>Yeah. Our story is very linked with the finance department because the citizen developer are saving internal hours and transforming the employee satisfaction and improving the talent and the reskilling of the people. But in the other hand, from the efficiency point of view, if you look for, for the finance approach, what happened, we, we take one profit and now domain perhaps 80% of the process. And next month the invoice reduce because your external cost disappear because the robot is making the task is improving the satisfaction of the customers. Because sometimes we have a, a human back office or another kind of task. And the compliance, the, the SLAs, the, the, the delay on time with all the people disappear with the robots because the robots are working at night. We can and repeating the job, 1, 1 1. And every tracking of that task are controlled by finance. Because if you save in a transaction three minutes, when you multiply for a thousand, a thousand, thousand tasks, you save on real time, you can see how much money you are saving and making the the things better. Not only a question of money is a question of money, but a attempt below that the customer is, is taking better experience for us. >>Robots don't sleep Nova. >>I never, >>So you started in finance and how much have you gone permeated other parts of the organization? What other parts of the organization are adopting RPA and automation? Where are you on that journey? >>More or less? Our eight, nine hundred and fifty three FTS equivalent robots working okay's like a contact center. It's robots navigating through the user interface applications, making transactions for our customers. So when you put in the middle of your customer relation, you can transform all because if a human agent is making a very complex process for, because telco is a complex market and very fast, perhaps the robot can help the human agent saving time and taking advantage of that part of, of the operations. And at the end, the operation is short and the customer satisfaction is better. And we measure the MPAs, the net, the net promoter score. And when you combine human agents with robots, the satisfaction improve because the transaction is made on real time very fast and doesn't fail. >>Is this a common story nivas that you're seeing in Telco in terms of the, the starting points? Does it tend to be bottoms up? Does it more top down? What are you seeing in >>Look, it actually varies by telecom. You know, Orange started their journey with us four years ago. So companies that have started while they tend to start in finance or IT or, or hr, but the customer experience I think is the ultimate area where many telecoms focus and what Harvey Edge just shared is it doesn't matter if a customer's calling you through a contact center or reaching you through a chatbot. They want their issue resolved at the first point. And what the robots do is they integrate information from multiple sources and provide that data to the agent so you can actually resolve the issue. And that is the beautiful example of humans and robots working together. Because if you know what the data's telling you, if it's a billing issue and a customer's been been billed because they have gone overseas and used international roaming and they weren't aware that the contract had that as a leader or a person in a contact center, you can make the right decision quite often. It takes a long time to find the data, but in this way you can actually address the issue real time, first point of resolution. And we're seeing up to 60% increase in first time resolutions across telecoms, irrespective of whether it's a chat bot or a contact center or a service desk. >>That's key. I mean, that's as a, that's consumer, that's what you just want to get off the phone or you want to get off the chat notice. So I have to ask you, what would you say is your secret to success? >>The secret is to be transparent with the organization, serve the savings and put on the table. We put on the table to the finance guys every month, all the robots that we put in production the month before and it's finance will declare officially the savings for each robot. As soon as you reach this, the credibility appear because it's not the robot factory team telling Aren, saving a lot of money of the company. No, no. It's the finance guys that trust on you. And as soon as you ask more money to buy more license or to improve the processes on whatever finance say, okay, these guys, as soon as we invest money in robots, we obtain twice or three times more by savings and they are improving not only for the quantity point of view, the quality is improving too. Because when you, a brief example, when you have a wifi problem connection and you call to our contact center, there is an ecosystem for more than 25 robots working from the beginning of your call, testing your line and making decisions. If we are going to send you a new router or you have a connectivity problem or, and the robot decide of, we are going to send to you a new install at your home and then the human manage you and take the conversation. But all the decisions are made by robots. So it's very powerful from the point of view of customer satisfaction. >>So what I'm hearing is you started four years ago. Yeah. And it, it, the ROI for your first instantiation was very fast, I presume inside of 12 months or what was the, how fast did you get a return with >>In the first three months we developed 25 robots and we saved more than 1 million to the company in three >>Months. In three months. Okay. So it was self-funding. >>Yeah. >>Right. You took that million dollars and you said, Okay, let's double down on that. Let's do it again. Do it again. Do it >>Again. It's only a question of resources and budget and only companies wants to create robots, but sometimes big companies only put on that one people to people. From the beginning of our story, we put 13 people and a budget. So if you have resources, the things happen be because the process are very accomplished. Sometimes you start one process. Sometimes our block, and we started at the beginning, a lot of process and imagine in telco we developed 900 processes, but every day we have a new opportunity for discovery. So I, I think the scalability is, is, is a challenge, but it's very, is possible if you put people and money >>And we, we focused on, we talk a lot in, in, in the broader IT world about the edge. And so I sort of think of these citizen developers as living at the edge. Part of your robot factory is at the core of the enterprise also. Is that, is that correct? Yes. >>Yes. >>Now what, what is, what has that looked like in terms of ROI cycles and development cycles? What kinds of projects do you work on at the core that are, that are different than what citizen soldiers are doing at the edge? >>Yeah. When, when we need to apply a discount or change your taif or switch on your bonus or your voicemail, that kind of transactions with impacting customers are made by the robot factory with robots made by the robot factory team. With a big traceability. With a big security because okay, with, with human awake the robot, we need to, to make a traceability because we have thousand of agents in the contact center working with robots and we have a lot of security disability and these kind of things. But in the other hand, internally we have a lot of task and a lot of processes for the citizen developers. There are very important tasks for the employee, perhaps not impacting in, in final customers, but we combine both. Because if you only work in one way, the citizen developer are making a lot of savings in terms of internal hours, but it's not real money. But in the other hand, you have the robot factory business processes impacting the money, combining both, you obtain the most powerful tool because the ambassadors, the, the, the employees are discovering you new opportunities. >>Last question, Javier, Why did you choose UiPath? What were the determining factors four years ago? >>Yeah, we, we were researching a lot in the market, but UiPath is pretty easy. You don't need to be an IT guy. People from, from customer care, people from finance in every areas. We have a lot of people learning this, this technology because it's easy, intuitive and very nice from the point of view of look and field. >>This a common story. This is really, we've reported on this a lot. This is how you UiPath really was able to get its foothold in the marketplace because of the simplicity. If you look at the legacy tools and even some of the modern tools, they were a lot more complicated. Now of course, UiPath is expanding its platform. So thank you very much. Don't welcome. Thank, thanks for coming. Thank you very much. Appreciate it. All right, you, you're gonna hear a lot of customer stories cuz that's what UI path brings in the cube. Proof is in the pudding. We right back at forward five from Las Vegas. Keep it right there.

Published Date : Sep 29 2022

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by UI Just off the keynote, it was really amazing to see what you were doing with Yeah, the Robot Factory is our brand to create the RPA journey to involve all Yeah. And in the other hand we have the robot factory team automating does the factory then have to audit it and make sure it's governed? And you can create by your own a robot doing that task and going to But what kind of patterns are you seeing in the industry for automation? But organizations like Orange, you know, Javi, I'm I'm curious about the concept of the citizen developer. It's changing the way that you are working with your desktop every morning. But you can slice it and dice it and look at a lot of different angles. But in the other hand, from the efficiency point So when you put in the middle of your customer but in this way you can actually address the issue real time, what would you say is your secret to success? We put on the table to the finance guys every So what I'm hearing is you started four years ago. You took that million dollars and you said, Okay, let's double down on that. So if you have resources, the things happen be because the at the edge. But in the other hand, you have the robot factory business processes You don't need to be an IT guy. If you look at the legacy tools and even some of the modern tools, they were a lot more complicated.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
JavierPERSON

0.99+

Javier CastanosPERSON

0.99+

OrangeORGANIZATION

0.99+

David NicholsonPERSON

0.99+

MiamiLOCATION

0.99+

Las VegasLOCATION

0.99+

80%QUANTITY

0.99+

twiceQUANTITY

0.99+

Dave AntePERSON

0.99+

Niva PillowPERSON

0.99+

Javier CastellanosPERSON

0.99+

13 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

ExcelTITLE

0.99+

25 robotsQUANTITY

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

UiPathORGANIZATION

0.99+

iPadCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.99+

900 processesQUANTITY

0.99+

Robot FactoryORGANIZATION

0.99+

500 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

more than 500QUANTITY

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.99+

one peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

million dollarsQUANTITY

0.99+

three monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

7 million euroQUANTITY

0.99+

first instantiationQUANTITY

0.99+

Nevash PillayPERSON

0.99+

more than 25 robotsQUANTITY

0.99+

more than 1 millionQUANTITY

0.98+

one wayQUANTITY

0.98+

three minutesQUANTITY

0.98+

JaviPERSON

0.98+

TelcoORGANIZATION

0.98+

next monthDATE

0.98+

each robotQUANTITY

0.98+

four years agoDATE

0.98+

one processQUANTITY

0.98+

telcoORGANIZATION

0.98+

three timesQUANTITY

0.98+

VenetianLOCATION

0.98+

four years agoDATE

0.98+

up to 60%QUANTITY

0.97+

both teamsQUANTITY

0.97+

first pointQUANTITY

0.97+

excelTITLE

0.97+

first three monthsQUANTITY

0.97+

four years agoDATE

0.97+

NavageORGANIZATION

0.96+

first timeQUANTITY

0.96+

fiveQUANTITY

0.95+

two different waysQUANTITY

0.95+

UI PathTITLE

0.94+

PathTITLE

0.94+

one profitQUANTITY

0.93+

thousand of agentsQUANTITY

0.92+

Dex ExcelTITLE

0.91+

30 years agoDATE

0.91+

ArenORGANIZATION

0.9+

SpaniaLOCATION

0.88+

PatORGANIZATION

0.86+

a thousandQUANTITY

0.84+

thousand tasksQUANTITY

0.83+

UIORGANIZATION

0.8+

nine hundred and fifty three FTSQUANTITY

0.77+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.75+

Sands Convention CenterLOCATION

0.75+

eight,QUANTITY

0.74+

fiveTITLE

0.73+

12 monthsQUANTITY

0.73+

Harvey EdgePERSON

0.71+

UI PathsTITLE

0.69+

UITITLE

0.6+

UiPathTITLE

0.54+

LastQUANTITY

0.5+

5QUANTITY

0.49+

5gORGANIZATION

0.34+

Danny Allan, Veeam | VeeamON 2022


 

>>Hi, this is Dave Volonte. We're winding down Day two of the Cubes coverage of Vim on 2022. We're here at the area in Las Vegas. Myself and Dave Nicholson had been going for two days. Everybody's excited about the VM on party tonight. It's It's always epic, and, uh, it's a great show in terms of its energy. Danny Allen is here. He's cto of in his back. He gave the keynote this morning. I say, Danny, you know, you look pretty good up there with two hours of sleep. I >>had three. >>Look, don't look that good, but your energy was very high. And I got to tell you the story you told was amazing. It was one of the best keynotes I've ever seen. Even even the technology pieces were outstanding. But you weaving in that story was incredible. I'm hoping that people will go back and and watch it. We probably don't have time to go into it, but wow. Um, can you give us the the one minute version of that >>long story? >>Sure. Yeah. I read a book back in 2013 about a ship that sank off Portsmouth, Maine, and I >>thought, I'm gonna go find that >>ship. And so it's a long, >>complicated process. Five >>years in the making. But we used data, and the data that found the ship was actually from 15 years earlier. >>And in 20 >>18, we found the bow of the ship. We found the stern of the ship, but what we were really trying to answer was torpedoed. Or did the boilers explode? Because >>the navy said the boilers exploded >>and two survivors said, No, it was torpedoed or there was a German U boat there. >>And so >>our goal was fine. The ship find the boiler. >>So in 20 >>19, Sorry, Uh, it was 2018. We found the bow and the stern. And then in 2019, we found both boilers perfectly intact. And in fact, the rear end of that torpedo wasn't much left >>of it, of course, but >>data found that wreck. And so it, um, it exonerated essentially any implication that somebody screwed >>up in >>the boiler system and the survivors or the Children of the survivors obviously appreciated >>that. I'm sure. Yes, Several >>outcomes to it. So the >>chief engineer was one >>of the 13 survivors, >>and he lived with the weight of this for 75 years. 49 sailors dead because of myself. But I had the opportunity of meeting some of the Children of the victims and also attending ceremonies. The families of those victims received purple hearts because they were killed due to enemy action. And then you actually knew how to do this. I wasn't aware you had experience finding Rex. You've >>discovered several of >>them prior to this one. But >>the interesting connection >>the reason why this keynote was so powerful as we're a >>team, it's a data conference. >>You connected that to data because you you went out and bought a How do you say this? Magnanimous magnetometer. Magnetometer, Magnetometer. I don't know what that >>is. And a side >>scan Sonar, Right? I got that right. That was >>easy. But >>then you know what this stuff is. And then you >>built the model >>tensorflow. You took all the data and you found anomalies. And then you went right to that spot. Found the >>wreck with 12 >>£1000 of dynamite, >>which made your heart >>beat. But >>then you found >>the boilers. That's incredible. And >>but the point was, >>this is data >>uh, let's see, >>a lot of years after, >>right? >>Yeah. Two sets of data were used. One was the original set of side scan sonar >>data by the historian >>who discovered there was a U boat in the area that was 15 years old. >>And then we used, of >>course, the wind and weather and wave pattern data that was 75 years old to figure out where the boiler should be because they knew that the ship had continued to float for eight minutes. And so you had to go back and determine the models of where should the boilers >>be if it exploded and the boilers >>dropped out and it floated along >>for eight minutes and then sank? Where was >>that data? >>It was was a scanned was an electronic was a paper. How did you get that data? So the original side scan sonar data was just hard >>drive >>data by the historian. >>I wish I could say he used them to >>back it up. But I don't know that I can say that. But he still had >>the data. 15 years later, the >>weather and >>wind and wave data, That was all public information, and we actually used that extensively. We find other wrecks. A lot of wrecks off Boston Sunken World War Two. So we were We were used to that model of tracking what happened. Wow. So, yes, imagine if that data weren't available >>and it >>probably shouldn't have been right by all rights. So now fast forward to 2022. We've got Let's talk about just a cloud >>data. I think you said a >>couple of 100 >>petabytes in the >>cloud 2019. 500 in, Uh, >>no. Yeah. In >>20 2200 and 42. Petabytes in 20 2500 Petabytes last year. And we've already done the same as 2020. So >>240 petabytes >>in Q one. I expect >>this year to move an exhibit of >>data into the public cloud. >>Okay, so you got all that data. Who knows what's in there, right? And if it's not protected, who's going to know in 50 60 7100 years? Right. So that was your tie in? Yes. To the to the importance of data protection, which was just really, really well done. Congratulations. Honestly, one of the best keynotes I've ever seen keynotes often really boring, But you did a great job again on two hours. Sleep. So much to unpack here. The other thing that really is. I mean, we can talk about the demos. We can talk about the announcements. Um, so? Well, yeah, Let's see. Salesforce. Uh, data protection is now public. I almost spilled the beans yesterday in the cube. Caught myself the version 12. Obviously, you guys gave a great demo showing the island >>cloud with I think it >>was just four minutes. It was super fast. Recovery in four minutes of data loss was so glad you didn't say zero minutes because that would have been a live demos which, Okay, which I appreciate and also think is crazy. So some really cool demos, Um, and some really cool features. So I have so much impact, but the the insights that you can provide through them it's VM one, uh, was actually something that I hadn't heard you talk about extensively in the past. That maybe I just missed it. But I wonder if you could talk about that layer and why it's critical differentiator for Wien. It's >>the hidden gem >>within the Wien portfolio because it knows about absolutely >>everything. >>And what determines the actions >>that we take is the >>context in which >>data is surviving. So in the context of security, which we are showing, we look for CPU utilisation, memory utilisation, data change rate. If you encrypt all of the data in a file server, it's going to blow up overnight. And so we're leveraging heuristics in their reporting. But even more than that, one of the things in Wien one people don't realise we have this concept of the intelligent diagnostics. It's machine learning, which we drive on our end and we push out as packages intervene one. There's up to 200 signatures, but it helps our customers find issues before they become issues. Okay, so I want to get into because I often time times, don't geek out with you. And don't take advantage of your your technical knowledge. And you've you've triggered a couple of things, >>especially when the >>analysts call you said it again today that >>modern >>data protection has meaning to you. We talked a little bit about this yesterday, but back in >>the days of >>virtualisation, you shunned agents >>and took a different >>approach because you were going for what was then >>modern. Then you >>went to bare metal cloud hybrid >>cloud containers. Super Cloud. Using the analyst meeting. You didn't use the table. Come on, say Super Cloud and then we'll talk about the edge. So I would like to know specifically if we can go back to Virtualised >>because I didn't know >>this exactly how you guys >>defined modern >>back then >>and then. Let's take that to modern today. >>So what do you >>do back then? And then we'll get into cloud and sure, So if you go back to and being started, everyone who's using agents, you'd instal something in the operating system. It would take 10% 15% of your CPU because it was collecting all the data and sending it outside of the machine when we went through a virtual environment. If you put an agent inside that machine, what happens is you would have 100 operating systems all on the same >>server, consuming >>resources from that hyper visor. And so he said, there's a better way of capturing the data instead of capturing the data inside the operating system. And by the way, managing thousands of agents is no fun. So What we did is we captured a snapshot of the image at the hyper visor level. And then over time, we just leverage changed block >>tracking from the hyper >>visor to determine what >>had changed. And so that was modern. Because no more >>managing agents >>there was no impact >>on the operating system, >>and it was a far more >>efficient way to store >>data. You leverage CBT through the A P. Is that correct? Yeah. We used the VCR API >>for data protection. >>Okay, so I said this to Michael earlier. Fast forward to today. Your your your data protection competitors aren't as fat, dumb and happy as they used to be, so they can do things in containers, containers. And we talked about that. So now let's talk about Cloud. What's different about cloud data protection? What defines modern data protection? And where are the innovations that you're providing? >>Let me do one step in >>between those because one of the things that happened between hypervisors and Cloud was >>offline. The capture of the data >>to the storage system because >>even better than doing it >>at the hyper visor clusters >>do it on the storage >>array because that can capture the >>data instantly. Right? So as we go to the cloud, we want to do the same thing. Except we don't have access to either the hyper visor or the storage system. But what they do provide is an API. So we can use the API to capture all of the blocks, all of the data, all of the changes on that particular operating system. Now, here's where we've kind of gone full circle on a hyper >>visor. You can use the V >>sphere agent to reach into the operating system to do >>things like application consistency. What we've done modern data protection is create specific cloud agents that say Forget >>about the block changes. Make sure that I have application consistency inside that cloud operating >>system. Even though you don't have access to the hyper visor of the storage, >>you're still getting the >>operating system consistency >>while getting the really >>fast capture of data. So that gets into you talking on stage about how synapse don't equal data protection. I think you just explained it, but explain why, but let me highlight something that VM does that is important. We manage both snapshots and back up because if you can recover from your storage array >>snapshot. That is the best >>possible thing to recover from right, But we don't. So we manage both the snapshots and we converted >>into the VM portable >>data format. And here's where the super cloud comes into play because if I can convert it into the VM portable data format, I can move >>that OS >>anywhere. I can move it from >>physical to virtual to cloud >>to another cloud back to virtual. I can put it back on physical if I want to. It actually abstracts >>the cloud >>layer. There are things >>that we do when we go >>between clouds. Some use bio, >>some use, um, fee. >>But we have the data in backup format, not snapshot format. That's theirs. But we have been in backup format that we can move >>around and abstract >>workloads across. All of the infrastructure in your >>catalogue is control >>of that. Is that Is >>that right? That is about >>that 100%. And you know what's interesting about our catalogue? Dave. The catalogue is inside the backup, and so historically, one of the problems with backup is that you had a separate catalogue and if it ever got corrupted. All of your >>data is meaningless >>because the catalogue is inside >>the backup >>for that unique VM or that unique instance, you can move it anywhere and power it on. That's why people said were >>so reliable. As long >>as you have the backup file, you can delete our >>software. You can >>still get the data back, so I love this fast paced so that >>enables >>what I call Super Cloud we now call Super Cloud >>because now >>take that to the edge. >>If I want to go to the edge, I presume you can extend that. And I also presume the containers play a role there. Yes, so here's what's interesting about the edge to things on the edge. You don't want to have any state if you can help it, >>and so >>containers help with that. You can have stateless environment, some >>persistent data storage, >>but we not only >>provide the portability >>in operating systems. We also do this for containers, >>and that's >>true if you go to the cloud and you're using SE CKs >>with relational >>database service is already >>asked for the persistent data. >>Later, we can pick that up and move it to G K E or move it to open shift >>on premises. And >>so that's why I call this the super cloud. We have all of this data. Actually, I think you termed the term super thank you for I'm looking for confirmation from a technologist that it's technically feasible. It >>is technically feasible, >>and you can do it today and that's a I think it's a winning strategy. Personally, Will there be >>such a thing as edge Native? You know, there's cloud native. Will there be edge native new architectures, new ways of doing things, new workloads use cases? We talk about hardware, new hardware, architectures, arm based stuff that are going to change everything to edge Native Yes and no. There's going to be small tweaks that make it better for the edge. You're gonna see a lot of iron at the edge, obviously for power consumption purposes, and you're also going to see different constructs for networking. We're not going to use the traditional networking, probably a lot more software to find stuff. Same thing on the storage. They're going to try and >>minimise the persistent >>storage to the smallest footprint possible. But ultimately I think we're gonna see containers >>will lead >>the edge. We're seeing this now. We have a I probably can't name them, but we have a large retail organisation that is running containers in every single store with a small, persistent footprint of the point of sale and local data, but that what >>is running the actual >>system is containers, and it's completely ephemeral. So we were >>at Red Hat, I was saying >>earlier last week, and I'd say half 40 50% of the conversation was edge open shift, obviously >>playing a big role there. I >>know doing work with Rancher and Town Zoo. And so there's a lot of options there. >>But obviously, open shift has >>strong momentum in the >>marketplace. >>I've been dominating. You want to chime in? No, I'm just No, >>I yeah, I know. Sometimes >>I'll sit here like a sponge, which isn't my job absorbing stuff. I'm just fascinated by the whole concept of of a >>of a portable format for data that encapsulates virtual machines and or instances that can live in the containerised world. And once you once you create that common denominator, that's really that's >>That's the secret sauce >>for what you're talking about is a super club and what's been fascinating to watch because I've been paying attention since the beginning. You go from simply V. M. F s and here it is. And by the way, the pitch to E. M. C. About buying VM ware. It was all about reducing servers to files that can be stored on storage arrays. All of a sudden, the light bulbs went off. We can store those things, and it just began. It became it became a marriage afterwards. But to watch that progression that you guys have gone from from that fundamental to all of the other areas where now you've created this common denominator layer has has been amazing. So my question is, What's the singer? What doesn't work? Where the holes. You don't want to look at it from a from a glass half empty perspective. What's the next opportunity? We've talked about edge, but what are the things that you need to fill in to make this truly ubiquitous? Well, there's a lot of services out there that we're not protecting. To be fair, right, we do. Microsoft 3 65. We announced sales for us, but there's a dozen other paths services that >>people are moving data >>into. And until >>we had data protection >>for the assassin path services, you know >>you have to figure out how >>to protect them. Now here's the kicker about >>those services. >>Most of them have the >>ability to dump date >>out. The trick is, do they have the A >>P? I is needed to put data >>back into it right, >>which is which is a >>gap. As an industry, we need to address this. I actually think we need a common >>framework for >>how to manage the >>export of data, but also the import of data not at a at a system level, but at an atomic level of the elements within those applications. >>So there are gaps >>there at the industry, but we'll fill them >>if you look on the >>infrastructure side. We've done a lot with containers and kubernetes. I think there's a next wave around server list. There's still servers and these micro services, but we're making things smaller and smaller and smaller, and there's going to be an essential need to protect those services as well. So modern data protection is something that's going to we're gonna need modern data protection five years from now, the modern will just be different. Do you ever see the day, Danny, where governance becomes an >>adjacency opportunity for >>you guys? It's clearly an opportunity even now if you look, we spent a lot of time talking about security and what you find is when organisations go, for example, of ransomware insurance or for compliance, they need to be able to prove that they have certifications or they have security or they have governance. We just saw transatlantic privacy >>packed only >>to be able to prove what type of data they're collecting. Where are they storing it? Where are they allowed to recovered? And yes, those are very much adjacency is for our customers. They're trying to manage that data. >>So given that I mean, >>am I correct that architecturally you are, are you location agnostic? Right. We are a location agnostic, and you can actually tag data to allowable location. So the big trend that I think is happening is going to happen in in this >>this this decade. >>I think we're >>scratching the surface. Is this idea >>that, you know, leave data where it is, >>whether it's an S three >>bucket, it could be in an Oracle >>database. It could be in a snowflake database. It can be a data lake that's, you know, data, >>bricks or whatever, >>and it stays where >>it is. And it's just a note on the on the call of the data >>mesh. Not my term. Jim >>Octagon coined that term. The >>problem with that, and it puts data in the hands of closer to the domain experts. The problem with that >>scenario >>is you need self service infrastructure, which really doesn't exist today anyway. But it's coming, and the big problem is Federated >>computational >>governance. How do I automate that governance so that the people who should have access to that it can have access to that data? That, to me, seems to be an adjacency. It doesn't exist except in >>a proprietary >>platform. Today. There needs to be a horizontal >>layer >>that is more open than anybody >>can use. And I >>would think that's a perfect opportunity for you guys. Just strategically it is. There's no question, and I would argue, Dave, that it's actually >>valuable to take snapshots and to keep the data out at the edge wherever it happens to be collected. But then Federated centrally. It's why I get so excited by an exhibit of data this year going into the cloud, because then you're centralising the aggregation, and that's where you're really going to drive the insights. You're not gonna be writing tensorflow and machine learning and things on premises unless you have a lot of money and a lot of GPS and a lot of capacity. That's the type of thing that is actually better suited for the cloud. And, I would argue, better suited for not your organisation. You're gonna want to delegate that to a third party who has expertise in privacy, data analysis or security forensics or whatever it is that you're trying to do with the data. But you're gonna today when you think about AI. We talked about A. I haven't had a tonne of talk about AI some >>appropriate >>amount. Most of the >>AI today correct me if you think >>this is not true is modelling that's done in the cloud. It's dominant. >>Don't >>you think that's gonna flip when edge >>really starts to take >>off where it's it's more real time >>influencing >>at the edge in new use cases at the edge now how much of that data >>is going to be >>persisted is a >>point of discussion. But what >>are your thoughts on that? I completely agree. So my expectation of the way >>that this will work is that >>the true machine learning will happen in the centralised location, and what it will do is similar to someone will push out to the edge the signatures that drive the inferences. So my example of this is always the Tesla driving down the road. >>There's no way that that >>car should be figuring it sending up to the cloud. Is that a stop sign? Is it not? It can't. It has to be able to figure out what the stop sign is before it gets to it, so we'll do the influencing at the edge. But when it doesn't know what to do with the data, then it should send it to the court to determine, to learn about it and send signatures back out, not just to that edge location, but all the edge locations within the within the ecosystem. So I get what you're saying. They might >>send data back >>when there's an anomaly, >>or I always use the example of a deer running in front of the car. David Floyd gave me that one. That's when I want to. I do want to send the data back to the cloud because Tesla doesn't persist. A tonne of data, I presume, right, right less than 5% of it. You know, I want to. Usually I'm here to dive into the weeds. I want kind of uplevel this >>to sort of the >>larger picture. From an I T perspective. >>There's been a lot of consolidation going on if you divide the >>world into vendors >>and customers. On the customer side, there are only if there's a finite number of seats at the table for truly strategic partners. Those get gobbled up often by hyper >>scale cloud >>providers. The challenge there, and I'm part of a CEO accreditation programme. So this >>is aimed at my students who >>are CEOs and CIOs. The challenge is that a lot of CEOs and CIOs on the customer side don't exhaustively drag out of their vendor partners like a theme everything that Saveem >>can do for >>them. Maybe they're leveraging a point >>solution, >>but I guarantee you they don't all know that you've got cast in in the portfolio. Not every one of them does yet, let alone this idea of a super >>cloud and and and >>how much of a strategic role you can play. So I don't know if it's a blanket admonition to folks out there, but you have got to leverage the people who are building the solutions that are going to help you solve problems in the business. And I guess, as in the form of >>a question, >>uh, do you Do you see that as a challenge? Now those the limited number of seats at >>the Table for >>Strategic Partners >>Challenge and >>Opportunity. If you look at the types of partners that we've partnered with storage partners because they own the storage of the data, at the end of the day, we actually just manage it. We don't actually store it the cloud partners. So I see that as the opportunity and my belief is I thought that the storage doesn't matter, >>but I think the >>organisation that can centralise and manage that data is the one that can rule the world, and so >>clearly I'm a team. I think we can do amazing things, but we do have key >>strategic partners hp >>E Amazon. You heard >>them on stage yesterday. >>18 different >>integrations with AWS. So we have very strategic partners. Azure. I go out there all the time. >>So there >>you don't need to be >>in the room at the table because your partners are >>and they have a relationship with the customer as well. Fair enough. But the key to this it's not just technology. It is these relationships and what is possible between our organisations. So I'm sorry to be >>so dense on this, but when you talk about >>centralising that data you're talking about physically centralising it or can actually live across clouds, >>for instance. But you've got >>visibility and your catalogues >>have visibility on >>all that. Is that what you mean by centralised obliterated? We have understanding of all the places that lives, and we can do things with >>it. We can move it from one >>cloud to another. We can take, you know, everyone talks about data warehouses. >>They're actually pretty expensive. >>You got to take data and stream it into this thing, and there's a massive computing power. On the other hand, we're >>not like that. You've storage on there. We can ephemeral e. Spin up a database when you need it for five minutes and then destroy it. We can spin up an image when you need it and then destroy it. And so on your perspective of locations. So irrespective of >>location, it doesn't >>have to be in a central place, and that's been a challenge. You extract, >>transform and load, >>and moving the data to the central >>location has been a problem. We >>have awareness of >>all the data everywhere, >>and then we can make >>decisions as to what you >>do based >>on where it is and >>what it is. And that's a metadata >>innovation. I guess that >>comes back to the catalogue, >>right? Is that correct? >>You have data >>about the data that informs you as to where it is and how to get to it. And yes, so metadata within the data that allows you to recover it and then data across the federation of all that to determine where it is. And machine intelligence plays a role in all that, not yet not yet in that space. Now. I do think there's opportunity in the future to be able to distribute storage across many different locations and that's a whole conversation in itself. But but our machine learning is more just on helping our customers address the problems in their infrastructures rather than determining right now where that data should be. >>These guys they want me to break, But I'm >>refusing. So your >>Hadoop back >>in their rooms via, um that's >>well, >>that scale. A lot of customers. I talked to Renee Dupuis. Hey, we we got there >>was heavy lift. You >>know, we're looking at new >>ways. New >>approaches, uh, going. And of course, it's all in the cloud >>anyway. But what's >>that look like? That future look like we haven't reached bottle and X ray yet on our on our Hadoop clusters, and we do continuously examine >>them for anomalies that might happen. >>Not saying we won't run into a >>bottle like we always do at some >>point, But we haven't yet >>awesome. We've covered a lot of We've certainly covered extensively the research that you did on cyber >>security and ransomware. Um, you're kind of your vision for modern >>data protection. I think we hit on that pretty well casting, you know, we talked to Michael about that, and then, you know, the future product releases the Salesforce data protection. You guys, I think you're the first there. I think you were threatened at first from Microsoft. 3 65. No, there are other vendors in the in the salesforce space. But what I tell people we weren't the first to do data capture at the hyper >>visor level. There's two other >>vendors I won't tell you they were No one remembers them. Microsoft 3 65. We weren't the first one to for that, but we're now >>the largest. So >>there are other vendors in the salesforce space. But we're looking at We're going to be aggressive. Danielle, Thanks >>so much for coming to Cuba and letting us pick your brain like that Really great job today. And congratulations on >>being back >>in semi normal. Thank you for having me. I love being on all right. And thank you for watching. Keep it right there. More coverage. Day volonte for Dave >>Nicholson, By >>the way, check out silicon angle dot com for all the written coverage. All the news >>The cube dot >>net is where all these videos We'll we'll live. Check out wiki bond dot com I published every week. I think I'm gonna dig into the cybersecurity >>research that you guys did this week. If I can >>get a hands my hands on those charts which Dave Russell promised >>me, we'll be right back >>right after this short break. Mm.

Published Date : May 18 2022

SUMMARY :

He gave the keynote this morning. And I got to tell you the story you told off Portsmouth, Maine, and I And so it's a long, But we used data, and the data that found the ship was actually from 15 years earlier. We found the stern of the ship, but what we were really trying to answer was The ship find the boiler. We found the bow and the stern. data found that wreck. Yes, Several So the But I had the opportunity of meeting some of the Children of the victims and also attending ceremonies. them prior to this one. You connected that to data because you you went out and bought a How do you say this? I got that right. But And then you And then you went right to that spot. But the boilers. One was the original set of side scan sonar the boiler should be because they knew that the ship had continued to float for eight minutes. So the original side scan sonar data was just hard But I don't know that I can say that. the data. So we were We were used to that model of tracking So now fast forward to 2022. I think you said a cloud 2019. 500 in, And we've already done the same as 2020. I expect To the to the importance the insights that you can provide through them it's VM one, But even more than that, one of the things in Wien one people don't realise we have this concept of the intelligent diagnostics. data protection has meaning to you. Then you Using the analyst meeting. Let's take that to modern today. And then we'll get into cloud and sure, So if you go back to and being started, of capturing the data inside the operating system. And so that was modern. We used the VCR API Okay, so I said this to Michael earlier. The capture of the data all of the changes on that particular operating system. You can use the V cloud agents that say Forget about the block changes. Even though you don't have access to the hyper visor of the storage, So that gets into you talking on stage That is the best possible thing to recover from right, But we don't. And here's where the super cloud comes into play because if I can convert it into the VM I can move it from to another cloud back to virtual. There are things Some use bio, But we have been in backup format that we can move All of the infrastructure in your Is that Is and so historically, one of the problems with backup is that you had a separate catalogue and if it ever got corrupted. for that unique VM or that unique instance, you can move it anywhere and power so reliable. You can You don't want to have any state if you can help it, You can have stateless environment, some We also do this for containers, And Actually, I think you termed the and you can do it today and that's a I think it's a winning strategy. new hardware, architectures, arm based stuff that are going to change everything to edge Native Yes storage to the smallest footprint possible. of the point of sale and local data, but that what So we were I And so there's a lot of options there. You want to chime in? I yeah, I know. I'm just fascinated by the whole concept of of instances that can live in the containerised world. But to watch that progression that you guys have And until Now here's the kicker about The trick is, do they have the A I actually think we need a common but at an atomic level of the elements within those applications. So modern data protection is something that's going to we're gonna need modern we spent a lot of time talking about security and what you find is when organisations to be able to prove what type of data they're collecting. So the big trend that I think is happening is going to happen in scratching the surface. It can be a data lake that's, you know, data, And it's just a note on the on the call of the data Not my term. Octagon coined that term. The problem with that But it's coming, and the big problem is Federated How do I automate that governance so that the people who should have access to that it can There needs to be a horizontal And I would think that's a perfect opportunity for you guys. That's the type of thing that is actually better suited for the cloud. Most of the this is not true is modelling that's done in the cloud. But what So my expectation of the way the true machine learning will happen in the centralised location, and what it will do is similar to someone then it should send it to the court to determine, to learn about it and send signatures Usually I'm here to dive into the weeds. From an I T perspective. On the customer side, there are only if there's a finite number of seats at So this The challenge is that a lot of CEOs and CIOs on the customer side but I guarantee you they don't all know that you've got cast in in the portfolio. And I guess, as in the form of So I see that as the opportunity and my belief is I thought that the storage I think we can do amazing things, but we do have key You heard So we have very strategic partners. But the key to this it's not just technology. But you've got all the places that lives, and we can do things with We can take, you know, everyone talks about data warehouses. On the other hand, We can ephemeral e. Spin up a database when you need it for five minutes and then destroy have to be in a central place, and that's been a challenge. We And that's a metadata I guess that about the data that informs you as to where it is and how to get to it. So your I talked to Renee Dupuis. was heavy lift. And of course, it's all in the cloud But what's the research that you did on cyber Um, you're kind of your vision for modern I think we hit on that pretty well casting, you know, we talked to Michael about that, There's two other vendors I won't tell you they were No one remembers them. the largest. But we're looking at We're going to be aggressive. so much for coming to Cuba and letting us pick your brain like that Really great job today. And thank you for watching. the way, check out silicon angle dot com for all the written coverage. I think I'm gonna dig into the cybersecurity research that you guys did this week. right after this short break.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
MichaelPERSON

0.99+

Dave RussellPERSON

0.99+

Dave NicholsonPERSON

0.99+

Renee DupuisPERSON

0.99+

2013DATE

0.99+

Danny AllenPERSON

0.99+

Dave VolontePERSON

0.99+

Danny AllanPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

10%QUANTITY

0.99+

David FloydPERSON

0.99+

DannyPERSON

0.99+

DaniellePERSON

0.99+

75 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

TeslaORGANIZATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

2018DATE

0.99+

CubaLOCATION

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

eight minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

two survivorsQUANTITY

0.99+

Las VegasLOCATION

0.99+

13 survivorsQUANTITY

0.99+

two daysQUANTITY

0.99+

two hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

100 operating systemsQUANTITY

0.99+

2020DATE

0.99+

18QUANTITY

0.99+

two hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

JimPERSON

0.99+

five minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

2022DATE

0.99+

four minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

Two setsQUANTITY

0.99+

one minuteQUANTITY

0.99+

49 sailorsQUANTITY

0.99+

Red HatORGANIZATION

0.99+

42QUANTITY

0.99+

TodayDATE

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

PortsmouthLOCATION

0.99+

zero minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

NicholsonPERSON

0.99+

15 years laterDATE

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.98+

less than 5%QUANTITY

0.98+

RancherORGANIZATION

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

this yearDATE

0.98+

WienLOCATION

0.98+

100%QUANTITY

0.98+

both boilersQUANTITY

0.98+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.97+

both snapshotsQUANTITY

0.97+

up to 200 signaturesQUANTITY

0.97+

15 years oldQUANTITY

0.97+

VeeamPERSON

0.96+

Town ZooORGANIZATION

0.96+

this weekDATE

0.96+

thousands of agentsQUANTITY

0.96+

100QUANTITY

0.95+

SalesforceORGANIZATION

0.95+

tonightDATE

0.95+

Boston Sunken World War TwoEVENT

0.94+

hpORGANIZATION

0.94+

Annie Weinberger, AWS | AWS re:Invent 2021


 

(upbeat music) >> Welcome back to theCUBE's continuous coverage of AWS re:invent 2021. I'm here with my co-host John Furrier and we're running one of the largest, most significant technology events in the history of 2021. Two live sets here in Las Vegas, along with our two studios. And we are absolutely delighted. We're incredibly delighted to welcome a returning alumni. It's not enough to just say that you're an alumni because you have been such a fixture of theCUBE for so many years. Annie Weinberger. And Annie is head of product marketing for applications at AWS. Annie, welcome. >> Thank you so much, it's great to be back. >> It's wonderful to have you back. Let's dive right into it. >> Okay. >> Talk to us about Connect. What does that mean when I say Connect? >> Yes, well, I think if we talk about Amazon Connect, we have to go back to the beginning of the origin story. So, over 10 years ago, when Amazon retail was looking for a solution to manage their customer service and their contact center, we went out and we looked at different solutions and nothing really met our needs. Nothing could kind of provide the scale that we needed at Amazon, or could really be as flexible as we needed to ensure that we're our customer obsession could come through in our customer service. So we built our own solution. And over the years, customers were coming to us and asking, you know, what do you use for your customer service technology? And so we launched Amazon Connect, our omni-channel cloud contact center solution just over four years ago. And it is the one of the fastest growing services at AWS. We have tens of thousands of customers using it today, like Capital One into it, Bank of Omaha, Mutual of Omaha, Best Western, you know, I can go on and on. And they're using it to have over 10 million interactions with customers every day. So it's, you know, growing phenomenally and we just couldn't be more proud to help our customers with their customer service. >> So, yeah. Talk about some of the components that go into that. What are the sort of puzzle pieces that make up AWS Connect? Because obviously connecting with a customer can take a whole bunch of different forms with email, text, voice. >> Yeah >> What's included in that? >> So it's an omni-channel cloud contact center. It provides, you know, any way you want to talk to your customers. There's traditional methods of voice. There's automated ways to connect. So IVRs or interactive voice responses where you call with voice prompts, there's chat, you know. We have Lex Bots that use the same technology that powers Alexa for natural language understanding. And I think customers really like it for a few reasons. One is that unlike kind of other contact center solutions, you can set it up in minutes. You know, American Preparatory Academy had to set up a contact center, they did it in two days. And then it's very, very easy to customize and use. So another example is, you know, when Priceline was going through COVID and they realized their call volume went up 300% overnight, and everybody was just sitting near the queue waiting to talk to an agent. So in 20 minutes, we were able to go in and very easily with a drag and drop interface, customize the ad flow so that people who had a reservation in the next 72 hours were prioritized. So very, very easily. >> You just jumped the gun on me. I was going to ask this because we never boarding that Connect during the pandemic was a huge success. >> Annie: Yes. >> It was many, many examples where people were just located, disrupted by the pandemic. And you guys had tons of traction from government public sector to commercial across the board. Adam Solecki told me in person a couple weeks ago that it was on fire, Connect was on fire. So again, a tailwind, one of those examples with the pandemic, but it highlights this idea or purpose built, ready to go. >> Pre-built the applications. >> Pre-built application. This is a phenomenon. >> It's moving up the stack for AWS. It's very exciting. I think, yeah, we had over 5,000 new contact centers stood up in March and April of 2020 alone. >> Dave: Wow. >> Give it some scale, just go back to the scale piece. Cause this is like, like amazing to stand up a call center like hours, days. Like this is like incredible to, give us some stats on some examples of how fast people were standing up Connect. >> Yeah, I mean, you could stand it up overnight. American Preparatory Academy, as I mentioned did it in two days, we had, you know, this county of Los Angeles did theirs I think at a day. You could go and right now you don't need any technical expertise, even though you have some. >> theCUBE call center, we don't need people calling. >> We had everyone from a Mexican restaurant needed to take to go orders. Cause now it's COVID and they don't have a call. They've been able to set that up, grab a phone number and start taking takeout orders all the way to like capital one, you know, with 40,000 agents that need to move remote overnight. And I think that it's because of that ease to set up, but also the scale and the way that we charge. So, you know, it's AWS consumption-based pricing. You only pay for the interactions with customers. So the barrier to entry is really, really low. You don't have to migrate everything over and buy a bunch of new licenses. You can just stand it up and you're only charged for the interactions with customers. And then if you want to scale down like into it, obviously tax season they're bringing on a lot more agents to handle calls, when those agents aren't really needed for that busy time, you're not paying for those seats. >> You're flex. Take me through the, okay, that's a win, I get that. So home run, great success. Now, the machine learning story is interesting too, because you have the purpose-built platform. There's some customizations that can happen on top of it. So it's not just, here's a general purpose piece of software. People are using some customizations. Take us through the other things. >> Well, the exciting thing is they're not even real customizations because we're AWS, we can leverage the AML services and built pre-built purpose-built features. So there it's embedded and you know, Amazon Connect has been cloud native and AI born since the very beginning. So we've taken a lot of the AI services and built them into you don't need any knowledge. You don't have to know anything about AIML. You can just go in and start leveraging it. And it has huge powerful effects for our customers. We launched three new features this year. One was Amazon Wisdom. That's part of Amazon Connect. And what that does is, you know, if you're an agent and you're on the phone and customer's asking questions, today what they have to do is go in and search across all these different knowledge repositories to find the answer or, you know, how do I issue a refund? You know, we're hearing about this feature that's broken on our product. We're listening behind the scenes to that call and then just automatically providing the knowledge articles as they're on the call saying, this is what you should do, giving them recommendations so we can help the customer much more quickly. >> I love them moving up the stack. Again, a huge fan of Connect. We've highlighting in all of our stories. It's a phenomenon that's translating to other areas, but I want to tie back in where it goes next cause on these keynotes, Adam Solecki's and today was Swami, the conversations about a horizontal data plane. And so as customers would say, use Connect, I might want, if I'm a big customer I want to integrate that into my data because it's voice data, it's call centers, customer data, but I have other databases. So how do you guys look at that integration layer snapping it together with say, a time series database, or maybe a CRM system or retail e-commerce because again, it's all data but it's connected call center. Some may think it's silo, but it's not really siloed. So, I'm a customer. How do I integrate call center? >> Yeah and it's, you know, we have a very strong partner with Salesforce. They're actually a reseller of Connect. So we work with them very, very closely. We have out of the box integrations with Salesforce, with your other, you know, analytics databases with Marketo with other services that you need. I think again, it's one of the benefits of being AWS, it's very extensible, very flexible, and really easy to bring in and share the data that we have with other systems. >> John: So it's not an issue then. >> One of the conversation points that's come up is the, this idea that a large majority of IT Spend is still on premises today. In other words, the AWS total addressable market hasn't been tapped yet. And, you imagine going through the pandemic, someone using AWS Connect to create a virtual call center, now as we hopefully come out and people some return to the office, but now they have the tools to be able to stay at home and be more flexible. Those people, maybe they weren't in the cloud that much before. But to John's point, now you start talking about connecting all of those other data sources. Well, where do those data sources belong? They belong in AWS. So, from your perspective, on the surface it looks like, well, wait, you have these products, but really those are gateways to everything else that AWS does. Is that a fair statement? >> I think it's very, yeah. Absolutely. >> Yeah. >> The big thing I want to get into is okay, we're, I mean, we don't have a lot of people calling for theCUBE but I mean, we wouldn't use the call center, but there's audio involved. Are people more going back to the old school phones for support now with the pandemic? Cause you've mentioned that earlier about the price line, having more- >> I think it's, you know, when we talk to our customers too, it's about letting, letting any customer contact you the way they want to. You know, we, you know, I was talking to Delta, spoke with us yesterday in the business application leadership session. And she said, you know, when someone has a flight issue, I'm sure you can attest to this. I did the same thing. They call, you know, if your, if your flight got canceled or it's looking like it's going to keep pushing, you don't necessarily want to go, you know, use a chat bot or send an email or a text, but there's other use cases where you just want a quick answer, you know, if you contact, I haven't received my product yet, you know, it said it was shipped, I didn't get it. I don't necessarily want to talk to someone, but so, it's just about making that available. >> On the voice side, is it other apps are integrating voice? So what's the interface to call center? Is it, can I integrate like an app voice integrated through the app or it's all phone? >> Because for the agents, there's an agent UI. So they'll see kind of calls that they have in their queue coming up, they'll see the tasks that they have to issue or refund. They'll see the kind of analytics that they have. The knowledge works. There's a supervisor view, so they could go see, you know, we with contact lens for Amazon Connect, we had a launch this, you know, this week, every event around contact lens, it lets you see the trends and sentiment of what's going on the call. It gives them like those training moments. If people aren't using the standard sign-off or the standard greeting on the call, it's a training moment and they can kind of see what's happening and get real-time alerts. If two keywords of a customer saying they cancel into the call, that can get a flag and they can go in and help the agent if necessary. So. >> All kinds of metadata extraction going on in real time. >> Yeah. >> How do you, how would AWS to go through the process of determining what should be bespoke solution hearing versus something that can be productized? And we know there are 475 different kinds of instances. However, you can come up with a package solution where people could pick features and get up and running really quickly. How is that decision making process? >> Well, I mean, you know, 90% at least of what we do build, it comes from what our customers ask for. So we don't, it's the onus is not on us. We listen to our customers, they tell us what they want us to build. Contact center solutions are their line of business applications are purchased by business decision makers and they're used to doing more buying than building. So they wanted to be more out of the box, more like pre-built, but we still are AWS. We make it very, very extensible, very easy to customize, like pull in other data sources. But when we look at how we are going to move up the stack and other areas, we just continue to listen to our customers. >> What's the biggest thing you learned in the pandemic from the team? What's the learnings coming out of the pandemic as hybrid world is upon us? >> I mean, I think a few things with, you know, starting, as you mentioned with the cloud, that the kind of idea of a contact center being a massive building, usually in the middle of America where, you know, people go and they sit and they have conversations. If that was really turned on its head and you can have very secure and accessible solutions through the cloud so that you can work from anywhere. So that was really fantastic to see. >> That's going to be interesting to see moving forward. How that paradigm shifts some centralized call centers, but a lot of this aggregated work that can be done. >> I mean, who knows the, you know, gig economy could be in the contact center, you know. >> Yeah, absolutely >> Yeah >> Maybe get some CUBE hosts, give us theCUBE Connect. We get some CUBE hosts remote. >> That's important work, yeah. >> We need, we need to talk. I got to got my phone number in that list. Annie, it's been fantastic to have you. >> Thank you guys so much. I really appreciate it. >> For John Furrier, this is Dave Nicholson telling you, thank you for joining our continuous coverage of AWS reinvent 2021. Stick with theCUBE for the best in hybrid event coverage. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Dec 2 2021

