Microsoft has put together an extraordinary list of partnerships with most of the world’s leading retailers by helping them elevate customer experiences.
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A few thoughts on why Microsoft, Amazon, Salesforce, and Google top the Cloud Wars list of the world’s largest and most-influential cloud providers.
On the Cloud Wars Live podcast, SAS EVP, COO and CTO Oliver Schabenberger joins me to discuss his company’s powerful partnership with Microsoft.
In this time of rampant disruption, change, and digital-everything, Bill McDermott and ServiceNow are promising to give businesses the gift of speed.
“For Microsoft, COVID-19 was personal on many levels.” – Microsoft Chief Medical Officer Dr. David Rhew, who’s helping to drive innovation amid crisis
40-year-old Christian Klein gave a confident performance on the SAP Q2 earnings call of which a CEO of any age would be proud.
Microsoft and the Azure Cloud are playing fundamental roles in the worldwide AI- and data-driven transformation of the automotive industry.
In his concluding remarks to the Google Cloud Next ’20 keynote presentation, CEO Thomas Kurian struck an empathetic tone, exemplifying his leadership style.
On the Cloud Wars Live podcast, Bonnie Tinder explains why she’s a fan of rapid deployment — but only when it’s done under the right circumstances.
CEO Christian Klein specifically called out SAP’s month-old Industry Cloud suite of applications as a “growth driver” in SAP’s preliminary Q2 report.
The near-impossible-to-impress analyst Lydia Leong, who wields considerable influence among biz customers, last week offered praise for Oracle Cloud.
First in a 10-part series on the biggest challenge facing each of the Cloud Wars Top 10: Microsoft has forged lots of partnerships. Can it keep them?
Through Workday Launch, it expects to shorten go-live time for HCM apps to 6 months or less and reduce expenses by up to 35%. Your move, Oracle.
Amazon’s new enterprise-cloud business unit is called Aerospace and Satellite Solutions, building on the AWS Ground Station capabilities announced in 2019.
While CEO Christian Klein insists that SAP owns all of its customer relationships, I see signs that its partnership with Google Cloud is deepening.
I expect that when Microsoft releases fiscal-Q4 earnings next month, it will total enterprise-cloud revenue for fiscal 2020 above $50 billion.
Stream the first episode of “Tinder on Customers,” a new Cloud Wars Live podcast series with Raven Insights founder and customer expert Bonnie Tinder.
Building on an alliance launched half a century ago, IBM and SAP are calling their new initiative “the evolution partnership.”
Larry Ellison & Oracle CEO Safra Catz also used yesterday’s fiscal-Q4 earnings call to highlight HCM momentum, Autonomous Database revenue growth, and more.
While its alliance with SAS gives Microsoft a vast amount of additional firepower, I’d love to see a deal with Amazon / AWS, for the benefit of customers.