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Earnings call: ServiceNow targets becoming top enterprise software firm by 2030

EditorNatashya Angelica
Published 13/09/2024, 01:00 am
© Reuters.
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ServiceNow (NYSE: NYSE:NOW), during its recent earnings call, outlined an ambitious goal to become the most valuable enterprise software company by 2030, with CEO William McDermott highlighting the company's innovation and culture as key drivers.


McDermott emphasized the success of the Xanadu release and the introduction of RaptorDB, along with ServiceNow's commitment to no layoffs during economic downturns. The company's focus on enhancing productivity through AI, without reducing headcount, was also discussed.


ServiceNow's strong performance in customer service management, with revenues surpassing $1 billion, and its dominance in the financial services sector, serving all top 24 global banks, were notable achievements. The call underscored the potential of AI to impact the economy positively and ServiceNow's role in driving digital transformation across industries.


Key Takeaways


  • ServiceNow aims to be the most valuable enterprise software company by 2030, excluding hyperscalers.
  • The Xanadu release incorporated significant innovations, and RaptorDB was introduced as the fastest database for analytic queries.
  • ServiceNow's customer service management has generated over $1 billion in revenue, with the company serving all top 24 global banks.
  • The company is investing in AI to enhance productivity and operational efficiency without laying off employees.
  • AI is expected to have an $11 trillion impact on the economy, with ServiceNow at the forefront of this transformation.


Company Outlook


  • ServiceNow's CEO projects the company's growth to be driven by increasing enterprise investment in AI, with a market expected to reach $3 trillion by 2027.
  • The company is focusing on developing domain-specific large language models in collaboration with NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Hugging Face.
  • ServiceNow's Creator Now platform has surpassed $1 billion, enabling developers to build applications that align with business processes.


Bearish Highlights


  • There were no specific bearish highlights discussed during the earnings call.


Bullish Highlights


  • ServiceNow has a strong position in financial services, now serving all top 24 global banks.
  • The company's customer service management has surpassed $1 billion in revenue.
  • ServiceNow highlighted its capability to manage queries across 1.3 billion devices with sub-second speed.


Misses


  • The earnings call did not disclose any specific misses or underperformance.


Q&A Highlights


  • McDermott addressed AI's impact on employment, suggesting technology enhances productivity and value generation by existing employees.
  • He emphasized that despite fears of AI leading to unemployment, there remains a high demand for tech jobs.
  • The partnership with Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) was discussed, highlighting the integration of Now Assist with Office Copilot for seamless procurement and automation.


ServiceNow, under the leadership of CEO William McDermott, is charting a course to dominate the enterprise software space by the end of the next decade. The company's recent innovations and strategic partnerships are setting the stage for significant growth and transformation in the industry. With a focus on AI and a commitment to maintaining a robust workforce, ServiceNow is positioning itself as a leader in the digital transformation era.


InvestingPro Insights


ServiceNow's ambitious growth targets are supported by its strong financial performance and market position. The company's impressive gross profit margin of 79.07% for the last twelve months as of Q2 2024 underscores its operational efficiency and ability to generate substantial earnings from its revenues. This is a testament to the company's innovation and culture, as highlighted by CEO William McDermott.


The company's valuation metrics, however, indicate a premium market perception. With a P/E ratio of 157.33 and a Price / Book multiple of 20.85, ServiceNow is trading at a high earnings multiple and a high valuation relative to its book value. This reflects investor confidence in the company's future growth prospects, aligning with the CEO's vision for ServiceNow to become the most valuable enterprise software company by 2030.


InvestingPro Tips suggest that ServiceNow is a prominent player in the Software industry and that its cash flows can sufficiently cover interest payments, showcasing a healthy financial structure. Moreover, the company is operating with a moderate level of debt, which may provide flexibility for continued investment in AI and other innovations.


InvestingPro also lists 15 additional tips for ServiceNow, providing a comprehensive analysis for investors looking to delve deeper into the company's financial health and market potential.


Investors may want to keep an eye on the company's next earnings date on October 23, 2024, to monitor ServiceNow's ongoing performance and strategic initiatives in the dynamic enterprise software market.