SUMMARY :

because you have been Thank you so much, It's wonderful to have you back. Talk to us about Connect. So it's, you know, Talk about some of the So another example is, you know, that Connect during the And you guys had tons of traction This is a phenomenon. in March and April of 2020 alone. like amazing to stand up a we had, you know, this theCUBE call center, we all the way to like capital one, you know, because you have the to find the answer or, you know, So how do you guys look Yeah and it's, you know, and people some return to the office, I think it's very, yeah. earlier about the price line, I think it's, you know, we had a launch this, you know, this week, extraction going on in real time. However, you can come up Well, I mean, you know, and you can have very secure That's going to be interesting I mean, who knows the, you know, We get some CUBE hosts remote. I got to got my phone number in that list. Thank you guys so much. thank you for joining

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
AnniePERSON

0.99+

Adam SoleckiPERSON

0.99+

Annie WeinbergerPERSON

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

Dave NicholsonPERSON

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

MarchDATE

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

90%QUANTITY

0.99+

two studiosQUANTITY

0.99+

Las VegasLOCATION

0.99+

Best WesternORGANIZATION

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

Mutual of OmahaORGANIZATION

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

American Preparatory AcademyORGANIZATION

0.99+

DeltaORGANIZATION

0.99+

300%QUANTITY

0.99+

40,000 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

Bank of OmahaORGANIZATION

0.99+

20 minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

two keywordsQUANTITY

0.99+

475 different kindsQUANTITY

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

Capital OneORGANIZATION

0.99+

Los AngelesLOCATION

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

this weekDATE

0.99+

April of 2020DATE

0.98+

PricelineORGANIZATION

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

two daysQUANTITY

0.98+

pandemicEVENT

0.98+

SalesforceORGANIZATION

0.97+

AmericaLOCATION

0.97+

over 10 million interactionsQUANTITY

0.97+

Two live setsQUANTITY

0.97+

tens of thousandsQUANTITY

0.97+

AlexaTITLE

0.96+

a dayQUANTITY

0.96+

over 5,000 new contact centersQUANTITY

0.95+

this yearDATE

0.95+

oneQUANTITY

0.94+

SwamiPERSON

0.94+

over 10 years agoDATE

0.93+

Amazon WisdomORGANIZATION

0.93+

three new featuresQUANTITY

0.92+

over four years agoDATE

0.92+

customersQUANTITY

0.9+

ConnectTITLE

0.89+

theCUBEORGANIZATION

0.87+

COVIDTITLE

0.87+

MarketoORGANIZATION

0.82+

a couple weeks agoDATE

0.8+

ConnectORGANIZATION

0.79+

Amazon ConnectORGANIZATION

0.78+

Michelle Christensen, enChoice and Ryan Dennings, Auto-Owners Insurance | IBM Think 2021


 

>>From around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of IBM. Think 2021 brought to you by IBM. >>Welcome to the cubes coverage of IBM. Think the digital experience I'm Lisa Martin. I've got two guests with me here today. Ryan Dennings joins us manager of ECM solutions at auto owners insurance company, Ryan, welcome to the program. Thank you. And Michelle Christianson is here as well. VP of enterprise report management practice at end choice, Michelle. It's good to have you on the program. Thank you. Thank you. So let's, let's go ahead and start with you. You guys are a customer of and choice and IBM, talk to us a little bit about auto owners company. I know this is a fortune 500. This was founded in 1916. You've got about nearly 3 million policy holders, but give us an overview of auto owners insurance. >>Sure. So I don't want to said insurance is an insurance company. That's headquartered in Lansing, Michigan. We write insurance in 26 States throughout the United States. Um, just by our name being auto owners insurance, which is how we started. Um, we write all personal lines, commercial lines and also have a life insurance company, >>So comprehensive and that across those nearly 3 million policy holders. Michelle, tell us a little bit about end choice. I know this, you guys are an IBM gold business partner, but this is end choices first time on the cubes. So give us a background. Sure, sure. Great. So in choice are an IBM gold business partner. Uh, we have had 28 years success with IBM as a business partner. Our headquarters are in areas, um, Austin, Texas, and, uh, Tempe, Arizona, as well as Shelton Connecticut. We cover all of North America and we are a hundred percent focused on the IBM digital business automation space. We have about 500 customers now that we've helped, uh, through the years. And we continue to be a leading support provider as well as an implementation partner with all the IBM solutions. And talk to me a little bit Michelle, about how it is that you work with with, um, auto owners. >>So we assisted auto owners recently in their digital transformation journey and they were, uh, dealing with an antiquated product and wanted to get for moving forward, you know, provided better customer satisfaction, um, experience, um, for their clients agents. And so we partnered with them and with IBM and bringing them a content manager on demand solution as well as navigator and several other products within the IBM digital business automation portfolio. Excellent client. Oh, sorry Michelle, go ahead. Nope. That's that's fine. All right, Ryan, tell us a little bit about auto owners, your relationship with IBM and choice and how is it helping you to address some, the challenges in the market today? >>Sure. So I don't know if this has a long-term relationship with IBM. Um, originally starting back as we go as a mainframe customer and then, you know, more recently, um, helping us with different modern technology initiatives. Uh, they were instrumental in the nineties when we created our initial web offerings. And then more recently they've been helping us with our digital business automation, which has helped us to, um, mature our content, offering it. >>So you have had a long standing relationship with IBM. Right. And you mentioned the nineties, ah, a time when we didn't have to wear a mask on our faces. So a couple of decades it goes back. Yeah. >>Yes. For sure. Yes. Even further than that back, you know, back into the seventies from the mainframe side of things, >>Uh, the seventies, another good time. All right. So Michelle had talked to me a little bit about what end choices doing with IBM solutions to help auto owners from a digital transformation perspective is as I said, this is a company that was founded in 1916. And I always love to hear how history companies like that are actually working with technology companies to facilitate that transformation a lot harder than it sounds well. That's correct. Just as I mentioned, we're focused on helping customers develop their strategies, their digital strategy and creating those transformative solutions. So we're helping organizations like auto owners, um, with their journey by first realizing, um, their existing, existing, digital state, what challenges they might have and what needs they might need. And then we break that down or we deconstruct those technical and process. And finally we re-invent, um, their strategic offering with modern capabilities. >>So we're focused on technologies like RPA machine learning, artificial intelligence, they're more efficient, scalable, and secure. So any way we can bring those technologies into the equation we go forward. So this offers us, our clients, um, smarter and more into intuitive interfaces, creating basically a better user experience and a better user experience then becomes disruptive to their competition. So they gain a better place in the market space. Ryan talked to us about that process as much as you were involved in it. I liked that Michelle said, you know, we kind of look at the environment, we deconstruct it and then we reinvent it. Talk to me about how IBM and enChoice have ha has helped auto owners to do that so that your digital infrastructure is much more modern. And I presume much more resilient when there are market dynamics like we're living in now. >>Yeah, for sure. So, you know, we've, we've gone through a couple of transformation journeys at auto owners with IBM. Um, when I started the team about seven years ago, we originally started using file NATS and data cap and case manager and content aggregator, um, as our first, um, movement from a traditional, um, platform that we had for content management into a more modern platform. And that helped us a lot to improve our business process, um, improve how we capture content and bring it into the system and make it actionable more recently, we've been working with Michelle and the team on our, um, migration to a content management on demand platform. And that's really going to be transformative in terms of how we're able to present content and documents and bills, um, to our agents and customers, um, to be able to transform that content and show it in ways that are, um, important, um, for our customers to be able to see it to, um, engage from, with auto owners in a, in a digital era. >>So Ryan, just a couple of questions on that is that, is that a facilitation of like the digitization of processes that had some paper involved cause you guys have about 48,000 agents. So a lot of folks, a lot of content, tell me a little bit more about how, um, that like content manager on demand, for example, and what you're doing with ETF, how has that really revolutionizing and driving part of that digital transformation? >>Sure. So, uh, you know, there's two parts to that in terms of that content management management on demand journey. Um, one is the technology portion of it, but IBM's provided and that suite of software gives us some functionality that we haven't had in the past. Um, specifically some functionality around searching and searchability of our content, um, that will make it easier for people to find the content that they're looking for, um, ability to implement, uh, records management policies and other things that help us manage that content more effectively, um, as well as, um, some different options to be able to present the content, uh, to our customers and agents in a, in a better and more modern way. Um, and I'm choices role rolling that has really been, sorry, guide us on that journey, um, to help us make the right choices along the way on the project and help us get to a successful implementation and production. >>Excellent. Michelle, talk to me about hybrid cloud AI data, a big theme of, uh, IBM think is your, how is enChoice using hybrid cloud and AI, you mentioned some of the ways, but kind of break into that a little bit more about how you're helping customers like auto owners and others really take advantage of those modern technologies. Well, sure, sure. So, um, of course with the Calpec offerings that IBM has come forward with and where we focus in the cloud Pak for automation, um, several of those offerings are, some of them are, um, uh, built specifically to, uh, survive or to, to, um, be hosted in a hybrid environment. And as we working with auto owners, um, transforming their platforms going forward, for example, they just invested in, in a, um, a, uh, I just lost the word here. I, they just invested in a new platform mainframe platform where they're going to be leveraging the red hats and from there they'll drive forward into containerization. >>So, um, Ryan mentioned, uh, some of the ways that we'll be presenting the content for his agents and his customers and a particular, um, that entire viewing platform itself can be moved to a containerization state. So, um, so it's going to be a lot easier for him to transition into that and to maintain it and to management manage it. And of course, um, just that whole, um, the ease of function around it will be a lot easier. So we are in our area as an IBM business partner. Um, we work with, uh, these solutions to try to stay ahead of the game, to try to be able to assist our customers to understand what makes sense, when is it time to move into those? Um, it's great to take advantage of the new stuff, but nobody wants to be, you know, the bleeding game. We want to be the leading game. >>And, um, so that's some of the areas we focus with our clients to really stay tight with the labs tight with IBM and understanding their strategies and convey those and educate our customers on those excellent leading edge. Ran, talk to me a little bit. I love this a bank, uh, sorry. Uh, an insurance company from the early 19 hundreds moving into the using container technology. I'll have stories like that. Talk to me a little bit about hybrid cloud AI and how those technologies are going to be facilitators of the continuation of the digital transformation and probably enabling more opportunities for your agents to meet more needs from, from your policy holders. >>Yeah, for sure. So, uh, first and foremost, um, we were a red hat open shift, uh, customer before IBM acquired them and we were doing microservices development and things like that on the platform. Um, and then we were super excited about IBM's digital business automation strategy to, uh, move to cloud pack, um, and have that available for software products to run on OpenShift. Um, at the end of last year, we updated our license thing so that we can move in that direction and we're starting to, um, deploy, um, digital business automation products on our OpenShift platform, which is super exciting for me. It's going to make for faster upgrades, more scalability. Um, just a lot of ease of use things, um, for my team, um, to make their jobs easier, but also easier for us to adapt new upgrades and software offerings from IBM. Um, there's also a number of products that are in the, um, containerized or OpenShift only offering as they're initially coming out, whether it's mobile capture or automated document processing, um, the same a couple, um, and those are both things that we're looking at auto owners to continue to mature in this space and be able to offer more functionality to our associates, our customers, and our agents, um, to continue to grow the business >>Very forward-thinking uh, awesome Ryan, thanks for sharing with us. What auto insurance or auto owners insurance is doing, how you're being successful and how, how you've done so much transformation already. I want to throw the last question to Michelle. Take us out Michelle with what's next from end choices perspective in terms of your digital transformation. Um, well we have been a hundred percent focus on helping all of our customers develop their digital strategy and, uh, and creating their own transformative solutions. So as we continue to work with our clients, take them through the journey. Um, as I mentioned before, we try to encourage them not to focus on the, the technology itself, but really to focus on creating their exceptional customer experience when driving their digital strategy. And we see ourselves as, you know, helping transform our clients experience such that, you know, customer experience becomes what enChoice does best. >>So we see not only our own organization going through the transformation, but making sure that we're taking our clients with us and with 500 clients, we're, we're really busy. So that's always good. That is good. It sounds like the last year has been, uh, very fruitful for you. And I love that you mentioned customer experience, Michelle. I think that is so important and as well as employee experience, but having a good customer experience, especially these days. Table-stakes I thank you both so much for sharing what you guys are doing with IBM solutions, the transformation that you're both of your companies are on, and we look forward to hearing what's to come. Thank you both for your time. Thank you. Thank you for Rand Dunnings and Michelle Christiansen. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cubes coverage of IBM. Think that digital experience.

Published Date : May 12 2021

SUMMARY :

Think 2021 brought to you by IBM. It's good to have you on the program. Um, we write all personal lines, commercial lines and also have a life insurance company, And talk to me a little bit Michelle, about how it is that you work with with, um, auto owners. So we assisted auto owners recently in their digital transformation journey And then more recently they've been helping us with our digital business automation, So you have had a long standing relationship with IBM. from the mainframe side of things, So Michelle had talked to me a little I liked that Michelle said, you know, we kind of look at the environment, to improve our business process, um, improve how we capture content So a lot of folks, a lot of content, tell me a little bit more about how, um, the content that they're looking for, um, ability to implement, So, um, of course with the Calpec offerings that IBM has come forward with And of course, um, just that whole, And, um, so that's some of the areas we focus with our clients to really stay tight with So, uh, first and foremost, um, we were a red So as we continue to work with our clients, take them through the journey. And I love that you mentioned customer experience, Michelle.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
RyanPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

MichellePERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

Michelle ChristensenPERSON

0.99+

Michelle ChristiansenPERSON

0.99+

Ryan DenningsPERSON

0.99+

Michelle ChristiansonPERSON

0.99+

AustinLOCATION

0.99+

1916DATE

0.99+

Rand DunningsPERSON

0.99+

TexasLOCATION

0.99+

ArizonaLOCATION

0.99+

United StatesLOCATION

0.99+

two partsQUANTITY

0.99+

28 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

500 clientsQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

two guestsQUANTITY

0.99+

North AmericaLOCATION

0.99+

enChoiceORGANIZATION

0.99+

OpenShiftTITLE

0.99+

Lansing, MichiganLOCATION

0.99+

TempeLOCATION

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

last yearDATE

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

about 500 customersQUANTITY

0.97+

about 48,000 agentsQUANTITY

0.97+

first timeQUANTITY

0.97+

ECMORGANIZATION

0.97+

hundred percentQUANTITY

0.97+

seventiesDATE

0.97+

CalpecORGANIZATION

0.95+

hundred percentQUANTITY

0.94+

early 19 hundredsDATE

0.93+

both thingsQUANTITY

0.91+

ninetiesDATE

0.9+

Shelton ConnecticutLOCATION

0.9+

endDATE

0.9+

nearly 3 million policy holdersQUANTITY

0.81+

seven years agoDATE

0.8+

BOS27 Michelle Christensen and Ryan Dennings VTT


 

(upbeat music) >> From around the globe. It's theCUBE with digital coverage of IBM Think 2021 brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome to theCUBE's coverage of IBM Think, The Digital Experience. I'm Lisa Martin. I've got two guests with me here today. Ryan Dennings joins us, Manager of ECM Solutions at Auto-Owners Insurance Company, Ryan, welcome to the program. >> Thank you. And Michelle Christensen is here as well, VP of Enterprise Report Management Practice at enChoice, Michelle, it's good to have you on the program. >> Thank you. Thank you. So let's, Ryan let's go ahead and start with you. You guys are a customer of enChoice and IBM, talk to us a little bit about Auto-Owners Company. I know this is a fortune 500. This was founded in 1916. You've got about nearly 3 million policy holders but give us an overview of Auto-Owners Insurance. >> Sure. So Auto-Owners Insurance is an insurance company that's headquartered in Lansing, Michigan. We write insurance in 26 States throughout the United States. Despite our name being Auto-Owners Insurance, which is how we started, we write all personal lines, commercial lines, and also have a life insurance company. >> So comprehensive and that across those nearly 3 million policy holders. Michelle, tell us a little bit about enChoice. I know this, you guys are an IBM Gold Business Partner but this is enChoice's first time on the Cube, so give us a background. >> Sure, sure, great. So enChoice are an IBM Gold Business Partner. We have had 28 years success with IBM as a business partner. Our headquarters are in areas of Austin, Texas, and Tempe, Arizona, as well as Shelton, Connecticut. We cover all of North America and we are a hundred percent focused on the IBM Digital Business Automation Space. We have about 500 customers now that we've helped through the years and we continue to be a leading support provider as well as an implementation partner with all the IBM Solutions. >> And talk to me a little bit Michelle about how it is that you work with with Auto-Owners. >> So we assisted Auto-Owners recently in their digital transformations journey and they were dealing with an antiquated product and wanted to get moving forward, you know provide a better customer satisfaction experience for their client's agents, and so we partnered with them and with IBM and bringing them a content manager on-demand solution as well as navigator and several other products within the IBM Digital Business Automation Portfolio. >> Excellent, Ryan Oh, sorry Michelle, go ahead. >> Nope. That's that's fine. All right, Ryan, tell us a little bit about Auto-Owners, your relationship with IBM and enChoice and how is it helping you to address some of the challenges in the market today? >> Sure. So Auto-Owners has a long-term relationship with IBM originally starting back years ago as a mainframe customer and then, you know more recently helping us with different modern technology initiatives. They were instrumental in the nineties when we redid our initial web offerings, and then more recently they've been helping us with our Digital Business Automation which has helped us to mature our content offering at Owners. >> So you have had a long standing relationship with IBM, Ryan, and then you mentioned the nineties at a time when we didn't have to wear masks on our faces. (laughing) So a couple of decades it goes back, yeah? >> Yes. For sure. Yes. Even further than that, that, you know back into the seventies from the mainframe side of things. >> The seventies, another good time. (laughing) All right. So Michelle, talk to me a little bit about what enChoice is doing with IBM Solutions to help Auto-Owners from a digital transformation perspective is as I said this is a company that was founded in 1916, and I always love to hear how history companies like that are actually working with technology companies to facilitate that transformation. It's a lot harder than it sounds. >> Well, that's correct. Yes. As I mentioned, we're focused on helping customers develop their strategy, their digital strategy and creating those transformative solutions. So we're helping organizations like Auto-Owners with their journey, by first realizing their existing digital state, what challenges they might have and what needs they might need, and then we break that down or we deconstruct those technical and processizations and finally we re-invent their strategic offering with modern capabilities. So we're focused on technologies like RPA, machine learning, artificial intelligence, they're more efficient, scalable, and secure, so any way we can bring those technologies into the equation we go for it. So this offers us, our clients smarter and more intuitive interfaces creating basically a better user experience, and a better user experience then becomes disruptive to their competition. So they gain a better place in the market space. >> Ryan talked to us about that process as much as you were involved in it. I liked that Michelle said, you know we kind of look at the environment, we deconstruct it and then we re-invent it. Talk to me about how IBM and enChoice has helped Auto-Owners to do that so that your digital infrastructure is much more modern, and I presume much more resilient when there are market dynamics like we're living in now. >> Yeah, for sure. So, you know, we've, we've gone through a couple of transformation journeys at Auto-Owners with IBM. When I started the team about seven years ago we originally started using file NATS and data cap, and case manager, and content aggregator as our first movement from a traditional platform that we had for content management into a more modern platform, and that helped us a lot to improve our business process, improve how we capture content and bring it into the system and make it actionable. More recently, we've been working with Michelle and the enChoice team on our migration to a content management on-demand platform, and that's really going to be transformative in terms of how we're able to present content and documents and bills to our agents and customers, to be able to transform that content and show it in ways that are important for our customers to be able to see it, to engage with Auto-Owners in a, in a digital era. >> So Ryan, just a couple of questions on that, is that is that a facilitation of like the digitization of processes that had some paper involved cause you guys have about 48,000 agents, so a lot of folks, a lot of content, tell me a little bit more about how that like content manager on-demand, for example and what you're doing with ECF, how has that really revolutionizing and driving part of that digital transformation? >> Sure. So, you know, there's two parts to that in terms of that content management on-demand journey. One is the technology portion of it, but IBM's provided, and that suite of software gives us some functionality that we haven't had in the past. Specifically, some functionality around searching and searchability of our content that will make it easier for people to find the content that they're looking for, ability to implement records management policies and other things that help us manage that content more effectively, as well as some different options to be able to present the content to our customers and agents in a in a better and more modern way and enChoice's role in that has really been to guide us on that journey to help us make the right choices along the way on the project and help us get to a successful implementation and production. >> Excellent. Michelle, talk to me about Hybrid Cloud AI Data a big theme of IBM Think this year. How is enChoice using Hybrid Cloud and AI? You mentioned some of the other ways but kind of break into that a little bit more about how you're helping customers like Auto-Owners and others really take advantage of those modern technologies. >> Well, sure, sure. So of course with the Cloud Pak offerings that IBM has come forward with and where we focus in the Cloud Pak for automation, several of those offerings are some of them are built specifically to survive or to to be hosted in a hybrid environment, and as we're working with Auto-Owners transforming their platforms going forward for example, they just invested in, in a, a I just lost the word here. They just invested in a, a new platform, mainframe platform where they're going to be leveraging the red hats, and from there they'll drive forward into containerization. So Ryan mentioned some of the ways that we'll be presenting the content for his agents and his customers in a particular that entire viewing platform itself can be moved to a containerization state. So, so it's going to be a lot easier for him to transition into that and to maintain it and to manage it. And of course, just that whole, the ease of function around it will be a lot easier. So we are in our area as an IBM business partner, we work with these solutions to try to stay ahead of the game, to try to be able to assist our customers to understand what makes sense, when is it time to move into those. It's great to take advantage of the new stuff but nobody wants to be, you know, the bleeding game. We want to be the leading game. And so that's some of the areas we focus with our clients to really stay tight with the labs, tight with IBM and understanding their strategies and convey those and educate our customers on those. >> Excellent leading edge. Ryan, talk to me a little bit. I love this a bank, sorry an insurance company from the early 1900's moving into the using container technology. I love stories like that. Talk to me a little bit about Hybrid Cloud AI and how those technologies are going to be facilitators of the continuation of the digital transformation, and probably enabling more opportunities for your agents to meet more needs from from your policy holders. >> Yeah, for sure. So first and foremost, we were a Red Hat OpenShift customer before IBM acquired them and we were doing microservices development and things like that on the platform, and then we were super excited about IBM's digital business automation strategy to move to a Cloud Pak and have that available for software products to run on OpenShift. At the end of last year, we updated our licensing so that we can move in that direction, and we're starting to deploy digital business automation products on our OpenShift platform which is super exciting for me. It's going to make for faster upgrades, more scalability, just a lot of ease of use things for my team to make their jobs easier but also easier for us to adapt new upgrades and software offerings from IBM. There's also a number of products that are in the containerized or OpenShift only offering as they're initially coming out, whether it's mobile capture or automated document processing to name a couple. And those are both things that we're looking at Auto-Owners to continue to mature in this space and be able to offer more functionality to our associates, our customers, and our agents to continue to grow the business. >> Very forward-thinking, awesome Ryan. Thanks for sharing with us what Auto-Owners Insurance is doing, how you're being successful and how you've done so much transformation already. I want to throw the last question to Michelle. Take us out Michelle with what's next from enChoice's perspective in terms of your digital transformation. >> Well, we have been a hundred percent focused on helping all of our customers develop their digital strategy and and creating their own transformative solutions. So as we continue to work with our clients, take them through the journey, as I mentioned before, we try to encourage them not to focus on the, the technology itself, but really to focus on creating their exceptional customer experience when driving their digital strategy. And we see ourselves as, you know helping transform our client's experience such that you know customer experience becomes what enChoice does best. So we see not only our own organization going through the transformation, but making sure that we're taking our clients with us and with 500 clients we're, we're really busy. So that's always good. >> That is good. It sounds like the last year has been very fruitful for you, and I love that you mentioned customer experience, Michelle. I think that is so important and as well as employee experience, but having a good customer experience, especially these days. Table-stakes. I thank you both so much for sharing what you guys are doing with IBM Solutions, the transformation that both of your companies are on and we look forward to hearing what's to come. Thank you both for your time. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for Ryan Dennings and Michelle Christiansen. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching theCUBE's coverage of IBM Think The Digital Experience. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 16 2021

SUMMARY :

brought to you by IBM. Welcome to theCUBE's it's good to have you on the program. talk to us a little bit in Lansing, Michigan. that across those nearly and we continue to be a leading And talk to me a little bit Michelle and so we partnered with them Excellent, Ryan and how is it helping you to address some and then more recently to wear masks on our faces. back into the seventies from and I always love to hear and then we break that down Ryan talked to us and the enChoice team on our migration to and that suite of software gives us Michelle, talk to of the game, to try to be able Ryan, talk to me a little bit. and our agents to continue question to Michelle. So as we continue to and I love that you mentioned coverage of IBM Think

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
MichellePERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

RyanPERSON

0.99+

Michelle ChristiansenPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

Ryan DenningsPERSON

0.99+

Michelle ChristensenPERSON

0.99+

AustinLOCATION

0.99+

enChoiceORGANIZATION

0.99+

1916DATE

0.99+

28 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

two partsQUANTITY

0.99+

500 clientsQUANTITY

0.99+

two guestsQUANTITY

0.99+

United StatesLOCATION

0.99+

Lansing, MichiganLOCATION

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

Cloud PakTITLE

0.99+

SheltonLOCATION

0.99+

OpenShiftTITLE

0.99+

North AmericaLOCATION

0.99+

about 500 customersQUANTITY

0.99+

first timeQUANTITY

0.98+

TexasLOCATION

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

firstQUANTITY

0.98+

first movementQUANTITY

0.98+

last yearDATE

0.97+

todayDATE

0.97+

ECM SolutionsORGANIZATION

0.97+

Auto-Owners Insurance CompanyORGANIZATION

0.97+

hundred percentQUANTITY

0.97+

early 1900'sDATE

0.97+

ConnecticutLOCATION

0.97+

IBM Gold Business PartnerORGANIZATION

0.96+

about 48,000 agentsQUANTITY

0.96+

hundred percentQUANTITY

0.96+

nearly 3 million policy holdersQUANTITY

0.95+

Auto-Owners InsuranceORGANIZATION

0.95+

this yearDATE

0.94+

Alex Sanchez, Fujitsu Global | AWS re:Invent 2020


 

>>From around the globe, it's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel and AWS. >>Oh, great. To have you with us here on the cube, as we continue our coverage of AWS reinvent 2020, doing it virtually of course, uh, out of a necessity as I'm sure all of you can appreciate we're joined now by Alex Sanchez, who is the head of cross GDC networks and Fujitsu and Fujitsu provider of global it services and solutions. And so their footprint, um, again, is, is around the world. Uh, Alex, thanks for joining us here on the cube. We appreciate your time. And, uh, I'd like to hear a little bit more about your role first off before we jump in and tell us a little bit about Fujitsu for those who might not be familiar with it. >>Thank you very much, Sean. I really appreciate it. Uh, well, uh, first, uh, let me start by providing some background on Fujitsu. We're a global it digital transformation company offering a full range of technology products, solutions, and services. Uh, we exist to keep our customer's business running and we strive to give the best possible experience across every customer touch point. My role as head of cross CDC networks, uh, makes me in charge of standardizing technology networks across our global delivery centers. And for the past couple of years, I have been working on the standardization of our contact center platform across all of our global delivery centers. >>Yeah, yeah. I mean, you mentioned global delivery centers, so let's, let's jump into that. Uh, first off, what are they, um, you know, how have you structured your business in that respect and, um, ultimately what kind of service or a solution are they providing to your customers? >>Absolutely. So our global delivery centers are interconnected, integrated global teams. Uh, we deliver a broad portfolio of standardized services, which includes cybersecurity workplace and much more. We're based out of, uh, eight different key countries. We serve customers in over 100 and uh, different countries and we provide support in over 40 different languages. Uh, we enabled, uh, those CDCs enabled us to consistently and resilient provide services to our customers, uh, 24 seven 365 days of the year. Uh, the service, uh, that we offer, uh, as, uh, for you to global delivery teams are constructed from fully standardized components. Uh, it allows us to, uh, be configured to meet our customer needs and deliver a flawless global consistency services. >>You just, you were just talking about multiple languages, right? You've got to deal with countries, uh, environments, uh, continents, uh, businesses with different needs of, of all, you know, all over the, over the map. If you might say that, um, how do you balance that? Or how do you approach that when you do have so many customers in a wide variety of venues with a wide variety of needs and yet, you know, you want to provide for them that exemplary service that they expect when they come to Fujitsu? >>Uh, well, yes, as I mentioned, uh, we strive to evolve our contact centers so that it meets that global need that global expansion. And we adapt to our customers' needs. Uh, we have our GDCs with teams that are engaged and enabled so that we can provide customers with, uh, the best customer experience we like to help our customers reimagine their employee experience. >>Yeah. You mentioned, uh, you're talking about the contact centers and I know that you're going through this major transformation right now, in terms of, of, uh, how they're operating, um, before we get into that and, and, and jump a little bit deeper into what you've already touched on, what was the problem before, or, you know, there's always a problem, right? We're always trying to solve something, make something better, put a little finer point on that in terms of, of what you were doing before, you know, where were we? >>Well, uh, if we get to this global delivery organization, uh, tries to build trust at every opportunity we aim to deepen our customer relationships by adding a value of mix, uh, of rock, solid delivery, innovation and collaboration. However, some of our previous systems, the net always offer us the functionality and flexibility that we needed to provide a diverse range of, uh, services to our customers and what they required. So that is the basis of our, uh, challenges and, uh, what we were striving to overcome. >>So you've, you've turned AWS, um, uh, again, Amazon connect, I know that, uh, that you've got widely deployed. What was it that, that attracted you to that in terms of finding the value in it, and then what kind of efficiencies and what kinds of improvement in your operations is, is connect providing you >>Well, uh, being able to, uh, think about the art of the possible adding value to our customers. Introducing next generation features, uh, our road with AWS connected started as a two month proof of concept, uh, with over 150 different agents initially supported out of one of those global delivery centers, providing support and services to, uh, one of the regions. So, uh, we started as a way to innovate and provide next generation functionality. >>Yeah. Proof of concept periods are always interesting, aren't they? Because you, you think you're going to find out some thing and, and you might, but then you sometimes find out something else, right. That, that you're like, okay, well, the, uh, there's another application here. There's another service here. There's another layer here. Um, what was it in that period of time for you then, as far as your takeaways that convinced you that, you know, this is right, this is good. We need this. And, and so we're going to jump in. Absolutely. So, >>Uh, I would say that one of those things is that we made marked improvements in our customer experience. We were able to rapidly onboard new agents and provide automated features, such as call recording sentiment analysis, integrated callback features. We were able to help our customers faster while simultaneously improving the service quality. >>Yeah. COVID, uh, has been, um, certainly wreaking havoc in, in every facet of life. Right. Um, no question personally, professionally unit, multiple industries. So how about the impact on your, in your world first off, just from, from COVID-19, uh, how you've had to assess what your client's needs are, how you, what your needs are and, and first off, how you've, how have you balanced that >>In the past year? Yes, well, uh, Fujitsu was able to move, uh, 95% of our contact survey agents to remote work environment, equipped with the tools that they needed to provide, uh, services while remaining safe and productive. Our contact center agents and operations was not able to persist, but actually thrive during the COVID 19 pandemic and provide the much needed support that our customers were expecting and, uh, provided from, from us. How fast >>Was it, you know, I guess it required, what, how quickly did you have to respond? Cause, uh, you know, I mean, this certainly has caught a lot of, or caught a lot of people by surprise back in early March and April. Um, and I assume that that Fujitsu's no different, right? All of a sudden you have, uh, a pandemic on your hands and you've got to move nimbly and quickly. So just talk about that, if you would, that, that quick transformation that you had to make and in terms of responding to the >>Absolutely. So with AWS connect, we were able to automate and simplify the complex contact center flows that we had previously, a product of this is it's ability to now make ad hoc changes in seconds while avoiding multiple vendors to actually get those implemented. One example of this is that for you to help one of our customers move from 4,500 QS to less than 400 by actually doing call tagging attributes, instead of just creating independent flows for each one of those countries. And this mainly because of the needs from the operation to be able to quickly create reports based on countries and languages. Yeah. >>And I know you were involved or, and, and, and I might still be, I'm not sure a beta testing, uh, with some of the new, um, AWS connect features that were announced recently, you know, here at, uh, during re-invent what, what is, um, what's got you going there, you know, what, what, uh, what's caught your attention and what are you excited about seeing I go into practice on a, on a wider basis? >>Well, John, I would to say that introduction of ado list tasks has greatly helped us improve our agent productivity. We were able to see improvements of around 30% and we expect refine our customer experience even further by adding additional AWS integrations. >>Now, you mentioned, mentioned further, there's always a next step, right? Isn't there Alex. I mean, there's always, it's as good as you are now. You can't afford to sit still. I mean, that's the competitive nature of your landscape. So where do you see yourself in, in terms of rollouts in the future, or if there's an area that you think this is the next, uh, challenge for us, uh, in the, in the short term, what would that be? >>Well, that AC very good question for you to provide, uh, contact center services to around 300 diverse customers with agents speaking dozens of different languages. And we are continually looking to improve those services and experience for our customers, as well as our employees. We believe that if our employees are happy and safe and they have the tools that they need to do their work, that would result in an M in a much more improved, uh, service to our customers as such, uh, for you to source invest money, invest in heavily in the of transformation. Some of those elements would include a location agnostic delivery. This would actually allow us to create virtual teams with so employees working from Fujitsu offices while some will continue working from home. This approach will offer, uh, significantly and greater flexibility for our employees, as well as an improved efficiency of our services. >>Uh, the ability to introduce self service and automation by introducing, uh, virtual assistants, uh, robotics, uh, voice recognition, speech to text conversion, sentiment analysis. It will help us reduce the time it takes for agents or staff in repetitive tasks, allowing them to focus on the more important, uh, improvement, adding value to our customers. Being able to add, uh, tasks such as technology upgrades, uh, knowledge and data management, uh, that analytics business recommendations from our customers. This would then, uh, tied into what we're doing with improved planning, uh, as situation changes. And definitely COVID has been one example of that. Uh, Fujitsu needs to respond rapidly to ensure that we continue to provide support to all of our customers, uh, wrote a planning system, provides insights recommendations to help us deal with those changes as well as offering a level of flexibility for employees to align with their personal needs. And, uh, finally, and tying this up with those innovations that we're looking into, uh, being able to take those into employee engagement. We're introducing a proof of concept with gamification on some of our contact center, uh, desks to provide employees with a rewarding environment that offers an increase, uh, find while also doing the work reinforcing behaviors and enhancing customer satisfaction while there's certainly, um, a new >>Order, a new world, right? In, in terms of how we have to operate in a business environment. And I think you hit a key word there it's flexibility, right? Ultimately giving your employees the flexibility to still do their jobs in a very productive environment and a safe environment is critical. And it seems like Fujitsu is committed to doing that. So congratulations on that and thank you for the time today. We really appreciate it. >>Thank you very much, Sean. And thank you for the opportunity.

Published Date : Dec 16 2020

SUMMARY :

From around the globe, it's the cube with digital coverage of AWS And, uh, I'd like to hear a little bit more about your role first off before we jump Thank you very much, Sean. Uh, first off, what are they, um, you know, how have you structured your business Uh, the service, uh, that we offer, uh, as, uh, yet, you know, you want to provide for them that exemplary service that they expect when they come to Fujitsu? Uh, we have our GDCs with teams that are engaged and enabled so that in terms of, of, uh, how they're operating, um, before we get into that and, Well, uh, if we get to this global delivery organization, uh, tries to build trust at every opportunity that attracted you to that in terms of finding the value in it, So, uh, we started as period of time for you then, as far as your takeaways that convinced Uh, I would say that one of those things is that we made marked improvements in our customer experience. So how about the impact on your, and, uh, provided from, from us. Cause, uh, you know, I mean, this certainly has caught a lot One example of this is that for you to help one of our customers 30% and we expect refine our customer experience even further by in terms of rollouts in the future, or if there's an area that you think this is the next, uh, service to our customers as such, uh, for you to source invest money, invest in heavily in Being able to add, uh, tasks such as technology upgrades, And I think you hit a key word there it's flexibility, right?

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
SeanPERSON

0.99+

Alex SanchezPERSON

0.99+

FujitsuORGANIZATION

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

95%QUANTITY

0.99+

AlexPERSON

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

two monthQUANTITY

0.99+

dozensQUANTITY

0.99+

less than 400QUANTITY

0.99+

around 30%QUANTITY

0.98+

over 100QUANTITY

0.98+

early MarchDATE

0.98+

24QUANTITY

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

4,500 QSQUANTITY

0.98+

one exampleQUANTITY

0.97+

over 150 different agentsQUANTITY

0.97+

IntelORGANIZATION

0.97+

AprilDATE

0.97+

over 40 different languagesQUANTITY

0.97+

Fujitsu GlobalORGANIZATION

0.96+

firstQUANTITY

0.96+

past yearDATE

0.95+

around 300 diverse customersQUANTITY

0.94+

eight different key countriesQUANTITY

0.93+

COVID 19 pandemicEVENT

0.91+

One exampleQUANTITY

0.89+

seven 365 daysQUANTITY

0.81+

past couple of yearsDATE

0.78+

GDCORGANIZATION

0.77+

each oneQUANTITY

0.77+

different languagesQUANTITY

0.77+

adoTITLE

0.73+

Amazon connectORGANIZATION

0.7+

InventEVENT

0.7+

reinvent 2020TITLE

0.62+

COVIDTITLE

0.55+

centersQUANTITY

0.52+

2020DATE

0.5+

reinvent 2020TITLE

0.48+

COVID-19OTHER

0.46+

Scott Mullins, AWS | AWS re:Invent 2020


 

>>From around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel and AWS. >>Welcome back to the cubes live coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 I'm Lisa Martin and I have with me a cube alumni back, please. Welcome Scott Mullins, the worldwide financial services business development leader at AWS. Scott. Welcome back. Great to have you joining us, >>Lisa. It's great to be back on the cube and to be visiting with you today from virtual re-invent 2020. >>Yes. Reinventing reinvent. The last show that I got to host in-person for the cube was reinvent last year. And here we have this three week virtual event that started last week. So lots more even going on. I think I even saw a hundred thousand or so registered, so massive event, lots of news. So walk us through some of the highlights that have been announced at reinvent this year and some of the things that you're seeing the most interest from customers in. >>Well, I think one of the big highlights is 500,000 registrants that are reinvented 50,000 attendees last year to reinvent or 50,000 or so to 500,000 re registered for the event. So that's, that's, that's worth talking about in its own. Right. But I think, you know, one of the things, and you mentioned this, you know, more re-invent three weeks, uh, this year, as opposed to the four days that we normally spend in Las Vegas together, physically, when you do, when you do it digitally, you have the ability to actually include more things and more leaders talking about things. And so when we think about the announcements that are having impacts, uh, with financial services customers specifically I'd point to a couple of things and, you know, they're obviously gonna mention Andy's keynote, but there's going to be some things that you might go wait a minute. >>I didn't even see that announcement. Uh, and then maybe I could point you and the viewers to some other, other, um, keynotes or some other sessions that were announced. So obviously I think, uh, first and foremost in Andy's keynote, uh, hybrid, uh, was something that was a very, uh, big focus for him and I for a very long time, we've had the messaging of the right tool for the right job when it comes to any of your services. I think you could alter that today to say it's the right tool for the right job at the right time and in the right place. That makes sense for you and especially for financial institutions. Um, you could look at the announcements around containers, the announcements around Amazon EKS, distro, Amazon EKS, anywhere, and then also Amazon ECS anywhere, which allows our customers to actually, uh, put AWS container technology anywhere they would like to put it. >>You could look also at the additions of the one you and two you form factors to outposts. So no longer do you have to do the, the, the large for you, uh, foreign factor for outposts, smaller outposts for smaller spaces, uh, that particular will play well in the financial service industry. You may not have necessarily as much room for a full cabinet. You could also look from the hybrid perspective in the announcement we made, um, around red hat OpenShift on AWS, all of are giving customers the ability to choose how they actually want to deploy, um, and pursue a hybrid. I'd also point to some announcements we made around management and governance in the financial services, industry governance, uh, is a very important topic. Uh, we announced the management and government lens for the AWS well architected, um, uh, program, uh, that is focused on breath practices for evolving governance for the cloud. >>It has recommended combination of AWS services integrations with our partner network and vetted reference architectures and guidance for addressing regulatory obligations as well. I'd also point to some things we made around audits. I was specifically in Steve Smith's, um, session today, he talked about AWS audit manager. That's a new tool for continually assessing areas and environments for controls or risk compliance. That includes prebuilt compliance frameworks for things like PCI DSS and GDPR, uh, two things that are very important in the financial services industry and last, but certainly not least I'd point to the announcement around the AWS audit Academy. This is training for auditors to actually be able to audit clouds from an agnostic perspective. Any cloud, not specifically AWS that's tree, uh, digital training to do that. And then also an instructor led course specifically on how to audit AWS. So some very key announcements, both from the standpoint of services, uh, as well as additional layers of helping customers in the financial services industry in regulated industries actually use our services. >>So typical, re-invent typical in a lot of news, a lot of announcements, the 500,000 Mark in terms of registering. I hadn't heard that. That's amazing. Let's talk that this has been an Andy. Jassy had an exclusive with John furrier just a couple of weeks ago before. I think it was last week, actually. And we've been talking about this acceleration of digital business transformation because of COVID we've been talking about it, the entire pandemic on the virtual cube, talking about how companies it's really about right now, surviving and thriving to be able to go forward and companies that haven't accelerated are probably in some trouble. Talk to me about how AWS has been working with your financial services customers to help them pivot and move to the cloud faster, really to not just help them survive now, but thrive in the long-term. >>Yeah. Immediately when COVID hit and it hit at different times in different, in different parts of the world. Immediately when COVID hit, we saw the conversation that we were having turning from, Hey, what's my digital strategy to immediately, what are my digital capabilities? And what that really means is what do I have the ability to do tomorrow? Because tomorrow is going to really matter. I don't have necessarily the time to plan for the next several quarters or the next several years, what can I do tomorrow to, um, really, uh, support my, my own workforce and support my own customers and the obligations I have as a financial institution. The first thing we saw people do was to try and make sure that those who financial services work can work. You can look at the adoption of Amazon workspaces, as well as our, uh, Amazon connect, uh, call centers as a service. >>As two examples there at the RBL bank in India was able to move to Amazon workspaces in just 10 days to enable its teams to actually work remotely from home. When they couldn't come into the office, you can look at Barclays. Barclays is actually a presenter at re-invent this year. They'll have a session on how they use Amazon connect, which again is our call center as a service offering to enable 25,000 contacts and our agents to work from home when they can no longer work out of the, out of their traditional contact center. The second thing we saw a financial institutions joining was making sure that customer engagements could still be meaningful when digital was the only option, um, specifically here in the U S you could look at the work that each of us did with FinTech companies like biz two X or fins Zack, or BlueVine Stripe and cabbage in support of the care act in the U S you might remember that the cares act, um, hasn't provisions for funding for small businesses. >>This small business administration had a program called the paycheck protection program, and those organizations were active in providing funding, uh, to small businesses. Uh, through that program. I'll give you an example of cabbage cabbage had previously not been an SBA lender, um, but they were able to, in two weeks build a fully automated system for small businesses to access PPP funding using Amazon text track, to extract information from documentation that those folks submitted to get alone. That reduced approval times from multiple days to about a median of four hours to actually get approval, to get funding through the PPP program. And then just four months cabbage became the second largest PPP lender. They lent over $7 billion in funding, which was twice the amount of funding that they went last year in 2019 loans. So we were happy to support organizations like cabbage and those other FinTech companies, as they help small businesses in the U S get access to funding, uh, during this critical time. >>And as we know, as you said, critical time, but really life or death for a lot of businesses. And as we continue to go through these ways, but it's interesting that you talked about that the speed of facilitation that during such unprecedented times, AWS and this massive machine was able to continue moving at full speed ahead and helping those customers to pivot. You talked about the cloud connect. I had a conversation with a guest on the queue last week about that. And, and I now think about if I have to call in a contact center and that person might be from home. So, you know, we're fortunate that the cloud computing technology and people like you and AWS, or are able to power that because it's, it's literally essential, which is probably one of the words of the year, but being able to keep the machinery going and innovate at the same time has been, make or break for a lot of businesses. >>Absolutely. And you, you look at, you know, kind of one of the last year is that I'll point to is, um, financial institutions. Uh, anti-virus, we're were very much focused on making sure that that cannot fail, that they scaled. And so you can look at the work we did with, uh, with the, with FINRA FINRA is the primary capital markets regulator here in the U S and on a daily basis frame or processes about 400 billion market events on every night to do surveillance on our markets, that when COVID hit, we had unprecedented volume and volatility in the market. And FINRA was, was, um, looking at processing, uh, anywhere from two to three times, their normal daily market volumes that's anywhere from 800 billion market events to 1.2 trillion a night. And if you look at how they were able to scale, they're actually able to scale up compute resources in AWS. We're on a nightly basis. They're able to automatically turn on and off up to a hundred thousand compute nodes in a single day. That automatic ability to scale is, is the power you're talking about. Being able to actually turn things up when you needed it and turn things down when you, when you don't need it based on the volumes. >>Well, and that's going to be something key going forward. As we know that there will be one thing I think that I always say we can count on right now is uncertainty and continued uncertainty, but we've also seen I'm calling them COVID catalysts. You know, the, what you talked about with cabbage, for example, and how that business pivoted quickly, because of the power of cloud computing and emerging technologies, what are some of the things that you think as we go into 2021 in the financial services arena, what are some of the big tech trends that you think were maybe born during COVID that are going to be critical going forward? >>Well, you know, you, you, you had Melanie Frank from capital one on cube a couple of days ago, and she was talking about, you know, their shift to cloud and what that's really enabled, and it, and she kind of sums it up nicely. She says, look, we want to give our customers experience that are real time, and that are intelligent. And you just can't do that with legacy technology. That's sitting in, you know, kind of a legacy data center. And so I think that's going to be kind of the, the, the all encompassing statement for what's happening in the financial services industry. As I mentioned, you know, organizations overnight said, okay, wait a minute, let's take that strategy. And then let's put it aside. Let's talk about capabilities. What can we do? And I think, you know, necessity is the mother of invention. Um, and when you're faced with limitations and challenges, like we all have been faced with around the world and not just in the financial services industry, it, it breeds, um, invention and the, and the desire and the need to actually meet those challenges head on, in very engineered of ways. >>And I think you're going to see more invention and specifically more invention from the established players in the financial services industry. Cloud use is not just experimental on the edges anymore. You're going to see more organizations coming out of COVID. Um, having had those experiences where they actually stood up a context center and scaled it. And, and just a matter of a few days to, to thousands of agents, you're going to find, um, organizations saying, wait a minute, we, we can do remote work. We could, we have access to things like Amazon workspaces. So I think you're, you're gonna, you're going to see that, uh, be a, be a trend. I think you're also gonna see, um, w what Lori beer said in the keynote with Andy, you know, she, she made a very, very astute statement, and I don't know if people caught it, cause it's kind of neat in the middle of her conversation. >>She said, look, we're trying to infuse analytics into everything that we do at JP Morgan. I think you're going to see more and more financial institutions looking to do that, to actually leverage the power of analytics, to power everything we do as a financial institution. So I think those, those are a couple of things that you're going to see. Um, and then, you know, looking, uh, you know, kind of around the corner, I think you're going to continue to see more re-invention within the industry. And what I mean by that is you've seen many financial institutions over the last week, uh, with, uh, re-invent making announcements, you saw bank and we towel saying, Hey, look, we are completely transforming ourselves with AWS. Uh, just a few weeks before we even saw standard charter, the same thing HSBC said, the same thing, global payments earlier in the year said the same thing. And you're going to see more and more organizations coming out and talking about these strategic decisions to reinvent everything that they do to make the financial systems of the world work. And so we're really pleased to be partnering with those organizations to make those transformations possible. We're seeing a lot of invention within the industry, and we're very pleased to be a part of the reinvention of the financial systems around the world. >>It's interesting to hear that you, you see, even the JP Morgan, some of those legacy, big houses are going to be really pivoting. They have to, to be competitive and to be able to utilize analytics, to deliver those real-time services. Because as we all know, as consumers, our patients is wearing thin these days, but I agree with you. I think there's a lot of opportunity there that innovation is exciting and there will have to be reinvention of entire industries, but I think there's a lot of silver linings there. Scott. I wish we had more time, cause I know we could keep talking, but thank you for sharing your insights on this reinvented reinvent this year. >>I appreciate it. Thank you, Lisa. It's always a pleasure to be on the cube. >>Chris Scott Mullins, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cubes coverage of AWS reinvent 2020.

