During IBM’s quarterly earnings call this week, CFO Jim Kavanagh mentioned “hybrid” 28 times, focusing on the IBM Future Hybrid Cloud,
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What to watch for in the coming hybrid wave. Cementing its future growth and relevance, the cloud industry is warmly embracing hybrid computing.
Remarks from Microsoft’s EVP and CMO Chris Capossela in late 2018 shed light on Microsoft’s marketing strategy going into 2019.
Cloud heavyweights Oracle, SAP and Workday continue to compete savagely in terms of mission-critical cloud ERP growth going into 2019.
The cloud is becoming the engine of the global digital economy. Read Cloud Wars Outlook 2019 to understand enterprise cloud trends for 2019.
Brian King oversees all of Marriott’s worldwide digital, sales, distribution, revenue management and customer engagement efforts.
Workday has begun positioning itself as a full-fledged ERP provider whose modern technology and customer-centric approach will begin winning new customers.
Amazon – AWS cloud-computing unit will post exceptionally strong numbers, and those numbers will fail to match those of Microsoft’s in The Cloud.
Microsoft, IBM & SAP posted a combined $13 billion in calendar-Q2 cloud revenue, led by Microsoft’s commercial-cloud growth rate of 53% to $6.9 billion.
Microsoft has a good chance of becoming the first tech vendor to reach $7 billion in quarterly cloud revenue, releases earnings on July 19.
As competition among top cloud vendors intensifies, cloud customer success is rapidly emerging as strategic differentiator more important than snazzy tech.
Just a handful of the world’s leading cloud vendors are on pace to generate $100 billion in combined enterprise-cloud revenue this calendar year.
Satya Nadella’s cloud business, Microsoft, is growing at a stunning 58%–and the enterprise cloud hasn’t even begun to reach the fat part of the market.
I wonder if Amazon cloud chief Andy Jassy knows—& takes any comfort from—the history of Bum Phillips? It’s Amazon’s last chance to catch #1 Microsoft in Q1?
Three largest enterprise-cloud providers—Microsoft, Amazon and IBM—all closing in on $20 billion in trailing-12-month revenue. What cloud powerhouse wins?
Oracle founder Larry Ellison said Oracle will beat Amazon in the cloud by releasing a sweeping set of “self-driving”, cloud solutions.
Some of Microsoft’s largest customers are moving their production SAP workloads as well as other mission-critical applications to the Azure Cloud.
Top executives at Microsoft, SAP and Oracle recently pledged to make customer success, not satisfaction or loyalty, their biggest priority in 2018.
SAP is predicting its cloud revenue will overtake its license revenue this year due to having “the most complete cloud in the enterprise,” CEO McDermott.