Full transcript - Servicenow Inc (NOW) Q1 2023:


Kasthuri Rangan: All right. All I ask is, are we ready for GenAI to move to the application layer in the bottom of the NASDAQ, I don't know, 2002, September, October, I forget. NASDAQ thousand stocks that did 8x multiples, not on revenue and earnings. The world feels like it's coming to a crashing end, and I'm depressed. Will I have a job? Will I be -- will software be around? I meet this gentleman, McDermott. 30-minute meeting, I come out feeling great about the company that you just joined, feeling great about the industry, feeling great about my job. I come back energized. Wow. And it's been, what, 22 years?


William McDermott: That's right.


Kasthuri Rangan: You've had a profound influence on the industry. Thank you for everything that you've done for software. Thank you, SaaS, and the things that you're going to be doing in the future. And thanks, you've been a big source of personal inspiration. Thank you so much.


William McDermott: Thank you so much. I appreciate you, brother. Thank you.


Kasthuri Rangan: Thank you.


William McDermott: Thank you. That's sweet It's really sweet. Thank you so much.


Kasthuri Rangan: You got to him credit.


Q - Kasthuri Rangan: Now with that [indiscernible], people ask me, why is Bill always bullish? And what are you always bullish?


William McDermott: Optimism is the only free [indiscernible].


Kasthuri Rangan: Care to explain more?


William McDermott: I'm the guy that wrote the book, "When his dream." And in the opening quotes, by Robert Kennedy, and he said, "Some men's seeing as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say, why not?" And that's who I am. And when I think about my life's journey, I just keep getting lucky by working for great brands that have unlimited potential. And if you lead people with innovation, customer-centricity and absolute unbreakable will and the passion to win every single day, it's amazing what can be accomplished when enough people care. And that's pretty much the story.


Kasthuri Rangan: You taught to me to dream big.


William McDermott: That's right.


Kasthuri Rangan: And you asked me -- I will not mention the name of the stock, but 2007, June 29, you said, "What stock should I buy?" And like I was blown away by the trust you had me. I mentioned the name of a company that had a fruit thing in -- they were releasing the first smartphone or something. And you said, I bought it. I said, "God, he did it. He did it." Now I got to take everything that I recommend seriously. So tell us where do you want ServiceNow to be in 5 years? What are your long-term aspirations for the company?


William McDermott: I always focus, especially in technology, on the innovation of a company. Yesterday, as you know, we had an unbelievable Xanadu release 350 million net new innovations built into our gen AI release, representing 5 million hours of engineering excellence into that one release. So innovation is at the center of everything. If there's no inhibition, there is no hope in tech. We also focus on the culture. I think that it's easy to talk about culture when things are going great. When things aren't going great is when cultures are built. And as you know, a few years ago, things were pretty questionable out there, and companies were laying people off like it was a sport. And we took a very distinct position on that and said, "We will not lay off anybody at ServiceNow." And while there might be some uncertainty in the horizon, once we get cleared, we're going to need all these great people because we only hired 10s and maybe 9s, but definitely not 8s and 7s. So we're going to need them all. And I think really making ServiceNow the best-run company in the information technology industry, where we can say with pride, we take the innovation, we take the culture and we take the way we lead the company, no matter what your position is so seriously because we're all working for the customer and their customers and they're going to need us now more than ever. Every day, they need us now more than ever. And we just started to bring that sense of urgency, and we will what we want. And we want to be the best, and we will it every day, and that's what I want. I want ServiceNow to be the best-run business in the information technology industry. And from a shareholder perspective, I do have goals. And by 2030, for sure, I see ServiceNow, with the exception of the hyperscalers, as the most valuable enterprise software company in the world.


Kasthuri Rangan: That's a bold statement.


William McDermott: That's what I believe is going to happen, and I don't have a doubt in my mind about it.


Kasthuri Rangan: You welcome back to the intervening years of this conference, and we're going to see 2029 when you're back. You guys [indiscernible], okay. I'll remember this.


William McDermott: Okay.


Kasthuri Rangan: Thank you. Yes. Great. Bill, you talk to customers all the time. What is -- what your feel for the pulse of what they're thinking about? It's already all of this year? What are they thinking about calendar '25, budget expectations, priority?