Published Date : Dec 10 2020

SUMMARY :

It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS Great to have you joining us, The last show that I got to host in-person for the cube was keynote, but there's going to be some things that you might go wait a minute. I think you could alter that today You could look also at the additions of the one you and two you form factors to outposts. I'd also point to some things we made around audits. right now, surviving and thriving to be able to go forward and companies that haven't accelerated I don't have necessarily the time to plan for the next several quarters or the next several years, or BlueVine Stripe and cabbage in support of the care act in the U S you as they help small businesses in the U S get access to funding, uh, during this critical time. And as we continue to go through these ways, but it's interesting that you talked about that the speed Being able to actually turn things up when you needed it and turn things down when you, when you don't need it based on the volumes. the financial services arena, what are some of the big tech trends that you think were maybe born and the desire and the need to actually meet those challenges head on, in very engineered of ways. And I think you're going to see more invention and specifically more invention from the established players uh, you know, kind of around the corner, I think you're going to continue to see more re-invention within the industry. It's interesting to hear that you, you see, even the JP Morgan, some of those legacy, big houses It's always a pleasure to be on the cube. You're watching the cubes coverage of AWS reinvent 2020.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
AndyPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

ScottPERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

HSBCORGANIZATION

0.99+

JP MorganORGANIZATION

0.99+

50,000QUANTITY

0.99+

Scott MullinsPERSON

0.99+

Steve SmithPERSON

0.99+

Chris Scott MullinsPERSON

0.99+

IndiaLOCATION

0.99+

last weekDATE

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

Las VegasLOCATION

0.99+

Melanie FrankPERSON

0.99+

tomorrowDATE

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

FINRAORGANIZATION

0.99+

four monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

twiceQUANTITY

0.99+

25,000 contactsQUANTITY

0.99+

JassyPERSON

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

two weeksQUANTITY

0.99+

over $7 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

BarclaysORGANIZATION

0.99+

10 daysQUANTITY

0.99+

GDPRTITLE

0.99+

this yearDATE

0.99+

U SLOCATION

0.99+

two examplesQUANTITY

0.98+

800 billion market eventsQUANTITY

0.98+

eachQUANTITY

0.98+

four hoursQUANTITY

0.98+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.98+

500,000 registrantsQUANTITY

0.98+

IntelORGANIZATION

0.98+

biz two XORGANIZATION

0.98+

BlueVine StripeORGANIZATION

0.98+

1.2 trillion a nightQUANTITY

0.97+

four daysQUANTITY

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.97+

three weekQUANTITY

0.97+

three timesQUANTITY

0.96+

oneQUANTITY

0.96+

reinventEVENT

0.96+

50,000 attendeesQUANTITY

0.96+

500,000 MarkQUANTITY

0.95+

yearEVENT

0.95+

Eron Kelly, AWS | AWS re:Invent 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel and AWS. Yeah, welcome to the Cubes Live coverage of AWS reinvent 2020. I'm Lisa Martin and I have a Cube alumni joining me Next. Aaron Kelly, the GM of product marketing at AWS Aaron. Welcome back to the program. >>Thanks, Lisa. It's great to be here. >>Likewise, even though we don't get to all be crammed into Las Vegas together, uh, excited to talk to you about Amazon Connect, talk to our audience about what that is. And then let's talk about it in terms of how it's been a big facilitator during this interesting year, that is 2020. >>Great, yes, for sure. So Amazon Connect is a cloud contact center where we're really looking to really reinvent how contact centers work by bringing it into the cloud. It's an Omni Channel, easy to use contact center that allows customers to spin up contact centers in minutes instead of months. Its very scalable so can scale to 10 tens of thousands of agents. But it also scaled down when you when it's not in use and because it's got a pay as you go business model. You only pay when you're engaging with collars or customers. You're not paying for high upfront per agent fees every month. So it's really been a great service during this pandemic, as there's been a lot of unpredictable spikes in demand, uh, that customers have had to deal with across many sectors, >>and we've been talking for months now about the acceleration that Corbett has delivered with respect to digital transformation. And, of course, as patients has been wearing fin globally. I think with everybody when we're calling a contact center, we want a resolution quickly. And of course, as we all know is we all in any industry are working from home. So are they. So I can imagine during this time that being able to have a cloud contact center has been transformative, I guess, to help some businesses keep the lights on. But now to really be successful moving forward, knowing that they can operate and scale up or down as things change. >>Yeah, that's exactly right. And so one of the key benefits of connect his ability to very quickly on board and get started, you know, we have some very interesting and examples like Morrisons, which is a retailer in the UK They wanted to create a new service as you highlighted, which was a door, you know, doorstep delivery service. And so they needed to spin up a quick new contact center in order to handle those orders. They were able to do it and move all their agents remotely in about a day and be able to immediately start to take those orders, which is really powerful, you know. Another interesting example is the Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training. Which part of their responsibility is to deliver unemployment benefits for their citizens? Obviously a huge surge of demand there they were able to build an entirely new context center in about nine days to support their citizens. They went from a knave ridge of about 74 call volume sort of capacity per minute to 1000 call on capacity per minute. And in the first day of standing up this new context center, they were able to serve 75,000 Rhode Island citizens with their unemployment benefits. So really ah, great example of having that cloud scalability that ability to bring agents remotely and then helping citizens in need during a very, very difficult time, >>right? So a lot of uses private sector, public sector. What are some of the new capabilities of Amazon connected? You're announcing at reinvent. >>Yeah, So we announced five big capabilities this during reinvent yesterday that really spanned the entire experience, and our goal is to make it better for agents so they're more efficient. That actually helps customers reduce their costs but also create a better collar experience so that C sat could go up in the collars, can get what they need quickly and then move on. And so the first capability is Amazon Connect Voice I D, which makes it easier to validate that the person calling is who in fact, they say they are so in this case, Lee. So let's say you're calling in. You can opt in tow, have a voice print made of you. The next time you call in, we're able to use machine learning to match that voiceprint to know. Yes, it is Lisa. I don't need to ask Lisa questions about her mother's maiden name and Social Security number. We can validate you quickly as an agent I'm confident it's you. So I'm less concerned about things like fraud, and we can move on. That's the first great new feature. The second is Amazon Connect customer profiles. So now, once you join the call rather than me is an agent having to click around a different systems and find out your order history, etcetera. I could get that all surface to me directly. So I have that context. I can create a more personalized experience and move faster through the call. The third one is called Wisdom. It's Amazon Connect wisdom, which now based on either what you're asking me or a search that I might make, I could get answers to your questions. Push to me using machine learning. So if you may be asking about a refund policy or the next time a new product may launch, I may not know rather than clicking around and sort of finding that in the different systems is pushed right to me. Um, now the Fourth Feet feature is really time capability of contact lens for Amazon connect, and what this does is while you were having our conversation, it measures the sentiment based on what you're saying or any keywords. So let's say you called it and said, I want a refund or I want to cancel That keyword will trigger a new alert to my supervisor who can see that this call may be going in the wrong direction. Let me go help Aaron with Lisa. Maybe there's a special offer I can provide or extra assistance so I can help turn that call around and create a great customer experience, which right now it feels like it's not going in that direction. And then the last one is, um, Amazon Connect tasks where about half of an agents time is spent on task other than the call follow up items. So you're looking for a refund or you want me Thio to ship you a new version of the product or something? Well, today I might write that on a sticky note or send myself a reminder and email. It's not very tracked very well. With Amazon Connect task, I can create that task for me as a supervisor. I could then X signed those tax and I can make sure that the follow up items air prioritized. And then when I look at my work. You is an agent. I can see both calls, my chats and my task, which allows me to be more efficient. That allows me to follow up faster with you. My customer, Andi. Overall, it's gonna help lower the cost and efficiency of the Contact Center. So we're really excited about all five of these features and how they improve the entire life cycle of a customer contact. >>And that could be table stakes for any business in terms of customer satisfaction. You talked about that, but I always say, You know, customer satisfaction is inextricably linked to employee satisfaction. They need. The agents need to be empowered with that information and really time, but also to be able to look at. I want them to know why I'm calling. They should already know what I have. We have that growing expectation right as a consumer. So the agent experience the customer experience. You've also really streamline. And I could just see this being something that is like I said, kind of table stakes for an organization to reduce churn, to be able to service more customers in a shorter amount of time and also employee satisfaction, right, >>right that's that. That's exactly right. Trader Grills, which is one of our, you know, beta customers using some of these capabilities. You know, they're saying 25% faster, handle times so shorter calls and a 10% increase in customer satisfaction because now it's personalized. When you call in, I know what grill you purchased. And so I have a sense based on the grill, you purchase just what your question might be or what you know, what special offers I might have available to me and that's all pushed to me is an agent, So I feel more empowered. I could give you better service. You have, you know, greater loyalty towards my brand, which is a win for everyone, >>absolutely that empowerment of the agent, that personalization for the customer. I think again we have that growing demanded expectation that you should know why I'm calling, and you should be able to solve my problem. If you can't, I'm gonna turn and find somebody else who can do that. That's a huge risk that businesses face. Let's talk about some of the trends that you're seeing that this has been a very interesting year to say the least, what are some of the trends in the context center space that you guys were seeing that you're working Thio to help facilitate? >>Yeah, absolutely. So I think one of the biggest trends that we're seeing is this move towards remote work. So as you can imagine, with the pandemic almost immediately, most customers needed to quickly move their agents to remote work scenario. And this is where Amazon Connect was a great benefit. For as I mentioned before, we saw about 5000 new contact centers created in March in April. Um, Atiya, very beginning of the pandemic. So that was a very, uh, that's a very big trend we're seeing. And now what we're seeing is customers were saying, Hey, when I have something like Amazon Connect that's in the cloud, it scales up. It provides me a great experience. I just need really a headset in a Internet connection from my agents. I'm not dealing with VPNs and, ah, lot of the complexity that comes with trying to move on on premises system remote. We're seeing a huge, you know, search of adoption and usage around that the ability to very quickly create a new context center around specific scenarios are use cases has been really, really powerful. So, uh, those are the big trends moving to remote remote work and a trend towards, um, spinning of new context that is quickly and then spending them back down as that demand moves or or those those those situations move >>right. And as we're all experiencing, the one thing that is a given during this time is the uncertainty that remains Skilling up. Skilling down volume changes. But looking as if a lot of what's currently going on from home is going to stay for a while longer, I actually not think about it. I'm calling into whether it's, you know, cable service or whatnot. I think What about agent is actually on their couch at home like I am working? And so I think it's being able to facilitate that because is transformative, and I think I think I'll step out on limbs side, you know, very potentially impact the winners and the losers of tomorrow, making sure that the consumer experience is tailored. It's personalized to your point and that the agents are empowered in real time to facilitate a seamless and fast resolution of whatever the issue is. >>Well, and I think you hit on it earlier as well. Agents wanna be helpful. They wanna solve a customer problem. They wanna have that information at their fingertips. They wanna be on power to take action. Because at the end of their day, they want to feel like they helped people, right? And so being able to give them that information safe from wisdom or being able to see your entire customer profile, Right? Right. When you come on board or know that you are Lisa, um, and have the confidence that I'm talking to Lisa, I'm not. This is not some sort of, you know, fishing, exercise, exercise. These are all really important scenarios and features that empower the agent, lowers cost significantly for the customer and creates a much better customer experience for you. The collar? >>Absolutely. And we all know how important that is these days to get some sort of satisfying experience. Last question. Erin, talk to us about, you know, as we all look forward, Thio 2021. For many reasons. What can we expect with Amazon? Connect? >>Well, we're going to continue to listen to our customers and hear their feedback and what they need, which what we certainly anticipate is continued focus on that agent efficiency, giving agents mawr of the information they need to be successful and answer customers questions quickly, continuing to invest in machine learning as a way of doing that. So using ML to identify that you are who you say you are, finding that right information. Getting data that I can use is an agent Thio. Handle those tasks and then automate the things that you know I really shouldn't have to take steps is a human to go do so if we need to send you a follow up email when when your product ships or when your refund is issued. Let me just put that in the system once and have it happened when it executes. So that level of automation continuing to bring machine learning in to make the agent experience better and more efficient, which ultimate leads to lower costs and better see set. These are all the investments. You'll see a sui continue for it next year. >>Excellent stuff, Erin, thank you so much for joining me on the program today, ensuring what's next and the potential the impact that Amazon connect is making. >>Thanks, Lisa. It's great to be here >>for Aaron Kelly. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cubes. Live coverage of AWS reinvent 2020.

Published Date : Dec 8 2020

SUMMARY :

It's the Cube with digital uh, excited to talk to you about Amazon Connect, talk to our audience about what that It's an Omni Channel, easy to use contact center that allows customers to spin up So I can imagine during this time that being able to have a cloud contact And so one of the key benefits of connect his ability to very What are some of the new capabilities of and I can make sure that the follow up items air prioritized. And I could just see this being something that is like I said, kind of table stakes for an organization to And so I have a sense based on the grill, you purchase just what your question might be or what you the least, what are some of the trends in the context center space that you guys were seeing that you're working So as you can imagine, with the pandemic almost immediately, most customers needed to that the agents are empowered in real time to facilitate a seamless These are all really important scenarios and features that empower the agent, Erin, talk to us about, you know, as we all look forward, Thio 2021. a human to go do so if we need to send you a follow up email when when your product ships or Excellent stuff, Erin, thank you so much for joining me on the program today, ensuring what's next and the potential the impact Live coverage of AWS reinvent

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
StevePERSON

0.99+

Dave VellantePERSON

0.99+

Steve ManlyPERSON

0.99+

SanjayPERSON

0.99+

RickPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

VerizonORGANIZATION

0.99+

DavidPERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

Fernando CastilloPERSON

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

Dave BalantaPERSON

0.99+

ErinPERSON

0.99+

Aaron KellyPERSON

0.99+

JimPERSON

0.99+

FernandoPERSON

0.99+

Phil BollingerPERSON

0.99+

Doug YoungPERSON

0.99+

1983DATE

0.99+

Eric HerzogPERSON

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

DeloitteORGANIZATION

0.99+

YahooORGANIZATION

0.99+

SpainLOCATION

0.99+

25QUANTITY

0.99+

Pat GelsingPERSON

0.99+

Data TorrentORGANIZATION

0.99+

EMCORGANIZATION

0.99+

AaronPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

PatPERSON

0.99+

AWS Partner NetworkORGANIZATION

0.99+

Maurizio CarliPERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

Drew ClarkPERSON

0.99+

MarchDATE

0.99+

John TroyerPERSON

0.99+

Rich SteevesPERSON

0.99+

EuropeLOCATION

0.99+

BMWORGANIZATION

0.99+

VMwareORGANIZATION

0.99+

three yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

85%QUANTITY

0.99+

Phu HoangPERSON

0.99+

VolkswagenORGANIZATION

0.99+

1QUANTITY

0.99+

Cook IndustriesORGANIZATION

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

Dave ValataPERSON

0.99+

Red HatORGANIZATION

0.99+

Peter BurrisPERSON

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

Stephen JonesPERSON

0.99+

UKLOCATION

0.99+

BarcelonaLOCATION

0.99+

Better Cybercrime Metrics ActTITLE

0.99+

2007DATE

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

Sanjay Poonen, VMware | VMworld 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of VM World 2020 brought to you by VM Ware and its ecosystem partners. Hello and welcome back to the cubes. Virtual coverage of VM World 2020 Virtual I'm John for your host of the Cube, our 11th year covering V emeralds. Not in person. It's virtual. I'm with my coast, Dave. A lot, of course. Ah, guest has been on every year since the cubes existed. Sanjay Putin, who is now the chief operating officer for VM Ware Sanjay, Great to see you. It's our 11th years. Virtual. We're not in person. Usually high five are going around. But hey, virtual fist pump, >>virtual pissed bump to you, John and Dave, always a pleasure to talk to you. I give you more than a virtual pistol. Here's a virtual hug. >>Well, so >>great. Back at great. >>Great to have you on. First of all, a lot more people attending the emerald this year because it's virtual again, it doesn't have the face to face. It is a community and technical events, so people do value that face to face. Um, but it is virtually a ton of content, great guests. You guys have a great program here, Very customer centric. Kind of. The theme is, you know, unpredictable future eyes is really what it's all about. We've talked about covert you've been on before. What's going on in your perspective? What's the theme of your main talks? >>Ah, yeah. Thank you, John. It's always a pleasure to talk to you folks. We we felt as we thought, about how we could make this content dynamic. We always want to make it fresh. You know, a virtual show of this kind and program of this kind. We all are becoming experts at many Ted talks or ESPN. Whatever your favorite program is 60 minutes on becoming digital producers of content. So it has to be crisp, and everybody I think was doing this has found ways by which you reduce the content. You know, Pat and I would have normally given 90 minute keynotes on day one and then 90 minutes again on day two. So 180 minutes worth of content were reduced that now into something that is that entire 180 minutes in something that is but 60 minutes. You you get a chance to use as you've seen from the keynote an incredible, incredible, you know, packed array of both announcements from Pat myself. So we really thought about how we could organize this in a way where the content was clear, crisp and compelling. Thekla's piece of it needed also be concise, but then supplemented with hundreds of sessions that were as often as possible, made it a goal that if you're gonna do a break out session that has to be incorporate or lead with the customer, so you'll see not just that we have some incredible sea level speakers from customers that have featured in in our pattern, Mikey notes like John Donahoe, CEO of Nike or Lorry beer C I, a global sea of JPMorgan Chase partner Baba, who is CEO of Zuma Jensen Wang, who is CEO of video. Incredible people. Then we also had some luminaries. We're gonna be talking in our vision track people like in the annuity. I mean, one of the most powerful women the world many years ranked by Fortune magazine, chairman, CEO Pepsi or Bryan Stevenson, the person who start in just mercy. If you watch that movie, he's a really key fighter for social justice and criminal. You know, reform and jails and the incarceration systems. And Malala made an appearance. Do I asked her personally, I got to know her and her dad's and she spoke two years ago. I asked her toe making appearance with us. So it's a really, really exciting until we get to do some creative stuff in terms of digital content this year. >>So on the product side and the momentum side, you have great decisions you guys have made in the past. We covered that with Pat Gelsinger, but the business performance has been very strong with VM. Where, uh, props to you guys, Where does this all tie together for in your mind? Because you have the transformation going on in a highly accelerated rate. You know, cov were not in person, but Cove in 19 has proven, uh, customers that they have to move faster. It's a highly accelerated world, a lot. Lots changing. Multi cloud has been on the radar. You got security. All the things you guys are doing, you got the AI announcements that have been pumping. Thean video thing was pretty solid. That project Monterey. What does the customer walk away from this year and and with VM where? What is the main theme? What what's their call to action? What's what do they need to be doing? >>I think there's sort of three things we would encourage customers to really think about. Number one is, as they think about everything in infrastructure, serves APS as they think about their APS. We want them to really push the frontier of how they modernize their athletic applications. And we think that whole initiative off how you modernized applications driven by containers. You know, 20 years ago when I was a developer coming out of college C, C plus, plus Java and then emerge, these companies have worked on J two ee frameworks. Web Logic, Be Aware logic and IBM Web Street. It made the development off. Whatever is e commerce applications of portals? Whatever was in the late nineties, early two thousands much, much easier. That entire world has gotten even easier and much more Micro service based now with containers. We've been talking about kubernetes for a while, but now we've become the leading enterprise, contain a platform making some incredible investments, but we want to not just broaden this platform. We simplified. It is You've heard everything in the end. What works in threes, right? It's sort of like almost t shirt sizing small, medium, large. So we now have tens Ooh, in the standard. The advanced the enterprise editions with lots of packaging behind that. That makes it a very broad and deep platform. We also have a basic version of it. So in some sense it's sort of like an extra small. In addition to the small medium large so tends to and everything around at modernization, I think would be message number one number two alongside modernization. You're also thinking about migration of your workloads and the breadth and depth of, um, er Cloud Foundation now of being able to really solve, not just use cases, you are traditionally done, but also new ai use cases. Was the reason Jensen and us kind of partner that, and I mean what a great company and video has become. You know, the king maker of these ai driven applications? Why not run those AI applications on the best infrastructure on the planet? Remember, that's a coming together of both of our platforms to help customers. You know automotive banking fraud detection is a number of AI use cases that now get our best and we want it. And the same thing then applies to Project Monterey, which takes the B c f e m A Cloud Foundation proposition to smart Knicks on Dell, HP Lenovo are embracing the in video Intel's and Pen Sandoz in that smart make architectural, however, that so that entire world of multi cloud being operative Phobia Macleod Foundation on Prem and all of its extended use cases like AI or Smart Knicks or Edge, but then also into the AWS Azure, Google Multi Cloud world. We obviously had a preferred relationship with Amazon that's going incredibly well, but you also saw some announcements last week from, uh, Microsoft Azure about azure BMR solutions at their conference ignite. So we feel very good about the migration opportunity alongside of modernization on the third priority, gentlemen would be security. It's obviously a topic that I most recently taken uninterested in my day job is CEO of the company running the front office customer facing revenue functions by night job by Joe Coffin has been driving. The security strategy for the company has been incredibly enlightening to talk, to see SOS and drive this intrinsic security or zero trust from the network to end point and workload and cloud security. And we made some exciting announcements there around bringing together MAWR capabilities with NSX and Z scaler and a problem black and workload security. And of course, Lassiter wouldn't cover all of this. But I would say if I was a attendee of the conference those the three things I want them to take away what BMR is doing in the future of APS what you're doing, the future of a multi cloud world and how we're making security relevant for distributed workforce. >>I know David >>so much to talk about here, Sanjay. So, uh, talk about modern APS? That's one of the five franchise platforms VM Ware has a history of going from, you know, Challenger toe dominant player. You saw that with end user computing, and there's many, many other examples, so you are clearly one of the top, you know. Let's call it five or six platforms out there. We know what those are, uh, and but critical to that modern APS. Focus is developers, and I think it's fair to say that that's not your wheelhouse today, but you're making moves there. You agree that that is, that is a critical part of modern APS, and you update us on what you're doing for that community to really take a leadership position there. >>Yeah, no, I think it's a very good point, David. We way seek to constantly say humble and hungry. There's never any assumption from us that VM Ware is completely earned anyplace off rightful leadership until we get thousands, tens of thousands. You know, we have a half a million customers running on our virtualization sets of products that have made us successful for 20 years 70 million virtual machines. But we have toe earn that right and containers, and I think there will be probably 10 times as many containers is their virtual machines. So if it took us 20 years to not just become the leader in in virtual machines but have 70 million virtual machines, I don't think it will be 20 years before there's a billion containers and we seek to be the leader in that platform. Now, why, Why VM Where and why do you think we can win in their long term. What are we doing with developers Number one? We do think there is a container capability independent of virtual machine. And that's what you know, this entire world of what hefty on pivotal brought to us on. You know, many of the hundreds of customers that are using what was formerly pivotal and FDR now what's called Tan Xue have I mean the the case. Studies of what those customers are doing are absolutely incredible. When I listen to them, you take Dick's sporting goods. I mean, they are building curbside, pick up a lot of the world. Now the pandemic is doing e commerce and curbside pick up people are going to the store, That's all based on Tan Xue. We've had companies within this sort of world of pandemic working on contact, tracing app. Some of the diagnostic tools built without they were the lab services and on the 10 zoo platform banks. Large banks are increasingly standardizing on a lot of their consumer facing or wealth management type of applications, anything that they're building rapidly on this container platform. So it's incredible the use cases I'm hearing public sector. The U. S. Air Force was talking about how they've done this. Many of them are not public about how they're modernizing dams, and I tend to learn the best from these vertical use case studies. I mean, I spend a significant part of my life is you know, it s a P and increasingly I want to help the company become a lot more vertical. Use case in banking, public sector, telco manufacturing, CPG retail top four or five where we're seeing a lot of recurrence of these. The Tan Xue portfolio actually brings us closest to almost that s a P type of dialogue because we're having an apse dialogue in the in the speak of an industry as opposed to bits and bytes Notice I haven't talked at all about kubernetes or containers. I'm talking about the business problem being solved in a retailer or a bank or public sector or whatever have you now from a developer audience, which was the second part of your question? Dave, you know, we talked about this, I think a year or two ago. We have five million developers today that we've been able to, you know, as bringing these acquisitions earn some audience with about two or three million from from the spring community and two or three million from the economic community. So think of those five million people who don't know us because of two acquisitions we don't. Obviously spring was inside Vienna where went out of pivotal and then came back. So we really have spent a lot of time with that community. A few weeks ago, we had spring one. You guys are aware of that? That conference record number of attendees okay, Registered, I think of all 40 or 50,000, which is, you know, much bigger than the physical event. And then a substantial number of them attended live physical. So we saw a great momentum out of spring one, and we're really going to take care of that, That that community base of developers as they care about Java Manami also doing really, really well. But then I think the rial audience it now has to come from us becoming part of the conversation. That coupon at AWS re invent at ignite not just the world, I mean via world is not gonna be the only place where infrastructure and developers come to. We're gonna have to be at other events which are very prominent and then have a developer marketplace. So it's gonna be a multiyear effort. We're okay with that. To grow that group of about five million developers that we today Kate or two on then I think there will be three or four other companies that also play very prominently to developers AWS, Microsoft and Google. And if we're one among those three or four companies and remembers including that list, we feel very good about our ability to be in a place where this is a shared community, takes a village to approach and an appeal to those developers. I think there will be one of those four companies that's doing this for many years to >>come. Santa, I got to get your take on. I love your reference to the Web days and how the development environment change and how the simplicity came along very relevant to how we're seeing this digital transformation. But I want to get your thoughts on how you guys were doing pre and now during and Post Cove it. You already had a complicated thing coming on. You had multi cloud. You guys were expanding your into end you had acquisitions, you mentioned a few of them. And then cove it hit. Okay, so now you have Everything is changing you got. He's got more complex city. You have more solutions, and then the customer psychology is change. You got to spectrums of customers, people trying to save their business because it's changed, their customer behavior has changed. And you have other customers that are doubling down because they have a tailwind from Cove it, whether it's a modern app, you know, coming like Zoom and others are doing well because of the environment. So you got your customers air in this in this in this, in this storm, you know, they're trying to save down, modernized or or or go faster. How are you guys changing? Because it's impacted how you sell. People are selling differently, how you implement and how you support customers, because you already had kind of the whole multi cloud going on with the modern APS. I get that, but Cove, it has changed things. How are you guys adopting and changing to meet the customer needs who are just trying to save their business on re factor or double down and continue >>John. Great question. I think I also talked about some of this in one of your previous digital events that you and I talked about. I mean, you go back to the last week of February 1st week of March, actually back up, even in January, my last trip on a plane. Ah, major trip outside this country was the World Economic Forum in Davos. And, you know, there were thousands of us packed into the small digits in Switzerland. I was sitting having dinner with Andy Jassy in a restaurant one night that day. Little did we know. A month later, everything would change on DWhite. We began to do in late February. Early March was first. Take care of employees. You always wanna have the pulse, check employees and be in touch with them. Because the health and safety of employees is much more important than the profits of, um, where you know. So we took care of that. Make sure that folks were taking care of older parents were in good place. We fortunately not lost anyone to death. Covert. We had some covert cases, but they've recovered on. This is an incredible pandemic that connects all of us in the human fabric. It has no separation off skin color or ethnicity or gender, a little bit of difference in people who are older, who might be more affected or prone to it. But we just have to, and it's taught me to be a significantly more empathetic. I began to do certain things that I didn't do before, but I felt was the right thing to do. For example, I've begun to do 25 30 minute calls with every one of my key countries. You know, as I know you, I run customer operations, all of the go to market field teams reporting to me on. I felt it was important for me to be showing up, not just in the big company meetings. We do that and big town halls where you know, some fractions. 30,000 people of VM ware attend, but, you know, go on, do a town hall for everybody in a virtual zoom session in Japan. But in their time zone. So 10 o'clock my time in the night, uh, then do one in China and Australia kind of almost travel around the world virtually, and it's not long calls 25 30 minutes, where 1st 10 or 15 minutes I'm sharing with them what I'm seeing across other countries, the world encouraging them to focus on a few priorities, which I'll talk about in a second and then listening to them for 10 15 minutes and be, uh and then the call on time or maybe even a little earlier, because every one of us is going to resume button going from call to call the call. We're tired of T. There's also mental, you know, fatigue that we've gotta worry about. Mental well, being long term. So that's one that I personally began to change. I began to also get energy because in the past, you know, I would travel to Europe or Asia. You know, 40 50%. My life has travel. It takes a day out of your life on either end, your jet lag. And then even when you get to a Tokyo or Beijing or to Bangalore or the London, getting between sites of these customers is like a 45 minute, sometimes in our commute. Now I'm able to do many of these 25 30 minute call, so I set myself a goal to talk to 1000 chief security officers. I know a lot of CEOs and CFOs from my times at S A P and VM ware, but I didn't know many security officers who often either work for a CEO or report directly to the legal counsel on accountable to the audit committee of the board. And I got a list of these 1,002,000 people we called email them. Man, I gotta tell you, people willing to talk to me just coming, you know, into this I'm about 500 into that. And it was role modeling to my teams that the top of the company is willing to spend as much time as possible. And I have probably gotten a lot more productive in customer conversations now than ever before. And then the final piece of your question, which is what do we tell the customer in terms about portfolio? So these were just more the practices that I was able to adapt during this time that have given me energy on dial, kind of get scared of two things from the portfolio perspective. I think we began to don't notice two things. One is Theo entire move of migration and modernization around the cloud. I describe that as you know, for example, moving to Amazon is a migration opportunity to azure modernization. Is that whole Tan Xue Eminem? Migration of modernization is highly relevant right now. In fact, taking more speed data center spending might be on hold on freeze as people kind of holding till depend, emmick or the GDP recovers. But migration of modernization is accelerating, so we wanna accelerate that part of our portfolio. One of the products we have a cloud on Amazon or Cloud Health or Tan Xue and maybe the other offerings for the other public dog. The second part about portfolio that we're seeing acceleration around is distributed workforce security work from home work from anywhere. And that's that combination off workspace, one for both endpoint management, virtual desktops, common black envelope loud and the announcements we've now made with Z scaler for, uh, distributed work for security or what the analysts called secure access. So message. That's beautiful because everyone working from home, even if they come back to the office, needs a very different model of security and were now becoming a leader in that area. of security. So these two parts of the portfolio you take the five franchise pillars and put them into these two buckets. We began to see momentum. And the final thing, I would say, Guys, just on a soft note. You know, I've had to just think about ways in which I balance work and family. It's just really easy. You know what, 67 months into this pandemic to burn out? Ah, now I've encouraged my team. We've got to think about this as a marathon, not a sprint. Do the personal things that you wanna do that will make your life better through this pandemic. That in practice is that you keep after it. I'll give you one example. I began biking with my kids and during the summer months were able to bike later. Even now in the fall, we're able to do that often, and I hope that's a practice I'm able to do much more often, even after the pandemic. So develop some activities with your family or with the people that you love the most that are seeing you a lot more and hopefully enjoying that time with them that you will keep even after this pandemic ends. >>So, Sanjay, I love that you're spending all this time with CSOs. I mean, I have a Well, maybe not not 1000 but dozens. And they're such smart people. They're really, you know, in the thick of things you mentioned, you know, your partnership with the scale ahead. Scott Stricklin on who is the C. C so of Wyndham? He was talking about the security club. But since the pandemic, there's really three waves. There's the cloud security, the identity, access management and endpoint security. And one of the things that CSOs will tell you is the lack of talent is their biggest challenge. And they're drowning in all these products. And so how should we think about your approach to security and potentially simplifying their lives? >>Yeah. You know, Dave, we talked about this, I think last year, maybe the year before, and what we were trying to do in security was really simplified because the security industry is like 5000 vendors, and it's like, you know, going to a doctor and she tells you to stay healthy. You gotta have 5000 tablets. You just cannot eat that many tablets you take you days, weeks, maybe a month to eat that many tablets. So ah, grand simplification has to happen where that health becomes part of your diet. You eat your proteins and vegetables, you drink your water, do your exercise. And the analogy and security is we cannot deploy dozens of agents and hundreds of alerts and many, many consoles. Uh, infrastructure players like us that have control points. We have 70 million virtual machines. We have 75 million virtual switches. We have, you know, tens of million's off workspace, one of carbon black endpoints that we manage and secure its incumbent enough to take security and making a lot more part of the infrastructure. Reduce the need for dozens and dozens of point tools. And with that comes a grand simplification of both the labor involved in learning all these tools. Andi, eventually also the cost of ownership off those particular tool. So that's one other thing we're seeking to do is increasingly be apart off that education off security professionals were both investing in ah, lot of off, you know, kind of threat protection research on many of our folks you know who are in a threat. Behavioral analytics, you know, kind of thread research. And people have come out of deep hacking experience with the government and others give back to the community and teaching classes. Um, in universities, there are a couple of non profits that are really investing in security, transfer education off CSOs and their teams were contributing to that from the standpoint off the ways in which we can give back both in time talent and also a treasure. So I think is we think about this. You're going to see us making this a long term play. We have a billion dollar security business today. There's not many companies that have, you know, a billion dollar plus of security is probably just two or three, and some of them have hit a wall in terms of their progress sport. We want to be one of the leaders in cybersecurity, and we think we need to do this both in building great product satisfying customers. But then also investing in the learning, the training enable remember, one of the things of B M worlds bright is thes hands on labs and all the training enable that happened at this event. So we will use both our platform. We in world in a variety of about the virtual environments to ensure that we get the best education of security to professional. >>So >>that's gonna be exciting, Because if you look at some of the evaluations of some of the pure plays I mean, you're a cloud security business growing a triple digits and, you know, you see some of these guys with, you know, $30 billion valuations, But I wanted to ask you about the market, E v m. Where used to be so simple Right now, you guys have expanded your tam dramatically. How are you thinking about, you know, the market opportunity? You've got your five franchise platforms. I know you're very disciplined about identifying markets, and then, you know, saying, Okay, now we're gonna go compete. But how do you look at the market and the market data? Give us the update there. >>Yeah, I think. Dave, listen, you know, I like davinci statement. You know, simplicity is the greatest form of sophistication, and I think you've touched on something that which is cos we get bigger. You know, I've had the great privilege of working for two great companies. s a P and B M where the bulk of my last 15 plus years And if something I've learned, you know, it's very easy. Both companies was to throw these TLS three letter acronyms, okay? And I use an acronym and describing the three letter acronyms like er or s ex. I mean, they're all acronyms and a new employee who comes to this company. You know, Carol Property, for example. We just hired her from Google. Is our CMO her first comments like, My goodness, there is a lot of off acronyms here. I've gotta you need a glossary? I had the same reaction when I joined B. M or seven years ago and had the same reaction when I joined the S A. P 15 years ago. Now, of course, two or three years into it, you learn everything and it becomes part of your speed. We have toe constantly. It's like an accordion like you expanded by making it mawr of luminous and deep. But as you do that it gets complex, you then have to simplify it. And that's the job of all of us leaders and I this year, just exemplifying that I don't have it perfect. One of the gifts I do have this communication being able to simplify things. I recorded a five minute video off our five franchise pill. It's just so that the casual person didn't know VM where it could understand on. Then, when I'm on your shore and when on with Jim Cramer and CNBC, I try to simplify, simplify, simplify, simplify because the more you can talk and analogies and pictures, the more the casual user. I mean, of course, and some other audiences. I'm talking to investors. Get it on. Then, Of course, as you go deeper, it should be like progressive layers or feeling of an onion. You can get deeper. It's not like the entire discussion with Sanjay Putin on my team is like, you know, empty suit. It's a superficial discussion. We could go deeper, but you don't have to begin the discussion in the bowels off that, and that's really what we don't do. And then the other part of your question was, how do we think about new markets? You know, we always start with Listen, you sort of core in contact our borough come sort of Jeffrey Moore, Andi in the Jeffrey more context. You think about things that you do really well and then ask yourself outside of that what the Jason sees that are closest to you, that your customers are asking you to advance into on that, either organically to partnerships or through acquisitions. I think John and I talked about in the previous dialogue about the framework of build partner and by, and we always think about it in that order. Where do we advance and any of the moves we've made six years ago, seven years ago and I joined the I felt VM are needed to make a move into mobile to really cement opposition in end user computing. And it took me some time to convince my peers and then the board that we should by Air One, which at that time was the biggest acquisition we've ever done. Okay. Similarly, I'm sure prior to me about Joe Tucci, Pat Nelson. We're thinking about nice here, and I'm moving to networking. Those were too big, inorganic moves. +78 years of Raghu was very involved in that. The decisions we moved to the make the move in the public cloud myself. Rgu pack very involved in the decision. Their toe partner with Amazon, the change and divest be cloud air and then invested in organic effort around what's become the Claudia. That's an organic effort that was an acquisition fast forward to last year. It took me a while to really Are you internally convinced people and then make the move off the second biggest acquisition we made in carbon black and endpoint security cement the security story that we're talking about? Rgu did a similar piece of good work around ad monetization to justify that pivotal needed to come back in. So but you could see all these pieces being adjacent to the core, right? And then you ask yourself, Is that context meaning we could leave it to a partner like you don't see us get into the hardware game we're partnering with. Obviously, the players like Dell and HP, Lenovo and the smart Knick players like Intel in video. In Pensando, you see that as part of the Project Monterey announcement. But the adjacent seas, for example, last year into app modernization up the stack and into security, which I'd say Maura's adjacent horizontal to us. We're now made a lot more logical. And as we then convince ourselves that we could do it, convince our board, make the move, We then have to go and tell our customers. Right? And this entire effort of talking to CSOs What am I doing is doing the same thing that I did to my board last year, simplified to 15 minutes and get thousands of them to understand it. Received feedback, improve it, invest further. And actually, some of the moves were now making this year around our partnership in distributed Workforce Security and Cloud Security and Z scaler. What we're announcing an XDR and Security Analytics. All of the big announcements of security of this conference came from what we heard last year between the last 12 months of my last year. Well, you know, keynote around security, and now, and I predict next year it'll be even further. That's how you advance the puck every year. >>Sanjay, I want to get your thoughts. So now we have a couple minutes left. But we did pull the audience and the community to get some questions for you, since it's virtually wanted to get some representation there. So I got three questions for you. First question, what comes after Cloud and number two is VM Ware security company. And three. What company had you wish you had acquired? >>Oh, my goodness. Okay, the third one eyes gonna be the turkey is one, I think. Listen, because I'm gonna give you my personal opinion, and some of it was probably predates me, so I could probably safely So do that. And maybe put the blame on Joe Tucci or somebody else is no longer here. But let me kind of give you the first two. What comes after cloud? I think clouds gonna be with us for a long time. First off this multi cloud world, you just look at the moment, um, that AWS and azure and the other clouds all have. It's incredible on I think this that multi cloud from phenomenon. But if there's an adapt ation of it, it's gonna be three forms of cloud. People are really only focus today in private public cloud. You have to remember the edge and Telco Cloud and this pendulum off the right balance of workloads between the data center called it a private cloud. The public cloud on one end and the telco edge on the other end. I think we're in a really good position for workloads to really swing between all three of those locations. Three other part that I think comes as a sequel to Cloud is cloud native. All of the capabilities a serverless functions but also containers that you know. Obviously the one could think of that a sister topics to cloud but the entire world of containers. The other seat, uh, then cloud a cloud native will also be topics, but these were all fairly connected. That's how I'd answer the first question. A security company? Absolutely. We you know, we aspire to be one of the leading companies in cyber security. I don't think they will be only one. We have to show this by the wealth on breath of our customers. The revenue momentum we have Gartner ranking us or the analysts ranking us in top rights of magic quadrants being viewed as an innovator simplifying the stack. But listen, we weren't even on the radar. We weren't speaking of the security conferences years ago. Now we are. We have a billion dollar security business, 20,000 plus customers, really strong presences and network endpoint and workload and Cloud Security. The three Coppola's a lot more coming in Security analytics, Cloud Security distributed workforce Security. So we're here to stay. And if anything, BMR persist through this, we're planning for multi your five or 10 year timeframe. And in that course I mean, the competition is smaller. Companies that don't have the breadth and depth of the n words are Andy muscle and are going market. We just have to keep building great products and serving customer on the third man. There's so many. But I mean, I think Listen, when I was looking back, I always wondered this is before I joined so I could say the summit speculatively on. Don't you know, make this This is BMR. Sorry. This is Sanjay one's opinion. Not VM. I gotta make very, very clear. Well, listen, I would have if I was at BMO in 2012 or 2013. I would love to about service now then service. It was a great company. I don't even know maybe the company's talk, but then talk about a very successful company at that time now. Maybe their priorities were different. I wasn't at the company at the time, but I can speculate if that had happened, that would have been an interesting Now I think that was during the time of Paul Maritz here and and so on. So for them, maybe there were other priorities the company need to get done. But at that time, of course, today s so it's not as big of a even slightly bigger market cap than us. So that's not happening. But that's a great example of a good company that I think would have at that time fit very well with VM Ware. And then there's probably we don't look back and regret we move forward. I mean, I think about the acquisitions we have made the big ones. Okay, Nice era air watch pop in black. Pivotal. The big moves we've made in terms of partnership. Amazon. What? We're announcing this This, you know, this week within video and Z scaler. So you never look back and regret. You always look for >>follow up on that To follow up on that from a developer, entrepreneurial or partner Perspective. Can you share where the white spaces for people to innovate around vm Where where where can people partner and play. Whether I'm an entrepreneur in a garage or venture back, funded or say a partner pivoting and or resetting with Govind, where's the white spaces with them? >>I think that, you know, there's gonna be a number off places where the Tan Xue platform develops, as it kind of makes it relevant to developers. I mean, there's, I think the first way we think about this is to make ourselves relevant toe all of that ecosystem around the C I. C. D type apply platform. They're really good partners of ours. They're like, get lab, You know, all of the ways in which open source communities, you know will play alongside that Hash E Corp. Jay frog there number of these companies that are partnering with us and we're excited about all of their relevancy to tend to, and it's our job to go and make that marketplace better and better. You're going to hear more about that coming up from us on. Then there's the set of data companies, you know, con fluent. You know, of course, you've seen a big I p o of a snowflake. All of those data companies, we'll need a very natural synergy. If you think about the old days of middleware, middleware is always sort of separate from the database. I think that's starting to kind of coalesce. And Data and analytics placed on top of the modern day middleware, which is containers I think it's gonna be now does VM or play physically is a data company. We don't know today we're gonna partner very heavily. But picking the right set of partners been fluent is a good example of one on. There's many of the next generation database companies that you're going to see us partner with that will become part of that marketplace influence. And I think, as you see us certainly produce out the VM Ware marketplace for developers. I think this is gonna be a game changing opportunity for us to really take those five million developers and work with the leading companies. You know, I use the example of get Lab is an example get help there. Others that appeal to developers tie them into our developer framework. The one thing you learn about developers, you can't have a mindset. With that, you all come to just us. It's a very mingled village off multiple ecosystems and Venn diagrams that are coalescing. If you try to take over the world, the developer community just basically shuns you. You have to have a very vibrant way in which you are mingling, which is why I described. It's like, Listen, we want our developers to come to our conferences and reinvent and ignite and get the best experience of all those provide tools that coincide with everybody. You have to take a holistic view of this on if you do that over many years, just like the security topic. This is a multi year pursuit for us to be relevant. Developers. We feel good about the future being bright. >>David got five minutes e. >>I thought you were gonna say Zoom, Sanjay, that was That was my wildcard. >>Well, listen, you know, I think it was more recently and very fast catapult Thio success, and I don't know that that's clearly in the complete, you know, sweet spot of the anywhere. I mean, you know, unified collaboration would have probably put us in much more competition with teams and, well, back someone you always have to think about what's in the in the bailiwick of what's closest to us, but zooms a great partner. Uh, I mean, obviously you love to acquire anybody that's hot, but Eric's doing really well. I mean, Erica, I'm sure he had many people try to come to buy him. I'm just so proud of him as a friend of all that he was named to Time magazine Top 100. But what he's done is phenomenon. I think he could build a company that's just his important, his Facebook. So, you know, I encourage him. Don't sell, keep building the company and you'll build a company that's going to be, you know, the enterprise version of Facebook. And I think that's a tremendous opportunity to do this better than anybody else is doing. And you know, I'm as an immigrant. He's, you know, China. Born now American, I'm Indian born, American, assim immigrants. We both have a similar story. I learned a lot from him. I learned a lot from him, from on speed on speed and how to move fast, he tells me he learns a thing to do for me on scale. We teach each other. It's a beautiful friendship. >>We'll make sure you put in a good word for the Kiwi. One more zoom integration >>for a final word or the zoom that is the future Facebook of the enterprise. Whatever, Sanjay, Thank >>you for connecting with us. Virtually. It is a digital foundation. It is an unpredictable world. Um, it's gonna change. It could be software to find the operating models or changing you guys. We're changing how you serve customers with new chief up commercial customer officer you have in place, which is a new hire. Congratulations. And you guys were flexing with the market and you got a tailwind. So congratulations, >>John and Dave. Always a pleasure. We couldn't do this without the partnership. Also with you. Congratulations of Successful Cube. And in its new digital format, Thank you for being with us With VM world here on. Do you know all that you're doing to get the story out? The guests that you have on the show, they look forward, including the nonviable people like, Hey, can I get on the Cuban like, Absolutely. Because they look at your platform is away. I'm telling this story. Thanks for all you're doing. I wish you health and safety. >>I'm gonna bring more community. And Dave is, you know, and Sanjay, and it's easier without the travel. Get more interviews, tell more stories and tell the most important stories. And thank you for telling your story and VM World story here of the emerald 2020. Sanjay Poon in the chief operating officer here on the Cube I'm John for a day Volonte. Thanks for watching Cube Virtual. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Sep 30 2020

