In the wickedly competitive cloud HCM market, Workday has been chosen to replace a large on-premises HCM system from Oracle or PeopleSoft, Workday co-CEO Aneel Bhusri said.
Speaking on Jim Cramerās Mad Money show late last week after Q2 earnings were out, Bhusri said CVS was āon a legacy systemāI donāt know if it was Oracle or PeopleSoft [Oracle owns PeopleSoft]. During the pandemic and during all the change, CVS just decided they needed to get on a modern HR platform, and they needed to work with a company that would scale those systems to meet their needs.
āTheyāre a huge company, and they chose us. Weāre very gratefulāitās an amazing companyātheyāve been on the front lines of taking care of all of us and itās where many of us have gotten vaccinated, so itās a real honor to be able to serve them.ā
Bhusri had cited the win at CVS Health during Workdayās Aug. 26 earnings call when he said, āWe are still, in the world of HCM, selling to absolutely the biggest companies in the world, like CVS Health.ā
If the legacy system replaced by Workday was indeed PeopleSoft, that would be profoundly ironic. Because way back in December 2004, after a long and extremely bitter takeover battle, Oracle finally succeeded in acquiring PeopleSoft. Before the takeover battle began, Bhusri was PeopleSoftās vice-chairman and senior vice-president, while Dave Duffield was PeopleSoftās chairman.
And in 2005, Duffield and Bhusri cofounded Workday.
For Oracle, Workdayās win at CVS comes amid a hot streak for Oracleās HCM business. The company declined to comment as it is in its quiet period before release of its FY22 Q1 results for the period ended Aug. 31. The CVS situation aside, Oracleās Fusion HCM cloud business has been on a definite roll: for Oracleās Q4 ended May 31, the company said Fusion HCM revenue was up 35%, which is a very strong number in its own right and also a huge sequential leap over the 23% growth rate Oracle posted for Fusion HCM in fiscal Q3, which ended Feb. 28. For more details on that, please see Larry Ellison Shows His Cards: Oracle ERP Revenue Could Reach $30B.
In Bhusriās interview with Cramer, the Workday cofounder summed up his companyās approach this way: āWeāve passed 50% of the Fortune 500 running Workday HCM, and a growing number running Workday Financials. When companies are running Workday Human Capital Management, it means theyāre not running another systemāthereās only one system of record.
āSo to get past that 50% number is a really big deal for us,ā Bhusri said, and is a direct result of having āgreat employees who really take care of our customers.
āOur customer satisfaction rate continues to hover around 97%āand at the end of the day, thatās what weāre in business to do: to have happy customers.ā
RECOMMENDED READING
10 Reasons Why Salesforce Buying Slack Is the Deal of the Decade
Salesforce Unleashes Slack and Rocks the Cloud
The Remarkable Larry Ellison: Oracleās Legendary Disruptor Turns 77
Cloud Wars Top 10 Crush Q2: $60 Billion Led by Microsoft, Amazon, Google
Infor and AWS: CloudSuite Vendor Bets the Company on Amazon R&D
ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott Playing Dangerous Game w/ SAP, Oracle
Amazon-Workday Kerfuffle: Big Winners Are Workday and Google Cloud
SAP Slaps Back at Larry Ellison: āHundredsā of Q2 Wins Over Oracle
How Evan Goldberg and Larry Ellison Made MagicāTwiceāwith NetSuite and Oracle
Disclosure: At the time of this writing, Workday and Oracle were among the many clients of Cloud Wars Media and/or Evans Strategic Communications LLC.
Subscribe to the Industry Cloud Newsletter, a free biweekly update on the booming demand from business leaders for industry-specific cloud applications.