William McDermott: I think they always need to grow, and that somehow seems to get lost. Most people keep talking about expenses and productivity, but in the end, they both have to run a tight shift and keep it lean and productive, but they also have to grow. And I always try to think about what we are doing as creating that single platform, that single pane of glass that resides above 55 years of complexity and a total mess. When you think about the enterprise and the average person having to go in and out of 17 different applications, it's no wonder they want to work from home. Who wants to go to that enterprise? So with ServiceNow, they go into one platform. And all that complexity disappears, and their work becomes enjoyable, becomes a pleasure. Their creative uses can flow. They can get stuff done. So I really truly believe this is a moment in time where we have to help the companies we serve be more productive. Don't waste 1/3 of the workers' time doing silly season stuff. Get that productivity. Get that revenue per employee metric going north, and make sure that you're not only making the workers stay more pleasurable, but you're getting much more output per worker and you can prove It. Now once you free that up in gen AI and the #1 use case for gen AI is process automation, then you also free yourself up to start thinking big and setting audacious goals on how you're going to grow your company, how you're going to unleash your company in new channels, in new ways, how you're going to apply the logic of process automation and data and really giving every employee and every customer an unbelievable experience on an end-to-end basis. So we came to the market with a clear vision to be the AI platform for business transformation. And that's not a department thing, that's an enterprise thing. That's in every industry that serves every persona and that crosses every geography in the global economy. That's what we're doing. And you can grow and you can be efficient and you can drive absolutely great results for your shareholders. That's what we owe every customer.


Kasthuri Rangan: That's great. When you look at what's been going on with generative AI, it's largely Jensen Huang was earlier today up on stage here. He did mention your company. I don't think he mentioned any other stuff. He talked about employee workflows, customer workflows being built on ServiceNow. So that's infrastructure. A lot of the money has gone to infrastructure. When do you think GenAI moves to the application layer?


William McDermott: Well, first, I want to knowledge, a great leader, visionary like Jensen. When I first came into ServiceNow, believe it or not, it's over 5 years now, the first thing we did, which wasn't even picked up by anybody because we've done this organically, we're the only enterprise software company in the world that crossed $10 billion in ACV, and we didn't have to buy a dimer revenue to do it. Didn't lay anybody off and built our own pathway to the top by innovating great product after product after product. Now when I first came in, we picked up a company called Element AI in Montreal, Canada because we had an immediate vision for AI. And the Touring award-winning [indiscernible] had great researchers and great engineers, but no go-to market. A lot of people forget the go-to market. It's not a good idea to forget that. And by putting it together with ServiceNow, we were able to recode Element AI into the ServiceNow platform, and we've actually been building large language models with Jensen and his great NVIDIA company for that entire time. So our paint isn't wet. We're not a pretender. We actually have real product, and that's what Jensen reacted to and why he might have mentioned us on stage. He calls us the operating system for the enterprise. And he, along with me, believes that this platform that ServiceNow has can manifest itself in helping companies manage their processes at a record clip in terms of speed. We just announced RaptorDB. We're in the database business, by the way. We now have a data workflow platform that we think is not only state-of-the-art, but we already know it's the fastest database in the world and it can do analytic queries faster and better than any database in the world. And we know that as the workflow automates the process, we now have the ability to look at the data from any data source, whether it's a system of record or it's a hyperscaler or it's a lake, we can grab the data as part of the transaction in the workflow. And you can have a complete knowledge graph now of your enterprise, whether it's people, process, data or device on one platform with one clear pane of glass. And you can go into an integration hub and you can see all the systems that you have in the enterprise, all the devices you have in the enterprise. In fact, yesterday, we ran one little query with 1.3 billion different devices in one of the largest companies in the world, sub-second speed. And we studied that, made some assessment on that and can help customers navigate that kind of a complex query instantaneously. And every persona now can simply have a graph and a dashboard, activated in real time on their device or on their desktop. No problem. We do it, and only ServiceNow does it. So this differentiation of innovation is what it's all about. Now as it relates to NVIDIA and hugging face and building things that have never been built before, we decided to go for domain-specific LLMs. And this is also multimodal as you know. But the idea there was to build our own, to literally automate the way IT and the whole estate around IT is run to completely reinvent the employee experience. Who cares about payroll. It's done. But how do I recruit higher onboard train, certify, give you your learning journey, so you're the best in the world at what you do, give you all the services so you can see whatever you need to see, your comp plan, what's happening with my long-term retirement procedures? "Hey, how am I doing on the health care? I have to take a leave, I have a maternity issue." Whatever it is, we do it for you. And you have a great experience still on the mobile. And by the way, there's no call in the 800 number, you have it all. And then when you offboard, we handle that, too. A lot of people have employees that have left their company years ago still on their data. That's a beauty. And then there's the customer and how you service the customer. And a lot of people don't know this, but when you think about customer service management, we blew past 1 billion. And when you think about field service, customer service, you think about the integration of ServiceNow Now Assist with Copilot from Microsoft. And just picture yourself, even Teams, and you want to activate an action in ServiceNow. It's seamless. You don't have to jump in and out of some app or UI, it's already done at a deep engineering level. And so you say, "Well, how is that an advantage in customer service management?" Well, if I happen to be in ServiceNow customer service management and I want to completely compose a presentation and perhaps it's a PowerPoint on the slide to make a sale to Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), I can do that instantaneously. I don't have to go into a separate app. It's all engineered together.