SUMMARY :

World 2020 brought to you by VM Ware and its ecosystem partners. I give you more than a virtual pistol. Back at great. Great to have you on. I mean, one of the most powerful women the world many years ranked by Fortune magazine, chairman, CEO Pepsi or So on the product side and the momentum side, you have great decisions you guys have made in the past. And the same thing then applies to Project Monterey, many other examples, so you are clearly one of the top, you know. And that's what you know, this entire world of what hefty on pivotal brought to us on. So you got your customers air in this in this in this, in this storm, I began to also get energy because in the past, you know, I would travel to Europe or Asia. They're really, you know, in the thick of things you mentioned, you know, your partnership with the scale ahead. You just cannot eat that many tablets you take you days, weeks, maybe a month to eat that many tablets. you know, the market opportunity? You know, we always start with Listen, you sort of core in contact our What company had you But let me kind of give you the first two. Can you share where the white spaces for people to innovate around vm You have to have a very vibrant way in which you are mingling, success, and I don't know that that's clearly in the complete, you know, We'll make sure you put in a good word for the Kiwi. is the future Facebook of the enterprise. It could be software to find the operating models or changing you guys. The guests that you have on the show, And Dave is, you know, and Sanjay, and it's easier without the travel.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DavidPERSON

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

2012DATE

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

EricaPERSON

0.99+

SwitzerlandLOCATION

0.99+

EuropeLOCATION

0.99+

2013DATE

0.99+

Scott StricklinPERSON

0.99+

DellORGANIZATION

0.99+

JapanLOCATION

0.99+

ChinaLOCATION

0.99+

SanjayPERSON

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

Pat GelsingerPERSON

0.99+

LenovoORGANIZATION

0.99+

MalalaPERSON

0.99+

Joe CoffinPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

BangaloreLOCATION

0.99+

Sanjay PoonenPERSON

0.99+

dozensQUANTITY

0.99+

AsiaLOCATION

0.99+

5000 tabletsQUANTITY

0.99+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

KatePERSON

0.99+

TokyoLOCATION

0.99+

PatPERSON

0.99+

NikeORGANIZATION

0.99+

LondonLOCATION

0.99+

BeijingLOCATION

0.99+

Sanjay PoonPERSON

0.99+

fiveQUANTITY

0.99+

EricPERSON

0.99+

JanuaryDATE

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

Sanjay PutinPERSON

0.99+

JPMorgan ChaseORGANIZATION

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

Pat NelsonPERSON

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

DavosLOCATION

0.99+

10 timesQUANTITY

0.99+

AustraliaLOCATION

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

45 minuteQUANTITY

0.99+

John DonahoePERSON

0.99+

U. S. Air ForceORGANIZATION

0.99+

Andy JassyPERSON

0.99+

Bryan StevensonPERSON

0.99+

CNBCORGANIZATION

0.99+

S A PORGANIZATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

20 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

VM WareORGANIZATION

0.99+

$30 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

15 minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

BabaPERSON

0.99+

fourQUANTITY

0.99+

Joe TucciPERSON

0.99+

FacebookORGANIZATION

0.99+

five millionQUANTITY

0.99+

First questionQUANTITY

0.99+

Jeffrey MoorePERSON

0.99+

ViennaLOCATION

0.99+

IntelORGANIZATION

0.99+

1,002,000 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

Joel Marchildon, Accenture & Benoit Long, Gov. of Canada | AWS Public Sector Partner Awards 2020


 

>> Narrator: From around the globe, it's theCUBE with digital coverage of AWS Public Sector Partner Awards brought to you by Amazon Web Services. Hello everyone, welcome back to theCUBE's Coverage of "AWS Public Sector Partner Awards Program". I'm John Furrier your host of theCUBE here in Palo Alto, California doing the remote interviews, during this pandemic we have our remote crews and getting all the stories and celebrating the award winners and here to feature the most Innovative Connect Deployment. We have Accenture of Canada and the Department of Employment and Social Development of Canada known as ESDC. Guys, congratulations Joel Marchildon, Accenture Canada, managing director and Benoit Long, ESDC of Canada chief transformation officer. Gentlemen, thanks for coming on, and congratulations on the award. >> Thank you. >> Thank you and nice to be here >> So obviously, during this pandemic, a lot of disruption and a lot of business still needs to go on including government services. But the citizens and people need to still do their thing you got a business got to run, and you got to get things going. But the disruptions caused a little bit of how the user experiences are. So this Connect has been interesting. Its been a featured part of what we've been hearing at the Public Sector Summit with Teresa Carlson. You guys, this is a key product. Tell us about the award. What is the solution that is starving and deserving of the award? >> Maybe I'll go first and then pass it over to Benoit. But I think the solution is Amazon Connect based Virtual Contact Center that was stood up fairly quickly, over the course of about four days and really in support of benefit that the Government of Canada was was releasing as part of its economic response to the pandemic. And in the end, its a fully functioning featured contact center solution. Includes an IVR. And, we stood it up for about 1500 to 2000 agents. So that's the the crux of the solution. And maybe Benoit can give a bit of insight as to how it came about so quickly. >> Yeah, we're happy to actually, we were obviously like every other government facing enormous pressures at that time to deliver benefits directly to people who were in true need. The jobs are being lost, our current systems were in trouble because of their age and their archaic nature. And so the challenge was quickly how do we actually support a lot of people really fast. And so it came through immediately that after our initial payments were made under what was called the Canada emergency response benefit that we had to support clients directly and so people turn to the transformation team of all teams. If you wish during a firestorm, to say, well, what could you do? And how could you help. And so we had an established relationship with a number of our system integrators, including Accenture. And we were able to run a competition very rapidly, and Accenture won. And then we deployed in, as Joel said, in a matter of four days, what for us was an exceptional and high quality solution to a significant client problem. And I say that because I think you can imagine how people feel in a pandemic of all things, but with the uncertainty that comes with loss of income, loss of jobs, the question of being able to deal with somebody a real; a human being, as well as to be able to efficiently answer a very simple but straightforward questions rapidly and with high quality, was pretty fundamental for us. So the the people in the groups that we're talking through here we're speaking to millions of people, who were literally being asked to accept the payment rapidly and to be able to connect with us quickly. And without this solution, which was exceptionally well done and of high quality personally as a technology solution, it would not have been possible to even answer any of these queries quickly. >> And well, that's a great point. One of the things that you see with the pandemic, its a disaster in the quote disaster kind of readiness thing. Unforeseen, right. So like other things, you can kind of plan for things, hypothetical, you got scenarios. But this is truly a case where every day counts, every minute counts, because humans are involved. There's no ROI calculation. Its not like, well, what's the payback of our system? The old kind of way to think. This is real results, fast. This is what cloud is all about. This is the promise of cloud, can I stand up something quick, and you did it with a partner, okay. This is like not, like normal. Its like, its like unheard of, right. Four days, with critical infrastructure, critical services that were unforeseen. Take us through what was going on in the war room. As you guys knew this was here. Take us through through what happened. >> So I think I can start. As you can imagine the set of executives that were overseeing the payment process was an exceptional, it was like a bunker, frankly, for about two weeks. We had to suspend the normal operations of the vast majority of our programming. We had to launch brand new payments and benefits systems and programs that nobody has seen before the level of simplicity was maximized in order to deliver the funds quickly. So you can imagine its a Warpath if you wish, because the campaign is really around timing. Timing is fundamental. People are literally losing their jobs, there is no support, there is no funding money for them to be able to buy groceries. So, and the trust that people have in the government is pretty much at risk right there. And there is straightforward but extraordinarily powerful magic moment, if you wish. If you can deliver a solution, then you make a difference for a long time. And so the speed is unheard of on all fronts. When it came to the call center capability and the ability for us to support in a service context, the clients that were desperate to reach us, and we're talking hundreds of thousands of calls a day. We're not talking a few thousand here, ultimately, at some point we were literally getting in overtaken by volumes, call centers, because we had our regular ones still operating. Over a million calls were coming in the day. With the capacity to answer 10s of thousands and so the reality is that the Call Centers that we put up here, very quickly became capable of answering more calls than our regular call centers. And that speaks to the the speed of delivery, the quality of the solution, of course, but the scalability of it. And I have to say maybe unheard of, it may be difficult to replicate the conditions to lead to this are rare. But I have to say that my bosses and most of the government is probably now wondering why we can't do this more often. Why can't we operate with that kind of speed and agility. So I think what you've got is a client in our case, under extreme circumstances, now realizing the new normal will never be the same. That these types of solutions and technology and their scalability, their agility, their speed of deployment, is frankly something we want we want all the time. Now we'd like to be able to do them during normal timeline conditions, but even those will be a fraction of what it used to take. It would have taken us a while I can actually tell you because I was the lead technologist to deploy at scale for the government, Canada, all the call center capabilities under a single software as a service platform. It took us two years to design it two years to procure it, and five years to install it. That's the last experience we have of call center, enterprise scale capabilities. And in this case we went from years, to literally days. >> Well, it takes a crisis sometimes to kind of wire up the simplicity solution that you say, why didn't we do this before? The waterfall meetings getting everyone arguing kind of gets in the way and the old software model, I want to come back to the transformation Benoit a minute, Because I think that's going to be a great success story and some learnings and I want to get your thoughts on that. But I want to go to Joel, because Joel, we've talked to many Accenture executives over the years and most recently, this past 24 months. And the message we've been hearing is, "We're going to be faster. We're not going to be seen as that, a consulting firm, taking our times trying to get a pound of flesh from the client." This is an example of my opinion of a partner working with a problem statement that kind of matches the cloud speed. So you guys have been doing this is not new to Accenture. So take us through how you guys reacted, because one, you got to sync up and get the cadence of what Benoit was trying to do sync up and execute take us through what happened on your side. >> Yeah, I mean, so its an unprecedented way of operating for us as well, frankly. And, we've had to look at, to get this specific solution out the door and respond to an RFP and the commercial requirements that go with that we had to get pretty agile ourselves internally on, how we go through approvals, etc, to make sure that we were there to support Benoit and his team and I think that we saw this as a broader opportunity to really respond to it. To help Canada in a time of need. So I think we had to streamline a lot of our internal processes and make quick decisions that normally even for our organization would have taken, could have taken weeks, right, and we were down to hours and a lot of instances. So it forces us to react and act differently as well. But I mean to Benoit's point I think this is really going to hopefully change the way... It illustrates the art of the possible and hopefully will change how quickly we can look at problems and we reduce deployment timeframes from years to months and months to weeks, etc. For solutions like this. And I think the AWS platform specifically in this case, Benoit touched on a lot of things beat the market scalability, but just as the benefit itself has to be simplified to do this quickly. I think one of the one of the benefits of the solution itself is, its simple to use technologically. I mean, we trained, as I said, I think 1600 agents on how to use the platform over the course of a weekend. And they're not normal agents. These were people who were furloughed from other jobs potentially within the government. So they're not necessarily contact center agents, by training, but they became contact center agents over the course of 48 hours. And I think, from that perspective, that was important as well to have something that people could use to answer those calls that we know that we knew were going to come. >> Benoit this is the transformation dream scenario in the sense of capabilities. I know its under circumstances of the pandemic and you guys did solve a big problem really fast and saved lives and then help people get on with their day. But transformation is about having people closest to the problem, execute. And also the people equation people process technology, as they say, is kind of playing out in real time. This is kind of the playbook. Amazon came in and said, "Hey, you want to stand something up?" You wired it together the solution quickly, you have close to it. Looking back now its almost like, hey, why aren't we doing this before, as you said, and then you had to bring people in, who weren't trained and stood them up and they were delivering the service. This is the playbook to share your thoughts on this because this is what you're you're thinking about all the time, and it actually is playing out in real time. >> Well, I would definitely endorse the idea that its a playbook. Its I would say its an ideal and dream playbook to bid like showing up on a basketball court with all the best players in the entire league playing together magically. It is exactly that. So a lot of things had to happen quickly but also correctly, because you can't pull all these things properly together without that. So I would say the partnership with the private sector here was fundamental. And I have to applaud the work that Accenture did particularly I think, as Canadians we were very proud of the fact that we needed to respond quickly. Everyone was in this our neighbors, we knew people who were without support and Accenture's team, I mean, all the way up and down across the organization was fundamental in and delivering this but also literally putting themselves into these roles and to make sure that we would be able to respond and quickly do so. I think the playbook around the readiness for change, I was shocked into existence. I mean, I won't talk about quantum physics, but clearly some higher level of energy was thrown in quickly, mobilize everybody all at once. Nobody was said he is sitting around saying, I wonder if we have changed management covered off, this was changed readiness at its best. And so I think for me from a learning perspective, apart from just the technology side, which is pretty fundamental, if you don't have ready enough technology to deploy quickly, then the best pay your plans in the world won't work. The reality is that to mobilize an organization going forward into that level of spontaneous driving change, exception, acceptance, and adoption, is really what I would aim for. And so our challenge now will be continuing that kind of progression going forward. And we now found the way and we certainly use the way to work with the private sector in an innovative capacity and innovative ways with brand new solutions that are truly agile and scalable, to be able to pull all of the organization all at once very rapidly and I have to admit that it is going to shift permanently our planning, we had 10 year plans for our big transformations, because some of our programs are the most important in the country in many ways. We support people about 8 million Canadians a month, depending on the benefits payments that we deliver. And they're the most marginal needing and requires our support from seniors, to the unemployed, to job seekers and whatnot. So if you think about that group itself, and to be able to support them clearly with the systems that we have its just unsustainable. But the new technologies are clearly going to show us a way that we had never forecast, and I have to say I had to throw up my 10 year plan. And now I'm working my way down from 10 to nine to eight year plans going forward. And so its exciting and nerve wracking sometimes, but then, obviously as a change leader, our goal is to get there as quickly as possible. So the benefits of all these solutions can make a difference in people's lives. >> What's interesting is that you can shorten that timetable, but also frees you up to be focused on what's contemporary and what's needed at the time to leverage the people and the resources you have. And take advantage of that versus having something that you're sitting on that's needs to be refreshed, you can always be on that bleeding edge. And this just brings up the DevOps kind of mindset, agility, the lean startup, the lean company, this is a team effort between Amazon Accenture and ESDC. Its, pass, shoot, score really fast. So this is the new reality. Any commentary from you guys on this, new pass, shoot, score combination because you got speed, you got agility, you're leaner, which makes you more flexible for being contemporary in solving problems? What's your thoughts? >> Yeah. So my perspective on that is most definitely right. I think what we were able to show in what's coming out of a lot of different responses to the pandemic by government is, perfection isn't the most important thing out of the gate, getting something out there that's going to reassure citizens, that's going to allow them to answer their questions or access benefits quickly, is what's becoming more important, obviously, security and privacy, those things are of the utmost importance as well. But its ability to get stuff out there, quickly, test it, change it, test it again, and just always be iterating on the solution. Like I can say what we put out on April 6, within four days, is the backbone of what's out there still today. But we've added an integrated workforce management solution from NICE, and we added some other ISVs to do outbound dialing from Acquia and things like that. So the solution has grown from that MVP. And I think that's one other thing that's going to be a big takeaway. If you're not going to do anything till you got the final end product out there, then its going to be late. So let's go quickly and let's adapt from there. >> Benoit, talk about that dynamic because that's about building blocks, on foundational things and then services. Its the cloud model. >> Yeah, I mean, before the pandemic, I had lunch with Mark Schwartz, which I believe you are quite familiar with. And, I spent an hour and a half with him. We were talking and he was so exciting and energized by what the technologies could do. And I was listening to him and I used to be the chief technology officer for the Government of Canada, right. And so I've seen a lot of stuff and I said, Well, that's really exciting. And I'm sure its possible in some other places, and maybe in some other countries where they didn't have infrastructure and legacy. I guess if I see him again soon. I'll have to apologize for not believing him enough. I think the building blocks of Agile the building blocks sprints and MVPs. I mean, they're enough fundamental to the way we're going to solve our biggest Harriers and scariest problems technologically. And then from a business perspective, service candidate itself has 18,000 employees involved in multiple channels, where the work has always been very lethargic, very difficult. Arduous you make change over years, not months, not days, for sure. And so I think that new method is not only a different way of working, its a completely revamped way of assembling solutions. And I think that the concept of engineering is probably going to be closer to what we're going to do. And I have to borrow the Lego metaphor, but the building blocks are going to be assembled. We know in working, I'm saying this in front of Joel, he doesn't know that yet. (all laughing) (indistinct) partners. We're going to be assembling MVP maps of an entire long program and its going to be iterative, it is going to be designed built, it will be agile as much as we can implement it. But more importantly, as much as we can govern it because the government is... We may have changed a lot, but the government is not necessarily caught on to most of these approaches. But the reality is that, that's where we're heading. And I will say, I'll close perhaps on this answer. The biggest reason for doing that apart from we've proved it is the fact that the appetite inside the organization for that level of mobilization, speed and solutioning, and being engaged rapidly, you just can't take that away from an organization once they've tasted that. If you let them down, well, they'll remember and frankly, they do remember now because they want more of this. And its going to be hard. But its a better hard, better challenge, than the one of having to do things over a decade, then to go fast and to kind of iterate quickly through the challenges and the issues and then move on very much to the next one as rapidly as possible. I think the the other comment I would add is most of this was driven by a client need. And that's not inconsequential because it mobilized everybody to a common focus. If it had been just about, well, we need to get people on side and solutions in place just to make our lives better as providers. Yeah, would it work perhaps, but it would have been different than the mobilization that comes when the client is put in the middle. The client is the focus, and then we drive everyone to that solution. >> Shared success and success is contagious. And when you ride the new wave, you're oh, we need a new board, right? So once you get it, it then spreads like wildfire. This is what we've been seeing. And it also translates down to the citizens because again, being contemporary, none of this just look could feel its success and performance. So as people in business start to adopt cloud. It becomes a nice synergy. This is a key! Joe, take us home here on the Accenture. The award winner, you guys did a great job. Final thoughts. >> Yeah, I mean, I think final thoughts would be happy to have had the opportunity to help. And it was a it was a complete team effort and continues to be. Its not a bunch of eccentric technologists in the background doing this. The commitment from everyone to get this in place and to continue to improve it from Benoit team and from other folks across the government has been paramount to the success. So its been a fantastic if world win like experience and look forward to continuing to build on it. And it has been well said, I think one thing that's done is its created demand for speed on some of these larger transformations. So I looking forward to continuing to innovate with with Benoit team. >> Well, congratulations for the most innovative Connect Deployment. And because you guys from Canada, I have to use the Hockey-Reference. You get multiple people working together in a cohesive manner. Its pass, shoot, score every time and its contagious. (Benoit laughs) Gentlemen, thank you very much for your time and congratulations for winning the election. Take care! >> Thanks. >> Take care. >> Okay, this is theCUBE's Coverage "AWS Public Sector Partner Awards" show. I'm John Furrier, host of theCUBE. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Aug 6 2020

SUMMARY :

and here to feature the most and a lot of business still needs to go on And in the end, and to be able to connect with us quickly. One of the things that and most of the government and get the cadence of what and the commercial This is the playbook to and to be able to support them the resources you have. is the backbone of what's Its the cloud model. than the one of having to down to the citizens and from other folks across the government I have to use the Hockey-Reference. host of theCUBE.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Joel MarchildonPERSON

0.99+

JoelPERSON

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

Benoit LongPERSON

0.99+

AccentureORGANIZATION

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mark SchwartzPERSON

0.99+

10QUANTITY

0.99+

April 6DATE

0.99+

NICEORGANIZATION

0.99+

Amazon Web ServicesORGANIZATION

0.99+

BenoitPERSON

0.99+

Teresa CarlsonPERSON

0.99+

ESDCORGANIZATION

0.99+

10 yearQUANTITY

0.99+

five yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

JoePERSON

0.99+

two yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

an hour and a halfQUANTITY

0.99+

CanadaLOCATION

0.99+

18,000 employeesQUANTITY

0.99+

1600 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

AcquiaORGANIZATION

0.99+

Palo Alto, CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

eight yearQUANTITY

0.99+

Four daysQUANTITY

0.99+

Accenture of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

Accenture CanadaORGANIZATION

0.99+

nineQUANTITY

0.99+

48 hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

Department of Employment and Social Development of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.99+

LegoORGANIZATION

0.99+

Government of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.99+

10s of thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

Over a million callsQUANTITY

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

Amazon AccentureORGANIZATION

0.98+

about 8 millionQUANTITY

0.98+

four daysQUANTITY

0.97+

BenoitORGANIZATION

0.97+

Public Sector SummitEVENT

0.96+

about two weeksQUANTITY

0.96+

over a decadeQUANTITY

0.96+

pandemicEVENT

0.96+

about four daysQUANTITY

0.95+

oneQUANTITY

0.95+

about 1500QUANTITY

0.95+

hundreds of thousands of calls a dayQUANTITY

0.95+

2000 agentsQUANTITY

0.95+

todayDATE

0.94+

AWS Public Sector Partner AwardsEVENT

0.94+

one thingQUANTITY

0.93+

firstQUANTITY

0.92+

AgileTITLE

0.92+

single softwareQUANTITY

0.91+

AWS Public Sector Partner Awards 2020EVENT

0.89+

AWS Public Sector Partner AwardsEVENT

0.89+

past 24 monthsDATE

0.83+

a monthQUANTITY

0.77+

millions of peopleQUANTITY

0.75+

Joel Marchildon and Benoit Long V2


 

>>from the Cube Studios in Palo Alto and Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world. This is a cube conversation. >>Welcome back to the Cube's coverage of AWS Public Sector Partner Awards program. I'm John Furrow, your host of the Cube here in Palo Alto, California In the remote interviews during this pandemic, we have our remote crews and getting all the stories and celebrating the award winners. And here to feature the most innovative connect deployment. We have a center of Canada and the Department of Employment and Social Development of Canada, known as E S D. C guys. Congratulations, Joel. More Children Censure Canada Managing director and Ben while long sdc of Canada Chief Transformation officer. Gentlemen, thanks for coming on. And congratulations on the award. >>Thank you. >>Thank you. >>So, Ashley, during this pandemic, a lot of disruption and a lot of business still needs to go on, including government services. But the citizens and people need to still do their thing. Business got to run, and you got to get things going. But the disruptions caused a little bit of how the user experiences are. So this connect has been interesting. It's been a featured part of where you've been hearing at the Public Sector summit with Theresa Carlson. You guys, this is a key product. Tell us about the award. What is the solution? That disturbing of deserving reward? >>Maybe I'll get I'll go first and then pass it over to Benoit. But I think the solution is Amazon Connect based Virtual Contact Center that we stood up fairly quickly over the course of about four days and really in support of of benefit that the government of Canada was was releasing as part of its economic response to the pandemic. And in the end that, you know, it's a fully functioning featured contact center solution includes an I V r. And, uh, you know, we stood it up for about 1500 to 2000 agents so that that's the crux of the solution. And maybe Benoit can give a bit of insight as to to how it came about so quickly. >>Yeah, happy to actually wear obviously, like every other government, facing enormous pressures at that time to deliver benefits directly to people who were in true need, the jobs are being lost. Our current systems were in trouble because of their age and barricade cake nature. And so the challenge is was quickly how to actually support a lot of people really fast. And so it came through immediately that after our initial payments were made under what was called Canada Emergency Response Benefit, then we have to support our clients directly. And so people turn to the transformation team of all teams. If you wish during a fire firestorm to say, Well, what could you do and how could you help? And so we had an established relationship with a number of other system integrators, including Accenture, and we were able to run a competition very rapidly. Accenture one. And then we deployed. And as you all said, in a matter of four days, what for us was a new, exceptional on high quality solution to a significant client problem. And I say that because I think you can imagine how people feel in the endemic of all of all things. But with the uncertainty that comes with the loss of income, loss of jobs, the question of being able to deal with somebody really a human being, as well as to be able to be efficiently answer a very simple but straightforward questions rapidly and with high quality, with pretty fundamental for us. So the people in the groups that were talking through here are talking, speaking to millions of people who were literally being asked to to accept the pavement rapidly and to be able to connect with us quickly. And without this solution, which was exceptionally well done and deployed and of high quality personally, just a technology, uh, solution. I would not have been possible to even answer any of these queries quickly. >>And while that's a great 0.1 of the things that you see with the pandemic it's a disaster in the quote disaster kind of readiness thing. Unforeseen, right? So, like other things, you can kind of plan for things that hypothetical. You've got scenarios, but this >>is >>truly a case where every day counts. Every minute counts because humans are involved is no our ROI calculation. It's not like it's not like, Well, what's the payback of our system? The old kind of way to think this is really results fast. This is what cloud is all about. This is the promise of cloud. Can I stand up something quick and you did it with a partner. Okay, this is, like, not, like, normal again. It's like it's, you know, it's like, unheard of, right? Four days with critical infrastructure, critical services that were unforeseen. Take us through what was going on in the war room, as you guys knew this was here. Take us through the through what happened. Yeah, >>So I think I can start a Z. You can imagine the set of executives that we're seeing a payment process. Uh, was an exceptional. It was like a bunker. Frankly, for about two weeks, we had to suspend the normal operations off the vast majority of our programming. We had to launch brand new payments and benefits systems and programs that nobody had seen before. The level of simplicity was maximized to delivered the funds quickly. So you could imagine it's a warpath if you wish, because the campaign is really around. A timing. Timing is fundamental. People are are literally losing their jobs. There is no support. There's no funding money for them to be able to buy groceries. So on the trust that people have in the government, Ai's pretty much at risk right there and then in a very straightforward but extraordinarily powerful magic moment. If you wish. If you can deliver a solution, then you make a difference for a long time. And so the speed unheard off on old friends when he came to the call center capability and the ability for us to support and service context the clients that were desperate to reach us on. We're talking hundreds of thousands of calls, right? We're not talking a few 1000 year. Ultimately, at some point we were literally getting in our over over, taken by volumes, call centers. But we had a regular one still operating over a 1,000,000 calls for coming in today with the capacity to answer, um, you know, tens of thousands. And so the reality is that the counselor that we put up here very quickly became capable of answering more calls than our regular costumes. And that speaks to the speed of delivery, the quality of the solution, of course, but the scalability of it and I have to say, maybe unheard of, it may be difficult to replicate. The conditions to lead to this are rare, but I have to say that my bosses and most of the government is probably now wondering why we can't do this more often, like we can't operate with that kind of speed and agility. So I think what you've got is a client in our case, under extreme circumstances. Now, realizing the new normal will never be the same, that these types of solutions and technology. And then there's scalability. There's agility there, the speed of deployment. It's frankly, something we want. We want all the time. Now we'd like to be able to do it under your whole timeline conditions. But even those will be a fraction of what it used to take. It would have taken us well, actually, I can actually tell you because I was the lead, Ah, technologists to deploy at scale for the government. Canada all the call center capabilities under a single software as a service platform. It took us two years to design it two years to procure it and five years to install it. That's the last experience. We have a call center enterprise scale capabilities, and in this case, we went from years to literally days. >>Well, you know, it takes a crisis sometimes to kind of wire up the simplicity solution that you say. Why didn't we do this before? You know, the waterfall meetings, Getting everyone arguing gets kind of gets in the way of the old the old software model. I want to come back to the transformation been wanna minute, cause I think that's gonna be a great success story and some learnings, and I want to get your thoughts on that. But I want to go to Joel because Joel, we've talked to many Accenture executives over the years and most recently this past 24 months. And the message we've been hearing is we're going to be faster. We're not going to be seen as that. You know, a consulting firm taking our times. Try and get a pound of flesh from the client. This is an example. In my opinion of a partner working with a problem statement that kind of matches the cloud speed. So you guys have been doing this. This is not new to a censure. So take us through how you guys reacted because one you got to sync up and get the cadence of what, Ben? What I was trying to do sync up and execute. Take us through what happened on your side. >>Yeah, I mean, so it's It's Ah, it's an unprecedented way of operating for us as well, frankly, and, um and, uh and, you know, we've had to look at to get this specific solution at the door and respond to an RFP and the commercial requirements that go with that way. Had Teoh get pretty agile ourselves internally on on how we go through approvals, etcetera, to make sure that that we were there to support Ben Wan is team. And I think you know that we saw this is a broader opportunity to really respond to it, to help Canada in a time of need. So So I think we, you know, we had to streamline a lot of our internal processes that make quick decisions that normally even for our organization, would have taken, um, could it could have taken weeks, right? And we were down to hours in a lot of instances. So it helps. It forces us to react and act differently as well. But I mean, to Benoit's point, I think this is really going to to hopefully change the way it illustrates the art of the possible and hopefully will change How, How quick We can look at problems and and we reduced deployment timeframes from from years to months and months to weeks, etcetera for solutions like this. Um, and I think that the AWS platform specifically in this case but what touched on a lot of things to beat the market scale ability But just as the benefit itself was, you know has to be simplified to do this quickly. I think one of the one of the benefits of the solution itself is it's simple to use technologically. I mean, we know least retrained. As I said, I think 1600 agents on how to use the platform over the course of a weekend on and and were able, and they're not normal agents. These were people who are firm from other jobs, potentially within the government. So they're not necessarily contact center agents by training. But they became contact center agents over the course of 48 hours, and I think from that perspective, you know, that was important as well have something that people could could use. The answer those calls that we know that when you were gonna come so >>Ben what this is. This is the transformation dream scenario in the sense of capabilities. I know it's under circumstances of the pandemic, and you guys didn't solve a big, big problem really fast and saved lives and help people get on with their day. But transformations about having people closest to the problem execute and the the also the people equation people process technology, as they say, is kind of playing out in real time. This >>is >>the this is kind of the playbook, you know? Amazon came in said, Hey, you want to stand something up? You wired it together. The solution quickly. You're close to it. Looking back now, it's almost like, Hey, why aren't we doing this before? As you said and then you had to bring people in who weren't trained and stood them up and they were delivering the service. This >>is >>the playbook to share your thoughts on this, because this is what you're you're thinking about all the time and it actually playing out in real time. >>Well, I would definitely endorsed the idea that it's a playbook. It's I would say it's an ideal and dream playbook timidly showing up on the basketball court with all the best players in the entire league playing together magically, it is exactly that. So a lot of things have to happen quickly, but also, um, correctly because you know, you can't pull these things properly together without that. So I would say the partnership with the private sector here was fundamental, and I have to applaud the work that Accenture did particularly, I think, as Canadians, we're very proud of the fact that we needed to respond quickly. Everyone was in this, our neighbors, we knew people who were without support and Accenture's team, I mean, all the way up and down across the organization was fundamental and delivering this, but also literally putting themselves into, uh, these roles and to make sure that we would be able to respond quickly to do so. I think the playbook around the readiness for change I was shocked into existence every night. I won't talk about quantum physics, but clearly some some high level of energy was thrown in very quickly, mobilized everybody all at once. Nobody was said. He's sitting around saying, I wonder if we have change management covered off, you know this was changed readiness at its best. And so I think for me from a learning perspective, apart from just the technology side, which is pretty fundamental if you don't have ready enough technology to deploy quickly than the best paid plans in the world won't work. The reality is that to mobilize an organization going for it into that level of of spontaneous driving, change, exception, acceptance and adoption is really what I would aim for. And so our challenge now we'll be continuing that kind of progression going forward, and we now found the way. We certainly use the way to work with private sector in an innovative capacity in the new, innovative ways with brand new solutions that are truly agile and and and scalable to be able to pull all of the organization. All that one's very rapidly, and I have to admit that it is going to shift permanently our planning. We had 10 year plans for our big transformation, so some of our programs are the most important in the country. In many ways. We support people about eight million Canadians a month and on the benefits payments that we deliver, and they're the most marginal needed meeting and and requires our support from senior study, unemployed jobseekers and whatnot. So if you think about that group itself and to be able to support them clearly with the systems that we have is just unsustainable. But the new technologies are clearly going to show us the way that we had never for forecast. And I have to say I had to throw up, like in your plan. And now I'm working my way down from 10 denying date your plants going forward. And so it's exciting and nerve wracking sometimes, but then obviously has a change leader. Our goal is to get there as quickly as possible, so the benefit of all of these solutions could make a difference in people's lives. >>What's interesting is that you can shorten that timetable but also frees you up to be focused on what's contemporary and what's needed at the time. So leverage the people on the resource is You have and take advantage of that versus having something that you're sitting on that need to be refreshed. You can always be on that bleeding edge, and this brings up the Dev ops kind of mindset agility. The lean startup glean company. You know this is a team effort between Amazon and center and SDC. It's pass, shoot, score really fast. So this isn't the new, the new reality. Any commentary from you guys on this, you know, new pass shoot score combination. Because you got speed, you got agility. You're leaner, which makes you more flexible for being contemporary and solving problems. What's your thoughts? >>So my perspective on that is most definitely right. I think what we what we were able to show and what's. You know, what's coming out of a lot of different responses to the pandemic by government is, um, you know, perfection isn't the most important thing out of the gate. Getting something out there that's going to reassure citizens that's gonna allow them to answer their questions or access benefits quickly is what's becoming more important. Obviously, security and privacy. Those things are of the utmost importance as well. But it's ability to get stuff out there, quickly, test it, change it, tested again and and just always be iterating on the solutions. Like I can say what we put out on April 6th within four days is the backbone of what's out there still today. But we've added, you know, we added an integrated workforce management solution from Nice, and we added some other eyes views to do outbound dialing from acquisition, things like that. So the solution has grown from that M v p. And I think that's one other thing that that's going to be a big takeaways if you're not gonna do anything. So you got the final and product out there, then it's going to be here, right? So let's go quickly and let's adapt from there. >>Then we'll talk about that dynamic cause that's about building blocks, fund foundational things and then services. It's the cloud model. >>Yeah, I mean, before the pandemic, I had lunch with Mark Schwarz, which I believe you're quite familiar with, and, you know, I spent an hour and 1/2 with it. We were talking, and he was so exciting and and energized by what the technologies could do. And I was listening to him, and I used to be the chief technology officer for the government can right? And so I've seen a lot of stuff and I said, Well, that's really exciting, and I'm sure it's possible in some other places. And maybe it's some other countries where you know they didn't have infrastructure and legacy. I guess if I see him again soon, I'll have to. I apologize for not believing him enough, I think the building blocks of edge of the building, blocks of sprints and MVP's I mean they're not fundamental to the way we're gonna. So our biggest, various and scariest problems, technologically and then from a business perspective, Service candidate itself has 18,000 employees involved in multiple channels where the work has always been very lethargic, very difficult, arduous. You make change over years, not months, not days for sure. And so I think that that new method is not only a different way of working, it's a completely re HVAC way of assembly solutions, and I think the concept of engineering is probably going to be closer to what we're going to do on. And I have to borrow the Lego metaphor, but the building blocks are gonna be assembled. We now and working. I'm saying this in front of goal. He doesn't know that you should practice partners. We're gonna be assembling MPP maps of an entire long program, and it's gonna be iterative. It is gonna be designed, built. It will be agile as much as we can implement it. But more importantly, and punches weaken govern. It is, you know, the government is we may have changed. A lot of the government is not necessarily can count on to Most of these things approaches, But the reality is that that's where we're heading. And I will say, Oh, close. Perhaps on this on this answer. The biggest reason for doing that apart from we've proved it is the fact that the appetite inside the organization for that level of globalization, speed solution ing and being engaged rapidly you just can't take that away from an organization. Must be a piece of that. Uh, if you let them down, well, they'll remember. And frankly, they do remember now, cause they want more and it's gonna be hard. But it's a better heart. Ah, a better challenge that the one of having to do things over a decade, then to go fast and to kind of iterating quickly through the challenges and the issues and then move on very much to the next one as rapidly as possible. I think the other company, I would add is most of this was driven by a client need, and that's not inconsequential because it mobilized everybody to comment focused. If you have been just about, well, you know, we need to get people on side and solutions in place just to make our lives better, it providers. Yeah, it would have worked, perhaps, but it would have been different than the mobilisation It comes when the client is put in the middle, the client is the focus, and then we drive. Everyone's with that solution, >>you know, shared success and success is contagious. And when you ride the new way to oh, we need a new board, right? So once you get it, it then spreads like wildfire. This is what we've been seeing. And it also translates down to the citizens because again, being contemporary, none of us just looked could feel it's success in performance. So, as you know, people in business start to adopt cloud. It becomes a nice, nice, nice synergy. This is key. I'll take a year on a center. Um, the award winner. You guys did a great job. Final thoughts. >>Yeah. I mean, I think final thoughts would be happy to have the opportunity that help. And it was a It was a complete team effort and continues to be, um, it's not. It's not a bunch of Accenture technologists in the background in this, you know the commitment from everyone to get this in place. And can you continue to improvement from Benoit's team and from other folks across the government has been, uh, has been paramount to the success. So, um um, it's been a fantastic if world win like experience and, uh, look forward to continuing to build on it. And it has been said, I think one thing this is done is it's created demand for speed on some of these larger transformations. So I'm looking forward to continuing to innovate with with Ben wanting. >>Well, congratulations. The most innovative connect deployment. And because you guys from Canada, I have to use the hockey reference. You get multiple people working together in a cohesive manner. It's pass, shoot, score every time. And you know it's contagious. Thank you very much for your time. And congratulations for winning the >>West. Thanks. Thank you. Okay, this is the >>Cube's coverage of AWS Public Sector Partner Award show. I'm John Furrier, host of the Cube. Thanks for watching. Yeah, Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Published Date : Jul 30 2020

SUMMARY :

from the Cube Studios in Palo Alto and Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world. And here to feature the most innovative connect deployment. But the citizens and people need to still do their thing. And in the end that, you know, it's a fully functioning featured contact center And I say that because I think you can imagine how people feel in the endemic And while that's a great 0.1 of the things that you see with the pandemic it's a disaster in the quote Can I stand up something quick and you did it with a partner. And that speaks to the speed of delivery, So take us through how you guys reacted because one you got to sync And I think you know that we saw this is a broader opportunity to really respond to it, I know it's under circumstances of the pandemic, and you guys didn't solve a big, the this is kind of the playbook, you know? the playbook to share your thoughts on this, because this is what you're you're thinking about all the time and And I have to say I had What's interesting is that you can shorten that timetable but also frees you up to be focused And I think that's one other thing that that's going to be a big takeaways if you're not gonna do anything. It's the cloud model. A lot of the government is not necessarily can count on to Most of these things approaches, And when you ride the new way in the background in this, you know the commitment from everyone to get this in And because you guys from Canada, I have to use the hockey reference. this is the I'm John Furrier, host of the Cube.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

JoelPERSON

0.99+

Theresa CarlsonPERSON

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

AccentureORGANIZATION

0.99+

John FurrowPERSON

0.99+

Mark SchwarzPERSON

0.99+

April 6thDATE

0.99+

two yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

five yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

BenoitPERSON

0.99+

10 yearQUANTITY

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

18,000 employeesQUANTITY

0.99+

CanadaLOCATION

0.99+

Palo Alto, CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

1600 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

AshleyPERSON

0.99+

BenPERSON

0.99+

Four daysQUANTITY

0.99+

48 hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

LegoORGANIZATION

0.99+

Joel MarchildonPERSON

0.99+

Ben WanPERSON

0.99+

SDCORGANIZATION

0.99+

four daysQUANTITY

0.98+

an hourQUANTITY

0.98+

hundreds of thousands of callsQUANTITY

0.97+

tens of thousandsQUANTITY

0.97+

about eight millionQUANTITY

0.97+

Cube StudiosORGANIZATION

0.97+

about four daysQUANTITY

0.97+

a yearQUANTITY

0.96+

Department of Employment and Social Development of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.96+

about two weeksQUANTITY

0.96+

oneQUANTITY

0.96+

firstQUANTITY

0.94+

pandemicEVENT

0.94+

about 1500QUANTITY

0.94+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.94+

2000 agentsQUANTITY

0.93+

1000 yearQUANTITY

0.93+

single softwareQUANTITY

0.93+

millions of peopleQUANTITY

0.92+

0.1QUANTITY

0.92+

10QUANTITY

0.92+

NiceORGANIZATION

0.91+

over a decadeQUANTITY

0.91+

one thingQUANTITY

0.9+

1,000,000 callsQUANTITY

0.9+

E S D. CORGANIZATION

0.9+

past 24 monthsDATE

0.87+

CubePERSON

0.86+

Benoit Long V2PERSON

0.83+

Response BenefitOTHER

0.79+

Public SectorEVENT

0.72+

government of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.71+

a monthQUANTITY

0.67+

Amazon ConnectORGANIZATION

0.64+

thingQUANTITY

0.63+

CanadiansPERSON

0.61+

Public Sector Partner AwardsTITLE

0.6+

AWS Public Sector Partner AwardTITLE

0.6+

Chief TransformationPERSON

0.58+

BenoitLOCATION

0.56+

CanadaORGANIZATION

0.53+

Censure CanadaORGANIZATION

0.53+

1/2QUANTITY

0.5+

Joel Marchildon and Benoit Long V1


 

