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In the wake of Oracle’s better-than-expected Q3 results, it can be illuminating to see the world—at least temporarily—through the eyes of Larry Ellison.
As Ellison fuses his red-hot self-driving database with his tiny cloud-infrastructure business, Oracle Autonomous Database surges to 150% revenue growth.
Its fast-growing Financials biz and enhanced product lineup have made Workday a very serious competitor vs. traditional heavyweights Oracle and SAP.
During the recent Workday Q4 earnings call, while citing his company’s excellent results, CEO Aneel Bhusri called out both SAP and Oracle failures.
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff: “With our recent acquisition of Tableau, we’re turning Customer 360 data into actionable insights… available to every user.”
The scary thing about Salesforce and its record-busting fiscal Q4 is that its growth rate is accelerating as it nears a $20 billion annualized run rate.
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff announced his company’s record Q4 and fiscal-2020 earnings results, along with the departure of former co-CEO Keith Block.
As Workday prepares to release quarterly and 12-month financial results later today, let’s consider its tagline: “Built for the Future.”
Continuing its rapid ascent under CEO Thomas Kurian, Google Cloud as jumped two spots to #4 on the Cloud Wars Top 10. Here are the 3 main reasons.
The Microsoft Teams marketing blitz matters, because Teams and Office 365 Commercial have become high-volume on-ramps for Azure and other cloud services.
Emphasizing the “differentiated” offerings from Google Cloud, CEO Thomas Kurian said last week that his #1 priority is to create a new AI-powered solutions.
Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian said to CNBC this week that his company’s 53% jump in revenue means it’s growing faster than Microsoft and Amazon’s AWS.
Google Cloud reported a Q4 53% growth rate and a $10.4 billion annualized run rate, but the only way it can catch Amazon is through aggressive M&A.
TechCrunch recently stated that “Microsoft is miles behind [ AWS ].” But official financial documents show that Microsoft’s cloud biz is much larger.
The most-disruptive initiative at high-flying ServiceNow is how new CEO Bill McDermott is redefining and redirecting the enterprise software business.
For Microsoft, another blowout quarter brings its total enterprise-cloud revenue for calendar 2019 to $44.7 billion. I expect Amazon’s to be $34.8 billion.
On yesterday’s Q4 earnings call, SAP said Qualtrics & experience management are its growth engines for the future, but that it won’t abandon its past.
Larry Ellison recently claimed that he convinced a huge SAP customer to move to Oracle Cloud ERP. SAP co-CEO Christian Klein is denying any such defection.
IBM saw its Q4 cloud revenue jump 23%. But CEO Ginni Rometty cannot afford another post-Q4 dropoff. I’ve brainstormed 5 ways that IBM can maintain its pace.



