Kasthuri Rangan: So if you want to make a sale to Gold Sachs, our CEO is actually here.


William McDermott: I would very much like that. Thank you, Goldman Sachs. You're actually an excellent customer. As is, 24 out of the top 24 banks in the world. We were 23 out of 24 coming into this year. We handled that situation in the first quarter. We're now 24 out of 24. We love financial services. In fact, our new Gen AI release yesterday, financial services, retail, telco, media, technology, public sector, all of these industries now are getting Gen AI use cases out of the box with the best platform in the world and it's real product. And the other thing we should talk about is creator. A lot of people don't know this, but Creator Now blew past 1 billion last year. And so you say, "Wow, you mean you actually have developers now creating innovation and applications on the fly?" Yes. But the best part is with complex workflows and governance procedures, and the development of new applicants, you're doing it on that same platform. So now your CEO knows when you're an engineer that anything you're building is in concert with the business processes and the way the workflow should be automated. And it's not a sidecar project, like the thousands and thousands points of dim light point solutions that are killing companies today, costing them all kinds of money, but dragging their productivity through the ground. All that goes away with ServiceNow. So the word is getting out there. And as the word gets out there, the company just continues to prosper. And that's the most important thing, getting the word out there.


Kasthuri Rangan: Bill, what's your vision for Now Assist? In terms of net new ACV, there was a big increase in second quarter. Where do you see this going?


William McDermott: Well, quarter-over-quarter, sequentially, we look at this doubling, and it has been doubling and it's going to continue to double because we have a real product. And I think the idea of Now Assist and the GenAI revolution, just think about it, $3 trillion will be spent on AI by enterprises through 2027. 36% of that will be GenAI in the space that we're participating in. So we're fighting for a $1-plus trillion price. So to your point, when do we move past hardware and GPU stacks and get into the app layer or the platform layer? It's now. It has started with ServiceNow. And I think ServiceNow, from what I can tell, you have great companies like Microsoft and NVIDIA that have prospered mightily because of...


Kasthuri Rangan: The CTO of Microsoft was sitting here yesterday.


William McDermott: Yes. And look, I think that we have built a framework partnership with Microsoft that's unbreakable. We have great partnerships with all the hyperscalers, though, it should be mentioned. I do need to do that because we work with AWS. We also have a partnership now with Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Cloud. And it's important to give the customer choice. And so as you're talking about GenAI, just remember, our domain-specific models, they're not only products, but they run very inexpensively. Customers love that. So just think about 175 GPU versus 1 GPU in terms of the cost to run a domain-specific LLM versus a big model. Think about 0 latency, rocket fast, it's your data and think about total security. Because, again, you're not going on any wild adventures. We're working within the framework of corporation. Customers love that. So that's where it's at now. But there's lots of different innovation. Met is doing a great job. Microsoft is doing a great job. Google is doing a great job, and we integrate seamlessly with all those models. In fact, lots of innovation is going to take place where companies will build their own, and they can bring their own LLM and integrate that into ServiceNow. So this is infinite choice, no limitations, complete open architecture and yet at the same time, very disciplined workflow automation and security across the whole enterprise. Even on security, security companies out there are very good. But some might be good in the cloud, some might be good at a firewall, others might be good at endpoint. We integrate with all of them. And then you can have a complete visibility on how they're all doing at different pieces and parts of the company in real time. So I think this idea of a controlled tower for digital transformation within every company is our calling card, and it's a good one because I don't compete with anybody. I just do something that none of them do.


Kasthuri Rangan: Like Stephen Curry?


William McDermott: That's it.