>>from the Cube Studios in Palo Alto and Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world. This is a cube conversation. >>Welcome back to the Cube's coverage of AWS Public Sector Partner Awards program. I'm John Furrow, your host of the Cube here in Palo Alto, California In the remote interviews during this pandemic, we have our remote crews and getting all the stories and celebrating the award winners. And here to feature the most innovative connect deployment. We have a center of Canada and the Department of Employment and Social Development of Canada, known as E S D. C guys. Congratulations, Joel. More Children Censure Canada Managing director and Ben while long sdc of Canada Chief Transformation officer. Gentlemen, thanks for coming on. And congratulations on the award. >>Thank you. >>Thank you. >>So, Ashley, during this pandemic, a lot of disruption and a lot of business still needs to go on, including government services. But the citizens and people need to still do their thing. Business got to run, and you got to get things going. But the disruptions caused a little bit of how the user experiences are. So this connect has been interesting. It's been a featured part of what we've been hearing at the public sector summit with Theresa Carlson. You guys, this is a key product. Tell us about the award. What is the solution? That disturbing of deserving reward? >>Maybe I'll get I'll go first and then pass it over to Benoit. But I think the solution is Amazon. Connect a spiritual contact center that we stood up fairly quickly over the course of about four days and really in support of of benefit that the government of Canada was was releasing as part of its economic response to the pandemic. And in the end that, you know, it's a fully functioning featured contact center solution includes an ai VR and, uh, you know, we stood it up for 1500 to 2000 agents so that that's the crux of the solution. And maybe Benoit can give a bit of insight as to to how it came about so quickly. >>Yeah, I'd be happy to actually wear obviously, like every other government, facing enormous pressures at that time to deliver benefits directly to people who were in true need, the jobs are being lost. Our current systems were in trouble because of their age in the arcade cake Nature. And so the challenge is was quickly how to actually support a lot of people really fast. And so it came through immediately that after our initial payments were made under what was called Canada Emergency Response Benefit, then we have to support our clients directly. And so people turn to the transformation team of all teams. If you wish during a fire firestorm to say, Well, what could you do and how could you help? And so we had an established relationship with a number of other system integrators, including Accenture, and we were able to run a competition very rapidly. Accenture one. And then we deployed in, as you all said, in a matter of four days, what for us was a new, exceptional on high quality solution to a significant client problem. And I say that because I think you can imagine how people feel in that endemic of all of all things. But with the uncertainty that comes with the loss of income, loss of jobs, the question of being able to deal with somebody really a human being, as well as to be able to be efficiently answer a very simple but straightforward questions rapidly and with high quality, with pretty fundamental for us. So the people in the groups that were talking through here are talking, speaking to millions of people who were literally being asked to to accept the pavement rapidly and to be able to connect with us quickly. And without this solution, which was exceptionally well done and deployed and of high quality personally, just a technology, uh, solution. I would not have been possible to even answer any of these queries quickly. >>And while that's a great 0.1 of the things that you see with the pandemic it's a disaster in the quote disaster kind of readiness thing. Unforeseen, right? So, like other things, you can kind of plan for things that hypothetical. You've got scenarios, but this >>is >>truly a case where every day counts. Every minute counts because humans are involved is no our ROI calculation. It's not like it's not like, Well, what's the payback of our system? The old kind of way to think this is really results fast. This is what cloud is all about. This is the promise of cloud. Can I stand up something quick and you did it with a partner. Okay, this is, like, not, like, normal again. It's like it's, you know, it's like, unheard of right? Four days with critical infrastructure, critical services that were unforeseen. Take us through what was going on in the war room, as you guys knew this was here. Take us through the through what happened. Yeah, >>So I think I can start a Z. You can imagine the set of executives that we're seeing a payment process. Uh, was an exceptional. It was like a bunker. Frankly, for about two weeks, we had to suspend the normal operations off the vast majority of our programming. We had to launch brand new payments and benefits systems and programs that nobody had seen before. The level of simplicity was maximized to delivered the funds quickly. So you could imagine it's a warpath if you wish, because the campaign is really around. A timing. Timing is fundamental. People are are literally losing their jobs. There is no support. There's no funding money for them to be able to buy groceries. So on the trust that people have in the government, Ai's pretty much at risk right there and then, in a very straightforward but extraordinarily powerful magic moment. If you wish. If you can deliver a solution, then you make a difference for a long time. And so the speed unheard off on old friends when he came to the call center capability and the ability for us to support and service context the clients that were desperate to reach us on. We're talking hundreds of thousands of calls, right? We're not talking a few 1000 year. Ultimately, at some point we were literally getting in our over over, taken by volumes, call centers, but we had a regular one still operating over a 1,000,000 calls for coming in today. Uh, with the capacity to answer, um, you know, tens of thousands. And so the reality is that the counselor that we put up here very quickly became capable of answering more calls than our regular costumes. And that speaks to the speed of delivery, the quality of the solution, of course, but the scalability of it and I have to say, maybe unheard of, it may be difficult to replicate. The conditions to lead to this are rare, but I have to say that my bosses and most of the government is probably now wondering why we can't do this more often like we can't operate with that kind of speed and agility. So I think what you've got is a client in our case, under extreme circumstances. Now, realizing the new normal will never be the same, that these types of solutions and technology. And then there's scalability. There's agility there, the speed of deployment. It's frankly, something we want. We want all the time. Now we'd like to be able to do it under your whole timeline conditions. But even those will be a fraction of what it used to take. It would have taken us well, actually, I can actually tell you because I was the lead. Ah, technologist, to deploy at scale for the government, Canada, all the call center capabilities under a single software as a service platform. It took us two years to design it. Two years to procure it and five years to install it. That's the last experience. We have a call center enterprise scale capabilities, and in this case, we went from years to literally days. >>Well, you know, it takes a crisis sometimes to kind of wire up the simplicity solution that you say. Why didn't we do this before? You know the waterfall meetings, Getting everyone arguing gets kind of gets in the way of the old, the old software model. I want to come back to the transformation been wanna minute, cause I think that's going to be a great success story and some learnings, and I want to get your thoughts on that. But I want to go to Joel because Joel we've talked to many Accenture executives over the years and most recently this past 24 months, And the message we've been hearing is we're going to be faster. We're not going to be seen as that. You know, a consulting firm taking our times. Try and get a pound of flesh from the client. This is an example, in my opinion of a partner working with the problem statement that kind of matches the cloud speed. So you guys have been doing this. This is not new to a censure. So take us through how you guys reacted because one you got to sync up and get the cadence of what? Ben? What I was trying to do, sync up and execute. Take us through what happened on your side. >>Yeah. I mean, so it's It's Ah, It's an unprecedented way of operating for us as well, frankly, and, um and, uh and, you know, we've had to look at to get this specific solution at the door and respond to an RFP and the commercial requirements that go with that way. Had Teoh get pretty agile ourselves internally on on how we go through approvals, etcetera, to make sure that that we were there to support Ben Wan is team. And I think you know that we saw this is a broader opportunity to really respond to it, to help Canada in a time of need. So So I think we, you know, we had to streamline a lot of our internal processes and make quick decisions that normally, even for our organization, would have taken, um, could it could have taken weeks, right? And we were down to hours in a lot of instances. So it helps. It forces us to react and act differently as well. But I mean, to Benoit's point, I think this is really going to to hopefully change the way it illustrates the art of the possible and hopefully will change how, How quickly we can look at problems and and we reduce deployment timeframes from from years to months and months to weeks, etcetera for solutions like this. Um, and I think that the AWS platform specifically in this case but what touched on a lot of things to beat the market scale ability But just as the benefit itself was, you know has to be simplified to do this quickly. I think one of the one of the benefits of the solution itself is it's simple to use technologically. I mean, we know least retrained. As I said, I think 1600 agents on how to use the platform over the course of a weekend on and and were able, and they're not normal agents. These were people who are firm from other jobs, potentially within the government. So they're not necessarily contact center agents by training. But they became contact center agents over the course of 48 hours that I think from that perspective, you know, that was important as well have something that people could could use. The answer those calls that you know that when you're gonna come So, >>Ben, what this is This is the transformation dream scenario in the sense of capabilities. I know it's under circumstances of the pandemic, and you guys didn't solve a big, big problem really fast and saved lives and help people get on with their day. But transformations about having people closest to the problem execute and the the also the people equation. People process technology, as they say, is kind of playing out in real time. This >>is >>the this is kind of the playbook, you know, Amazon came in said, Hey, you want to stand something up? You wired it together. The solution quickly. You're close to it. Looking back now, it's almost like, Hey, why aren't we doing this before? As you said and then you had to bring people in who weren't trained and stood them up and they were delivering the service. This >>is >>the playbook to share your thoughts on this, because this is what you're you're thinking about all the time and it actually playing out in real time. >>Well, I would definitely endorsed the idea that it's a playbook. It's I would say it's an ideal and dream playbook to build like showing up on the basketball court with all the best players in the entire league playing together magically, it is exactly that. So a lot of things have to happen quickly, but also correctly because you know you can't pull these things properly together without that. So I would say the partnership with the private sector here was fundamental. And I have to applaud the work that Accenture did particularly, I think, as Canadians, we're very proud of the fact that we needed to respond quickly. Everyone was in this, our neighbors, we knew people who were without support and Accenture's team, I mean all the way up and down across the organization was fundamental in and delivering this, but also literally putting themselves into, uh, these roles and to make sure that we would be able to respond quickly, do so. I think the playbook around the readiness for change. I was shocked into existence every night. I won't talk about quantum physics, but clearly some some high level of energy was thrown in very quickly, mobilized everybody all at once. Nobody was said. He's sitting around saying, I wonder if we have change management covered off, you know this was changed readiness at its best. And so I think for me from a learning perspective, apart from just the technology side, which is pretty fundamental if you don't have ready enough technology to deploy quickly than the best plans in the world won't work. The reality is that to mobilize an organization going forward into that level of of spontaneous driving, change, exception, acceptance and adoption is really what I would ain't for. And so our challenge Now we'll be continuing that kind of progression going forward, and we now found a way. And we certainly use the way to work with private sector in an innovative capacity and in innovative ways with brand new solutions that are truly agile and and scalable to be able to pull all of the organization. All that one's very rapidly, and I have to admit that it is going to shift permanently our planning. We had 10 year plans for our big transformation, so some of our programs are the most important in the country. In many ways. We support people about eight million Canadians a month and on the benefits payments that we deliver, and they're the most marginal needed meeting and and requires our support from senior studio, unemployed jobseekers and whatnot. So if you think about that group itself and to be able to support them clearly with their systems that we have is just unsustainable. But the new technologies are clearly going to show us the way that we had never for forecast. And I have to say I had to throw up, like in your plan. And now I'm working my way down from 10 denying date your plants going forward. And so it's exciting and nerve wracking sometimes. But then, obviously, as a change leader, our goal is to get there as quickly as possible, so the benefit of all of these solutions could make a difference in people's lives. >>What's interesting is that you can shorten that timetable but also frees you up to be focused on what's contemporary and what's needed at the time. So leverage the people on the resource is You have and take advantage of that versus having something that you're sitting on that need to be refreshed. You can always be on that bleeding edge, and this brings up the Dev ops kind of mindset agility. The lean startup glean company. You know this is a team effort between Amazon and center and SDC. It's pass, shoot, score really fast. So this isn't the new, the new reality. Any commentary from you guys on this, you know, new pass shoot score combination. Because you got speed, you got agility. You're leaner, which makes you more flexible for being contemporary and solving problems. What's your thoughts? >>Yeah, So my perspective on that is most definitely right. I think what we what we were able to show and what's. You know, what's coming out of a lot of different responses to the pandemic by government is, um, you know, perfection isn't the most important thing out of the gate. Getting something out there that's going to reassure citizens that's going to allow them to answer their questions or access benefits quickly is what's becoming more important. Obviously, security and privacy. Those things are of the utmost importance as well. But it's ability to get stuff in there, quickly, test it, change it tested again and just always be iterating on the solutions. Like I can say what we put out on April 6th within four days is the backbone of what's out there still today. But we've added, you know, we added an integrated workforce management solution from Nice, and we added some other eyes views to do outbound dialing from acquisition, things like that. So the solution has grown from that M v p. And I think that's one other thing that that's going to be a big takeaways if you're not gonna do anything. So you got the final and product out there, then it's going to be here, right? So let's go quickly and let's adapt from there. >>Then we'll talk about that dynamic cause that's about building blocks, fund foundational things and then services. It's the cloud model. >>Yeah, I mean, before the pandemic, I had lunch with Mark Schwarz, which I believe you're quite familiar with, and, you know, I spent an hour and 1/2 with it. We were talking, and he was so exciting and and energized by what the technologies could do. And I was listening to him, and I used to be the chief technology officer for the government. Can't right. And so I've seen a lot of stuff and I said, Well, that's really exciting, and I'm sure it's possible in some other places. And maybe it's some other countries where you know they didn't have infrastructure and legacy. I guess if I see him again soon, I'll have to. I apologize for not believing him enough, I think the building blocks of agile, the building blocks of sprints and MVP's I mean, they're not fundamental to the way we're going to solve our biggest various and scariest problems technologically and then from a business perspective. Service candidate itself has 18,000 employees involved in multiple channels, where the work has always been very lethargic, very difficult, arduous. You make change over years, not months, not days for sure. And so I think that that new method is not only a different way of working, it's a completely revamped way of assembly solutions, and I think the concept of engineering is probably going to be closer to what we're going to do. Um, and I have to borrow the Lego metaphor, but the building blocks are gonna be assembled. We now and working. I'm saying this in front of goal. He doesn't know that you should practice partners. We're gonna be assembling MPP maps of an entire long program, and it's gonna be iterative. It is gonna be designed, built. It will be agile as much as we can implement it. But more importantly, and punches weaken govern. It is, you know, the government is we may have changed. A lot of the government is not necessarily can count on to Most of these things approaches. But the reality is that that's where we're headed. And I will say, Oh, close. Perhaps on this on this answer. The biggest reason for doing that apart from we've proved it is the fact that the appetite inside the organization for that level of globalization, speed solution ing and being engaged rapidly you just can't take that away from an organization. Must be a piece of that. Uh, if you let them down, well, they don't remember. And frankly, they do remember now, cause they want more and it's gonna be hard. But it's a better heart. Ah, a better challenge that the one of having to do things over a decade, then to go fast and to kind of iterating quickly through the challenges and the issues and then move on very much to the next one as rapidly as possible. I think The other company, I would add, is most of this was driven by a client need, and that's not inconsequential because it mobilized everybody to comment focused. It could have been just about well, you know, we need to get people on side and solutions in place just to make our lives better. It is his providers. Yeah, it would have worked, perhaps, but it would have been different than the mobilisation It comes when the client is put in the middle. The client is the focus. And then we drive. Everyone's with that, >>you know, shared success and and successes contagious. And when you ride the new way to oh, we need a new board, right? So once you get it, it then spreads like wildfire. This is what we've been seeing. And it also translates down to the citizens because again, being contemporary numbers just look and feel. It's success in performance. So, as you know, people in business start to adopt cloud. It becomes a nice, nice, nice synergy. This is key. I'll take a year on a center. Um, the award winner. You guys did a great job. Final thoughts. >>Yeah. I mean, I think final thoughts would be happy to have the opportunity that help. And it was a It was a complete team effort and continues to be, um, it's not. It's not a bunch of Accenture technologists in the background in this, you know the commitment from everyone to get this in place. And can you continue to improvement from Benoit's team and from other folks across the government has been has been paramount to the success. So, um um, it's been a fantastic world win like experience and, uh, look forward to continuing to build on it. And it has been said, I think one thing this is done is it's created demand for speed on some of these larger transformations. So I'm looking forward to continuing to innovate with with Ben wanting. >>Well, congratulations. The most innovative connect deployment. And because you guys from Canada, I have to use the hockey reference. You get multiple people working together in a cohesive manner. It's pass, shoot, score every time. And you know it's contagious. Thank you very much for your time. And congratulations for winning the West. Thanks. Okay, this is the Cube's coverage of AWS Public Sector Partner Award show. I'm John Furrier, host of the Cube. Thanks for watching. Yeah, Yeah, >>yeah, yeah, yeah

Published Date : Jul 23 2020

SUMMARY :

from the Cube Studios in Palo Alto and Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world. And here to feature the most innovative connect deployment. But the citizens and people need to still do their thing. And in the end that, you know, it's a fully functioning featured contact center And I say that because I think you can imagine how people feel in that endemic And while that's a great 0.1 of the things that you see with the pandemic it's a disaster in the quote Can I stand up something quick and you did it with a partner. And that speaks to the speed of delivery, So take us through how you guys reacted because one you got to sync And I think you know that we saw this is a broader opportunity to really respond to it, I know it's under circumstances of the pandemic, and you guys didn't solve a big, the this is kind of the playbook, you know, Amazon came in said, Hey, you want to stand something the playbook to share your thoughts on this, because this is what you're you're thinking about all the time and And I have to applaud the work that Accenture did What's interesting is that you can shorten that timetable but also frees you up to be focused But we've added, you know, we added an integrated It's the cloud model. a better challenge that the one of having to do things over a decade, And when you ride the new way in the background in this, you know the commitment from everyone to get this in And because you guys from Canada, I have to use the hockey reference.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

AccentureORGANIZATION

0.99+

Theresa CarlsonPERSON

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

JoelPERSON

0.99+

John FurrowPERSON

0.99+

Joel MarchildonPERSON

0.99+

Mark SchwarzPERSON

0.99+

April 6thDATE

0.99+

two yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

five yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

BenoitPERSON

0.99+

18,000 employeesQUANTITY

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

Two yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

48 hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

10 yearQUANTITY

0.99+

CanadaLOCATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

Four daysQUANTITY

0.99+

1600 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

Palo Alto, CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

AshleyPERSON

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

BenPERSON

0.99+

LegoORGANIZATION

0.99+

1500QUANTITY

0.99+

Ben WanPERSON

0.99+

four daysQUANTITY

0.99+

SDCORGANIZATION

0.98+

hundreds of thousands of callsQUANTITY

0.98+

an hourQUANTITY

0.98+

pandemicEVENT

0.97+

about eight millionQUANTITY

0.97+

Cube StudiosORGANIZATION

0.97+

oneQUANTITY

0.97+

Department of Employment and Social Development of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.96+

a yearQUANTITY

0.96+

about two weeksQUANTITY

0.96+

about four daysQUANTITY

0.96+

1000 yearQUANTITY

0.95+

firstQUANTITY

0.94+

NiceORGANIZATION

0.94+

0.1QUANTITY

0.94+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.94+

2000 agentsQUANTITY

0.93+

single softwareQUANTITY

0.93+

one thingQUANTITY

0.92+

over a decadeQUANTITY

0.9+

E S D. CORGANIZATION

0.9+

tens of thousandsQUANTITY

0.9+

past 24 monthsDATE

0.87+

agileTITLE

0.85+

millions of peopleQUANTITY

0.84+

1,000,000 callsQUANTITY

0.8+

government of CanadaORGANIZATION

0.79+

Benoit Long V1PERSON

0.78+

Canada EmergencyTITLE

0.74+

AWS Public Sector Partner AwardTITLE

0.72+

Response BenefitOTHER

0.72+

10 denyingQUANTITY

0.69+

a monthQUANTITY

0.65+

CubePERSON

0.63+

CanadiansPERSON

0.6+

Public Sector Partner AwardsTITLE

0.6+

Chief TransformationPERSON

0.58+

BenoitLOCATION

0.57+

1/2QUANTITY

0.56+

CanadaORGANIZATION

0.54+

Bill Mann, Styra | CUBE Conversation, July 2020


 

(upbeat music) >> Narrator: From the Cube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, connecting with thought leaders all around the world. This is the Cube Conversation. >> Welcome to this Cube Conversation. I'm Lisa Martin, excited to talk to the CEO of Styra, Bill Mann today. Bill, welcome to the Cube. >> Hi Lisa, how are you doing? >> I'm doing well. I should say welcome back. You've been on the Cube at a previous company, but we're excited to talk to you today about Styra, what's going on? So let's go ahead and start informing our audience who Styra is and what you do? >> Sure, so who Styra is and what do we do? So Styra is a company that's focused on reinventing policy and authorization in the cloud native stack. We're the company that created an open source project called Open Policy Agent, it's part of CNCF. And on top of Open Policy Agent, we built a control plane, a management plane to help organizations really put OPA into production and operationalized OPA. >> An OPA is Open Policy Agent. That's what the company actually developed with CNCF, correct? >> So, we actually founded Open Policy Agent and then we contributed Open Policy Agent to CNCF. And the real goal of contributing the Open Policy Agent to CNCF was we believe that we want to get authorization defacto in the market, right? And the only way to get something out there that everybody uses is to put it into the open source and having an entity like the CNCF supporting the project. So, really it's about getting everybody, all enterprises and vendors to use Open Policy Agent as a way of solving authorization for the cloud native environment. >> So you say Styra is reinventing policy and authorization for cloud native applications, your target audience, security folks, developer folks, what changes has cloud native brought to security and development teams? >> Sure, so what changes has cloud native brought to security and development teams? So fundamentally there've been three changes in the marketplace. One, as you know we're shifting from this monolithic architecture of building applications to now this new distributed architectures of kubernetes, microservices and Deep-coupled architecture. So fundamentally the way we build applications is fundamentally changed because everybody wants to have scale up and scale down and so forth. Second, the way we actually developed software, we've moved now to a DevOps model where we're doing more things earlier on in the cycle so we can innovate faster and we're producing code on an hourly basis versus when I joined the industry which was probably three releases a year. And then thirdly which is kind of a major topic that all of us kind of understand is our focus on privacy and security is higher than it's been before. And if these applications are going to be way more complex and more distributed and we're going to innovate faster than the way we focus on security and privacy has to be done differently as well. And if we don't do it differently, then we're going to have to all the breaches that we had in the previous generation of the app stack. >> And we don't want that, but you're right privacy and security are increasing concerns in any environment. How do you help address those and also with the thought of privacy and security are going to be concerned for quite a long time? >> Yeah, so let me take a step back. So how do we address privacy and security? So, at a fundamental level, authorization is a foundational part of security and authorization has never really been solved or re-imagined ever for the last 50 years or so. Every application developer or security vendor has built authorization into their own stack and done it in a very proprietary way. And it's been locked away within these applications and these stacks and so forth. So what happens now when you've got a highly distributed environment is that you've got so many moving parts, you still need to apply authorization. So, the way we've tackled it is by building Open Policy Agent. And there's three fundamental kind of tenants around Open Policy Agent that make it really ideal for this cloud native environment. Number one, it's policy as code and everything in the market now, everything is as code. You buy infrastructure as code. So this is now policy as code. So you can describe in a declarative model, how you want the policy for a system to be developed and you can use the language called Rego to do that. Second is the fact that all the cloud native projects out there which are all developed based upon open source technologies, kubernetes, microservices, envoy, SDO, cafco, all these kinds of buzzwords you hear in the marketplace, they all integrate with Open Policy Agent already. And then thirdly the architecture of Open Policy Agent is that it's distributed, which means that it's ideally suited for this distributed architecture for cloud native. And those are the three kind of characteristics of Open Policy Agent leading to developers loving it. And when I say they love it, we've got hundreds and thousands of users of Open Policy Agent. When you go to the CNCF shows co op con earlier this year and there's two more coming this year. There's many, many talks on it. You've got cloud vendors like Google and Microsoft adopting Open Policy Agent, got a lot of enterprises adopting Open Policy Agent. So, that's really fundamentally what we've built is we've built an authorization architecture for this new world to really address the security and privacy concerns, which have always existed and I'm going to be more exponential in this new world. >> And I think you've also built a community around OPA. Can you share a little bit of information about that and how they help with the co-development and even some of the other things that you're commercializing? >> Sure, yeah. So, now what have we done in from a community point of view with Open Policy Agents? So yeah, the community is a integral part of any open source project and we're lucky to have a great community. We've got a great community of enterprise users of Open Policy Agents and vendors as well, vendors like Microsoft and Google who are now contributing to OPA and building it up. And for me, the most important part of a community is that you learn how enterprises are using your software and they share ideas and they share use cases and you're able to innovate really, really fast. And what we've learned from that is the use cases that they use Open Policy Agent for, for instance, one of the major use cases for Open Policy Agent is for kubernetes Admission Control. So, essentially we can test the configuration of an application which is described in a file called YAML before it goes into production. So, think of it as pre-production tests, but companies are using it for microservices and applications and data and so forth. So, it helps us understand what they're using it for, but also we use it to help us develop our commercial product, which is the management control plane for OPA. So, we learn about what they're missing in the open source project that we can use to build our commercial product >> which is ready for enterprise use. >> So you've had a lot of success with OPA. Talk to me about Styra DAS and why the need for that? >> Sure, so why do we need Styra DAS recognizing that OPA is very, very successful. So, the fundamental difference is OPA is a very focused on developers and it's very focused on an environment for an individual node or cluster, but it doesn't have all the enterprise features necessary for a real enterprise to go into production. So what we notice is companies use OPA for pre-production, but when they want to go into production, they need a user interface. They need a way to author policies, distribute policies, monitor policies, do impact analysis and a whole bunch of other features and capabilities that are needed for enterprise deployments and so forth. So that's a fundamental difference between OPA and the commercial product. The commercial product is really operationalizing in OPA for an enterprise deployment. >> So the relationship between Styra and OPA seems very collaborative to me that what you just described with the commercial product of Styra DAS is really one that was developed based on what the OPA community and Styra have learned together? >> Correct, Yes. So, OPA was created by the CTO, the founders of the company saw early on several years ago, the need for distributed architectures and the need for unified policy so they left and created OPA. And from day one they wanted to get OPA into everybody's hands. That's why they contributed it to open source as part of CNCF. And then the next kind of strategy is to focus on the control apps aspects, the enterprise aspect. So yes, the same team that created OPA is the same team that's creating the Styra DAS commercial offering as well. >> So from the enterprise perspective, talk to me about some of the companies that you're talking to. I imagine any organization that's focused on cloud native, but any industry in particular that you see is really kind of leading edge right now? >> Yeah, so which industries are we talking to in terms of using Styra DAS and OPA? What we've actually found it's across the board. And we've seen in the early days that financial services and high tech were using OPA, but now it's really across the board. So it's all verticals really. And what we've noticed is any organization which is going through a cloud transformation project where they're either building new applications based upon cloud native app stacks like kubernetes and microservices and so forth or shift to the cloud are the companies that are also adopting OPA and the Styra DAS product, right? Because it's all part of the same solution set. And what we're noticing now and this is a fundamental difference is platform architects and developers are kind of prime to use these technologies. They learn about these technologies by going to the conferences and unlike the past which was very much top down selling from the sea level down, this is very much bottomed up. So developers learn about OPA from going to the conferences. They use it within their own environment and then they tell their management that, "Look, we're using OPA already. "We're missing these capabilities," or they come to us and we educate them about the Styra DAS product and so forth. So it's a very different sales model as well and that's why it's very important for ourselves and any open source company to really keep developers happy and provide a solution, that's meeting their requirements. >> On that side with so many of us and developers included working from home for the past nearly four months. We now are doing things like this virtual conversations, virtual events, how is Styra helping to continue to feed and educate those developers so that they can understand how you can impact their job functions and how they can then elevate you guys up the stack. >> Sure, so what's changed over the last three months or so in the market as a consequence of COVID-19 and from an educational point of view. So, what we've seen is fundamentally in the early days of COVID-19 everybody was kind of get the head around how to work from home and so forth, but what we've seen across the all verticals is developers have now really focused on educating themselves and just as a data point and the audience that we get to the OPA website is as high as it's ever been for the last three months. And what we're doing as a company is a lot of training sessions, video content, write-ups, blogs and so forth, right? And really helping the community learn about OPA and how to solve these kind of fundamental problems around policy and authorization within the environment. We've also been helped by the community as well. So there's been talks about a number of companies, Microsoft, Google, Palo Alto had a talk and many many companies are talking about OPA now and I love it because ultimately being an open source company and building a project which we want to become defacto, we want to raise the bar for security across the world, right? And if we can do that then it's going to be an achievement for us and it's very gratifying knowing that we're really fixing security problems for organizations because ultimately we always want to be able to use an application or a banking service and not worry about privacy and security concerns and that's ultimately what we're all after. But this is such a fundamental component that once we want to have developers learn this now because if they can incorporate this into the DevOps app stack then in future years when these applications are built and they're exposed there'll be more secure. >> And so it sounds like maybe there's even more engagement now during COVID when everybody is at home. Tell me about some of the things that are coming down the pipe for Styra in light of all of this exciting collaboration with the community. >> Sure, yeah. There's definitely been way more collaboration as a consequence of COVID-19. People are at home and they're focusing and they're going through learning sessions and browsing the website going through the video content and so forth. So what we're engaging as much as we have ever been, in fact I would argue that we're engaging even more so now, because it's just a different environment to work in. And what we're focused on now is really adding more features to the Styra DAS product, just to step back for a second, Open Policy Agent works across the cloud native stack and Styra DAS has been focused first on the kubernetes use case and now it also supports microservices as well. And then what we're continuing to do is add more of those enterprise features into Styra DAS and move up and up across the stack. But it is all driven by developers that we're talking to on a daily basis and that's leading to where the project is moving forward and the development for the roadmap and so forth. >> And Styra DAS was only launched in 2019, is that correct? >> 2019 yes, that's correct. That's correct. Yes, time flies, right? So, yes. >> A lot of change and a lot of development in a short period of time. >> That's right and 2019 was a big year for us, right? We started last 2019 with a soft launch at the RSA conference and we finished 2019 with series a funding led by Xcel. And yeah, it's great to see how the commercial product has been gaining traction in the marketplace as well as OPA as well and I think it's a combination of events. One, the fact that cloud native is now really well understood. Second, the fact that kubernetes at the beginning of 2019, it was still, "What does kubernetes mean, "is it going into production?" Now kubernetes is absolutely going into production and there's such a desire for organizations to make sure that security and policy and compliance are resolved before applications go into production otherwise we're going to have the same kind of challenges we had with previous app stacks. >> Well, the momentum is certainly with you. I can definitely hear that in your voice bell. Thank you so much for joining me talking about Styra, how you're reinventing policy and authorization for cloud native applications. >> Thank you, Lisa. >> For my guest Bill Mann, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube Conversation. Thanks for your time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jul 8 2020

SUMMARY :

This is the Cube Conversation. the CEO of Styra, Bill Mann today. You've been on the Cube in the cloud native stack. An OPA is Open Policy Agent. and having an entity like the Second, the way we actually and also with the thought and everything in the market and even some of the other things And for me, the most and why the need for that? and the commercial product. the founders of the company and the need for unified policy So from the enterprise perspective, and the Styra DAS product, right? for the past nearly four months. and the audience that we that are coming down the pipe for Styra and browsing the website So, yes. a lot of development at the RSA conference and we finished 2019 Well, the momentum Thanks for your time.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

Bill MannPERSON

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

CNCFORGANIZATION

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

July 2020DATE

0.99+

Bill MannPERSON

0.99+

hundredsQUANTITY

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

StyraORGANIZATION

0.99+

BillPERSON

0.99+

SecondQUANTITY

0.99+

OPATITLE

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

Palo AltoORGANIZATION

0.99+

Open Policy AgentTITLE

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

XcelORGANIZATION

0.99+

three changesQUANTITY

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.98+

DevOpsTITLE

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

this yearDATE

0.98+

Styra DASTITLE

0.97+

oneQUANTITY

0.97+

Cube StudiosORGANIZATION

0.97+

Styra DASORGANIZATION

0.96+

firstQUANTITY

0.96+

RegoTITLE

0.96+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.94+

StyraPERSON

0.93+

COVID-19OTHER

0.92+

Cube ConversationTITLE

0.92+

earlier this yearDATE

0.92+

three releases a yearQUANTITY

0.92+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.91+

several years agoDATE

0.9+

Open Policy AgentsTITLE

0.89+

three kindQUANTITY

0.87+

COVID-19TITLE

0.86+

last three monthsDATE

0.85+

COVIDTITLE

0.84+

secondQUANTITY

0.84+

last 50 yearsDATE

0.83+

thirdlyQUANTITY

0.82+

Bill Mann, Styra | CUBE Conversation, July 2020


 

(upbeat music) >> Narrator: From the Cube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, connecting with thought leaders all around the world. This is the Cube Conversation. >> Welcome to this Cube Conversation. I'm Lisa Martin, excited to talk to the CEO of Styra, Bill Mann today. Bill, welcome to the Cube. >> Hi Lisa, how are you doing? >> I'm doing well. I should say welcome back. You've been on the Cube at a previous company, but we're excited to talk to you today about Styra, what's going on? So let's go ahead and start informing our audience who Styra is and what you do? >> Sure, so who Styra is and what do we do? So Styra is a company that's focused on reinventing policy and authorization in the cloud native stack. We're the company that created an open source project called Open Policy Agent, it's part of CNCF. And on top of Open Policy Agent, we built a control flame, a management plane to help organizations really put OPA into production and operationalized OPA. >> An OPA is Open Policy Agent. That's what the company actually developed with CNCF, correct? >> So, we actually founded Open Policy Agent and then we contributed Open Policy Agent to CNCF. And the real goal of contributing the Open Policy Agent to CNCF was we believe that we want to get authorization defacto in the market, right? And the only way to get something out there that everybody uses is to put it into the open source and having an entity like the CNCF supporting the project. So, really it's about getting everybody, all enterprises and vendors to use Open Policy Agent as a way of solving authorization for the cloud native environment. >> So you say Styra is reinventing policy and authorization for cloud native applications, your target audience, security folks, developer folks, what changes has cloud native brought to security and development teams? >> Sure, so what changes has cloud native brought to security and development teams? So fundamentally there've been three changes in the marketplace. One, as you know we're shifting from this monolithic architecture of building applications to now this new distributed architectures of kubernetes, microservices and Deep-coupled architecture. So fundamentally the way we build applications is fundamentally changed because everybody wants to have scale up and scale down and so forth. Second, the way we actually developed software, we've moved now to a DevOps model where we're doing more things earlier on in the cycle so we can innovate faster and we're producing code on an hourly basis versus when I joined the industry which was probably three releases a year. And then thirdly which is kind of a major topic that all of us kind of understand is our focus on privacy and security is higher than it's been before. And if these applications are going to be way more complex and more distributed and we're going to innovate faster than the way we focus on security and privacy has to be done differently as well. And if we don't do it differently, then we're going to have to all the breaches that we had in the previous generation of the app stack. >> And we don't want that, but you're right privacy and security are increasing concerns in any environment. How do you help address those and also with the thought of privacy and security are going to be concerned for quite a long time? >> Yeah, so let me take a step back. So how do we address privacy and security? So, at a fundamental level, authorization is a foundational part of security and authorization has never really been solved or re-imagined ever for the last 50 years or so. Every application developer or security vendor has built authorization into their own stack and done it in a very proprietary way. And it's been locked away within these applications and these stacks and so forth. So what happens now when you've got a highly distributed environment is that you've got so many moving parts, you still need to apply authorization. So, the way we've tackled it is by building Open Policy Agent. And there's three fundamental kind of tenants around Open Policy Agent that make it really ideal for this cloud native environment. Number one, it's policy as code and everything in the market now, everything is as code. You buy infrastructure as code. So this is now policy as code. So you can describe in a declarative model, how you want the policy for a system to be developed and you can use the language called Rego to do that. Second is the fact that all the cloud native projects out there which are all developed based upon open source technologies, kubernetes, microservices, envoy, SDO, cafco, all these kinds of buzzwords you hear in the marketplace, they all integrate with Open Policy Agent already. And then thirdly the architecture of Open Policy Agent is that it's distributed, which means that it's ideally suited for this distributed architecture for cloud native. And those are the three kind of characteristics of Open Policy Agent leading to developers loving it. And when I say they love it, we've got hundreds and thousands of users of Open Policy Agent. When you go to the CNCF shows co op con earlier this year and there's two more coming this year. There's many, many talks on it. You've got cloud vendors like Google and Microsoft adopting Open Policy Agent, got a lot of enterprises adopting Open Policy Agent. So, that's really fundamentally what we've built is we've built an authorization architecture for this new world to really address the security and privacy concerns, which have always existed and I'm going to be more exponential in this new world. >> And I think you've also built a community around OPA. Can you share a little bit of information about that and how they help with the co-development and even some of the other things that you're commercializing? >> Sure, yeah. So, now what have we done in from a community point of view with Open Policy Agents? So yeah, the community is a integral part of any open source project and we're lucky to have a great community. We've got a great community of enterprise users of Open Policy Agents and vendors as well, vendors like Microsoft and Google who are now contributing to OPA and building it up. And for me, the most important part of a community is that you learn how enterprises are using your software and they share ideas and they share use cases and you're able to innovate really, really fast. And what we've learned from that is the use cases that they use Open Policy Agent for, for instance, one of the major use cases for Open Policy Agent is for kubernetes Admission Control. So, essentially we can test the configuration of an application which is described in a file called Yammer before it goes into production. So, think of it as pre-production tests, but companies are using it for microservices and applications and data and so forth. So, it helps us understand what they're using it for, but also we use it to help us develop our commercial product, which is the management control plane for OPA. So, we learn about what they're missing in the open source project that we can use to build our commercial product which is ready for enterprise use. >> So you've had a lot of success with OPA. Talk to me about Styra DAS and why the need for that? >> Sure, so why do we need Styra DAS recognizing that OPA is very, very successful. So, the fundamental difference is OPA is a very focused on developers and it's very focused on an environment for an individual node or cluster, but it doesn't have all the enterprise features necessary for a real enterprise to go into production. So what we notice is companies use OPA for pre-production, but when they want to go into production, they need a user interface. They need a way to author policies, distribute policies, monitor policies, do impact analysis and a whole bunch of other features and capabilities that are needed for enterprise deployments and so forth. So that's a fundamental difference between OPA and the commercial product. The commercial product is really operationalizing in OPA for an enterprise deployment. >> So the relationship between Styra and OPA seems very collaborative to me that what you just described with the commercial product of Styra DAS is really one that was developed based on what the OPA community and Styra have learned together? >> Correct, Yes. So, OPA was created by the CTO, the founders of the company when the team was actually part of Nicira and they left Nicira which got acquired by VMware and so on early on several years ago, the need for distributed architectures and the need for unified policy so they left and created OPA. And from day one they wanted to get over into everybody's hands. That's why they contributed it to open source as part of CNCF. And then the next kind of strategy is to focus on the control apps aspects, the enterprise aspect. So yes, the same team that created OPA is the same team that's creating the Styra DAS commercial offering as well. >> So from the enterprise perspective, talk to me about some of the companies that you're talking to. I imagine any organization that's focused on cloud native, but any industry in particular that you see is really kind of leading edge right now? >> Yeah, so which industries are we talking to in terms of using Styra DAS and OPA? What we've actually found it's across the board. And we've seen in the early days that financial services and high tech were using OPA, but now it's really across the board. So it's all verticals really. And what we've noticed is any organization which is going through a cloud transformation project where they're either building new applications based upon cloud native app stacks like kubernetes and microservices and so forth or shift to the cloud are the companies that are also adopting OPA and the Styra DAS product, right? Because it's all part of the same solution set. And what we're noticing now and this is a fundamental difference is platform architects and developers are kind of prime to use these technologies. They learn about these technologies by going to the conferences and unlike the past which was very much top down selling from the sea level down, this is very much bottomed up. So developers learn about OPA from going to the conferences. They use it within their own environment and then they tell their management that, "Look, we're using OPA already. "We're missing these capabilities," or they come to us and we educate them about the Styra DAS product and so forth. So it's a very different sales model as well and that's why it's very important for ourselves and any open source company to really keep developers happy and provide a solution, that's meeting their requirements. >> On that side with so many of us and developers included working from home for the past nearly four months. We now are doing things like this virtual conversations, virtual events, how is Styra helping to continue to feed and educate those developers so that they can understand how you can impact their job functions and how they can then elevate you guys up the stack. >> Sure, so what's changed over the last three months or so in the market as a consequence of COVID-19 and from an educational point of view. So, what we've seen is fundamentally in the early days of COVID-19 everybody was kind of get the head around how to work from home and so forth, but what we've seen across the all verticals is developers have now really focused on educating themselves and just as a data point and the audience that we get to the OPA website is as high as it's ever been for the last three months. And what we're doing as a company is a lot of training sessions, video content, write-ups, blogs and so forth, right? And really helping the community learn about OPA and how to solve these kind of fundamental problems around policy and authorization within the environment. We've also been helped by the community as well. So there's been talks about a number of companies, Microsoft, Google, Palo Alto had a talk and many many companies are talking about OPA now and I love it because ultimately being an open source company and building a project which we want to become defacto, we want to raise the bar for security across the world, right? And if we can do that then it's going to be an achievement for us and it's very gratifying knowing that we're really fixing security problems for organizations because ultimately we always want to be able to use an application or a banking service and not worry about privacy and security concerns and that's ultimately what we're all after. But this is such a fundamental component that once we want to have developers learn this now because if they can incorporate this into the DevOps app stack then in future years when these applications are built and they're exposed there'll be more secure. >> And so it sounds like maybe there's even more engagement now during COVID when everybody is at home. Tell me about some of the things that are coming down the pipe for Styra in light of all of this exciting collaboration with the community. >> Sure, yeah. There's definitely been way more collaboration as a consequence of COVID-19. People are at home and they're focusing and they're going through learning sessions and browsing the website going through the video content and so forth. So what we're engaging as much as we have ever been, in fact I would argue that we're engaging even more so now, because it's just a different environment to work in. And what we're focused on now is really adding more features to the Styra DAS product, just to step back for a second, Open Policy Agent works across the cloud native stack and Styra DAS has been focused first on the kubernetes use case and now it also supports microservices as well. And then what we're continuing to do is add more of those enterprise features into Styra DAS and move up and up across the stack. But it is all driven by developers that we're talking to on a daily basis and that's leading to where the project is moving forward and the development for the roadmap and so forth. >> And Styra DAS was only launched in 2019, is that correct? >> 2019 yes, that's correct. That's correct. Yes, time flies, right? So, yes. >> A lot of change and a lot of development in a short period of time. >> That's right and 2019 was a big year for us, right? We started last 2019 with a soft launch at the RSA conference and we finished 2019 with series a funding led by Xcel. And yeah, it's great to see how the commercial product has been gaining traction in the marketplace as well as OPA as well and I think it's a combination of events. One, the fact that cloud native is now really well understood. Second, the fact that kubernetes at the beginning of 2019, it was still, "What does kubernetes mean, "is it going into production?" Now kubernetes is absolutely going into production and there's such a desire for organizations to make sure that security and policy and compliance are resolved before applications go into production otherwise we're going to have the same kind of challenges we had with previous app stacks. >> Well, the momentum is certainly with you. I can definitely hear that in your voice bell. Thank you so much for joining me talking about Styra, how you're reinventing policy and authorization for cloud native applications. >> Thank you, Lisa. >> For my guest Bill Mann, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube Conversation. Thanks for your time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jul 7 2020

SUMMARY :

This is the Cube Conversation. the CEO of Styra, Bill Mann today. You've been on the Cube in the cloud native stack. An OPA is Open Policy Agent. and having an entity like the Second, the way we actually and also with the thought and everything in the market and even some of the other things And for me, the most and why the need for that? and the commercial product. and the need for unified policy So from the enterprise perspective, and the Styra DAS product, right? for the past nearly four months. and the audience that we that are coming down the pipe for Styra and browsing the website So, yes. a lot of development at the RSA conference and we finished 2019 Well, the momentum Thanks for your time.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Bill MannPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

CNCFORGANIZATION

0.99+

July 2020DATE

0.99+

Bill MannPERSON

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

hundredsQUANTITY

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

StyraORGANIZATION

0.99+

SecondQUANTITY

0.99+

BillPERSON

0.99+

OPATITLE

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

NiciraORGANIZATION

0.99+

Palo AltoORGANIZATION

0.99+

Open Policy AgentTITLE

0.99+

StyraPERSON

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

three changesQUANTITY

0.99+

DevOpsTITLE

0.98+

BostonLOCATION

0.98+

XcelORGANIZATION

0.98+

RSAEVENT

0.98+

this yearDATE

0.98+

VMwareORGANIZATION

0.97+

oneQUANTITY

0.97+

COVID-19OTHER

0.97+

firstQUANTITY

0.97+

Cube StudiosORGANIZATION

0.97+

OneQUANTITY

0.97+

RegoTITLE

0.97+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.94+

earlier this yearDATE

0.92+

several years agoDATE

0.92+

Styra DASTITLE

0.91+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.91+

Styra DASORGANIZATION

0.89+

three releases a yearQUANTITY

0.89+

Open Policy AgentsTITLE

0.89+

three kindQUANTITY

0.87+

last three monthsDATE

0.86+

last 50 yearsDATE

0.84+

thirdlyQUANTITY

0.82+

Dan Woicke, Cerner Corporation | Virtual Vertica BDC 2020


 

