Cloud Wars
  • Home
  • Top 10
  • CW Minute
  • CW Podcast
  • Categories
    • AI and Copilots
    • Innovation & Leadership
    • Cybersecurity
    • Data
  • Member Resources
    • Cloud Wars AI Agent
    • Digital Summits
    • Guidebooks
    • Reports
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Tech Analysts
    • Marketing Services
  • Summit NA
  • Dynamics Communities
  • Ask Copilot
Twitter Instagram
  • Summit NA
  • Dynamics Communities
  • AI Copilot Summit NA
  • Ask Cloud Wars
Twitter LinkedIn
Cloud Wars
  • Home
  • Top 10
  • CW Minute
  • CW Podcast
  • Categories
    • AI and CopilotsWelcome to the Acceleration Economy AI Index, a weekly segment where we cover the most important recent news in AI innovation, funding, and solutions in under 10 minutes. Our goal is to get you up to speed – the same speed AI innovation is taking place nowadays – and prepare you for that upcoming customer call, board meeting, or conversation with your colleague.
    • Innovation & Leadership
    • CybersecurityThe practice of defending computers, servers, mobile devices, electronic systems, networks, and data from malicious attacks.
    • Data
  • Member Resources
    • Cloud Wars AI Agent
    • Digital Summits
    • Guidebooks
    • Reports
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Tech Analysts
    • Marketing Services
    • Login / Register
Cloud Wars
    • Login / Register
Home » Amid Mixed Results, Dell Cloud Demand and Supply Chain Execution Excel
Cloud Wars Horizon

Amid Mixed Results, Dell Cloud Demand and Supply Chain Execution Excel

Tom SmithBy Tom SmithAugust 30, 2022Updated:April 13, 20233 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Dell Technologies’ solid Q2 results and reduced outlook for the balance of 2023 reflected shifting customer buying dynamics, the macro environment, and uncertainty about what customers will do next.

There were at least a couple of notable bright spots, including strength in the company’s APEX Infrastructure-as-a-Service offerings, for which orders grew 78% year over year.

“The Q2 and second-half macro dynamics have become more challenging as customers are taking a more cautious view of their needs given the uncertainty,” Vice Chairman and co-COO Jeff Clarke said. “We have responded swiftly by managing inventories down and reducing our expenditures.” He added that the company’s view of the demand environment had changed since its last quarterly report in May.

With an expansive product line spanning cloud, infrastructure, and desktop products for commercial and consumer customers — and $100 billion in annual revenue — Dell’s results, as well as the commentary from its top executives, has broad-reaching applicability across multiple sectors of the economy.  

The Results

For its fiscal Q2 2023, Round Rock, Texas-based Dell reported:

  • Record second quarter revenue of $26.4 billion, up 9%, driven by continued growth across client and infrastructure business units.
  • Operating income rose 25% to $1.3 billion and non-GAAP operating income rose 4% to $2 billion.
  • Diluted earnings per share were $0.68 and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share were $1.68.

In the company’s Client Solutions Group which includes desktops and notebooks, revenue grew 9% to a record $15.5 billion on the strength of commercial customer purchases (up 15%) while consumer revenue declined 9%. In the Infrastructure Solutions Group, which includes networking, storage, multi-cloud data control, cybersecurity, and the aforementioned APEX, revenue was up 12% to $9.5 billion. Servers and networking grew 16% and storage grew 6%.

APEX was a particular strength: Annual Recurring revenue is now $1 billion, orders grew 78%, and Dell added 200 new customers. The unit has an APEX Flex on Demand offer that includes customized infrastructure with storage, servers, hyperconverged infrastructure, data protection and more.

“In the current macro environment, we’re naturally seeing lots of interest from customers who are looking to manage cash outlays by pivoting to a pay-as-they-go scale on-demand type model.”

Chuck Witten, co-COO of Dell

Overall for the Infrastructure group, however, “we now see a more challenging ISG demand environment as we head toward the back half of the year,” CFO Tom Sweet said

Welcome Development: Deflation

As a manufacturer of products with a diverse set of components sourced globally, the company’s supply chain and component pricing directly impact current and future results.

Officials said they continued to see shortages of parts and embedded integrated circuits including power supplies and microphones. Backlogs are particularly pronounced for servers, they said. But there was better news as well: they expect modest cost deflation in aggregate component costs in Q3 and noted that logistics rates are beginning to decline.  

Currency continues to be a headwind and Q3 revenue is now expected to be between $23.8 billion and $25 billion, with CSG declining in the high teens and ISG growing the low teens.

Other executive comments that are pertinent to the Acceleration Economy audience included:

  • “Automation and digital transformation remain the backbone of our customers’ strategies necessary for productivity and growth.” – Witten
  • “Our supply chain execution was excellent throughout the quarter.” – Clarke
  • “We are seeing projects come to fruition. They’re taking longer to close. And the size of the projects are somewhat reduced from what we’ve seen in the past.” – Sweet

For more exclusive coverage of innovative cloud companies, check out Cloud Wars Horizon here:

Cloud Cloud Wars Cloud Wars Archive Cloud Wars Horizon featured financial supply chain
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
Analystuser

Tom Smith

Editor in Chief, analyst, Cloud Wars

Areas of Expertise
  • AI/ML
  • Business Apps
  • Cloud
  • Digital Business

Tom Smith analyzes AI, copilots, cloud companies, and tech innovations for Cloud Wars. He has worked as an analyst tracking technology and tech companies for more than 20 years.

  Contact Tom Smith ...

Related Posts

How One Company Added 20% to Profit with Cloud Optimization

June 27, 2025

AI Agent & Copilot Podcast: ServiceNow Innovation Officers Outline Agentic AI Opportunities in Healthcare

June 27, 2025

Workday Sets the Standard for Responsible AI with Dual Governance Accreditations

June 27, 2025

The AI Economy: Oracle More Valuable than Disney, Goldman Sachs, and Uber Combined

June 26, 2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Recent Posts
  • AI Agent & Copilot Podcast: ServiceNow Innovation Officers Outline Agentic AI Opportunities in Healthcare
  • How One Company Added 20% to Profit with Cloud Optimization
  • Workday Sets the Standard for Responsible AI with Dual Governance Accreditations
  • The AI Economy: Oracle More Valuable than Disney, Goldman Sachs, and Uber Combined
  • Microsoft Delivers In-Depth View of Security, Governance Functions in Copilot Control System

  • Ask Cloud Wars AI Agent
  • Tech Guidebooks
  • Industry Reports
  • Newsletters

Join Today

Most Popular Guidebooks

Accelerating GenAI Impact: From POC to Production Success

November 1, 2024

ExFlow from SignUp Software: Streamlining Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations and Business Central with AP Automation

September 10, 2024

Delivering on the Promise of Multicloud | How to Realize Multicloud’s Full Potential While Addressing Challenges

July 19, 2024

Zero Trust Network Access | A CISO Guidebook

February 1, 2024

Advertisement
Cloud Wars
Twitter LinkedIn
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
  • Marketing Services
  • Do not sell my information
© 2025 Cloud Wars.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

  • Login
Forgot Password?
Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email.