Kasthuri Rangan: I get pushed back from investors. And hey, the gen AI thing, is it really a business use case? How are customers getting value out of it? I know you've deployed it internally. Can you drill into one or two customers that have deployed GenAI with ServiceNow have gotten meaningful savings that are impacting their bottom line?


William McDermott: There's so many. Teleperformance would be an example. USI would be an example, and it's instantaneous ROI, by the way. So this isn't like a hard business case. Let's get the consulting team over there for a month and prove it. This is like -- it's a no-brainer. You're deflecting 90% of the cases that normally had to be managed by agents. So okay, now it's self-service. Just think about that savings. When the case does need to be managed, just think about resolving it in seconds instead of 45 minutes, and then times that by the number of cases. Think about a BT. Think about a London Stock Exchange. Think about creating experiences for the customer that are so uncommonly good that they're undeniable. So I believe that the biggest cases right now would be in managing a case, deflecting a case, closing out a case and making sure that it's an employee experience or customer experience, the time to resolution is so undeniably good that you don't need a computer to understand the business case. You could do it on the back of a napkin. And that's the kind of cases we're going into the market with, and that's why customers absolutely love it. And again, you're not doubling sequentially because you don't have product. That's the key. You've got to have the product.


Kasthuri Rangan: Some would say it's build salesmanship, but there's got to be excellent product?


William McDermott: There's got to be more than just bill, I mean, because it's a big global economy out there. And if you're the Australia government or you're the Italian government or you're the Saudi Arabian government and the Kingdom and you're buying into ServiceNow, I can't be in all those 3 places at the same time. And if you're looking at the top 2,000 companies in the world, we're getting close to having 90% of them doing something with ServiceNow. And what we think has really, really added a lot of value is now where the CEO's platform. And I think we earned our stripes with the CIO because of the outstanding platform and the notoriety it had in IT, which then evolved into the employee experience, obviously, into the customer experience and to the developer community. But think about the CEOs out there. If you believe -- and you should ask them, the CEOs out there have had it with company spending all kinds of money on IT, all kinds of money on applications. And in the end, they look around the boardroom and they say, "Why is it that this department can't talk to this department? Why is it that I can have a single threaded end-to-end process in this company that takes my innovation from the foxhole and can move it?" Okay -- excuse me, from the factory and move it to the foxhole in instantaneous time. Why can't we do that? Well, this system doesn't talk to that system. That data is caught in that volt, then we can't get to it. And it goes on and on and on. And that's not only in the private sector. Obviously, that's in the public sector, which explains why our federal, state and local business, particularly in the United States, blew way past 1 billion because they love us, and it works. And the projects are quick to implement, fast to return value on invested capital. And everybody that does business with us is referenceable and successful. And especially in public sector, they don't want to take chances with these huge programs that used to cost billions and billions. And now instead, they can do it for millions and install it, get it referenceable and make it a showcase in weeks, sometimes months or not years.


Kasthuri Rangan: Bill, you talked about the savings from call deflection and whatnot. As you talk to your customers, getting these savings from generative AI, are they saying, "Okay, I don't need to hire as many people because this thing is saving me money." Or are they saying, "I don't want to plant the other thing." but how are they looking at it? Are they looking to cut costs, cut down employment? And you have broader touch therefore, what does this mean for the employment market in customer support and sales and marketing? Is AI going to take away our jobs?