(gentle electronic music) >> Hello, everybody, welcome back to the Virtual Vertica Big Data Conference. My name is Dave Vellante and you're watching theCUBE, the leader in digital coverage. This is the Virtual BDC, as I said, theCUBE has covered every Big Data Conference from the inception, and we're pleased to be a part of this, even though it's challenging times. I'm here with Dan Woicke, the senior director of CernerWorks Engineering. Dan, good to see ya, how are things where you are in the middle of the country? >> Good morning, challenging times, as usual. We're trying to adapt to having the kids at home, out of school, trying to figure out how they're supposed to get on their laptop and do virtual learning. We all have to adapt to it and figure out how to get by. >> Well, it sure would've been my pleasure to meet you face to face in Boston at the Encore Casino, hopefully next year we'll be able to make that happen. But let's talk about Cerner and CernerWorks Engineering, what is that all about? >> So, CernerWorks Engineering, we used to be part of what's called IP, or Intellectual Property, which is basically the organization at Cerner that does all of our software development. But what we did was we made a decision about five years ago to organize my team with CernerWorks which is the hosting side of Cerner. So, about 80% of our clients choose to have their domains hosted within one of the two Kansas City data centers. We have one in Lee's Summit, in south Kansas City, and then we have one on our main campus that's a brand new one in downtown, north Kansas City. About 80, so we have about 27,000 environments that we manage in the Kansas City data centers. So, what my team does is we develop software in order to make it easier for us to monitor, manage, and keep those clients healthy within our data centers. >> Got it. I mean, I think of Cerner as a real advanced health tech company. It's the combination of healthcare and technology, the collision of those two. But maybe describe a little bit more about Cerner's business. >> So we have, like I said, 27,000 facilities across the world. Growing each day, thank goodness. And, our goal is to ensure that we reduce errors and we digitize the entire medical records for all of our clients. And we do that by having a consulting practice, we do that by having engineering, and then we do that with my team, which manages those particular clients. And that's how we got introduced to the Vertica side as well, when we introduced them about seven years ago. We were actually able to take a tremendous leap forward in how we manage our clients. And I'd be more than happy to talk deeper about how we do that. >> Yeah, and as we get into it, I want to understand, healthcare is all about outcomes, about patient outcomes and you work back from there. IT, for years, has obviously been a contributor but removed, and somewhat indirect from those outcomes. But, in this day and age, especially in an organization like yours, it really starts with the outcomes. I wonder if you could ratify that and talk about what that means for Cerner. >> Sorry, are you talking about medical outcomes? >> Yeah, outcomes of your business. >> So, there's two different sides to Cerner, right? There's the medical side, the clinical side, which is obviously our main practice, and then there's the side that I manage, which is more of the operational side. Both are very important, but they go hand in hand together. On the operational side, the goal is to ensure that our clinicians are on the system, and they don't know they're on the system, right? Things are progressing, doctors don't want to be on the system, trust me. My job is to ensure they're having the most seamless experience possible while they're on the EMR and have it just be one of their side jobs as opposed to taking their attention away from the patients. That make sense? >> Yeah it does, I mean, EMR and meaningful use, around the Affordable Care Act, really dramatically changed the unit. I mean, people had to demonstrate in order to get paid, and so that became sort of an unfunded mandate for folks and you really had to respond to that, didn't you? >> We did, we did that about three to four years ago. And we had to help our clients get through what's called meaningful use, there was different stages of meaningful use. And what we did, is we have the website called the Lights On Network which is free to all of our clients. Once you get onto the website the Lights On Network, you can actually show how you're measured and whether or not you're actually completing the different necessary tasks in order to get those payments for meaningful use. And it also allows you to see what your performance is on your domain, how the clinicians are doing on the system, how many hours they're spending on the system, how many orders they're executing. All of that is completely free and visible to our clients on the Lights On Network. And that's actually backed by some of the Vertica software that we've invested in. >> Yeah, so before we get into that, it sounds like your mission, really, is just great user experiences for the people that are on the network. Full stop. >> We do. So, one of the things that we invented about 10 years ago is called RTMS Timers. They're called Response Time Measurement System. And it started off as a way of us proving that clients are actually using the system, and now it's turned into more of a user outcomes. What we do is we collect 2.5 billion timers per day across all of our clients across the world. And every single one of those records goes to the Vertica platform. And then we've also developed a system on that which allows us in real time to go and see whether or not they're deviating from their normal. So we do baselines every hour of the week and then if they're deviating from those baselines, we can immediately call a service center and have them engage the client before they call in. >> So, Dan, I wonder if you could paint a picture. By the way, that's awesome. I wonder if you could paint a picture of your analytics environment. What does it look like? Maybe give us a sense of the scale. >> Okay. So, I've been describing how we operate, our remote hosted clients in the two Kansas City data centers, but all the software that we write, we also help our client hosted agents as well. Not only do we take care of what's going on at the Kansas City data center, but we do write software to ensure that all of clients are treated the same and we provide the same level of care and performance management across all those clients. So what we do is we have 90,000 agents that we have split across all these clients across the world. And every single hour, we're committing a billion rows to Vertica of operational data. So I talked a little bit about the RTMS timers, but we do things just like everyone else does for CPU, memory, Java Heap Stack. We can tell you how many concurrent users are on the system, I can tell you if there's an application that goes down unexpected, like a crash. I can tell you the response time from the network as most of us use Citrix at Cerner. And so what we do is we measure the amount of time it takes from the client side to PCs, it's sitting in the virtual data centers, sorry, in the hospitals, and then round trip to the Citrix servers that are sitting in the Kansas City data center. That's called the RTT, our round trip transactions. And what we've done is, over the last couple of years, what we've done is we've switched from just summarizing CPU and memory and all that high-level stuff, in order to go down to a user level. So, what are you doing, Dr. Smith, today? How many hours are you using the EMR? Have you experienced any slowness? Have you experienced any hourglass holding within your application? Have you experienced, unfortunately, maybe a crash? Have you experienced any slowness compared to your normal use case? And that's the step we've taken over the last few years, to go from summarization of high-level CPU memory, over to outcome metrics, which are what is really happening with a particular user. >> So, really granular views of how the system is being used and deep analytics on that. I wonder, go ahead, please. >> And, we weren't able to do that by summarizing things in traditional databases. You have to actually have the individual rows and you can't summarize information, you have to have individual metrics that point to exactly what's going on with a particular clinician. >> So, okay, the MPP architecture, the columnar store, the scalability of Vertica, that's what's key. That was my next question, let me take us back to the days of traditional RDBMS and then you brought in Vertica. Maybe you could give us a sense as to why, what that did for you, the before and after. >> Right. So, I'd been painting a picture going forward here about how traditionally, eight years ago, all we could do was summarize information. If CPU was going to go and jump up 8%, I could alarm the data center and say, hey, listen, CPU looks like it's higher, maybe an application's hanging more than it has been in the past. Things are a little slower, but I wouldn't be able to tell you who's affected. And that's where the whole thing has changed, when we brought Vertica in six years ago is that, we're able to take those 90,000 agents and commit a billion rows per hour operational data, and I can tell you exactly what's going on with each of our clinicians. Because you know, it's important for an entire domain to be healthy. But what about the 10 doctors that are experiencing frustration right now? If you're going to summarize that information and roll it up, you'll never know what those 10 doctors are experiencing and then guess what happens? They call the data center and complain, right? The squeaky wheels? We don't want that, we want to be able to show exactly who's experiencing a bad performance right now and be able to reach out to them before they call the help desk. >> So you're able to be proactive there, so you've gone from, Houston, we have a problem, we really can't tell you what it is, go figure it out, to, we see that there's an issue with these docs, or these users, and go figure that out and focus narrowly on where the problem is as opposed to trying to whack-a-mole. >> Exactly. And the other big thing that we've been able to do is corelation. So, we operate two gigantic data centers. And there's things that are shared, switches, network, shared storage, those things are shared. So if there is an issue that goes on with one of those pieces of equipment, it could affect multiple clients. Now that we have every row in Vertica, we have a new program in place called performance abnormality flags. And what we're able to do is provide a website in real time that goes through the entire stack from Citrix to network to database to back-end tier, all the way to the end-user desktop. And so if something was going to be related because we have a network switch going out of the data center or something's backing up slow, you can actually see which clients are on that switch, and, what we did five years ago before this, is we would deploy out five different teams to troubleshoot, right? Because five clients would call in, and they would all have the same problem. So, here you are having to spare teams trying to investigate why the same problem is happening. And now that we have all of the data within Vertica, we're able to show that in a real time fashion, through a very transparent dashboard. >> And so operational metrics throughout the stack, right? A game changer. >> It's very compact, right? I just label five different things, the stack from your end-user device all the way through the back-end to your database and all the way back. All that has to work properly, right? Including the network. >> How big is this, what are we talking about? However you measure it, terabytes, clusters. What can you share there? >> Sorry, you mean, the amount of data that we process within our data centers? >> Give us a fun fact. >> Absolute petabytes, yeah, for sure. And in Vertica right now we have two petabytes of data, and I purge it out every year, one year's worth of data within two different clusters. So we have to two different data centers I've been describing, what we've done is we've set Vertica up to be in both data centers, to be highly redundant, and then one of those is configured to do real-time analysis and corelation research, and then the other one is to provide service towards what I described earlier as our Lights On Network, so it's a very dedicated hardened cluster in one of our data centers to allow the Lights On Network to provide the transparency directly to our clients. So we want that one to be pristine, fast, and nobody touch it. As opposed to the other one, where, people are doing real-time, ad hoc queries, which sometimes aren't the best thing in the world. No matter what kind of database or how fast it is, people do bad things in databases and we just don't want that to affect what we show our clients in a transparent fashion. >> Yeah, I mean, for our audience, Vertica has always been aimed at these big, hairy, analytic problems, it's not for a tiny little data mart in a department, it's really the big scale problems. I wonder if I could ask you, so you guys, obviously, healthcare, with HIPAA and privacy, are you doing anything in the cloud, or is it all on-prem today? >> So, in the operational space that I manage, it's all on-premises, and that is changing. As I was describing earlier, we have an initiative to go to AWS and provide levels of service to countries like Sweden which does not want any operational data to leave that country's walls, whether it be operational data or whether it be PHI. And so, we have to be able to adapt into Vertia Eon Mode in order to provide the same services within Sweden. So obviously, Cerner's not going to go up and build a data center in every single country that requires us, so we're going to leverage our partnership with AWS to make this happen. >> Okay, so, I was going to ask you, so you're not running Eon Mode today, it's something that you're obviously interested in. AWS will allow you to keep the data locally in that region. In talking to a lot of practitioners, they're intrigued by this notion of being able to scale independently, storage from compute. They've said they wished that's a much more efficient way, I don't have to buy in chunks, if I'm out of storage, I don't have to buy compute, and vice-versa. So, maybe you could share with us what you're thinking, I know it's early days, but what's the logic behind the business case there? >> I think you're 100% correct in your assessment of taking compute away from storage. And, we do exactly what you say, we buy a server. And it has so much compute on it, and so much storage. And obviously, it's not scaled properly, right? Either storage runs out first or compute runs out first, but you're still paying big bucks for the entire server itself. So that's exactly why we're doing the POC right now for Eon Mode. And I sit on Vertica's TAB, the advisory board, and they've been doing a really good job of taking our requirements and listening to us, as to what we need. And that was probably number one or two on everybody's lists, was to separate storage from compute. And that's exactly what we're trying to do right now. >> Yeah, it's interesting, I've talked to some other customers that are on the customer advisory board. And Vertica is one of these companies that're pretty transparent about what goes on there. And I think that for the early adopters of Eon Mode there were some challenges with getting data into the new system, I know Vertica has been working on that very hard but you guys push Vertica pretty hard and from what I can tell, they listen. Your thoughts. >> They do listen, they do a great job. And even though the Big Data Conference is canceled, they're committed to having us go virtually to the CAD meeting on Monday, so I'm looking forward to that. They do listen to our requirements and they've been very very responsive. >> Nice. So, I wonder if you could give us some final thoughts as to where you want to take this thing. If you look down the road a year or two, what does success look like, Dan? >> That's a good question. Success means that we're a little bit more nimble as far as the different regions across the world that we can provide our services to. I want to do more corelation. I want to gather more information about what users are actually experiencing. I want to be able to have our phone never ring in our data center, I know that's a grand thought there. But I want to be able to look forward to measuring the data internally and reaching out to our clients when they have issues and then doing the proper corelation so that I can understand how things are intertwining if multiple clients are having an issue. That's the goal going forward. >> Well, in these trying times, during this crisis, it's critical that your operations are running smoothly. The last thing that organizations need right now, especially in healthcare, is disruption. So thank you for all the hard work that you and your teams are doing. I wish you and your family all the best. Stay safe, stay healthy, and thanks so much for coming on theCUBE. >> I really appreciate it, thanks for the opportunity. >> You're very welcome, and thank you, everybody, for watching, keep it right there, we'll be back with our next guest. This is Dave Vellante for theCUBE. Covering Virtual Vertica Big Data Conference. We'll be right back. (upbeat electronic music)

Published Date : Mar 31 2020

SUMMARY :

in the middle of the country? and figure out how to get by. been my pleasure to meet you and then we have one on our main campus and technology, the and then we do that with my team, Yeah, and as we get into it, the goal is to ensure that our clinicians in order to get paid, and so that became in order to get those for the people that are on the network. So, one of the things that we invented I wonder if you could paint a picture from the client side to PCs, of how the system is being used that point to exactly what's going on and then you brought in Vertica. and be able to reach out to them we really can't tell you what it is, And now that we have all And so operational metrics and all the way back. are we talking about? And in Vertica right now we in the cloud, or is it all on-prem today? So, in the operational I don't have to buy in chunks, and listening to us, as to what we need. that are on the customer advisory board. so I'm looking forward to that. as to where you want to take this thing. and reaching out to our that you and your teams are doing. thanks for the opportunity. and thank you, everybody,

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Dan WoickePERSON

0.99+

Dave VellantePERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

CernerORGANIZATION

0.99+

Affordable Care ActTITLE

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

DanPERSON

0.99+

10 doctorsQUANTITY

0.99+

SwedenLOCATION

0.99+

90,000 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

five clientsQUANTITY

0.99+

CernerWorksORGANIZATION

0.99+

8%QUANTITY

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

Kansas CityLOCATION

0.99+

SmithPERSON

0.99+

VerticaORGANIZATION

0.99+

Cerner CorporationORGANIZATION

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

MondayDATE

0.99+

BothQUANTITY

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

one yearQUANTITY

0.99+

a yearQUANTITY

0.99+

27,000 facilitiesQUANTITY

0.99+

HoustonLOCATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

two petabytesQUANTITY

0.99+

five years agoDATE

0.99+

CernerWorks EngineeringORGANIZATION

0.98+

south Kansas CityLOCATION

0.98+

eight years agoDATE

0.98+

about 80%QUANTITY

0.98+

Virtual Vertica Big Data ConferenceEVENT

0.98+

CitrixORGANIZATION

0.98+

two different data centersQUANTITY

0.97+

each dayQUANTITY

0.97+

four years agoDATE

0.97+

two different clustersQUANTITY

0.97+

six years agoDATE

0.97+

eachQUANTITY

0.97+

north Kansas CityLOCATION

0.97+

HIPAATITLE

0.97+

five different teamsQUANTITY

0.97+

firstQUANTITY

0.96+

five different thingsQUANTITY

0.95+

two different sidesQUANTITY

0.95+

about 27,000 environmentsQUANTITY

0.95+

both data centersQUANTITY

0.95+

About 80QUANTITY

0.95+

Response Time Measurement SystemOTHER

0.95+

two gigantic data centersQUANTITY

0.93+

Java HeapTITLE

0.92+

Mark Penny, University of Leicester | Commvault GO 2019


 

>>live >>from Denver, Colorado. It's the Q covering com vault Go 2019. Brought to you by combo. >>Hey, welcome to the Cube. Lisa Martin in Colorado for CONMEBOL Go 19. Statement. A man is with me this week, and we are pleased to welcome one of combos, longtime customers from the University of Leicester. We have Mark Penny, the systems specialist in infrastructure. Mark. Welcome to the Cube. >>Hi. It's good to be here. >>So you have been a convo customer at the UNI for nearly 10 years now, just giving folks an idea of about the union got 51 different academic departments about five research institutes. Cool research going on, by the way and between staff and students. About 20,000 folks, I'm sure all bringing multiple devices onto the campus. So talk to us about you came on board in 20 ton. It's hard to believe that was almost 10 years ago and said, All right, guys, we really got to get a strategy around back up, talk to us about way back then what? You guys were doing what you saw as an opportunity. What you're doing with combo today, a >>time and the There's a wide range of backup for us. There was no really assurance that we were getting back up. So we had a bit of convert seven that was backing up the Windows infrastructure. There was tyranny storage manager backing up a lot of Linux. And there was Amanda and open source thing. And then there was a LL sorts of scripts and things. So, for instance, of'em where backups were done by creating an array snapshot with the script, then mounting that script into that snapshot into another server backing up the server with calm bolt on the restore process is an absolute takes here. It was very, very difficult, long winded, required a lot of time on the checks. For this, it really was quite quite difficult to run it. Use a lot of stuff. Time we were, as far as the corporate side was concerned it exclusively on tape resource manager, we're using disc. Amanda was again for tape in a different, completely isolated system. Coupled with this, there had been a lack of investment in the data centers themselves, so the network hadn't really got a lot of throughput. This men that way were using data private backup networks in order to keep back up data off the production networks because there was really challenges over bandwidth contention backups on. So consider it over around and so on. If you got a back up coming into the working day defect student So Way started with a blank sheet of paper in many respects on went out to see what was available on Dhe. There was the usual ones it with the net back up, typically obviously again on convert Arc Serve has. But what was really interesting was deed Implication was starting to come in, But at the time, convo tonight just be released, and it had an absolutely killer feature for us, which was client side duplication. This men that we could now get rid of most of this private backup network that was making a lot of complex ISI. So it also did backup disk on back up to tape. So at that point, way went in with six Media agents. Way had a few 100 terabytes of disk storage. The strategy was to keep 28 days on disk and then the long term retention on tape into a tape library. WeII kept back through it about 2013 then took the decision. Disc was working, so let's just do disco only on save a whole load of effort. In even with a take life, you've got to refresh the tapes and things. So give it all on disk with D Duplication way, basically getting a 1 to 1. So if we had take my current figures about 1.5 petabytes of front side protected data, we've got about 1.5 petabytes in the back up system, which, because of all the synthetic fools and everything, we've got 12 months retention. We've got 28 days retention. It works really, really well in that and that that relationship, almost 1 to 1 with what's in the back up with all the attention with plants like data, has been fairly consistent since we went all disc >>mark. I wonder if you'd actually step back a second and talks about the role in importance of data in your organization because way went through a lot of the bits and bytes in that is there. But as a research organization, you know, I expect that data is, you know, quite a strategic component of the data >>forms your intellectual property. It's what is caught your research. It's the output of your investigations. So where were doing Earth Operational science. So we get data from satellites and that is then brought down roars time, little files. They then get a data set, which will consist of multiple packages of these, these vials and maybe even different measurements from different satellites that then combined and could be used to model scenarios climate change, temperature or pollution. All these types of things coming in. It's how you then take that raw data work with it. In our case, we use a lot of HPC haIf of computing to manipulate that data. And a lot of it is how smart researchers are in getting their code getting the maximum out of that data on. Then the output of that becomes a paper project on dhe finalized final set of of date, which is the results, which all goes with paper. We've also done the a lot of genetics and things like that because the DNA fingerprinting with Alec Jeffrey on what was very interesting with that one is how it was those techniques which then identified the bones that were dug up under the car park in Leicester, which is Richard >>Wright documentary. >>Yeah, on that really was quite exciting. The way that well do you really was quite. It's quite fitting, really, techniques that the university has discovered, which were then instrumental in identifying that. >>What? One of the interesting things I found in this part of the market is used to talk about just protecting my data. Yeah, a lot of times now it's about howto. Why leverage my data even Maur. How do I share my data? How do I extract more value out of the data in the 10 years you've been working with calm Boulder? Are you seeing that journey? Is that yes, the organization's going down. >>There's almost there's actually two conflicting things here because researchers love to share their data. But some of the data sets is so big that can be quite challenging. Some of the data sets. We take other people's Day to bring it in, combining with our own to do our own modeling. Then that goes out to provide some more for somebody else on. There's also issues about where data could exist, so there's a lot of very strict controls about the N. H s data. So health data, which so n hs England that can't then go out to Scotland on Booth. Sometimes the regulatory compliance almost gets sidelines with the excitement about research on way have quite a dichotomy of making sure that where we know about the data, that the appropriate controls are there and we understand it on Hopefully, people just don't go on, put it somewhere. It's not because some of the data sets for medical research, given the data which has got personal, identifiable information in it, that then has to be stripped out. So you've got an anonymous data set which they can then work with it Z assuring that the right data used the right information to remove so that you don't inadvertently go and then expose stuff s. So it's not just pure research on it going in this silo and in this silo it's actually ensuring that you've got the right bits in the right place, and it's being handled correctly >>to talk to us about has you know, as you pointed out, this massive growth and data volumes from a university perspective, health data perspective research perspective, the files are getting bigger and bigger In the time that you've started this foundation with combo in the last 9 10 years. Tremendous changes not just and data, but talking about complaints you've now got GDP are to deal with. Give us a perspective and snapshot of your of your con vault implementation and how you've evolved that as all the data changes, compliance changes and converts, technology has evolved. So if you take >>where we started off, we had a few 100 petabytes of disk. It's just before we migrated. Thio on Premise three Cloud Libraries That point. I think I got 2.1 petabytes of backup. Storage on the volume of data is exponentially growing covers the resolution of the instruments increases, so you can certainly have a four fold growth data that some of those are quite interesting things. They when I first joined the great excitement with a project which has just noticed Betty Colombo, which is the Mercury a year for in space agency to Demeter Mercury and they wanted 50 terabytes and way at that time, that was actually quite a big number way. We're thinking, well, we make the split. What? We need to be careful. Yes. Okay. 50 terrorizes that over the life of project. And now that's probably just to get us going. Not much actually happened with it. And then storage system changed and they still had their 50 terabytes with almost nothing in it way then understood that the spacecraft being launched and that once it had been launched, which was earlier this year, it was going to take a couple of years before the first data came back. Because it has to go to Venus. It has to go around Venus in the wrong direction, against gravity to slow it down. Then it goes to Mercury and the rial bolt data then starts coming back in. You'd have thought going to Mercury was dead easy. You just go boom straight in. But actually, if you did that because of gravity of the sun, it would just go in. You'd never stop. Just go straight into the sun. You lose your spacecraft. >>Nobody wants >>another. Eggs are really interesting. Is artfully Have you heard of the guy? A satellite? >>Yes. >>This is the one which is mapping a 1,000,000,000 stars in the Milky Way. It's now gone past its primary mission, and it's got most of that data. Huge data sets on DDE That data, there's, ah, it's already being worked on, but they are the university Thio task, packaging it and cleansing it. We're going to get a set of that data we're going to host. We're currently hosting a national HPC facility, which is for space research that's being replaced with an even bigger, more powerful one. Little probably fill one of our data centers completely. It's about 40 racks worth, and that's just to process that data because there's so much information that's come from it. And it's It's the resolution. It's the speed with which it can be computed on holding so much in memory. I mean, if you take across our current HPC systems, we've got 100 terabytes of memory across two systems, and those numbers were just unthinkable even 10 years ago, a terrible of memory. >>So Mark Lease and I would like to keep you here all way to talk about space, Mark todo of our favorite topics. But before we get towards the end, but a lot of changes, that combo, it's the whole new executive team they bought Hedvig. They land lost this metallic dot io. They've got new things. It's a longtime customer. What your viewpoint on com bold today and what what you've been seeing quite interesting to >>see how convoy has evolved on dhe. These change, which should have happened between 10 and 11 when they took the decision on the next generation platform that it would be this by industry. Sand is quite an aggressive pace of service packs, which are then come out onto this schedule. And to be fair, that schedule is being stuck to waken plan ahead. We know what's happening on Dhe. It's interesting that they're both patches and the new features and stuff, and it's really great to have that line to work, too. Now, Andi way with platform now supports natively stone Much stuff. And this was actually one of the decisions which took us around using our own on Prem Estimate Cloud Library. We were using as you to put a tear on data off site on with All is working Great. That can we do s3 on friend on. It's supported by convoy is just a cloud library. Now, When we first started that didn't exist. Way took the decision. It will proof of concept and so on, and it all worked, and we then got high for scale as well. It's interesting to see how convoy has gone down into the appliance 11 to, because people want to have to just have a box unpack it. Implicated. If you haven't got a technical team or strong yo skills in those area, why worry about putting your own system together? Haifa scale give you back up in a vault on the partnerships with were in HP customer So way we're using Apollo's RS in storage. Andi Yeah, the Apollo is actually the platform. If we bought Heifer Scale, it would have gone on an HP Apollo as well, because of the way with agreements, we've got invited. Actually, it's quite interesting how they've gone from software. Hardware is now come in, and it's evolving into this platform with Hedvig. I mean, there was a convoy object store buried in it, but it was very discreet. No one really knew about it. You occasionally could see a term on it would appear, but it it wasn't something which they published their butt object store with the increasing data volumes. Object Store is the only way to store. There's these volumes of data in a resilient and durable way. Eso Hedvig buying that and integrating in providing a really interesting way forward. And yet, for my perspective, I'm using three. So if we had gone down the Hedvig route from my perspective, what I would like to see is I have a story policy. I click on going to point it to s three, and it goes out it provision. The bucket does the whole lot in one a couple of clicks and that's it. Job done. I don't need to go out, create the use of create the bucket, and then get one out of every little written piece in there. And it's that tight integration, which is where I see benefits coming in you. It's giving value to the platform and giving the customer the assurance that you've configured correctly because the process is an automated in convoy has ensured that every step of the way the right decisions being made on that. Yet with metallic, that's everything is about it's actually tried and tested products with a very, very smart work for a process put round to ensure that the decisions you make. You don't need to be a convoy expert to get the outcome and get the backups. >>Excellent. Well, Mark, thank you for joining Student on the Cape Talking about tthe e evolution that the University of Leicester has gone through and your thoughts on com bolts evolution in parallel. We appreciate your time first to Minutemen. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cue from combo go 19.

Published Date : Oct 15 2019

SUMMARY :

It's the Q covering com vault We have Mark Penny, the systems So talk to us about you came on board in 20 ton. So at that point, way went in with six Media agents. quite a strategic component of the data It's the output of your investigations. It's quite fitting, really, techniques that the university has discovered, the data in the 10 years you've been working with calm Boulder? it Z assuring that the right data used the right information to remove so to talk to us about has you know, as you pointed out, this massive growth and data volumes the great excitement with a project which has just noticed Betty Colombo, Is artfully Have you heard of the guy? It's the speed with which it can be computed on but a lot of changes, that combo, it's the whole new executive team they bought Hedvig. that the decisions you make. We appreciate your time first to Minutemen.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

Mark PennyPERSON

0.99+

28 daysQUANTITY

0.99+

VenusLOCATION

0.99+

ColoradoLOCATION

0.99+

20 tonQUANTITY

0.99+

MarkPERSON

0.99+

University of LeicesterORGANIZATION

0.99+

100 terabytesQUANTITY

0.99+

50 terabytesQUANTITY

0.99+

2.1 petabytesQUANTITY

0.99+

LeicesterLOCATION

0.99+

Milky WayLOCATION

0.99+

Mark LeasePERSON

0.99+

12 monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

Alec JeffreyPERSON

0.99+

50 terabytesQUANTITY

0.99+

Denver, ColoradoLOCATION

0.99+

University of LeicesterORGANIZATION

0.99+

EarthLOCATION

0.99+

51 different academic departmentsQUANTITY

0.99+

100 petabytesQUANTITY

0.99+

10 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

two systemsQUANTITY

0.99+

1QUANTITY

0.99+

ScotlandLOCATION

0.99+

1,000,000,000 starsQUANTITY

0.99+

MercuryLOCATION

0.99+

first dataQUANTITY

0.99+

ApolloORGANIZATION

0.99+

50QUANTITY

0.98+

MaurPERSON

0.98+

threeQUANTITY

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

10 years agoDATE

0.98+

tonightDATE

0.97+

todayDATE

0.97+

AmandaPERSON

0.97+

About 20,000 folksQUANTITY

0.97+

OneQUANTITY

0.97+

LinuxTITLE

0.97+

firstQUANTITY

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.96+

EnglandLOCATION

0.96+

2019DATE

0.96+

WindowsTITLE

0.96+

WrightPERSON

0.96+

Betty ColomboPERSON

0.96+

this weekDATE

0.95+

ThioPERSON

0.95+

N. HLOCATION

0.93+

earlier this yearDATE

0.93+

RichardPERSON

0.93+

nearly 10 yearsQUANTITY

0.93+

ThioORGANIZATION

0.92+

six Media agentsQUANTITY

0.9+

sunLOCATION

0.89+

about 1.5 petabytesQUANTITY

0.87+

HedvigORGANIZATION

0.87+

about 40 racksQUANTITY

0.87+

a yearQUANTITY

0.85+

four foldQUANTITY

0.84+

2013DATE

0.83+

10QUANTITY

0.82+

about five research institutesQUANTITY

0.79+

clicksQUANTITY

0.78+

two conflicting thingsQUANTITY

0.78+

Prem EstimateORGANIZATION

0.76+

Eso HedvigORGANIZATION

0.75+

AndiPERSON

0.74+

ApolloCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.73+

Object StoreTITLE

0.68+

Mike Banic, Vectra | AWS re:Inforce 2019


 

>> live from Boston, Massachusetts. It's the Cube covering A W s reinforce 2019 brought to you by Amazon Web service is and its ecosystem partners. >> Okay, welcome back. Everyone keeps live coverage here in Boston. Messages of AWS reinforce That's Amazon. Webster's his first inaugural commerce around cloud security on John Kerry with David Lantz. One of the top stories here, the announced being announced here reinforced is the VPC traffic nearing and we wanted to bring in alumni and friend Mike Banner was the VP of marketing at a Vectra who specializes in networking. Welcome to the Q. We go way back. HP networking got a hot start up here so wanted to really bring you in to help unpack this VPC traffic mirroring product is probably medias announcement of everything on stage. That other stuff was general availability of security have which is great great product, Absolutely. And guard guard duty. Well, all this other stuff have it. But the VPC traffic nearing is a killer feature for a lot of reasons, absolutely. But it brings some challenges and some opportunities that might be downstream. I don't get the thoughts on what is your take on the BBC traffic nearing >> a tte. The highest level brings a lot of value because it allows you get visibility and something that's really opaque, which is the traffic within the cloud. And in the past, the way people were solving this was they had to put an agent on the workload, and nobody wants that one. It's hard to manage. You don't want dozens to hundreds or thousands of agents, and also it's going to slow things down. On third, it could be subverted. You get the advanced attacker in there. He knows how to get below that level and operated on in a way where he can hide his communication and and his behavior isn't seen. With traffic nearing that, we're getting a copy of the packet from below. The hyper visor cannot be subverted, and so we're seeing everything, and we're also not slowing down the traffic in the virtual private cloud. So it allows us to extract just the right data for a security application, which is our case, metadata and enrich it with information that's necessary for detecting threats and also of performing an investigation. >> Yeah, it was definitely the announcement that everybody has been talking about has the buzz. So from a from a partner perspective, how do you guys tie into that? What do you do? Was the value that you bring to the customer, >> So the value that we're bringing really stems from what you can do with our platform. There's two things everybody is looking to do with him at the highest level, which is detect threats and respond to threats. On the detection side, we could take the metadata that we've extracted and we've enriched. We're running through machine learning algorithms, and from there we not only get a detection, but we can correlated to the workers we're seeing it on. And so we could present much more of an incident report rather than just a security alert, saying, Hey, something bad happened over there. It's not just something bad happened, but these four bad things happen and they happen in this time sequence over this period of time, and it involved these other work looks. We can give you a sense of what the attack campaign looks like. So you get a sense of like with cancer, such as you have bad cells in your liver, but they've metastasized to these other places. Way also will keep that metadata in something we call cognito recall, which is in AWS. And it has pre built analytics and save searches so that once you get that early warning signal from cognito detect, you know exactly where to start looking for. You can peel back all the unrelated metadata, and you can look specifically at what's happened during the time of that incident. In order, perform your threat investigation and respond rapidly to that threat. >> So you guys do have a lot of machine intelligence. OK, ay, ay chops. How close are we to be able to use that guy to really identify? Detect, but begin to automate responses? We there yet eyes. It's something that people want don't want. >> We're getting close to being there. It's answer your first question, and people are sure that they want it yet. And here's some of the rationale behind it. You know, like we generally say that Aria is pretty smart, but security operations people are still the brains of the operation. There's so much human intelligence, so much contextual knowledge that a security operations person can apply to the threats that we detect. They can look at something and say, Oh, yeah, I see the user account. The service is being turned on from, you know, this particular workload. I know exactly what's happening with that. They add so much value. So we look at what we're doing is augmenting the security operations team. We're reducing their workload by taking all the mundane work and automating that and putting the right details at their fingertips so they could take action. Now there's some things that are highly repeatable that they do like to use playbooks for So we partner with companies like Phantom, which got bought by spunk, and to Mr which Palazzo Networks acquired. They've built some really good playbooks for some of those well defying situations. And there was a couple presentations on the floor that talked about those use >> cases. Fan of fan was pretty good. Solid product was built in the security hub. Suit helps nice product, but I'll get back to the VPC traffic, not smearing. It makes so much sense. It's about time. Yes, Finally they got it done. This make any sense? It wasn't done before, but I gotta ask first with the analytics, you and you said on the Q. Before network doesn't lie, >> the network is no line >> they were doesn't lie with subversion pieces of key piece. It's better be the lowest level possible. That's a great spot for the data. So totally agree. Where do you guys create Valley? Because now that everyone's got available BBC traffic mirroring How do you guys take advantage of that? What's next for you guys is that Where's the differentiation come from? Where's the value go next? >> Yeah, there's really three things that I tend to focus on. One is we enrich the metadata that we're extracting with a lot of important data that makes it. It really accelerates the threat investigation. So things like directionality, things like building a notion of what's the identity of the workload or when you're running us on prem. The device, because I P addresses changed. There's dynamic things in there, so having a sense of of consistency over a period of time is extremely valuable for performing a threat investigation so that information gets put in tow. Recall for the metadata store. If people have a data leak that they wanna have ascended to, whether it's elastic or spawn, Kafka then that is included in what we send to them and Zeke formatting use. Others eat tooling so they're not wasting any money there. And in the second piece is around the way that we build analytics. There's always, ah, a pairing of somebody from security research with the data scientist. This is the security researcher explains the tools, the tactics, the techniques of the attacker. So that way, the data scientist isn't being completely random about what features do they want to find in the network traffic. They're being really specific to what features are gonna actually pair to that tool, tactic and technique. So that way, the efficacy of the algorithm is better. We've been doing this for five plus years, and history speaks for something because some of the learning we've had is all right. In the beginning, there were maybe a couple different supervised techniques to apply. Well, now we're applying those supervised techniques with some deep learning techniques. So that way, the performance of the algorithm is actually 90% more effective than it was five years ago. >> Appreciating with software. Get the data extract the data, which the metadata, Yes, you're doing. Anyway. Now, It's more efficient, correct, low speed, No, no problems with informants in the agents you mentioned earlier. Now it's better data impact the customers. What's the What's the revelation here For the end of the day, your customer and Amazons customers through you? What do they get out of it? What's the benefit to them? >> So it's all about reducing the time to detect in the time to respond. Way had one of our fortune to 50 customers present last week at the Gardener Security Summit. Still on stage. Gentlemen from Parker Hannifin talked about how they had an incident that they got an urgent alert from from Cognito. It told him about an attack campaign. He was immediately alerted the 45 different machines that were sending data to the cloud. He automatically knew about what were the patterns of data, the volume of data. They immediately know exactly what the service is that were being used with in the cloud. They were able to respond to this and get it all under control. Listen 24 hours, but it's because they had the right data at their fingertips to make rapid decisions before there was any risk. You know what they ended up finding was it was actually a new application, but somebody had actually not followed the procedures of the organization that keeps them compliant with so many of their end users. In the end, it's saved tremendous time and money, and if that was a real breach, it would have actually prevented them from losing proprietary information. >> Well, historically, it would take 250 days to even find out that there was a breach, right? And then by then who knows what What's been exfiltrate ID? >> Yeah, we had a couple. We had a couple of firms that run Red team exercises for a living come by and they said, I said to them, Do you know who we are? And they said, Of course we know where you are. There's one tool out there, then finds us. It's victory. That's >> a That's a kind of historical on Prem. So what do you do for on Pramuk? This is all running any ws. Is it cloud only? >> It's actually both, so we know that there's a lot of companies that come here that have never owned a server, and everything's been in AWS from day one and for I t. Exactly. And for them waken run everything. We have the sensor attached to the VPC traffic nearing in AWS. We could have the brain of the cognitive platform in eight of us, you know. So for them they don't need anything on prime. There's a lot of people that are in the lift and shift mode. It can be on Prem and in eight of us, eh? So they can choose where they want the brain. And they could have sensors in both places. And we have people that are coming to this event that their hybrid cloud, they've got I t infrastructure in Azure. But they have production in eight of us and they have stuff that's on Prem. And we could meet that need to because we work with the V Top from Azure and so that we're not religious about that. It's all about giving the right data right place, reducing the time to detective respond, >> Mike, Thanks for coming and sharing the insights on the VP. Your perspective on the vpc traffic mirror appreciated. Give a quick plug for the company. What you guys working on? What's the key focus? You hiring. Just got some big funding news. Take a minute to get the plug in for electric. >> Yeah, So we've gone through several years of consecutive more than doubling in. Not in a recurring revenue. I've been really fortunate to have to be earning a lot of customer business from the largest enterprises in the world. Recently had funding $100,000,000 led by T C V out of Menlo Park. Total capitalization is over to 22 right now on the path to continue that doubling. But, you know, we've been really focusing on moving where the you know already being where the puck is going to by working with Amazon. Advance on the traffic nearing. And, you know, we know that today people are using containers in the V M environment. We know that you know where they want to go. Is more serverless on, you know, leveraging containers more. You know, we're already going in that direction. So >> great to see congratulates we've known each other for many, many years is our 10th anniversary of the Q. You were on year one. Great to know you. And congratulations. Successive victor and great announcement. Amazon gives you a tailwind. >> Thanks a lot. It's great to see your growth as well. Congratulations. >> Thanks, Mike. Mike Banning unpacking the relevance of the VPC traffic mirroring feature. >> This is kind >> of conversation we're having here. Deep conversation around stuff that matters around security and cloud security. Of course, the cubes bring any coverage from the inaugural event it reinforced for me. Ws will be right back after this short break.

Published Date : Jun 26 2019

SUMMARY :

It's the Cube covering I don't get the thoughts on what is your take on the BBC traffic nearing And in the past, the way people were solving this was Was the value that you bring So the value that we're bringing really stems from what you can do with our platform. So you guys do have a lot of machine intelligence. And here's some of the rationale behind it. but I gotta ask first with the analytics, you and you said on the Q. Before network doesn't lie, Because now that everyone's got available BBC traffic mirroring How do you guys And in the second piece is around the way that we build analytics. What's the benefit to them? So it's all about reducing the time to detect in the time to respond. And they said, Of course we know where you are. So what do you do for on Pramuk? We have the sensor attached to the VPC Mike, Thanks for coming and sharing the insights on the VP. Advance on the traffic nearing. great to see congratulates we've known each other for many, many years is our 10th anniversary of the Q. It's great to see your growth as well. Of course, the cubes bring any coverage from the inaugural event it reinforced for me.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
David LantzPERSON

0.99+

Mike BannerPERSON

0.99+

90%QUANTITY

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

John KerryPERSON

0.99+

$100,000,000QUANTITY

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

AmazonsORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mike BanicPERSON

0.99+

250 daysQUANTITY

0.99+

MikePERSON

0.99+

24 hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

BBCORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mike BanningPERSON

0.99+

first questionQUANTITY

0.99+

eightQUANTITY

0.99+

second pieceQUANTITY

0.99+

dozensQUANTITY

0.99+

Boston, MassachusettsLOCATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

one toolQUANTITY

0.99+

50 customersQUANTITY

0.99+

five plus yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

last weekDATE

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

hundredsQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

45 different machinesQUANTITY

0.99+

three thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

Gardener Security SummitEVENT

0.98+

Menlo ParkLOCATION

0.98+

2019DATE

0.97+

10th anniversaryQUANTITY

0.97+

two thingsQUANTITY

0.97+

five years agoDATE

0.97+

Palazzo NetworksORGANIZATION

0.97+

primeCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.97+

firstQUANTITY

0.96+

PhantomORGANIZATION

0.95+

AriaORGANIZATION

0.95+

AzureTITLE

0.93+

four bad thingsQUANTITY

0.93+

VectraORGANIZATION

0.92+

WebsterPERSON

0.92+

thirdQUANTITY

0.91+

coupleQUANTITY

0.9+

HannifinPERSON

0.87+

both placesQUANTITY

0.86+

year oneQUANTITY

0.86+

thousands of agentsQUANTITY

0.85+

oneQUANTITY

0.83+

day oneQUANTITY

0.82+

Amazon Web serviceORGANIZATION

0.78+

overQUANTITY

0.75+

first inauguralQUANTITY

0.75+

One of the top storiesQUANTITY

0.72+

CognitoTITLE

0.71+

RedORGANIZATION

0.65+

WsORGANIZATION

0.65+

PremORGANIZATION

0.6+

ZekePERSON

0.6+

V TopORGANIZATION

0.57+

KafkaPERSON

0.56+

cognitoTITLE

0.55+

VPERSON

0.53+

ParkerORGANIZATION

0.52+

CubeCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.52+

22QUANTITY

0.49+

spunkORGANIZATION

0.49+

yearsQUANTITY

0.49+

cognitoORGANIZATION

0.44+

PramukORGANIZATION

0.43+

Dave Russell, Veeam | VeeamON 2019


 

