Welcome
to a special BriefingsDirect
podcast, an interview with Bill Veghte,
Executive Vice President of the HP
Software & Solutions group, conducted by Dana Gardner, Principal
Analyst at Interarbor
Solutions.
The one-on-one
discussion comes to you from the HP Software
Universe 2010 Conference in Washington D.C., held last week, to explore some major
enterprise software and solutions trends and innovations making
news across HP’s ecosystem of customers, partners, and
developers.
Here are some excerpts:
Veghte: I spend a
lot of time out there with CIOs and IT professionals, and we're at
two remarkable inflection points in our industry.
The first is
in terms of how businesses are delivering IT, and that's on three
dimensions. The first
is virtualization.
There's a lot of not only conversation, but moving workloads of
application services to a virtualized environment. Look at the numbers.
People say that over 25 percent of x86 server workloads are now
virtualized, and that number looks like it's going to accelerate
over the next couple of years.
Correspondingly, there's a
heck of a
lot of conversation around cloud. People
wrap a lot up in that word, but many of the customers tell me they think
of it as just another way of delivering experiences to their
end-customers. And, in cloud there's platform, applications, and private
versus public, but it's another
choice point for CIOs and IT folks.
The final piece in
terms of IT delivery is that there are a heck of a lot
of mobile devices, over a billion mobile devices, accessing the
Internet. With the advent of smartphones, a very rich viewing and
consuming medium, people expect to have that information.
Those
things are incredible tools and opportunities, whether you characterize
it in a balance sheet, and moving from capital expenditure to
operating expense, or whether you characterize it in anytime/anywhere
information on your mobile device. But with that, it does bring more
choice points and more complexity.
The other inflection point that I'd highlight, Dana, is
the breadth
and depth of data that’s being generated.
You and I both know that digital information is doubling globally
every 12 to 18 months. In the midst of all the digital photos or
whatever, sometimes people lose track of the fact that 85 percent of
that data resides in businesses. And the fastest growing part of that
is in
unstructured data.
Now, the most precious resource is your
ability to take that data and translate
it into actionable information. The companies and businesses that
are able to do that have a real competitive advantage.
You can
put that in the context of a specific business operation. If you're a
pharmaceutical, how quickly can you bring a drug to market? You can
characterize that in a financial services organization. Do you have
better, quicker data and market movements?
You can characterize
it in IT. There's an
enormous amount of IT information and data, but how do I parse it
out to the things that are going to represent a service desk ticket,
and can I automate that so I am not putting people in the middle?
When
I think about it in a historic context, I'd highlight a couple of
things. One is that we're going through the biggest change in IT
delivery since client-server,
because of the three delivery vehicle changes that I highlighted.
That, in turn, is going to generate a very significant refresh in
applications and services.
You don't have the time deadline in the same
way that we did with Y2K,
but the CIOs and IT and apps folks that I know, as the economy is
recovering, are looking at their application and service portfolios and
saying, "How am I going to refresh this to take
advantage of these new and different delivery vehicles?"
...
As I looked across the marketplace and at this inflection point, there
are a couple of things that attracted me to HP. One, I think HP is
uniquely positioned in the marketplace, because it has a great
portfolio as a company, across not only services, but also hardware and
software.
On the software side, there is a remarkable
portfolio of assets within HP, across
application development and quality to the operations
side. Yet, given the complexity that I just characterized,
there's a real opportunity to bring more of a portfolio approach to
delivering those solutions to customers.
The final piece that I would highlight is that I
worked for many years with HP as a partner. Whether it be Todd Bradley,
who I worked with around the Windows business, or Mark [Hurd],
as the executive sponsor for the HP Partnership, when I was on the
Microsoft side, they're a great group of people doing some remarkable
things.
If you look at what that executive leadership team has
done over the last couple of years with and for HP customers, it’s
exciting to think what we can do over the next five or six years.
...
It's been a great
Software Universe for us. Compared with years past, there is a
degree of energy and optimism in customers that's very invigorating.
