In this Cloud Wars Minute, Bob reviews official Q2 earnings numbers from three of the Cloud Wars heavy hitters.
Salesforce
Bob Evans explains why this milestone “needs to be recognized and applauded.”
In this Cloud Wars Minute, Bob Evans says isn’t a case of SAP stumbling, but an indication of Salesforce’s powerful influence on the cloud wars growth market.
Bob shares his predictions as Salesforce, Workday, and Snowflake are set to announce their fiscal Q2 results this week.
In this Cloud Wars Minute episode, Bob predicts big numbers for Salesforce, Workday, and Snowflake despite growing recessionary fears.
Leading the industry cloud evolution, Oracle, SAP, and IBM have emerged in the new movement to reimagine industry-specific solutions.
While some experts will howl that the company’s growth rate is down 2% from Q1, Bob Evans thinks that Co-CEOs Marc Benioff and Bret Taylor will describe their second quarter with positive terminology. Here’s why.
Salesforce’s fiscal Q2 figures are just a week away. Co-CEOs Marc Benioff and Bret Taylor generally latch onto a certain vivid description of their earnings.
Under CEO Christian Klein, SAP has become one of the fastest-growing cloud providers in the world, per its latest Q2 results.
Salesforce CFO Amy Weaver recently explained how the company keeps almost all of its customers so happy that they’re eager to re-up or increase their levels of spending.
In this Cloud Wars Minute, Bob takes the whiteboard on the road to examine Salesforce’s strong retention figures.
With the recent revenue growth of Snowflake, Workday, and Salesforce, Bob recommends that everyone should embrace a fearless perspective.
In this Cloud Wars Minute, Bob recounts recent earnings calls and the need to stay fearless in the face of challenging times.
Bob shares comments from top executives at Salesforce pertaining to the company’s confidence in continued customer demand.
In this Cloud Wars Minute, Bob expands on co-CEO Marc Benioff’s world tour, his confidence in the company’s Q1 earnings report, and motivated customers.
As Bob notes, the company once again demonstrates that the future is not written, but instead is out there for us to shape.
The company joins Workday and Snowflake in rejecting the notion of a recession, explains Bob.
Bob looks at the growth trajectories of these SaaS stalwarts over the past year to see if their performance inspires confidence in continued extraordinary results.
Bob examines Salesforce and Workday’s track record of growth and why fewer companies are seeing IT as a cost center.
The cloud provider’s quarterly numbers are sure to draw extra scrutiny as a portender of things to come for the entire enterprise-cloud business.