>> Live from Miami Beach, Florida, it's theCUBE covering VeeamON 2019 brought to you by Veeam! >> Welcome back to Miami, everybody. This is theCUBE, the leader in live tech coverage. My name is Dave Vellante. We're here at the Fontainebleau Hotel. VeeamON day one of two-day coverage of the Veeam conference, very swaggy hotel. Dave Russell is here. He's the Vice President of NFI Strategy at Veeam. David, good to see you again. >> Good to see you. >> Thanks so much for coming onto theCUBE. >> Yeah, thanks for having me again. >> You're very welcome. So let's see, you're well over, let's see, a year out, just about a year out of Gartner. Right? >> Yeah, yeah. >> And so okay you've been injected with the Kool-Aid fully, I presume, right? >> There you go, in the green, yes. >> But we're still going to talk a little bit about the magic water, but before we get into that, talk about your first year here. >> Yeah. >> Your impressions. Do they meet, exceed your expectations? >> It exceeded my expectations, but I can honestly say I'm not doing what I thought I was going to be doing here, but it actually turned out to be better. The other thing I will honestly tell you is I'm now on Pacific Coast time at the moment. Arizona, we're too unsophisticated for Daylights Saving, right so I'm either Mountain or Pacific but I'm Pacific now. But by 10 a.m. my time, I pretty much what I thought I was going to do that day is out the window and I'm doing something else and it's fun though. I mean now especially with the investment that we had earlier in the year and the cash reserves we ended last year with, looking at a lot of partnership capabilities, looking at ecosystem activities, certainly involved with customer activity. We're redoing our marketing and how we're focusing our go-to-market so it's a whole variety of things that sort of change hourly. >> So on the, I think we just talked about the M&A side. You've always been a dot connector in your, right? Because you talk to all the vendors, you talk to all the customers and you could see the picture. You have a huge observation space so part of your job on strategy is to try to what? Figure out where the gaps are. >> Yeah. >> And then drive strategy around do we build, do we buy? Maybe you can talk about that a little bit. >> Yeah and it really does net down to what you said. It's a build/buy decision. It's an acceleration to market kind of decision and then the hard part is what are you willing to trade off and of course the real answer is as little as humanly possible. But you have to decide, just because you can do it, just 'cause you have the money doesn't necessarily mean you should pull the trigger. So if anything, it's curious because people like myself and a couple of my colleagues, we almost are more discerning. So we look at, okay, the technology, is it really viable? Do our due diligence, right? But then we also look at well, does this fit culturally? Is the integration point really there? Is the customer value really going to be significantly improved and if you cannot answer that very favorably, then keep the money. >> So you worked at IBM for a number of years, you worked at Gartner for a number of years. Now you're back working for a vendor. >> Yeah. >> Compare and contrast those roles. I mean Gartner, you do a lot of writing, you do a lot of traveling, you talk to a zillion people. I'm sure you talk to a lot of people here too, but you're coming at it from a very biased perspective whereas Gartner of course you're unbiased. You're serving the end customer. So talk about the difference in those two roles. >> So I approach it a little uniquely in that I'm biased. I mean I'm paid by a vendor, right? And so there's a certain inherent bias in there, but I go into a customer conversation and say "Maybe you shouldn't be using Veeam for certain things." So I'll give you an example. We have Unix capabilities with Solaris AIX. There are other vendors that do that even better than we do. They have rich application integration. If someone says that's my number one problem, honestly we're not your best choice. Now the reality is most of the world is moving towards more physical and virtual Windows and Linux. So I'll come in, say, a large enterprise and I'll say, "Okay, if you're like most shops," and I'll always undersell it. "Like probably 85% of your workload "is physical virtual Windows Linux." and they always interrupt me and go, "No, no, no, it's 92%." Like, "Okay, well we can help with that 92%." >> Yeah, yeah. >> The other 7%, I'm honestly going to tell you, we're not best of breed. >> Yeah that's a safe balance view that the AIX Solaris piece. >> Series. (Dave laughs) There's certain things. >> Yeah. >> We want to stick to our swim lane. We think it's a pretty wide lane, but there's no reason to come out of it. >> So your role as strategy, talk a little bit about how you're turning that strategy into action and specifics at Veeam. >> Yeah a big part of it has to do with cloud. >> I know that's the word that we've been talking about for a long, long time. So there's the aspirational aspect of Cloud and the operational. The aspirational is I want to be able to move in and out. I want mobility, I want the ability to exit. The operational is I want to be able to do this efficiently, meaning I want to be able to either send data to the cloud, my on-prem backup or I want to be able to protect SAAS-based workloads or infrastructure as a service workload so cloud-native workloads and then over time, I might want to be able to leverage that for something other than availability. So how can you rapidly make the data and only the portion of data that I need available to me when I need it? >> I was taking some notes during the key notes and I was just doing like a little, not really a tag cloud, but I was trying to identify as I heard them and grabbed them, the attributes of cloud data protection. I want to throw some out to you. You tell me. We'll play kind of word association, I guess. So I have fast recovery, API-based, open, simple, transparent, data-oriented, automated, cloud pricing, federated to accomodate the edge. Are these some of the attributes that we should associate with cloud data protection, maybe some of the things that I'm missing. How do you look at the attributes of a company and its products providing cloud data protection? >> Yeah so a big part of it, I actually like the phrase hybrid cloud even better than people say multi-cloud. The reason I like that is because hybrid presumes that you can have on premises as well. So like if it was the Dave and Dave company tomorrow, we'd probably be born in the cloud. Everything would be software as a service. We'd get some public cloud space. Now if we'd been in business for 20 years, we've got investments that we've made and we don't want to get rid of that any sooner than we have to. So hybrid cloud I like, but I think you nailed it in that what do every one of those attributes have in common? It's trying to get your most precious resource to you in a way that you want to consume it with as least amount of friction as possible. We want to reduce the aggravation associated with being able to access that rapidly. >> When you think about the customer conversations that you've had at Veeam and even going back to your Gartner days, I've always felt this notion of not hybrid, I see hybrid and multi-cloud as different. I've always looked at multi-cloud as multi-vendor. >> Yeah. >> Yeah I've got line of business, I've got shadow IT, I've got different IT projects and I've got multiple clouds and it's just, to me it was always less of a strategy than sort of this is where we are and now people need to put together a hybrid strategy. So IT's been asked to come clean up this mess as it always is. What's your take on the hybrid landscape and how we got here but more specifically, customer strategies when you consult with your customers? >> Yeah you're right that there's a lot of departmental buying, there's a lot of, in some cases, it's best of breed so I'm very willing to go look at multiple providers because I didn't sign up to go deploy the third best solution. Everyone wants what they think will be the most appropriate tool for them and rightfully so. So I think that's how we got, to your point, we didn't have a strategy that said I want 10 vendors. We arrived at an implementation choice that resulted in 10 vendors being deployed and then to your point further, then we had to layer on something on top of that. That's really where we come in and simple as it sounds, we really want to promote choice, choice of infrastructure, choice of cloud, choice of hypervisor, choice of operating system. >> So great discussion vector is the best of breed versus sort of integration. >> Yeah. >> And my question is that's been a decades-long. >> Yeah. >> Sort of trade-off that people have made. You see it in the software business, the hardware business and all through the industry. Is the API economy changing that. Can you be both, I mean Veeam, let's agree. Veeam is a best-of-breed provider. While your portfolio's growing, you're a billion-dollar company, you take a company like Dell who's got this ridiculously large portfolio. They can come into a customer and say well even with services or at IBM, we can wrap the big blue blanket around you and integrate everything. With the API economy, does that change the game on that argument of best of breed versus integration and convenience? >> It's a nuanced answer. The answer is a little yes and a little no. >> It depends, right? >> Let me decompose that because that's a cop-out, but the "it depends" aspect is really, APIs are wonderful to create an ecosystem and other integration points. If that's about offering your expandability to do something, that's a positive. If that really means that well because I can't deliver what you need, you got to go and write it yourself, that is a negative. So if the API is leveraging something for even greater value but beyond what the tools are originally designed to do, I think that's net positive, but if you have to exploit the API to just to get the product to work, why did I buy your product when I have to go hire someone to write code to work on your product? That's, you don't want that business. >> Okay so the last Gartner Magic Quadrant that came out was one that you sort of spearheaded back in 2017. It was like this perfect storm of backup analysts leaving Gartner and so there's been a little bit of delay in terms of the new one coming out which is coming our shortly as I understand it, but one of the observations that you can make if you look at the 2016-2017 Gartner Magic Quadrant is that Veeam moved from lower right to upper right which is rare. Can you explain that a little bit? You were saying that it usually goes in a different pattern. Elucidate, please. >> Yeah. Yeah so the magic in the Magic Quadrant is if you could actually jump from one quadrant to straight to leaders and that would be a very atypical progression. Usually it's a backwards Z. You come into the lower left, probably get over to the lower right, fall back, but go up to the upper left and then maybe you get to leaders in the upper right. The magic part in Veeam, the thing that they were able to do is go from visionary lower right to leader upper right. >> Okay and why do you think they were able to do that? I mean there are numerous attributes, but presumably 350,000 I think is the number of customers helped and so you've got a lot of references and proof points, the technology itself, but it's rare. Why do you think Veeam has been able to succeed in that regard? >> I think it's because Veeam has been good about getting answers to the most pressing problems. Again Veeam doesn't do everything. It doesn't support every single operating system, but the vast majority of the concentration of where customer issues are and where customer environments are getting deployed at, we can address very well and actually this weekend, I got here Friday night. So all day Saturday, all day Sunday and yesterday 'til 5 p.m. I took our SE training and so I've deployed Veeam, worked with active directories, all kinds of things for 72 hours basically and it was really that easy to use. In fact, my most difficult thing is I stayed in class until 6:30 at night because I'd never done active directory. I've never been an exchange admin before so I had to kind of come up to speed on those tools a little bit, but once I got that, the product was incredibly powerful, but also very intuitive. So you still have a little bit of that independent analyst DNA in you so I'm going to ask you to try to put that independent hat on. When you think about Veeam's traditional base of SMB, they're very successful there, obviously superglued itself to the virtualization trend. The last couple of years, Veeam has tried to move up-market, develop some relationships with some large players and has had some success there. Is the product well-suited for that larger enterprise and where do you see that going in terms of the up-market progression? >> Yeah so in theory, that's what I'm here to drive, the enterprise word is in my title, but in reality I focus more broadly than that. But if I just think about enterprise, I ran the numbers last week and company inception to date, we've actually derived over $2 billion of software-only revenue from the enterprise market and that's been accelerating. Now in 2017-18 and the first quarter of this year, almost $1 billion. So we're moving and we're moving fast. We had our sales kick off like most companies do. January, go to sales kick off and Ratmir says, "Hey don't chase just the big deals, the $2 million deals. "We've never sold a $2 million "without having a $200,000 deal first." The very next week, we got a $2 million deal on the first paper so he shot low. He should've said five million, but the interesting thing about Veeam and to answer your question, I think we resonate with the kind of challenges a large enterprise has. We allow them to move at their own scale if they want to move in a very large fashion, they can with Veeam. I would honestly tell them move as appropriate for you. As assets age, as you're willing to take on the change in an environment, do so, but I think Veeam is interesting. It's the same piece of software that I installed on my laptop this weekend that can also go to a Fortune 100 company. The same piece of software that manages 50,000 agents, we have at one shop, 50,000 Windows agents. We can do that with same code base and the only thing that's different is we just horizontally scale out how we deploy the capacity and then how we deploy the mover agents. >> I tweeted out this morning, Ratmir was standing in front of a chart with all these features and over the time and that's been part of the hallmark of Veeam is not checkbox features but real substantive features and you've had a consistent progression. Even Ratmir said, we don't have a big long-term roadmap that we share with our customers even internally. Yeah we have a direction and a vision, but very focused, almost like a bit of an Agile development methodology but the point is that, and you see that some companies are really good at this, some companies, not so good at this, but just consistently delivering features that are in-demand, that customers want, listening to their customers and just nailing it and that seems to be the hallmark of Veeam and as they say, some companies just don't have that in their DNA. Your thoughts on that? >> Yeah I think what it really comes down to is at the end of the day, every developer thinks like a customer and they do that because they spend a lot of time on our Veeam forums and I'll be honest, when I was a mainframe backup developer, I didn't talk to that many customers. I was just writing code and I didn't know how people were actually putting the product to use in production. I didn't always know what feature might be most helpful for them. >> You were guessing. >> I was trying to think of the art of the possible, hopefully an educated guess, but I was really just trying to say what might be good, what might be of resonance versus actually having someone goes on a forum and says Veeam, what I would like you to do is X. That's one of the reasons why we do have, to your point, we don't have a 10-year roadmap where we say this feature is coming in 12 months, this feature is coming in 24 months. It's fluid and in some cases, we actually moved up delivering our physical agent management by a year because we started selling more and more of those and people said I need that feature functionality faster. We're willing to trade-off some of our other feature functionality. So if we can be, as long as we can continue to respond to the market, I think we're well-positioned. >> How does a capability like that surface itself? Obviously by talking to customers, but how does it get into the development pipeline so quickly? >> Yeah well in some cases, we've got a huge amount of not just, our part of R&D. It's the research, it's experimentation, it's incubation of new things. So when we find that sweet intersection point, then we can quickly operationalize that. In other cases, we just have to be nimble. We have to react fast. >> Is it a command and control culture though where somebody says okay this is what we're doing or is it more sort of the team gets together and says oh this really makes sense based on what the customers are telling us, let's go. How does that decision get made? >> Yeah well ultimately it is a command and control in the sense that our co-founder, one of our co-founders runs sales and marketing. Our other co-founders runs R&D and they ultimately get sign-off on their respective areas, but it is collaborative in the sense of we do bring forward, here's what we see in market, here's what see in our customer forums. Here's what our ecosystem of partners are telling us, here's our view of the top five things we ought to go do. >> I was struck by the other slide that Ratmir had. It was the $15 billion slide and it was probably, backup and recover was maybe I don't know seven out of the 15 if I remember, but there were all these other segments. It was sort of analytics and disaster recovery and data management, all new pockets of opportunity. $15 billion today, obviously growing with especially the cloud. How do you see that landscape and how does that affect the way you look at strategy? >> Yeah so I actually put that bubble chart together. >> Oh, I like it. >> The rationale between the bubbles, we have core, we put backup in the middle because that's what we do but also that's how we ingest data and now we can do other things around it. So the reason for those bubbles and they were of varying sizes and the bubbles were sort of in and out of to varying degrees the main backup bubble according to how much intersection we thought as a company we could have with that. Where we thought we could add value, where we thought there was an ecosystem potential. So for example, analytics. We're not going to become the next best analytics company tomorrow, not even years from now. We could partner and we can provide data and we get better access to data to be able to do that. So we'd want to facilitate that. In other cases, maybe we really do want to go own and acquire. >> Well and so to your earlier comments there, I didn't use the term, the phrase land and expand, but that's clearly what you guys are doing starting with the $200,000 sale and growing it to a $2 million sale. So those bubbles are potentially cohort sales. >> Yes. >> That you can sell sort of like bananas in bunches I like to say, right? >> Yeah. And part of that is who do you sell that to. And so if you're able to go and address some of those ancillary bubbles or markets, now you've got a different entree point into the organization. If you're already involved with an organization, now you can offer more value because you can get more out of your data that you've already protected. So it opens up new conversations for us to have. It opens up entirely new buying centers for us too. >> Well how is the role of whom you sell to changing? I mean it was backup admin historically, right or maybe a Veeamware admin. Veeam admin. How is that changing? >> So greatest example I would tell you are events. So we acquired a company last January or a year ago January called N2W Software. So they're predominantly at Amazon re:Invent conferences. You go to Amazon re:Invent and no one's heard of Veeam and if anyone's heard of either of the two companies, it's definitely N2WS and someone's seen it in the marketplace. That demographic tends to be totally different from the demographic if you go to the on-premises data center type of conference where they have heard of Veeam and it's a very different sort of mindset. To your point, they grew up in a very different landscape. Now instead of someone who's well-steeped in server storage and networking and maybe majored in one, possibly two of those things, now you've got a generalist where he or she is probably in their 20s, has a very different point of view of what it should take to get something working and has a very different view of how they want to be sold to, how you can go and reach them. >> So at the cloud show, there might be a development persona. >> Yes. >> That you're selling to. Obviously VMWare, VMWorld, we know what that is. It's IT guys, right, is the predominant and how do you see cloud changing that? Is it cloud architects or sort of cloud leaders? CTOs increasingly? Data Protection becomes more and more important to digital business. So how are you seeing that role change due to cloud? >> So right now we have to basically have more touchpoints. Our typical legacy fan of our customer, our customer base, our product's sweet spot still remains and it's in some cases will pull us into the cloud. In other cases, we have to go talk to someone that's entirely different. But again, that's more of an administrative view. But to your point, going up the stack now, if you go to the not even Vice President of Infrastructure, you go to the CIO, he or she says, "I am tired of thinking about boxes. "I am tired of thinking about where this resides. "I want to think business outcome." So for us that's actually a great conversation because it all comes back to data. That's what we're in the business of doing. We capture, protect and move data. >> So that brings it back to strategy. We got to run, but summarize in your words, just sort of the strategy of Veeam and where you see this whole thing going. >> Yeah I will simplistically say it's more of the same. We want to continue to offer what we think is a best of breed solution for on-prem and increasingly cloud availability, but also we want to offer real customer value in terms of now being able to leverage that data, get more value out of that whether that's DevOps, running analytics against that, security test patch, whatever it may be, we want to be able to give you just the data you need, so have granularity, and offer speed and ease of use to do that. >> So as data becomes more and more important, you're seeing companies go beyond backup, trying to get more out of there, their backup, moving to data protection, data management, not just an insurance policy anymore. Dave Russell, thanks very much for coming to theCUBE. It was great to have you. >> Thank you so much. >> You're welcome. All right, keep it right there, everybody. We'll be back with Peter Burris as my cohost. We're at VeeamON Live from Miami. You're watching theCUBE. (upbeat music)

Published Date : May 21 2019

SUMMARY :

David, good to see you again. So let's see, you're well over, let's see, a year out, the magic water, but before we get into that, Do they meet, exceed your expectations? The other thing I will honestly tell you So on the, I think we just talked about the M&A side. Maybe you can talk about that a little bit. Yeah and it really does net down to what you said. So you worked at IBM for a number of years, So talk about the difference in those two roles. So I'll give you an example. The other 7%, I'm honestly going to tell you, that the AIX Solaris piece. There's certain things. but there's no reason to come out of it. So your role as strategy, and only the portion of data that I need How do you look at the attributes of a company So hybrid cloud I like, but I think you nailed it and even going back to your Gartner days, and it's just, to me it was always less of a strategy and then to your point further, So great discussion vector is the best of breed And my question is that's been we can wrap the big blue blanket around you The answer is a little yes and a little no. the product to work, why did I buy your product but one of the observations that you can make to the upper left and then maybe you get to leaders Okay and why do you think they were able to do that? and where do you see that going and to answer your question, I think we resonate and that seems to be the hallmark of Veeam putting the product to use in production. what I would like you to do is X. It's the research, it's experimentation, or is it more sort of the team gets together in the sense of we do bring forward, and how does that affect the way you look at strategy? The rationale between the bubbles, we have core, Well and so to your earlier comments there, And part of that is who do you sell that to. Well how is the role of whom you sell to changing? and if anyone's heard of either of the two companies, So at the cloud show, and how do you see cloud changing that? So right now we have to basically have more touchpoints. and where you see this whole thing going. just the data you need, so have granularity, their backup, moving to data protection, We'll be back with Peter Burris as my cohost.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Peter BurrisPERSON

0.99+

RatmirPERSON

0.99+

Dave VellantePERSON

0.99+

Dave RussellPERSON

0.99+

DavidPERSON

0.99+

$200,000QUANTITY

0.99+

DellORGANIZATION

0.99+

$15 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

$2 millionQUANTITY

0.99+

10-yearQUANTITY

0.99+

GartnerORGANIZATION

0.99+

72 hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

10 vendorsQUANTITY

0.99+

85%QUANTITY

0.99+

SundayDATE

0.99+

MiamiLOCATION

0.99+

JanuaryDATE

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

2017-18DATE

0.99+

N2WSORGANIZATION

0.99+

2017DATE

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

Friday nightDATE

0.99+

20 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

five millionQUANTITY

0.99+

92%QUANTITY

0.99+

50,000 agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

two rolesQUANTITY

0.99+

SaturdayDATE

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

over $2 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

ArizonaLOCATION

0.99+

VeeamORGANIZATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

two companiesQUANTITY

0.99+

M&AORGANIZATION

0.99+

20sQUANTITY

0.99+

first quarter of this yearDATE

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

VMWorldORGANIZATION

0.99+

12 monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

350,000QUANTITY

0.99+

N2W SoftwareORGANIZATION

0.99+

LinuxTITLE

0.99+

first yearQUANTITY

0.99+

15QUANTITY

0.99+

VMWareORGANIZATION

0.99+

24 monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

next weekDATE

0.99+

a year ago JanuaryDATE

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

Miami Beach, FloridaLOCATION

0.99+

VeeamPERSON

0.99+

7%QUANTITY

0.99+

WindowsTITLE

0.99+

last JanuaryDATE

0.98+

tomorrowDATE

0.98+

first paperQUANTITY

0.98+

VeeamwareORGANIZATION

0.98+

last weekDATE

0.98+

one quadrantQUANTITY

0.98+

PacificLOCATION

0.98+

Pacific CoastLOCATION

0.97+

todayDATE

0.97+

Rowan Trollope, Five9 | CUBEConversation, January 2019


 

>> Welcome to the special. Keep conversation. I'm John Furrier in the Palo Alto Studios of the Cube. We're a special guest Rowan Trollope of CEO of Five9, formerly of Cisco formerly CUBE alumni. Great to see you. Thanks for joining me today. >> Great to see you, John. So let's talk about >> the future. The Contact Center. You got a new role. CEO Five9. Looks like a great opportunity. Tell us about it. >> Well, the Contact Center is really where it's at right now in the UC space on in the collaboration space. And frankly, in the digitization trend for most companies, they're realizing that the experience that they give to their customers has got to transform. You know, customers are telling them that if they don't fix the experience they deliver, they're going to leave. The business is that they're doing business with him. So I think that's, you know, it's It's really emerging as this really hot space and interesting space in a place where businesses recognize they have to spend money and do a much better job. >> One of the things that we talked about the past, certainly that you're always on the wave of cloud data. You've always had that vision in our previous conversations. Five9 Now in this contact center, kind of an old legacy old way of doing things. Voice over i p. You know, managing customer relationships. Whether it's support or outbound seems to be changed with cloud computing in the role of data. And now, machine learning and eyes really been an accelerant. Yet what's your vision over the next five years as this starts to transform and people re imagine what that's going to look like for their businesses? Because certainly customer relationships are changing. People have multiple devices here on any platform, there, there horizontally, moving around different websites, different places different on the undergo. A lot of change happening. What's your vision? There >> is a lot of change happening, and it's changed. But that's primarily driven by consumer behavior and sort of enabled by technology. So the biggest factor, in my opinion, that's affecting businesses, that you have the age of this empowered consumer. You know, ten years ago, for example, my wife stuff is you're bugging the crap out of me about fixing cleaning up my garage and so at the time, the way that I did that as I ran down to Home Depot, I looked at what they had on the shelf. I picked a, you know, a shelving system, and I brought it home, and I set it up ten years later, and this is just about a year ago. We have moved since then and, you know, the garages yet again, a mess. And I've been giving getting a hard time about it. So she's finally I said, Okay, okay, I'll organize the garage. And so what do I do this time? I go out and I get on my phone and I search for garage organizing systems, and I get lots of different forms and people talking about things and reading customer reviews and so on and so forth. I do a whole bunch of research, actually call a couple of the companies that made three different calls just to get some details about their product that I couldn't get online and ultimately ordered one. And it shows up at my house. So ten years ago, you have sort of, you know, not very empowered consumer. I took what was on the shelf. That's what I got. Ten years later, you have zero trips to retail brick and mortar. You have a very empowered consumer. Me. It has lots of options, lots of choices and three calls to a contact center that happened in the span of ten years, powered by the Internet, >> power by my mobile phone, powered >> by connectivity and so on and so forth. So any business, who's in, you know, every business essentially is dealing with this challenge and my expectation in terms of who I'm gonna do. Businesses with heavily influenced by the quality of their website, the quality of the experience that they had the quality of their community, that user reviews, they were coming back and, you know, some of them. Some of the commentary, Like, I got this thing it was missing. Some stuff I couldn't get hold of them was super hard to deal with. I'm not going to do business with that company. So what? You know, part of that transformation over the last ten, twenty, thirty years has been the empowered consumer gets to make a choice, and they don't have to do business if you don't have a great experience. So that's moving the contact center industry from being a sort of an extension of the phone system that we really don't want to think about very often into some that's really, really important for businesses, and I was seeing that left and right coming from my previous job. >> It's interesting. It's an opportunity to its challenge on one hand, for company dealing with the old way to do it, it becomes an opportunity when the user expectations and experiences impacted. That's a buying decision or relationship. Emotional decision. What is this opportunity mean for companies? Because now this now flips to the potential sellers of services and products. They have now an opportunity to take advantage of this new dynamic where users are in charge of being empowered. What's the opportunity for companies? >> So so it's two things. One, if you're a disruptive company coming out, you know any or starting up a new company and you're going after this. You can look at the user experience as part of your differentiation value proposition. I'm not only going to have a great product, but I'm gonna wrap that in the great experience. And that's the expectation today that any new company company will take a company like Square, for example, Yes, they have a beautiful little card swipe reader, and they have a, you know, nice industrial design. But that's not just what you get. You get a team behind that coming from, you know, the company that provides great support and a great experience. And when you sign up for square, the first thing you get is an email from their CEO sort of welcoming you to the community, and you see that with a lot of modern companies. Tesla's another great example where you see a really tremendous experience being around what is fundamentally a great product. Uh, and that's not something that you would see with the the incumbents. I think if you're a disrupter or new company, or you're looking at transforming an industry, then the opportunity is think about the holistic customer experience. If you're an incumbent or you've been in the business for a while and you're facing one of these sort of digital disruptors, if you want to call them that, then your opportunity is to re imagine your customer experience end to end and put some time and effort into it. You know, the reality is still, and I was in the call center thirty years ago, almost. The customers at the call centre. In most businesses, most incumbent businesses today is a call is a cost center because it's something that you sort of essentially have to deal with once this product has been sold. And it's not a place that most executives in most businesses want to go. In fact, in many cases it's been sent to other countries. Your contact center is You don't even know where it is. It's in the Philippines or it's and you know, some other country or it's in India or it's it's in a state, you know, less expensive state, which is all fine. But it's not fine that executives and companies don't want to go and see where the frontline of their business is, which is the place where they that experience meets the customer. So if you're an incumbent, you really have to think about, you know, you have to think about putting your contact center as a priority for your business and re imagining the experience and look, go walk a day in their shoes and experience what it's like. >> One of the things that we've been reporting on over the years and and you know you've been following the Cube and it's looking angle is the talk of CX or custom experience been going on for many, many years, somewhat aspirational outside of the corner cases of companies that actually specialize in, you know, differentiating on customer satisfaction and user experience. And that's obvious than you check the box there. But as as the market changes its now attainable, we're seeing that the rial actionable execution for companies to modernize what was once a call. Soon, as you pointed out, >> how do they >> do that? What's what's happening? Certainly, cloud computing helps data, and I are kind of at the table. How does a company that wants to modernize and have a real advantage and change their business business approach? What do they do? What's the What's the plan? You guys seem to be position for that. What do I do? What's the playbook? >> Go to Five9.com. No. The reality is that the first thing you have to do is really believe that this is an important aspect of delivering your business to your end consumer and and look at what's making up your competitors offer not just their product, but their offer and and sort of internalize and get the idea that OK, yes, this turns out it is important and I care about it. I'm going to go spend time on it because, look, the reality is we know how to deliver any business. You don't have to be a genius to figure out how to deliver great customer service. You know, what customers want is actually really simple. When I call you answer the phone. Don't send me through some rigmarole of IVRs and other technology hurdles. Don't hide your phone number when I want to get a hold of you make it easy for me to contact you. And when I contact you, what I want, I want someone who understands me. Who knows the problem that I have, Who's an expert who can help me and who has empathy, you know who can really connect with me and relate with me. And if there's a problem, it's not just about I'm going to solve the problem. But it's like we understand and we're sorry, you know, and we're going to make this better for you, and we're going to follow up with you, so that's a big part of what you have to-turns out doing that is not hard. You don't have to be a genius to figure out how to do it. Now. There are lots of technology companies that are out there today that make that easy. And the history of the Contact Center, essentially over the last twenty five years, has been essentially kind of stuck in the, you know, in a phone closet, somewheres with some technology that has actually hindered what smart people knew. We knew how to do this. We knew how to deliver a great experience. The problem was, you had like this legacy technology, and you had to call somebody in the data center somewhere else, and they were like, That's going to be hard. It's going to cost millions of dollars and our system doesn't support that. And so there is a technology sort of shackles that were on customer service experts and executives in businesses was like, Wow, that sounds like it's going to be expensive. It's going to take a long time now. We're in a world with the cloud where within a few clicks and a few minutes, You can deploy a contact center >> so we go to >> our side or other sites, and you can instantly have, you know, very, very quickly have a contact center that is modern that is flexible, that is, you know, has all the latest features and functionality. And so technology is no longer the hindrance that has been taken off the table. Our company was born in the cloud. There's other companies out there people can use. The bottom line is this is not really a technology problem anymore. >> So people have multiple devices and a lot of different channels of how people engaged. That's expectation on the Cust company side variety of sets of resource is that could be deployed at any given time. So you kind of have this now integrated kind of philosophy with cloud. How What does Cloud and Data? And now Aye, aye, due to the context. And how's the contact center change? Yeah. Does it look like >> that? Yes. Of the real, most important thing that has happened with the cloud computing wave is, you know, first that it made technology easy to consume. You know, it used to be really hard and expensive like we just talked about just to get technology. And then once you've got it, you were stuck with it and didn't change ever. Okay, we're kind of beyond that now with the cloud and that those were the table stakes. But something else happened when we started moving technology to the cloud that was more important. That and that was that we started collecting data, and as we started to collect data >> that >> became really interesting because of one other thing that happened, which was the revolution that happened in machine learning, and it started about ten years ago with some very, you know, big scientific breakthroughs on deep learning, more specifically, and what that deep learning approach needed was lots and lots and lots of data in order to work. It was a great scientific breakthrough, but it kind of stalled a little bit at the beginning because you didn't. There wasn't a lot of data out there that could actually you could get the benefits. Well, as companies have more, more been moving to the cloud. What that's creating his centers of data and not just data for your company, because lots of businesses don't have enough data actually to power machine learning algorithms. Machine learning algorithms are famously data hungry. You know that there's a famous saying from, you know, a bunch of folks in the AI industry. But it's that more data is better data. You know, the more you have, the better you are. In fact, you can also say that you know if you have more data, it's better than having a great algorithm right. The more data will always win. So what the cloud has unlocked is massive amounts of data, and that data is important to actually get at the root cause of the problem of bad customer service and support, which is with that data and the breakthroughs in machine learning. And that data in our industry is customer conversations. What your customers are actually telling you, either by text or by voice or by email that information is really interesting and can be married with machine learning technology to provide automation. It's >> interesting you mentioned customer. I think that's, I think, a key point. And you know, as we look at the data world, people look at certainly from a tech perspective that supply technology to data great that could assist then things. But we tell what customers and you're in business to serve customers. That's probably most valuable data. So as you said earlier, people hide the phone Or is it that they want to shy away from engaging with customers to not support them or hope they go away? They might be indifferent of serving them. You're saying the reverse Be proactive, engaged the customer, get that data so you can iterated on that. So I get that I think that Israel innovation in terms of the direction but as you did with customers is also the human side of it. Yeah, customers want to know that there's someone on the other side. You brought your garage organizing system because that component, how is the role of humans and machines impacting this new transformation from customer center to custom contact Sent it to essentially customer center. Yeah, what is the What is that piece of human? Super important? >> Yeah, we don't see technology replacing all the humans, actually, because and this goes back to my experience in the in the contact center many years ago. And, you know, many years ago. And my observation was and I, in fact, my first job I said, you know, in between two different agents and one of them was named Dave and one was named Ken. And Ken was really warm and effusive, and he got, I remember, he used to get gifts on his desk from customers. They would send him flowers and chocolates and, you know, like their products and so on. And he could tell a customer to shut up in a nice way, and they would love him after it. I mean, it was amazing that he could do this. It was all about empathy. He didn't. He didn't actually know all the answers to all of the questions. But he created these, like, incredible fans amongst the customers. The guy to my right, Dave, he was super smart. He just had, like, as much empathy as a rock. And he could answer all the questions really fast. Okay, And I So I use that cause I would learn things from him, but customers didn't like him. And the answer, you know, what I saw in those two folks, was that you can't do one or the other. You need both And what computers, are and what machine learning specifically. But now that we're getting all this data through the cloud is is able to do is we're able to predict the answers to what customers. You know what the questions from customers will to predict those things really quickly. So that's a sort of a mastery, so machines can help with mastery. They can help with being able to answer every question instantly or know the best thing to say at it to a customer at any given time. But what machines can't do is empathy. Humans are the ones that have to bring the heart. So what we're working on at Five9 is using machines to help agents. Human agents give them mastery, and we're letting the humans then focus on what they do really well, which is bringing the heart to the customer. And that creates a a bond between a brand and a customer that is like, unbreakable. >> I think you're onto something big here because we look a digital, the impact of digital technologies And you could look at variety examples mainstream media to technology companies to any kind of industry of vertical. There's a lot lack of emotional I Q or emotional quotient, and this seems to be what people are looking at you. I'm just looking further than some of the polarization in with digital in terms of media coverage, politics or whatnot. You started to see this focus on how to bring Mohr empathy and Mohr emotional like, yeah, two systems. And I think users are responding to that. Can you comment on your reaction to that? >> Yeah, part of this starts with confusion that the contact that is rampant in the contact centre industry, which is that people don't really want to talk anymore. And, you know, this has been observed because of the fact that, you know, we have new generations entering the work force like millennials. You know, we'll have our kids out there who would prefer to text us than talkto us often. But the reality is, and we surveyed this that actually even millennials still prefer voice as the primary form of communication and and that what has happened, that is the mistake. What is the error that people made? The error that people made is assuming that no, if it were actually conflating a bad voice experience with the fact that voice is bad and that's just not true, and it's observable. Not too. We've gone and actually proven this. So So what we've sort of realised is that what you need to fix is the bad voice experience. What is that? It's like, Wait, going into an Ivy are Okay, That's frustrating. You know what's >> a G are real quick to >> find the interactive voice response. So it's the push one for this push to for that. Everybody hates everyone hates, you know, every company uses it, and it's like a stain on humanity. We need to get rid of those things because they're just awful. So you go into this tree and all that, Okay, so get rid of it. By the way, everybody, you know, five years ago said, Oh, we can fix that problem with bots. Oh, and that actually is almost worse. You know, I've been trying to use bots for the last three months. I've been doing my own little test on this and communicating, you know, using only using text and whenever I hit a But it's like the last thing I want to do is talk to a computer. I want to get to a human. So my first question now is Are you human, which is my version of push zero to get through the I v. R. Gets again to an agent. Okay, so you know, there's been a confusion about this, and when you go back to what you had said earlier, this notion that users that, you know, the empathy is what has tend to be lost. Well, turns out it's much harder to make a emotional connection on text. Then it is with voice, and people just in general are not as good at communicating that emotional content on text because they're not very good writers generally, and they don't have time, Whereas they're excellent at doing that with their voice. You know, I'm not happy verses. I'm not happy, you know, there's a huge range of emotion that commune can be communicated with the human voice, which is extremely powerful. So if we can fix the bad voice experience, take away all that crap so that when you get someone they know, you know they know who you are. It's a you know, if they understand you, they can get to the root cause of your problem very quickly. Then it turns out that the human voice is extremely useful and and we're in now entering into an era where we can use the computer to talk to humans in unique and interesting ways now that I believe is actually still a little bit further out because of a variety of reasons. But in the meantime, computers and a I can help agents master their craft and let them focus on the embassy side of >> things. So in terms of Five9, the core problem that you're solving is what. >> So we provide a flexible, easy to configure, easy to deploy, cloud based contact center. OK, and it's it's it's it's minutes or hours before you can have this technology deployed. You don't need to have a phone system. So you look at a call center that sort of from the old days, and it's like lots of phones on desks in our world. You sweep those away. You have a computer in a Web browser. You plug in a headset, your agent could be sitting anywhere in the world. They get a beautiful web UI that's deeply integrated into Sales Force or Zen desk or service. Now >> our Oracle or >> any CRM system that you have, and we give you this really, really tightly integrated end to end experience. And we just make all of that easy and it handles any kind of contact, whether it's voice or text or email, it all goes through our system. It's all in the cloud. It's really easy and it's affordable. >> And the data management is pretty straight forward. Is that going to be flexible and agile enough to use with other things as people start having different touchpoints? >> Absolutely. In fact, with our system, all your calls are recorded into the cloud, as are all of your contacts. All of that is stored securely in our servers and is accessible to you. You can. There's a whole range of APS in the contact center. You can plug in on >> top of our platform >> and including things like variant Collab Rios. You know this whole area of workforce optimization and and so on, so lots and lots of technologies are actually built on Five9. So when you, by our technology, really banged up technology platform with ah rich ecosystem of APS that plug in on top of it and where we sit really in that value chain, you know, is the core platform that delivers that delivers the data and the pipes, and we sort of provide the intelligence. Also, that runs on top of that data, and that's where we're heading >> and that's your core innovation. Pretty much get that cloud based in it up fast. Get the focus on >> that part of it, and I'd say the second part of it that's sort of product on platform. The second part is really the offer. So it turns out that if you go to most companies, the things that make their customer experience poor that they want to fix, ah, solvable through capabilities that are already available in the platforms that they generally already have. What they're missing is a partner who can help them make that happen because it turns out it's not easy. You know, we've got a very flexible platform. It's been built over more than a decade, so it's like, really rich and in features. But the question and more and more what we see our customers wanting from us is a complete offer, and that includes professional services on site support, you know, people to help you, you know, handhold walk you through that process so well, kind of go the extra mile for our customers and give them in end end solution to their problem, not just a piece of technology. Now, if just technology is what you wanted, Our technology works for businesses with two support center reps. So it's, you know, weeks scale >> all the >> way down to folks. But we also have context are running that have for thousand reps. So we run that entire that entire spectrum for the small customers. They want something easy pre configured off the shelf. Just go. Okay, There's nobody coming on site for those customers. You have four thousand reps, We've got people on site. We darken the skies with our support people and our our engineers and everyone else actually provide a complete solution to our customers. >> That's great. We'll congratulate. I think having that innovation and having the cloud approach gets it up fast, gets the value delivered. And then as they grow, you can flex it, flex with flex the size, the organization not limited. So I want to get Teo. You're doing a panel discussion. Enterprise connect coming up in Orlando That's where we first met. This has been a show that's been talking to the enterprise customers who are been evolving from voice over i. P. Integrated communications, unified communications. Though that world of voice, data and systems to now and open cloud based data A. I So should be exciting. Yeah, panel want to get I don't want to give it away, but what are you talking about? The title is why customer engagements leading the Enterprise communications conversation Give us a quick teaser. What? >> I'm going to be focused on what's coming next, and one of the big reasons that drove me to this company that's attracted some top talent in the industry is that many of us see that the era of the cloud has actually opened these golden doors to a new land, which is powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning, and that we see that solving some of the root cause problems that we talked about earlier, bad customer service and experience that have essentially been talked about for a long time but haven't been solved. That finally, the technology is actually caught up to the problem. And so our big play at Five9 is to become the world's best self learning intelligent contact center platform. And we see that the Contact Center has--is shifting from being less a contact center and more a center of customer data and that that is the key insight that that is the key and said that we had is that wow, this is a lot of really interesting data, you know? Turns out what your customers say to you. It's really, really important. And today, in almost all contact centers, almost everywhere that data goes nowhere. It goes away because it's not very useful. Most of the most of what customers they're telling you is actually voice traffic, and that sits in wave files. If you recorded at all, which many customers don't and then they're not very useful, so they get thrown away. We figured out that that information is ridiculously valuable, but it's only become valuable recently because of advances in machine learning that allow us to do speech to text reliably as good as humans. Okay, speech to text has been around for a while. It's just been really crappy. Now it's really good. And now that it's gotten really good and affordable. Every customer can take advantage of it. So because all of our customers have all of their data stored on our cloud and all calls get recorded, we can now start to translate those voice wave files into text and provide that as insight back to the customer. We signed a partnership with Google to leverage their technology to help us make sense of all of those spoken conversations and then, ultimately all of the text. So we believe the next generation of the Contact Center is going to be less about a contact center and more about a center of customer data, which can be used to drive automation and insight back into the business. That's the big transformation for the next decade in the Contact Center. >> taking the Contact center making gets a customer center. This is kind of compatible with >> Hostage Data Center. That's runner of customer data. >> I mean, it's it's really kind of in line with how dev ops change cloud computing, where you had Devon ops coming together and you're taking that concept, that ethos to the context center, You know? Look, >> um, >> I'm not sure that it's exactly like Deb ops, but I guess you could draw that correlation. I think what you do see in businesses that there's new functions >> popping up all >> the time. A recent function that's popped up his customer, uh, customer success and what his customers success. It's all about reaching out to your customer to help make them successful in the insight that led to customers successes. When you have a services business, if you engage with your customer proactively, you actually can make more money and drive higher value both for the customer and for the business. And you know, I relate this back to my first experience in business, and I remember and I was in support and we're on the twelfth floor. We had a >> whole floor of people, >> and I remember our boss came down one day and they said something really interesting. They said Every time you guys pick up the phone, we lose money. I mean, if you can believe that is that it is now. It sounds crazy, but that's what happened in America. I felt kind of bad about that was like, Wow, I don't want to answer the phone, but it's ringing all the time. So what am I going to do? Well, the answer was we hired someone, not me. But the team hired someone to hide the phone number, which is sort of logical if you're told that when you pick up the phone, you're going to lose money. What do you want to get less phone calls? Well, how are you going to do that? Well, the company's customers can't find about Guess what tons of customers did this other thing we did? Was we employment in an i. V. R. Let's try and give themselves service. So they really the motivation >> of hiding the customer experience that we were running away from the customer experience, >> that iron Iwas and this is in hindsight. I see this that right on the floor above me was it wasn't the thirteenth. It was the fourteenth floor. It was a sales floor and they were doing everything they could tow proactively reach out and contact customers who didn't want to really hear from here from the sales people. So you had this situation. We had a floor of people, my floor, which were sort of running away from customers and a floor of people they were trying to run towards customers and like we're both missing them. It was insane. And what's now transpired in businesses that people get this and go? Wow. If I can deliver a great experience, it actually increases loyalty. It increases the amount of services that my customer will get. They get more value, I get more value. We want to run way, want to run towards customers. We want to reduce the distance between a business and their customer to zero. We want that to be like this kind of connection. We want our businesses, you know, their customers, toe love them. And the way that you get that love actually often comes through the contact Center. So it's becoming much more >> strategic, connecting in, engaging with customers. We're only going >> to be powered by machine learning like you can't do this. Okay? Just by going, I mean, you could do it by hiring lots and lots of humans, but it's really expensive. OK? Does not scale. So the only answer to this problem, which we know how to solve, is toe leverage technology. And it starts in the cloud. >> Right? Great stuff. We'll see you at Enterprise Connect the Cube will be there and great degree to see you. Thanks for coming and great to see this's The Cube Conversation Special Cube comes here in Palo Alto. Grown trial of CEO of Five9. Solving the contact problem. Bring it in. Modernizing it. Running towards customers Customer engagement and big panel coming up. Enterprise connect. I'm John for here in Palo Alto. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Jan 25 2019

SUMMARY :

I'm John Furrier in the Palo Alto Studios of the Cube. You got a new role. So I think that's, you know, it's It's really emerging as this really hot One of the things that we talked about the past, certainly that you're always on the wave of cloud data. actually call a couple of the companies that made three different calls just to get some details about their product that that user reviews, they were coming back and, you know, some of them. It's an opportunity to its challenge on one hand, for company dealing with the old way to do it, It's in the Philippines or it's and you know, some other country or it's in India or it's it's in a state, One of the things that we've been reporting on over the years and and you know you've been following the Cube and it's looking angle is the Certainly, cloud computing helps data, and I are kind of at the table. the first thing you have to do is really believe that this is an important aspect of delivering your center that is modern that is flexible, that is, you know, has all the latest features and functionality. So you kind of have this with the cloud computing wave is, you know, first that it made You know that there's a famous saying from, you know, a bunch of folks in the AI industry. So I get that I think that Israel innovation in terms of the direction but as you And the answer, you know, what I saw in those two folks, was that you can't do one or the other. and this seems to be what people are looking at you. that what you need to fix is the bad voice experience. So it's the push one for this push to for that. So in terms of Five9, the core problem that you're solving is what. So you look at a call center that sort of from the old days, any CRM system that you have, and we give you this really, really tightly integrated end to end experience. Is that going to be flexible and agile enough to use with other All of that is stored securely in our servers and is accessible to you. you know, is the core platform that delivers that delivers the data and the pipes, Get the focus on and that includes professional services on site support, you know, We darken the skies with our support people and our our engineers And then as they grow, you can flex it, flex with flex the size, Most of the most of what customers they're telling you is actually voice traffic, taking the Contact center making gets a customer center. That's runner of customer data. I'm not sure that it's exactly like Deb ops, but I guess you could draw that correlation. in the insight that led to customers successes. But the team hired someone to hide the phone number, which is And the way that you get that love actually often strategic, connecting in, engaging with customers. So the only answer to this problem, which we know how to solve, We'll see you at Enterprise Connect the Cube will be there and great degree to see you.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Rowan TrollopePERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

KenPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

AmericaLOCATION

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

IndiaLOCATION

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

January 2019DATE

0.99+

CiscoORGANIZATION

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

OrlandoLOCATION

0.99+

SquareORGANIZATION

0.99+

Five9ORGANIZATION

0.99+

PhilippinesLOCATION

0.99+

ten yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

twelfth floorQUANTITY

0.99+

thirteenthQUANTITY

0.99+

fourteenth floorQUANTITY

0.99+

CUBEORGANIZATION

0.99+

TeslaORGANIZATION

0.99+

two different agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

two folksQUANTITY

0.99+

first questionQUANTITY

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

first experienceQUANTITY

0.99+

thirty years agoDATE

0.99+

ten years laterDATE

0.99+

ten years agoDATE

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

second partQUANTITY

0.99+

two thingsQUANTITY

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

Home DepotORGANIZATION

0.99+

first jobQUANTITY

0.98+

Enterprise ConnectORGANIZATION

0.98+

four thousand repsQUANTITY

0.98+

Enterprise connectORGANIZATION

0.98+

Ten years laterDATE

0.98+

two support center reps.QUANTITY

0.98+

three callsQUANTITY

0.97+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.97+

squareORGANIZATION

0.97+

MohrPERSON

0.97+

five years agoDATE

0.97+

more than a decadeQUANTITY

0.97+

three different callsQUANTITY

0.96+

zeroQUANTITY

0.96+

many years agoDATE

0.96+

next decadeDATE

0.95+

about a year agoDATE

0.94+

about ten years agoDATE

0.93+

thousand reps.QUANTITY

0.92+

twentyQUANTITY

0.91+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.9+

Five9TITLE

0.9+

IsraelLOCATION

0.9+

one other thingQUANTITY

0.89+

two systemsQUANTITY

0.88+

thirty yearsQUANTITY

0.87+

last three monthsDATE

0.84+

tenQUANTITY

0.84+

TeoPERSON

0.83+

Contact CenterORGANIZATION

0.83+

last twenty five yearsDATE

0.81+

a dayQUANTITY

0.81+

Sales ForceTITLE

0.81+

one of themQUANTITY

0.79+

ZenTITLE

0.79+

Jonathan Rosenberg, Five9 | CUBEConversation, January 2019


 