I've been in back-to-back meetings. You walk in, and they are excited
about the innovations that we're bringing into market.
We've had
a variety of very exciting announcements, such as Business
Service Management 9.0. Some of the
announcements were around the ability to automate how you take a
production environment and apply it into a text script.
I think that they're
constructively challenging us to make sure that we have a set of tools
that are effectively scaling into the most complex operating
environments in IT in the world.
The areas that customers
are highlighting are: "You've got a great portfolio. You're heading in
the right direction. Keep that pedal down. Take advantage of the fact
that you've got not only fantastic best-of-breed capabilities in
individual areas, but that you've got this breadth of offerings. I'm
going to evaluate you against my entire solution set."
It
starts with the strategy. In fact, there was a great customer meeting
this morning. The customer said, "Look, I use you in a bunch of
different ways, and I think you've got a great product. Now, what I
need you to do is step up and make sure that from strategy, to
application, to operation you're delivering that cohesion for me. I
see good steps, but I want to see you keep doing it."
I think
that they're constructively challenging us to make sure that we have a
set of tools that are effectively scaling into the most complex
operating environments in IT in the world, and making sure that, as
the additional complexity in delivery vehicles that I just highlighted
come online, that we continue to make sure that we are scaling
effectively to deliver for the customers.
For
example, at Software Universe 2010, in the Service
Manager case we announced, not only will we be providing a near
real-time dynamic view of IT, but we are doing it across virtualized
and cloud implementations. I just came from the session, where we were
demoing to 3,500 people the ability to display that information on a
smartphone across a variety of platforms—from BlackBerry to iPhone
to a Sprint device.
... Think about the fact that the role of IT
continues to evolve. First, as an IT organization, I have more
choices in terms of how I am delivering my application service for and
with business. I increasingly become a service broker, because I'm looking across my
applications and services and deciding with the business what’s the
most cost effective and best way of delivering those experiences for
the businesses.
Second is, and we've talked about this as an
industry for a long time, the continuing blending of business and IT. A
customer from a Fortune 5 company was in a meeting with me earlier
this week. He's been in the industry for 25 years, a very sharp guy,
and in a deep partnership with HP.
He said that this year there
are more people from business operations coming to Software Universe
than there are from IT operations. He said, the reality is that
whether you talk about it in the context of PPM
or application and service requirements, those two functions are
intermingling. Given the software footprint and portfolio we have, it’s
a wonderful opportunity, but that continues to accelerate.
The
final piece that I would highlight is not a change, but a continuity.
Even as IT has a broader set of choices, and the relationship with
the businesses continue to intertwine more and more, they're not off
the hook, when it comes to security
or compliance or the availability and performance of the
solutions that they are responsible for supporting and delivering for
the business. So, it’s important to factor that even as we look ahead.
This has been illustrated time and
time again. The most successful businesses have figured out how to
constructively apply IT to run a business.
IT tools are at such a maturity and the
experiences of IT with the customer experience are so intermingled.
The CIO at Delta
Air Lines was talking
yesterday about her utilization of HP technologies and some of
the remarkable projects that she's been through. You listen to that
talk and you realize that the reservation system, the way I check in,
and my
experience with Delta Air Lines is commingled with what you and I
would characterize as the IT experience.
It was a remarkable
story about that interrelationship with the business, as they were not
only dealing with the broad adversity of the business climate, but
also were trying
to merge with Northwest Airlines.
... IT means many
different things to many people. The thing I would highlight is that
IT has the ability to continue to outsource
a variety of baseline capabilities. With that outsourcing
capability, as an industry, IT providers, are going to be able to
provide more and more. And that gives IT the ability to move up the
stack in terms of higher value-add applications and services, and then
the business runs through and with IT.
... The intersection
between [business and IT]—and the resulting customer experience—continues to accelerate. We look forward, as part of HP Software &
Solutions, to playing a great role in helping customers deliver those
solutions and those experiences.
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