From the Workday fiscal 2021 Q1 earnings call, a collection of key comments from CEO Aneel Bhusri and his executive team on customers, competition & more.
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On the Workday fiscal Q1 earnings call later today (May 27), I expect CEO Aneel Bhusri to make some pointed comments about the competitive landscape.
During the recent Workday Q4 earnings call, while citing his company’s excellent results, CEO Aneel Bhusri called out both SAP and Oracle failures.
There’s no love lost between Oracle and Workday. But both Larry Ellison and Aneel Bhusri are talking a lot about large orgs’ growing appetite for SaaS apps.
Last year’s acquisition of planning hotshot Adaptive Insights appears to be the catalyst for ongoing success at Workday, per CEO Aneel Bhusri.
Workday CEO Aneel Bhusri says that about 50% of the Fortune 100 have subscribed to Workday’s cloud HCM services. Of those 50, 35 are already live.
Speaking at a recent investors conference, Aneel Bhusri touched on the Workday + Walmart deal, and how new people-based apps have doubled the HCM market.
As impressive as Workday Q1 earnings results are, I found CEO Aneel Bhusri’s commentary on machine learning to be even more compelling.
Workday’s recent strong fiscal performance includes impressive subscription revenue growth and substantial backlog.
Workday’s Q4 results showcase a robust fiscal performance with a 19% surge in subscription revenue, hitting $6.6 billion for fiscal 2024.
The elevation of Carl Eschenbach and Rob Enslin to sole CEOs of Workday and UiPath likely points to the end of the co-CEO model and important new strategic directions for both firms.
Workday’s co-CEO, Carl Eschenbach, reflects on the company’s progress, emphasizing initiatives including international expansion and strengthening the ecosystem.
Customers are applying increased ‘deal scrutiny’ on major IT investments but they are ‘absolutely’ still buying when there’s a strong value proposition, Workday Co-CEO Carl Eschenbach says.
As technology and business strategies converge, the CEO Outlook 2024 series dives deep into insights from Cloud Wars Top 10 CEOs. Don’t miss the exclusive interviews, starting with SAP’s Christian Klein.
The Cloud Wars Top 10 companies, with a combined market cap exceeding $7 trillion, have experienced a range of performance in 2023, with CEOs including Microsoft’s Satya Nadella and SAP’s Christian Klein standing out.
Major enterprise vendors, Workday, Snowflake, and Salesforce, collectively reveal a robust fiscal-Q3 with strengthened customer spending, notable revenue surges, and strategic positioning.
Workday’s co-CEO, Carl Eschenbach, attributes the company’s robust Q3 results to increased customer demand for talent offerings, a trend toward app supplier consolidation, and the growing emphasis on generative AI.
Workday has introduced two programs, the AI Marketplace and AI Gateway, centered on its Workday Extend platform, to facilitate co-creation with customers and partners in the development of AI capabilities and solutions, further expanding its ecosystem.
Workday aims to involve more developers and partners in enhancing GenAI tools while ensuring high standards of responsibility and privacy.
Workday’s Q2 results reflect the transformative “Eschenbach Effect.” The co-CEO is boosting growth through AI integration, expanded offerings, and accelerated customer commitments.