>> Hello, and welcome to the special. Keep conversation here in Palo Alto, California John Furrier, Co-Host of the Cube. We're here with Jonathan Rosenberg, CTO chief technology officer and head of AI for Five9. Jonathan. Great. Great to see you. Thanks for coming in. >> Thanks. My pleasure to be here. >> So you've had a stellar career? Certainly. Technical career going way back to Lucent Technologies. Now here at Five9, Cisco along the way. You've been a really technical guru. You've seen the movie before. This's happening. Every wave of innovation, multiple ways you've been on. Now you're on the next wave, which is cloud AI, CTO Five9. Rapidly growing company. Yes, it is. What attracted you to five? >> Yeah, Great question. There's actually a lot of things that brought me to Five9. I think probably the most important thing is that I've got this belief, and I'm very motivated for myself. A least to do technology and innovate and create new things. And this belief that were on the cusp of the next generation of technology in the collaboration industry. And that next generation is going to be powered by artificial intelligence, and one of the ways I sort of talked about this is that if you look at the entire history of collaboration, up til now meetings, telephony, messaging was to figure out, a way to get the bits of data from one person to another person fast enough to have a conversation. That's it. You know, once we got the audio connected, we just moved the audio packets in the video packets and messaging from one place to another. And we didn't actually analyze any of that because we couldn't. We didn't have the technology to do that. But now, with the arrival of artificial intelligence and particular speech recognition, natural language processing, we can apply those technologies to that content and take all this dark data that's been basically thrown away the instant it was received, to process it and do things. And that is going to completely transform every field of collaboration, from meetings to messaging, to telephony. And I believe that so strongly, that is, That's great. That's going to be my next job. I wanna work on that. And it's going to start in the Contact Center because a contact center is the ideal place to do that. It's the tip of the spear for AI in collaboration, >> and it's in a really great area. Disruptive innovation are absolutely so Take us through the impact was one of things I have observed in this industry is you have You know, I don't want to say mainframe clients served to go back to date myself, but there was that wave of client server computer >> mainframes. Cool again. We just called clout. Now, hey, is >> exactly. So you have these structural industry waves take us through the waves of how we got here and what's different now? And why can't the old guard or the older incumbents surviving if you're not out in front that next wave your driftwood. So what? What's What's his ways mean? Why is this important? What has to change to be successful? >> Exactly. So there's been this this whole like you said these waves. So the first wave of telecommunications was like hardware: circuit switching, big iron switches, sitting in telco data centers, you know, And then that era transitioned to software and that was with the arrival voiceover IP and technologies like SIP, and that made it more less expensive. And anyone could do it, and it transformed the industry. The next wave, the third wave were still like halfway through and in some areas, actually, just beginning contact, center was early here, the third wave is cloud, right is now we're moving that software to a totally new delivery vehicle that allows us to deliver innovation and speed. And that wave has now enabled us to start the next wave, which is on ly in its infancy, which is AI right, and the application of machine learning techniques to automate all kinds of aspects of how people communicate in collaborate. >> I think cloud is a great example of Seen a. I, which had been a concept around when I was in computer science. Back in the eighties, there was a guy you know theory, and it's the science of it is not so much change, but computing's available. The data to be analysed for the first time is available. Yeah, you mentioned analyzing the bits writings. There's now a key part. What does it actually mean? Teo. Someone who's has a contact center has a large enterprise. Says, you know what? I got to modernize. How does A I fit them? What is actually going on, >> right? Great question. So a I actually consult lots different problem at the end of the day again, Hey, eyes like this, Let's. It's the biggest buzz word right on. It's in my title. So, like I'm a little guilty, right? >> We'll get a pay raise for, But >> what? It comes down to this, really this Korean machine learning, which is really like a fancy new algorithmic technique for taking a bunch of data and sort of making a decision based on it. So And it turns out, as we've learned that if you have enough data and you can have enough computing and we optimize the algorithms, you could do some amazing things, right? And it's been applied to areas like speech recognition and image recognition and all these kind of things. Self driving cars that are all about decision process is, Do I go left? I go right? Is this Bob? Is this Alice? Did the users say and or did they say or write those air all decision process? Is that these tools economy? What does it mean? The Contact Center? It means everything in the context. And if you look at the conduct center. It's all about decision. Process is, you know, where should this call get routed? What's the right agent to handle the call right now? When the agent gets the call, what kind of things should they be saying? What I do with the call after the call is done, How should the agent use their time? All those things are decision processes and their key to the contact center. So so, aye, aye. And Emily going to transform every aspect of it and, most importantly, analyzing what the person is saying connecting with the customer, allowing the age to >> be more. You know, I think this is really one of the most cutting edge areas of the business. And the technology and throw in CEO was talking about an emotional cognitive recognition around. Yeah, connecting with customers and data certainly is going to be a part of that. But as machine learning continues to get it, Sea legs. Yeah, you seeing kind of two schools of thought? I call it the Berklee School. Hard core mathematics. Throw math at it. And then you've got this other side of a machine learning which is much more learning. Yeah, it's less math. More about adaptive and self learning. One's deterministic one's non deterministic is starting to see these use cases where Yeah, there's a deterministic outcome, right throw machine learning at a great exactly helped humans come curate, create knowledge, create value that you've got a new emerging use case of non deterministic, like machine learning environments where I could be driving my test Look down the road or my company's run the Contact Center. I gotto understand what's gonna happen before it happens. Right? Talkabout this. What's your thoughts on this is This isn't really new, pioneering area. What's your view on >> this? Yeah, so I think it actually straight sort of a key point. I wantto narrow enough from what she said, which is that a lot of these problems still, it's about the combination of man and machine, right? It's that there's things that you know are going to be hard for the machine to predict. So the human in their usage of the product, teaches the machine, and the machine, as it observes, helped the human achieved mastery. And that human part, by the way, is even more important in the conduct centre than anywhere else. At the end of the day, your customer and you call up, you're reaching for human connection. You're calling this. You want to talk, you've got a problem. You need someone to not just give you the answers, but empathize with youto understand you. Right? And if you go back to anything about the best experience you've ever had when you called up for support or get a question answered. He was like it was someone who understood you who's friendly, polite, empathetic, funny. And they knew exactly what they were doing, right? And they solve it for you. So the way I think about that, is that actually the future of the context. Dinner is a combination of human and machine, and the human delivers the heart, and the machine delivers the master. >> And I just noticed your I'm looking at Twitter, right? And you just tweeted this forty minutes to go the future of Contact Center. Nice. A combination of human and machine human delivers heart. The machines lose mastery. I think this is so important because unpacking that words like trust come out True relationship. So you asked about my experiences is when I've gotten what I needed, You know, all ledger, the outcome I wanted. Plus I felt good about right. I trusted it. I trusted the truth. It was. And he's seeing that in media today with fake news. You're seeing it with Digital has kind of almost created, anonymous, non trustworthy its data. There's been no real human. Yeah, packaging. So I think you're I'm hearing you You're on the side of humans and machines, not just machines being the silver bullet. >> Absolutely, absolutely. And again, it goes back to sort of the history of the contact centre has been this desire to, like, just make it cheaper, right? But as the world is changing, and as customer experience is more important than ever before and is now, technology is enabling us to allow agents and human beings to be more effective through this. The symbiotic relationship that we're going to form with each other, like we can actually deliver amazing customer experiences. And that's what really matters. And that idea of trust I want to come back to that word that's like super Central to this entire thing. You know, you have that as a user, you have to trust the brand you have to trust the information you're getting from the agent. You have to trust the product that you're calling them talking about, and that's central to everything that we need to do. In fact, it's a It's a fundamental aspect of our entire business. In fact, if you again think about it for a moment here, we're going to customers who are looking to buy a context, and we're saying, Trust us, we're going to put it in the cloud, We're going to run it, We're going to operate it for you and we're going to deliver a great, highly reliable experience that takes trust to sew one of things that back to your early early question. Why did come two, five, nine? One of the things it has done is build this amazing trust with its customers to its huge, amazing reliability. Up time, a great human process of how we go in work with our customers. It's about building trust in every single >> way. So I want to put in the spot because I know you've seen many ways of innovation. You've seen a lot of different times, but now it's more accelerated. Got cloud computing at a much more accelerated innovation cycle. So as users expect interact with certain kind of environment. Roman talked about this in his interview. CEO Control. So you just want to be served on the channels that they want to be served in. So having a system that they have to go to to get support, They wanted where they are. And so how is the future of the customer interaction? Whether it's support our engagement is going to take place in context to nonlinear discovery, progression, meaning or digging a service themselves in the organic digital space. I honestly want to go to a site per se. How do you see the future evolving around this notion of organic discovery? Talking to their friends, finding things out? Does that impact how Five9 sees the future? >> Yeah, absolutely. And I think it gets back to sort of an old idea of Omni channel. I mean, this is something that the context people been talking about for, like forever, like the last ten years, right? And and its original meeting was just this idea. Oh, you know, you can talk to us via chat, or you can send us an e mail or you can send us a text or you could call us right and we'll work with you on any of those, like you said. Actually, what's more interesting is as customers and users moved between those things, and it actually switches from reactive to proactive right where we actually treat those channels as well. Depending on what the situation is, we're going to gather information from all these different data sources, and then we're going toe, find the right way to reach out to you and allow you to reach out to us in the most official. >> So you see a real change in user expectation experience with relative rule contact? >> Yeah, I mean, I mean, the one thing that technology is delivered is a change in user expectations on how things work. And if you look at the way we as human beings communicate with each other, it's dramatically different today than it was really just just a few years ago. >> So, Johnny, let's look under the hood now in terms of the customer environment, because certainly I've seen Legacy after Legacy sisters being deployed. It's almost like cyber security kind of matches the same kind of trend that in your world, which is throw money at something and build it out. So there's a lot of sprawl of solutions out there and trying to solve these problems. How does the customer deal with that? And they're going forward there on this new wave. They want to be modernized, but they got legacy. They had legacy process, legacy, culture. What's the key technical architecture, How you see them deploying this? What's the steps of the patient and her opinion? >> It will surprise you not one drop when I say it's go to the cloud, all right, and there are real reasons for it and by the way, this is going to be going to be talking about this at Enterprise Connect. So, So tune in Enterprise Connect. I'm going to be talking about this. Um, there's a ton of reasons, five huge ones, actually, about why people need to get to the cloud. And one of them is actually one of the ones we've been talking about here, which is a lot of this. Modernization is rooted in artificial intelligence. It turns out you just cannot do artificial intelligence on promise you cannot. So the traditional gear, which used to be installed and operated by legacy vendors like a VIA, you know, they go in, and Genesis, they go in the install a thing and it works just for one customer at a time. The oly way artificial intelligence works is when it gathers data across multiple customers. So multi tendency and artificial intelligence go hand in hand. And so if you want to take any benefit from the stuff that we've been talking about this conversation, the first step is you gotta take your context int the cloud just to begin building and adding your data on the set and then leverage the technologies and they come out >> So data is the central equation And in all this because good data feed's good machine learning good machine learning feeds Great a. I So data is the heart of this, yes. So data making data in the cloud addressable seems to be a key. Thought Your reaction and what are you guys doing with? >> Absolutely, absolutely. And this is, by the way, another reason why I joined five nine, that I've been speculating here. I said, All right, if Date if ya if the future is about a I miss, I said, That's what I want to do in collaboration. You need data to do that. You actually have to work for a company that has a lot of data. So market leadership matters. And if you go look at the contact center and you go look at all the industry and analyst reports like it made it pretty obvious, like who to go to there is like the leader in cloud Conduct. Sonar with with tons of agents and tons of data is Five9 and ah, and so that's That's why you're so building the data aggregating data. That's one of the first things I'm working on here is how do we increase and utilize the data that we've been gathering for years. >> And and a lot of that we've had this conscious with many customs before about Silas Silas. Kill innovation When it comes to data address ability, your thoughts on that and what customs Khun due to start thinking about breaking down those silent >> exactly so In fact, Silas have been a big part of the history of especially on premise systems. Once in fact, Afghan one silo for inbound contacts and are different for outbound. Different departments, by the way, also had their own different comic centers. And then you had other tools that on the other data, if you don't like a separate tool over there for serum and a different tool over there for WFOR debut Fam and something else for Q M. And all these things were like barely integrated together in the cloud that becomes much more natural. Spring these technologies together and the data can begin to flow from the systems in and out of each other. And that means that we have a much greater access to data and correlated data across these different things that allows us to automate all over the place. So it's this positive reinforcement sile cycle that you only get one year when you've gone to the club. >> The question I want to ask you, it's more customers on pretend I'm a customer for second. I won't ask you, Jonathan, what's the core innovation for me to think about and bring to my organization? If I want to go down the modern monitors you. How do you answer that question? What is the core innovation? Stretch it. I should have Marcy moving through the cloud is one beyond that is itjust cloud. Then what else? What, Juanito? Be preaching internally and organizing my culture >> around. Yeah, great questions. So, I mean, I think the cloud is sort of the enabler of many of these different pieces of innovation. Right? So velocity and speed is one of them. And then setting up and adjusting these things used to be super super hard. Ah, you wanted to add agents seats? Oh, my gosh, enough to go binding hardware and racket stack boxes and whatever. So even simple things like reactive nous, right? That's something that's important to talk about is that many of our customers and our businesses are highly seasonal. Right? We've seen like someone showed me a graph. This was like, Oh, my gosh, it was It was a company that was doing ah, telethon. And they said, Here's how many agents they have over this year. It was like two agents, and then it shut up. It's like five hundred agents of phones. Two days exactly. Drop back down. And I'm like, if you think about a business like that, you could never even do that. And so the so cloud is nice, but the way you talk about it, and as an I t buyer of these technologies, you talk your business owners about reacted nous speed, velocity, right? That's what matters to a business and then customer experience. >> You're one of the things that just to kind of end of second, I want to get your thoughts on. I'm gonna bring kind of industry trend. That's I think, might be a way to kind of talk about some of these core problems on data. Most mainstream people look at Facebook and saying, Well, what a debacle. They used my data. These men against me. I'm not in control of my data. You're seeing that weaponization people saying elections were rigged. So weaponizing data for bad is this content, and this context ends right? An infrastructure that's right, >> that's right. >> But there's also the other side, which is, you actually make it for good. So you started thinking about this people starting to realize Wow, I should be thinking about my data and the infrastructure that I have to create a better outcome. That's right, Your thoughts on that as people start to think about II in terms of the business context, right? How did they get to that moment where they can saying, I don't want anyone weaponizing did against me. I want to use it for good. How did the head of the company comes back to >> trust, by the way, right? Is that you know, on and to some degree that's an uphill battle due to some of these debacles that you just talked about. But Contact Center is a different beast of the whole thing. And interestingly, it's an area where there's already been an assumption by users that when they interact with the contact center, that data is sort of used to improve the experience. I mean, every contacts and the first thing I say, by the way, this call may be recorded for training. Um, honoring purses, Captain, that they are right. It's it's already opt in. There's an assumption that that's exactly how that is being used. So it's This is another reason. By the way, what's a contact center is? It was the tip of the spear because it was a place where there was already permission, where the data is exactly the kind of stuff that had already been subject to analysis and Attock customer expectation that that's actually what was happening. The expectation was there they building action, that data what was missing. So now we're filling in the ability to action on that All that data with artificial intelligence >> and final question. What's your vision going forward? A CTO and aye, aye. What's the vision of Five9? What do what do you see? The twenty miles stair for Five9 within consciousness. We just talked about >> it. So? So it's It's about revolution. I'll be honest. Right on. I tell people like, I'm not like an incremental, steady Eddie CTo like I do things because I want to make big changes. And I believe that the context and R is on the cusp of a massive change. And my boss, Rohan said this and this has been actually central to how I'm thinking about this. The Contact Center in the next five years will be totally different than the twenty five years before that. It's a technologist. I say. Wow, five years like that's not very long in terms of softer development. That's what we were going pretty much rewrite our entire stack over the next five years. And show. What should that start to look like? So for me, it's about how do we completely reimagine every single aspect of the context center to revolutionize the experience by merging together, human and machine and totally new >> and the innovation strategies cloud in a cloud and and and data great job and great to have you on pleasure. Great, great conversation. Quick plug for you guys. Going to be a enterprise, connect to Cuba. Lbi. They're covering the event as well. What you going to talk about that? What? Some of the interactions? What will be the hallway conversations? What's your objective? What's your focus >> exactly? So so I'm going to be having my own session. We're going to be talking about the five reasons that you may not think about to goto context on the cloud. I've hinted already. A James of them. I think we're too well. That's you can you know, A. I is clearly central and I'm going to start to talk about the other four. >> Great, great conversation. A lot of change. Massive change happening. Great innovation Stretch. Great mission here at Five9. Great, great mission around. Changing and reimagine. More change the next five years in the past twenty five years. Again cloud computing eyes doing it will be winners. Will be losers will be following it here on the Cube. Jonathan Rosenberg, CTO ahead of AI at Five9. I'm John Furrier with the Cube. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Jan 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Co-Host of the Cube. My pleasure to be here. What attracted you to five? is going to be powered by artificial intelligence, and one of the ways I sort of talked about this is that if you look at the entire things I have observed in this industry is you have You know, I don't want to say mainframe clients served to go back to date Now, hey, is So you have these structural industry waves take us through the waves of how So there's been this this whole like you said these waves. Back in the eighties, there was a guy you know theory, and it's the science of it is not so So a I actually consult lots different problem at the end of the day again, What's the right agent to handle the call right now? And the technology and throw in CEO was talking about an emotional cognitive recognition You need someone to not just give you the answers, And you just tweeted this forty minutes to go the future of Contact Center. We're going to operate it for you and we're going to deliver a great, highly reliable experience that takes trust to So having a system that they have to go And I think it gets back to sort of an old idea of Omni channel. And if you look at the way we as human beings communicate with each other, it's dramatically different today than it was What's the key technical architecture, How you see them deploying this? benefit from the stuff that we've been talking about this conversation, the first step is you gotta take your context int the So data making data in the cloud addressable seems to be a key. And if you go look at the contact center and you go look at all the industry And and a lot of that we've had this conscious with many customs before about Silas Silas. So it's this positive reinforcement sile cycle that you only get one year when you've gone What is the core innovation? And so the so cloud is nice, but the way you You're one of the things that just to kind of end of second, I want to get your thoughts on. How did the head of the company comes back to of stuff that had already been subject to analysis and Attock customer expectation What do what do you see? And I believe that the context and R is on the cusp of a massive change. and the innovation strategies cloud in a cloud and and and data great job and great to We're going to be talking about the five reasons that you may not think about More change the next five years in the past twenty five years.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Jonathan RosenbergPERSON

0.99+

JonathanPERSON

0.99+

JohnnyPERSON

0.99+

RohanPERSON

0.99+

EmilyPERSON

0.99+

Lucent TechnologiesORGANIZATION

0.99+

CiscoORGANIZATION

0.99+

two agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

JuanitoPERSON

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

January 2019DATE

0.99+

forty minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

Two daysQUANTITY

0.99+

Five9ORGANIZATION

0.99+

five reasonsQUANTITY

0.99+

one yearQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

Berklee SchoolORGANIZATION

0.99+

MarcyPERSON

0.99+

Enterprise ConnectORGANIZATION

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

RomanPERSON

0.99+

CubaLOCATION

0.99+

first timeQUANTITY

0.99+

AlicePERSON

0.99+

twenty milesQUANTITY

0.99+

fiveQUANTITY

0.99+

FacebookORGANIZATION

0.99+

nineQUANTITY

0.99+

five hundred agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

GenesisORGANIZATION

0.98+

first stepQUANTITY

0.98+

eightiesDATE

0.98+

one customerQUANTITY

0.98+

third waveEVENT

0.98+

Eddie CToPERSON

0.98+

fourQUANTITY

0.98+

VIAORGANIZATION

0.98+

two schoolsQUANTITY

0.98+

LegacyTITLE

0.97+

Palo Alto,LOCATION

0.97+

TwitterORGANIZATION

0.97+

five yearsQUANTITY

0.97+

secondQUANTITY

0.96+

todayDATE

0.96+

first thingQUANTITY

0.95+

BobPERSON

0.95+

JamesPERSON

0.94+

few years agoDATE

0.88+

first thingsQUANTITY

0.88+

one dropQUANTITY

0.87+

five hugeQUANTITY

0.87+

one personQUANTITY

0.87+

telcoORGANIZATION

0.86+

SilasTITLE

0.85+

tonsQUANTITY

0.85+

this yearDATE

0.84+

TeoPERSON

0.83+

next five yearsDATE

0.8+

wave ofEVENT

0.79+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.78+

fiveORGANIZATION

0.75+

KoreanOTHER

0.73+

telethonORGANIZATION

0.73+

twenty five yearsDATE

0.73+

first wave ofEVENT

0.72+

Seen a.PERSON

0.72+

past twenty five yearsDATE

0.72+

Silas SilasTITLE

0.71+

WFORTITLE

0.7+

last ten yearsDATE

0.69+

next waveEVENT

0.68+

one thingQUANTITY

0.68+

Q M.ORGANIZATION

0.67+

John Donahoe, ServiceNow | ServiceNow Knowledge18


 

live from Las Vegas it's the cube covering service now knowledge 2018 brought to you by service now welcome back to the cubes live coverage of service now knowledge 18 we are here in Las Vegas Nevada I'm your host Rebecca Knight along with my co-host Dave allanté we are joined by John Donahoe who is the president and CEO of ServiceNow thanks so much for coming on the cube it's great to be here Rebecca so I want to talk with you a little bit about what you said on the main stage this morning you said this is your first year your anniversary of joining ServiceNow you said when you got here you could barely spell IT but when you reflect back on this year what has been sort of the biggest surprise challenges and surprises about about leading this company well I would say a couple things one I've sort of fallen in love with our customers and the challenges and opportunities they have and what I spoke about this morning this digital transformation thing even a year ago is a bit of a buzzword it's a reality for CEOs for companies and therefore for CIOs and then the second thing that is as I talked about it something very exciting is the role of the CIO the role of IT is transforming before our very eyes out of necessity because technology is here to stay technology's driving strategic change at every company can call it a digital transformation called a tech transformation and CEOs need the most technically savvy leader in the c-suite to help with that and that's often the CIO and so I think that's an enormous ly exciting opportunity for the people that are our traditional customer base and then the last thing I just I'm thrilled about is how many companies are saying that ServiceNow is a strategic platform of choice going forward far beyond just IT and so that's something to roll build upon I was struck yesterday in the Financial Analysts session you shared with us your meeting with the board yeah and you said to them look if you want to clean this thing up flip it whatever that don't hire me I'm here to build a sustainable company during company I think is what you said and the attributes of an enduring companies that are Purpose Driven they both innovate and execute they invest in talent and they have a will to win they got a fight in them a lot of good sports analogies there yeah so okay so you've set that framework where do you see this thing going in the next near term mid term and long term well we've said I think it's really important to set the aspiration of what it is you're shooting toward I've been surprised how many customers have responded well to the statement that we aspire to create a built to last company it starts with the purpose I defined our purpose and that purpose is a long term investment and our employees are already deeply resonating with the purpose and then comes the hard work the hard work of how you bring the purpose to life and our purpose and our product and the work we do with our customers all fit together you talked about automation and in many executives that we talked to kind of run away from that we don't want to talk about automation because it implies we're gonna replace humans you said hey we're at the center of automation we have to take that issue head-on what's the conversation like with the executives and customers that you talk to well the first thing is I have to think yet to look at the data which is what I've spent time doing and two things jump out one if you look at where automation is really gonna have the biggest impact it's not in any given job it's actually the third of all of our jobs that are repetitive administrative redundant right that's so we need to automate the low value-added parts of all of our jobs and then that will free our time up to be due to leverage our more creative capabilities to add more value and so if you look at it both at a micro and macro standpoint where automation is going to impact jobs it's not a given category it's more of a horizontal cut of all jobs and then secondly looking at aggregate job creation I've done a fair amount of work with James mineka the McKinsey Institute is to blow up a suit who's got to think the best objective macro study about job creation and there going to be some jobs they'll be fewer of and other jobs they'll be more of and how do we migrate the skills migration so that people have the skills for the jobs of the future one of which by the ways things like being a ServiceNow administrator you do not have to be a computer science major or an engineer to be a ServiceNow administrator you have to like technology you have to embrace technology but you can do it as a mere mortal and so we're looking at ways of how do we help retrain people to have the skills to create one of the jobs that we're creating through ServiceNow administrators John you talk to a lot of people I think five or six hundred customers know and they'll have since I met you a year ago it ServiceNow headquarters we obviously talked to a lot of people on the cube and no question every CEO the ax talked it was trying to get digital right yep they understand it but there's somewhat of a dissonance and I wonder if you sense it in and I wonder if you could talk about how ServiceNow can help wear this the c-suite gets it and they're driving for that but when you go below the line there's a lot of sometimes complacency not in our industry not in my lifetime I'll be retired by then do you hear a lot of that and how can ServiceNow help increase the urgency well I'd say I take a couple things Dave one is the c-suite gets it by not every c-suites role-modeling what's necessary without the cross-functional leadership the partnership of ITN HR and the business units then what happens by tama goes to three levels down people have functional identities and so people role model are behaving the way they see their leadership team role modeling and so if that if that c suite is embracing technology and understanding technology demands cross-functional engagement to deliver great customer experiences and employee experiences then it makes it a lot easier two three steps down the second thing I think c-suite people need to do is be able to say we take if off the table we said I talked about top-down goals most people are scared of a top-down goal the problem is if there's a not a top-down goal then people can debate if we need to make this change and how but if the CEO the c-suite says we are going to improve the employee experience and I'm setting this goal then it's when you go a level two levels down it's not if no no they said if now our job is how and so I think leadership has to do its role and I think I think the c-suite and leadership's learning how you lead and a technology enabled environment so leadership is the key and and the CEO is really leading a little suite I think the whole the whole C suite set of leaders and partnering and reaching out to one another so we I mean as you said on the main stage in many ways the technology is the easy part but what you're talking about is the hard stuff because this is the real change management and and it's human lead so what are you hearing what are you seeing and do you have any ideas for best practices I mean as you said that the the C suite needs to embrace it yes and then push that down but how do you do it what are some what are some of the things you've seen that work well here's some of the things that we're trying to do to contribute toward that because obviously we're a software platform but one is to do what I did this morning which is be more articulate about what best practice looks like what is best in class so that anyone in any organization can can go to their boss and say oh this is best practice this is best-in-class we need to emulate this and here are the returns we can get if we emulate it so one is just hold out the successes successful examples and illustrate what's required that's why I kept saying over and over this morning employee experience is not just an HR issue employee experience is not just an IT issue you need a powerful team of CIO C HR o other functional leaders and then the second thing I think is getting people on i.t to see themselves a little bit differently we have a CIO track going on upstairs with a hundred top CIOs and the whole day is around driving culture change and CIO is leader and I think good leaders they don't just allow a label to be attached to them they invest in themselves they build their skills they build change management skills communication skills and I think whether it's a CIO or IT if they're going to have the kind of transformative impact they can across the company they need to build their technical expertise along with other skill sets you heard Andrew Wilson talk about that and they need to learn to speak business and not just IT John I want to push on something that I'm discerning from you guys and get your reaction so obviously cloud you guys are born in the cloud cloud is a tailwind for you we've seen this Asif occation of business but we seem to be entering a new era moving from a cloud of remote services to one of us fabric Ubiquiti is fabric of digital services so my question is around innovation you talked about that as one of the key attributes of an enduring company what's the innovation equation going forward yeah it's not Moore's law anymore it's not cloud mobile social Big Data at least it doesn't feel that way anymore is it machine intelligence combined with cloud what do you see I think it gets down actually to what I talked about this morning user experience I think machine learning I think AI is going to be a commodity functionality we're gonna get it from AWS or Azure or Google the cloud infrastructure providers whether it's natural language processing whether it's the kind of machine learning capabilities that's that's gonna be sort of available widely then it's our job as a software platform to build that into our platform so we built machine learning capability into our platform we built chat bot functionality into our platform we built leading-edge mobile capability into our platform and again I'll call that I don't know it's the easy part but that's our job in this equation the hard job then is how you apply that to real-world use cases whether you're applying using real-world datasets specific customer data sets and real-world workflows and use cases so let me give you a small example we bought a machine learning company a year ago called DX continuum great machine learning team great machine learning technology we rebuilt it inside the ServiceNow platform okay and I don't believe a AI is a horizontal platform is I don't you know we didn't call it a name it after a a dead scientist that's out what we're gonna do and I'm not casting judgment on it but it's not a solution looking for a problem we built machine learning into our platform and then so we want to be the first user we want to use it on a specific challenge so the case we used it on our own inbound customer support we have about 800 customer support agents that serve our customers about 11 percent of their time is spent on something we call incident categorization and incident routing sounds kind of grunty terms but when summer calls with a problem we have to be able to identify what that problem is and then route it to the right person to fix the problem so 11% of our peoples time was doing that that's not a fun task so we turned on machine learning and within two weeks the machine was categorizing the issue and routing it more accurately than a human can so now what happens is our customers problems are getting solve faster and the 11% of those resources those customer support resources who are engineers in our case are focused on solving customer problems not doing what felt like an administrative task to them and so I think the actual application of machine learning the actual application in many of these these technologies it's the application that's going to matter not the invention so a lot of what you said makes it makes sense to me because you're saying that your customers are gonna be buying essentially that machine learning capability in relative and applying it in very narrow use cases to solve their business problems rather than trying to build it right and you do see some companies trying to maybe get over out over their skis and over-rotate to try to build some of that stuff that's gonna come from the technology suppliers what yours if we're doing our job the infrastructure providers the software platforms like us we're doing our job we're making it easy another small example will be mobile I talked this morning about companies everywhere need to build mobile experiences and so there one do I need to build a mobile design team a mobile coding team if you're up if you're a bank or utility or an oil and gas company or a retailer or well platforms like ours make building mobile experiences really easy for them so we're trying to build that mobile capability that design capability that Design Thinking the mobile capability into the platform so they can just get out-of-the-box functionality and they don't have to have their own mobile designers they don't have their own mobile engineers they can just be saying how do I want to use mobile inside my company and then there they're taking our mobile platform if you will and and creating mobile applications and mobile experiences that are relevant for them so your brand identity is now making work work better for people yes when you are doing your blue sky thinking about the pain points that employees feel and that job candidates feel because that's their another important part of of companies trying to keep their people happy yes what what are what do you see I mean as you said the next three to five years are going to be this the revolution is going to be in the workplace yes what do you see as sort of the biggest challenges that you want to help solve well let me just take a simple use case that that comes to mind as you mention that let's take from the time you start being recruited for a company through that let's say you get hired and get started so the recruiting process you're sending a resume and you don't know if I got in didn't get in if anyone someone may or may not contact you you may get an interview you got to find out where you're going if you're going did you get called back maybe you get an offer letter it comes you get it all set all kind of I would call an unstructured workflow let's say you get hired then the onboarding process onboarding is a classic unstructured workflow you got to go to this security to get your badge you got to go to facilities to get your desk you got to go to it2 get your laptop or mobile phone you got to get to another part of IT to get your email credentials put on you've got to enter your information into the payroll system you got to reenter your same information and pick a health care provider you got a range of the same information and and and get a in the tini system you got to do all this compliance training painting an accurate ownerís picture this is your first impression of the company you're joining now there is no reason they took my mobile phone away from me so I'm twitching there's no reason why there shouldn't be an app that says a recruit says I want to interview if the company they download the app they submit their resume based on the app we give a response in the app they say oh might my resume was accepted and I they want me to do an interview and they want me to be in Santa Clara next once at 8:00 and here's who I'm going to be meeting with and here's their background in the app then they do the interview let's say they get invited back who they're interviewing with we're inside the app okay let's say then they get an offer well then the app has more permission in the offer comes through the app you can print it or you can read it then onboarding starts onboarding can be a seamless experience it still can connect but you enter your data in once it pre fills all those systems and then in one mobile experience you're picking what's your laptop what's your healthcare system what's the bank you want your payroll in teeny to go into and all the complexity is hidden underneath it that's what we have in the consumer world our lives at home when you buy something on eBay all the complexities hidden when you pay with PayPal all the complexities hidden there's no reason why all the complexity can't be hidden in the recruiting and onboarding process and and so the technology's there to do it but it's managing all the workflows managing all the processes underneath so you can pull that together into a seamless experience and that's the kind of experience it's funny I have four grown kids my daughter she started working I won't say where but a major technology company and she's like dad what's up with this onboarding process why isn't it in a mobile app and the Millennials will start demanding this and so I I just think there's so much opportunity to make our lives at work feel more like our lives at home and you just described the capability that allow you to reach your aspirations of the next great enterprise software company when we think of great enterprise software companies we think of Oracle and si P you're nothing like Oracle and si P in my opinion and then of course you think of Salesforce different you know you're not a an SMB how should we be thinking about the next great enterprise software company so this I think this is a really important question Dave and I'd look at it through the eyes that what I heard from the 500 customers and here's what I heard they're embracing digital transformation they're embracing cloud they're embracing cloud at the infrastructure level figuring out their data center strategy and how much they embrace public cloud and then at the software platform level they're saying we want to have four to six strategic platforms and often it's the born in the cloud platforms often its sales force and workday and service now and maybe office 365 or Google for email or communications maybe if they have a supply chain ASAP and they're saying I want those platforms to work well together so no one platform should be claiming they can do everything each of us needs to figure out what's our role and how do we work with one another and our role ServiceNow I'm proud to say is one of those strategic platforms as I said earlier people see our capabilities as being connective tissues helping to pull those platforms together you know in the onboarding example we pull all the data sets and platforms together by the way we don't slap our brand on top because actually employees want to see their own brands they want to see their own company's brand they don't want to know what the enterprise software brand underneath it is they just wanna have a great experience and so I I don't view it I think the winning enterprise software I see a chance for Salesforce and workday and ServiceNow and Microsoft to all be winners and delivering this future for companies where you are the platform of platforms though correct but that's not and I'm being very careful the way I say it I'm not saying we're the top dog sure I'm saying what we're good at is cross-functional workflow actually it's probably the grunt 'ya stuff all those things and you're the best at it and we're the best at you are and our brand we're not we're not forcing our brand everywhere that we're doing it in service to our customers and so I just want to always be listening to what our customers want that's gonna be our North Star they're gonna guide us it always has been I know you know Fred Letty started that from the beginning and that's what we're gonna continue to do well John it's always a pleasure having you on the cube so thanks so much for coming on our show thank you very much Becky thank you Dave great to be happy John I'm Rebecca night for Dave Allante we will have more from ServiceNow knowledge 18 in just a little bit [Music]

Published Date : May 8 2018

SUMMARY :

and get a in the tini system you got to

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
John DonahoePERSON

0.99+

Rebecca KnightPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

Andrew WilsonPERSON

0.99+

Dave allantéPERSON

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

fiveQUANTITY

0.99+

Santa ClaraLOCATION

0.99+

McKinsey InstituteORGANIZATION

0.99+

Dave AllantePERSON

0.99+

ServiceNowORGANIZATION

0.99+

BeckyPERSON

0.99+

James minekaPERSON

0.99+

11%QUANTITY

0.99+

Las VegasLOCATION

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

RebeccaPERSON

0.99+

500 customersQUANTITY

0.99+

2018DATE

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

second thingQUANTITY

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.98+

first yearQUANTITY

0.98+

fourQUANTITY

0.98+

first userQUANTITY

0.98+

a year agoDATE

0.98+

two thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

two weeksQUANTITY

0.98+

second thingQUANTITY

0.97+

first thingQUANTITY

0.97+

second thingQUANTITY

0.97+

about 11 percentQUANTITY

0.97+

PayPalORGANIZATION

0.96+

SalesforceTITLE

0.96+

oneQUANTITY

0.96+

four grown kidsQUANTITY

0.96+

UbiquitiORGANIZATION

0.96+

Fred LettyPERSON

0.95+

twoQUANTITY

0.95+

secondlyQUANTITY

0.95+

three stepsQUANTITY

0.95+

first impressionQUANTITY

0.95+

SalesforceORGANIZATION

0.95+

thirdQUANTITY

0.95+

bothQUANTITY

0.94+

eachQUANTITY

0.94+

North StarORGANIZATION

0.93+

six strategic platformsQUANTITY

0.93+

six hundred customersQUANTITY

0.93+

Las Vegas NevadaLOCATION

0.93+

five yearsQUANTITY

0.93+

ServiceNowTITLE

0.92+

this morningDATE

0.92+

MoorePERSON

0.91+

DXORGANIZATION

0.91+

about 800 customer support agentsQUANTITY

0.91+

one mobile experienceQUANTITY

0.9+

a year agoDATE

0.89+

this yearDATE

0.88+

office 365TITLE

0.88+

8:00DATE

0.87+

this morningDATE

0.86+

all jobsQUANTITY

0.84+

si PORGANIZATION

0.82+

ITN HRORGANIZATION

0.81+

lot of peopleQUANTITY

0.81+

levelQUANTITY

0.74+

PORGANIZATION

0.74+

eBayORGANIZATION

0.74+

threeQUANTITY

0.73+

Rashesh Jethi, Amadeus - Open Networking Summit 2017 - #ONS2017 - #theCUBE


 

(upbeat electronic music) >> Announcer: Live from Santa Clara, California, it's theCUBE covering Open Networking Summit 2017. Brought to you by The Linux Foundation. >> Hey, welcome back, everybody, Jeff Frick here with theCUBE. We are in Santa Clara, California at the Open Networking Summit 2017. Really happy to be joined by my co-host for the next couple of days, Scott Raynovich. And we've been talking to a lot of providers and technical people, but now we want to talk to customers. We love talking to customers, and we're really excited to have Rashesh Jethi. He's the SVP, Head of R&D for the Americas for Amadeus, which is a big travel company. Welcome. >> Thank you so much, Jeff. Thank you, Scott. >> So like I said, we'd love to talk to a practitioner. So you're out on the frontlines, you're seeing all this talk of software-defined and software-defined networking. From your point of view, how real is it, where are we on this journey? What do you see from your point of view? >> Super real. Have you searched for a flight lately? >> I have searched for a flight. >> Excellent. I'm proud to tell you that your flight search very likely was powered by Amadeus, and it's running on a software-defined data center completely. So this stuff is real. We are, I believe, one of the first companies who have actually taken this from what was a very strong academic kind of research project onto this start-up ecosystem, but we're actually out there deploying it, running real world business, using a very purposeful and deliberate software-defined strategy. >> And it's interesting because you said before we got on camera that you guys are actually very active participants in the open source movement and development of this stuff. You're not just kind of a participant waiting in the wings for this stuff to get developed. >> I mean absolutely, and to me, that's one of the reasons which if you're serious about open source, you have to use it. You can't just talk about it. You can't just say it looks like a nice idea. You have to get out there and get your hands dirty and do it. But the other thing also is you have to contribute back. I think that's a big tenet of the open source community. And we all and certainly the company, we grew up and we've seen tech evolve through the ages. And a big part, especially in the last 10 years or so, has been the open source movement, and it's contributing back. It's one of the reasons I'm here. It's one of the reasons the conference organizers invited me, is to actually talk about how we use open source and software-defined strategy for our technology. >> That's cool. So where do you run this software? You run it in private cloud, public cloud? Do you guys build your own data centers? How do you run it? >> Quick history lesson and our quick history-- >> Let's back up. First off, where is Amadeus today for people that aren't familiar with the company? >> We are actually a 30-year-old company. We are celebrating our 30th birthday this year. The company was started in the late '80s as a consortium between four leading European airlines, Lufthansa, Air France, Iberia, and Scandinavian. So we started off, which was very typical at that time, as a mainframe shop, and that's where a lot of our core systems were built. We're a big provider of technology in general to the travel industry even though we were founded by airlines. So to put it in perspective, we carry about 95% of the world's scheduled commercial seats, airline seats, on our platform. >> 95%. >> 95%, so we work with the world's-- >> Are available to purchase. Obviously, 95% of the purchases don't go through your system. >> Right. They are available. They are used by over 90,000 travel agents, retail travel agents, corporate travel, online travel. And we work with over, like I said, 700 airlines, work for their inventory. So chances are if you travel on an airplane, very good chances that our software was used to make the reservation. We also have airline ID systems and hotel ID systems, and we work with the airports. And this is where we do departure control, flight management, baggage reconciliation, a lot of the back end processes. And we started the company, essentially runs as we write our own software. We are offered as a service from day one, so we are one of the oldest software service providers in the industry. And obviously, when we got started to do that, you had to own your own infrastructure. So we are pretty good at it. We have very strong kind of technical chops. We have a large data center outside Munich Airport and a bunch of smaller data centers all over the world. And what we're doing now is really very deliberately making the journey towards a cloud, both our private cloud, so taking our own infrastructure, virtualizing it, and making it available as a service for our own applications, and then where it makes sense, to leverage public cloud infrastructures where they are available. >> So different apps in different clouds, is that-- >> Different apps in different clouds based on customer preferences. The core reservation booking engines, they are in our own private cloud because we do have a lot of regulatory security, privacy considerations. So that stuff, we keep kind of close where we can keep a very watchful eye on it, but there are a lot of transactions we are also talking about. The volume of searches has grown up, right? Obviously, Google has seen a lot of search volume. If you look at our business, it used to be when you wanted to book a flight, you'd go to a travel agent and be able to look at a bunch of flight options and you'd pick one. About 20 years ago, you call it the look to book ratios. You'd look at 10 to 20 options and you'd book one. You want to guess what it is today? >> The look to book ratio was 20 to one. That's got to be way higher. That's got to be 80 to one. >> It's more like 1,000 to one. >> 1,000 to one. >> 1,000 to one. It's partly people like you and I who have a spare moment and have a vacation in mind, and we are looking at options. But keep in mind, anything that you search, it has to come into our systems. We have to configure the journey. We have to price it. We have to make sure it's available before we offer it up to you, right? So it's very transaction and computing intensive even before it touches any of the back ends where we do core kind of booking and passenger processing. And so to handle that scale, those are the kind of very logical applications that make sense for the public cloud. And those are the ones that we've looked to move. Certainly, for customers, we are a global company. We have customers all over the world. Some customers want to have some of these systems closer to their geographic location. So we look at all use cases kind of. >> That's amazing to think of. These things have so changed behavior and the way that we interact. I assume that 20 to one was a function because you would sit down. Now you sit down at your desk, time to book that flight, and maybe you don't get it done that day. You come back two or three times. But as you said, now it's grabbing little bits of time throughout the day whenever we can. But do you get paid on a regular subscription, or do you get paid on the transaction? Has that just increased your overhead, whatever the ratio 20 to 1,000 is? >> Absolutely, no, our business model has been very consistent from day one. We get paid on the number of bookings we make and the number of people that board aircraft, I mean roughly speaking. There are smaller lines of businesses, but those are our two main revenue drivers. So we see a lot of transaction volume upfront, but it doesn't translate to a booking which logically, it won't. Yes, that's noise or revenue for us, but we still have to service that volume because that's eventually, the funnels just gotten wider. And so it makes sense to do that in the most cost efficient manner but without compromising quality, without compromising speed. I mean if you're like me, if you have to wait for more than two or three seconds, you're like, "Ah, I'm moving on." >> Oh, two seconds. It's milliseconds, isn't it? >> Absolutely. >> And by the way, I still don't always find the flight I want. So where are those extra flights? Can you provide those for your service? >> Jeff: That extra 5% those are under. >> That's very different. It's got nothing to do with open source and kind of what we're talking about here, but a lot of what you're doing in there from an engineering perspective is just looking at, for example, machine learning algorithms. And what you said is actually a very common complaint, is how do I find kind of the right sort of flights. And more importantly, if you have certain preferences with airports or airlines or loyalty programs or time of day, how do I provide you context-sensitive results? We are doing a lot of kind of core R&D work for that, but our customers are doing amazing work as well. KAYAK is one of our customers, very close to our offices in the Boston area, and they do pretty amazing work in terms of getting their context right and then applying machine learning technologies and artificial intelligence. It's very, very early days but very exciting, very promising. >> One of the cool features I like are these fare alerts. I don't know if you use them. It tells you, it predicts this is going to go up. You better book now, wait. Do you guys do that sort of thing too? >> Our customers do that. We have a very simple model. Our customers are travel agencies, online, American Express, Expedia, metasearches like KAYAK, Skyscanner, et cetera, the airlines themselves whose products we host in our system and we sell. So a lot of our engineering work is learning to offering kind of core innovation so that they can offer products for people like you and me, their customers, the best products out there. So we focus on enabling them. And then at an operational level, we try to do it in the most efficient manner and the most future proof that we can think of. >> What about security? I mean it sounds like a lot of sensitive data changing hands here, right, where are people going to sit on an airplane, where are they going. You must have incredible security demands on your data now. >> Yes. (Jeff and Scott laugh) I mean you understand, obviously, it's paramount to us. And the good news is, look, we've been in this business for 30 years. We have really deep domain expertise in that. And also, you'll understand why I wouldn't want to talk too much about what we do and how we do it, but absolutely, that's one of the-- >> Scott: You just lock it down. >> Prime drivers of everything we think all the way from application design to things like the infrastructure planning and design to the physical level. I mean everything you can think of and probably a couple of things you may not think of. >> Hopefully a few things we didn't think of. So where do you go next? It sounds like you're enabling a lot of the innovation on your partner's side. You just mentioned KAYAK and people writing some of the machine learning and AI algorithms to help the end traveler find what they're looking for. Where are you guys concentrating? You said you've been at it for 30 years. What are some of the next big hurdles that you're looking to take down? >> It's wonderful, I think, being close to our customers. And one of the reasons I'm in Boston, we are a European company. We are actually headquartered in Madrid. Our core engineering team, our central engineering team is in France. The reason I'm in Boston and my team is in Boston is we've started doing a lot of business here in North America, and we try to stay very close to our customers. And when you listen carefully, and that's why we have two ears and one mouth is to hopefully try to listen a lot, you do see their pain points, you do see where they are going with kind of their business. And it gives us a chance to have a front row seat in designing new products that they can use. So to me, it's kind of two pronged. One is we want to offer the best technology we can to our customers at the best price point we can. And obviously, by now, you've figured out it's mission critical stuff has to always be on. Keeping those kind of boundary conditions in mind, you want to be the best technology provider, and then we want to innovate. So one of the things I'm seeing at this conference, there's a lot of friends from the service providers who are talking about 5G technology. And so with connected cars, with virtual reality, I mean these are all trends that are going to impact us as travelers in a positive way. And so we have a dedicated innovation team across all our business lines. We do a lot of work with academic institutions, with ETH in Zurich, with MIT here, close to my office in Boston. And there's just a chockfull of possibilities in terms of what can be done. >> All right, I'll give you the last word, impressions on the show. What do you get out of a show like this? Why is it important for you to come? >> It's amazing. I mean this morning, Martin Casado was there. He's called kind of the grand daddy of software-defined networking (mumbles). >> He's not that old yet, but he's going to like seeing that clip. (laughs) >> It's true. I read that at The Guardian. It was on one of the newspapers. But the fact is we used NSX for virtualization in our entire data center, and we have close to 20,000 infrastructure devices. All our computers are virtualized, 100% of it, and it's all using NSX from VMware, right? Now this was a sort of brilliant idea by an extremely intelligent and persuasive graduate student at Stanford 15 years ago that is, as he announced this morning, is a billion-dollar business today, right? And we are actually using the technology, and it's very real, to process all of this. So it's great to be able to see what people like him, I mean from Google, he's a great partner of ours. We use Kubernetes for kind of the container deployment strategy for our cloud network. We hear him speak about what they're thinking about in terms of investments and how the network is going to essentially drive the movement of data analytics. It's just phenomenal to get the top leadership. I'm obviously very honored and privileged to be presenting to this audience and to share our thoughts and what we're doing and just to see a lot of the buzz around here and what wonderful ideas are happening in the Valley. There's so much action, as always, going on. >> Great, great, great summary. Well, glad you could take a few minutes to stop by theCUBE. >> Completely my pleasure. Thank you very much. Great meeting you, and have a great rest of the show. >> All right. He's Rashesh, he's Scott, I'm Jeff. You're watching theCUBE from Open Networking Summit 2017 in Santa Clara. We'll be back after this short break. Thanks for watching. (upbeat electronic music) >> Announcer: Robert Herjavec. >> People obviously know you from Shark Tank, but The Herjavec Group has been really laser focused on cybersecurity. >> I actually helped to bring upon Checkpoint to (mumbles) firewalls, URL filtering, that kind of stuff. >> But you're also...

Published Date : Apr 4 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by The Linux Foundation. and technical people, but now we want to talk to customers. Thank you so much, Jeff. What do you see from your point of view? Have you searched for a flight lately? I'm proud to tell you that your flight search before we got on camera that you guys are actually But the other thing also is you have to contribute back. So where do you run this software? that aren't familiar with the company? in general to the travel industry Obviously, 95% of the purchases and a bunch of smaller data centers all over the world. So that stuff, we keep kind of close The look to book ratio was 20 to one. and have a vacation in mind, and we are looking at options. and the way that we interact. We get paid on the number of bookings we make It's milliseconds, isn't it? And by the way, I still don't always And what you said is actually a very common complaint, One of the cool features I like are these fare alerts. and the most future proof that we can think of. going to sit on an airplane, where are they going. I mean you understand, obviously, it's paramount to us. and probably a couple of things you may not think of. a lot of the innovation on your partner's side. to our customers at the best price point we can. Why is it important for you to come? the grand daddy of software-defined networking (mumbles). but he's going to like seeing that clip. So it's great to be able to see what people like him, Well, glad you could take a few minutes to stop by theCUBE. Thank you very much. from Open Networking Summit 2017 in Santa Clara. People obviously know you from Shark Tank, I actually helped to bring upon Checkpoint

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
ScottPERSON

0.99+

Jeff FrickPERSON

0.99+

Scott RaynovichPERSON

0.99+

JeffPERSON

0.99+

ZurichLOCATION

0.99+

Martin CasadoPERSON

0.99+

FranceLOCATION

0.99+

BostonLOCATION

0.99+

10QUANTITY

0.99+

Rashesh JethiPERSON

0.99+

MadridLOCATION

0.99+

95%QUANTITY

0.99+

20QUANTITY

0.99+

80QUANTITY

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

30 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

LufthansaORGANIZATION

0.99+

two secondsQUANTITY

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

ETHORGANIZATION

0.99+

two earsQUANTITY

0.99+

Santa ClaraLOCATION

0.99+

ExpediaORGANIZATION

0.99+

SkyscannerORGANIZATION

0.99+

RasheshPERSON

0.99+

MITORGANIZATION

0.99+

North AmericaLOCATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

Air FranceORGANIZATION

0.99+

AmadeusORGANIZATION

0.99+

Munich AirportLOCATION

0.99+

700 airlinesQUANTITY

0.99+

30-year-oldQUANTITY

0.99+

Santa Clara, CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

over 90,000 travel agentsQUANTITY

0.99+

one mouthQUANTITY

0.99+

KAYAKORGANIZATION

0.99+

5%QUANTITY

0.99+

American ExpressORGANIZATION

0.99+

three timesQUANTITY

0.98+

more than twoQUANTITY

0.98+

late '80sDATE

0.98+

this yearDATE

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

1,000QUANTITY

0.98+

#ONS2017EVENT

0.98+

15 years agoDATE

0.98+

Open Networking Summit 2017EVENT

0.98+

30th birthdayQUANTITY

0.97+

Robert HerjavecPERSON

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.97+

two main revenue driversQUANTITY

0.97+

about 95%QUANTITY

0.97+

billion-dollarQUANTITY

0.97+

theCUBEORGANIZATION

0.96+

todayDATE

0.96+

20 optionsQUANTITY

0.96+

NSXORGANIZATION

0.96+

About 20 years agoDATE

0.95+

FirstQUANTITY

0.94+

three secondsQUANTITY

0.94+