William McDermott: I'm going to give you two ways of looking at it. So first, let's talk about the CEO. There's this CEO, a really great conversation. He has done roll-ups and dominated in the insurance industry. I asked him the same question. Dominated. Incredible. And he told me, that he doesn't want his people to have a great experience, but he wants to do so much more with less. Meaning in the event the revenue doesn't go into a hockey stick, he's got to get the productivity out of the headcount that he already has. And he needs technology to bring that value out of each and every employee that he has in the company. So there's definitely a focus on the productivity. On the other hand, he is going to the M&A card and growing very fast because of the M&A, and he's acutely aware of the fact that the value of this company is based on how fast it grows. So he wants to use technology to move the top line. It's not about reducing headcount, it's about leveraging the headcount you already have. In tech, there's many more jobs available than people to fill them. Nobody ever talks about that. Millions of jobs available that aren't getting filled. Yes. And so it's a renaissance of technology that's going on in the world because every company needs to be a tech company. In fact, I think every company needs to be a software company, which is why I think the ServiceNow platform needs to be a standard in every company in the world. The other thing about what people don't know, they're genuinely afraid of. So if you think about Time Magazine in 1966, they ran a big story that computers were going to take away 90% of the jobs in the global economy. That the only people that would actually be employed were high-level managers, and the governments would have to subsidize the other 90%. Jobs would be gone and society would have to carry him because computers were going to do everything. Now I think there's like hundreds of millions of jobs that have been created on tech since then, and obviously, that never came to fruition. I believe, and I sincerely believe this that AI is the well spring of opportunity in the global economy. There are researchers that independently have said it will have an $11 trillion impact on the economy in the next handful of years. I believe that maybe true. Maybe it's 10, maybe it's 9, maybe it's 8, but it's going to be big. And the reason for that is there is so much inefficiency. There is so much waste. There is so much human potential that can be activated by taking the sole crushing work away from people and unleashing them to do things that really matter that can help companies grow and prosper. And that has never been factored into the equation as people think about technology on a day-to-day basis, that's why we're working so hard to tell them the story.


Kasthuri Rangan: That's great. Powerful. Tell us about your partnership with Microsoft, the Now Assist working with Office Copilot? And also, if you can, how is the Microsoft Copilot thing going for ServiceNow internally?


William McDermott: Yes. We have a great partnership with Microsoft, as I mentioned earlier. If you think about what I said, Copilot and Now Assist are 2 excellent, excellent Gen AI use cases for customers to consider, but they do very different things. And if you think about knowledge work and Office 365 and Teams and Dynamics, by the way, we use Dynamics at ServiceNow. These are all very important things, but they don't do what we do. So let me just give you an example. If you're in Teams and you're doing your day-to-day job. And let's just say, for example, you happen to be in the HR or the technology department and you need to order some new gear for a home office or get a computer delivered to your office because the one that you're using is broken, Microsoft can do a lot of things, but they can't do that. So Now Assist will be assisting you in getting you the form factor configuration that management signed off on, the price that you agreed to in your procurement schedule, and it will go grab what you need, in the form that you needed, at the price you bargained for and deliver it to the address you wanted, and it will be done automatically, instantaneously. And the thing that's going to really be interesting, so you could see how that's going to work for you. But then it'd be really interesting, are these AI agents? Hang with me on this. We see an enormous world of AI agents. Now the thing that's going to happen in the enterprise with AI agents is they are going to work 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. We don't have to get them on any kind of health care plan. We don't really worry about them. We're just going to grind and grind and grind, and they're going to do a lot of the hard stuff. But they're going to be working with people, not just for people, and they're going to be able to think, not just act. They're going to be pretty smart, maybe even as smart, if not smarter than humans. Certainly, in certain ways they will. And this is happening now. You saw the Xanadu release. If you haven't, we got AI agents. Now this is our competitive advantage. Others will have them too, but they will have them in their main. They'll be very specialized and they'll do specialized things, which is fine. Let it happen. But what platform on an [indiscernible] is going to corral all these agents that are running around? Where you have some real [indiscernible] with your strategy on an end-to-end basis, where the finance agents work well with sales agents who understand the engineering agents. And now you've got an organization that's under control, and you have processes that are integrated and the agents are plus up and they're secure. What happens if the agents aren't governed? And this isn't a platform structure around them. You might optimize for one department, but you're not going to optimize the entity, the corporation. And that's what's happened for the last 55 years. Everybody gets to do their own thing, they self-optimize for their department, and the CEO sits back and wonders why I can execute a clear vision across the enterprise on an end-to-end basis with immediacy. Well, everything is trapped in a silo. We took down the walls. And now you can have your agents. We're not competing with other people's agents. That's good, but we'll integrate those agents into workflow automation across the enterprise in a coherent way, so you run a great company. That's going to be the big frontier.


Kasthuri Rangan: Next year, when you come back, everybody will have an agent.


William McDermott: Yes.


Kasthuri Rangan: You can actually ask the agent to take notes and you can actually listen and enjoy the conversation. So on that note, Bill, it's great to have you with us.


William McDermott: Thank you.


Kasthuri Rangan: We hope you come back again next year.


William McDermott: Love to Kash.


Kasthuri Rangan: And the year after, and the year after.


William McDermott: Thank you all very much.


Kasthuri Rangan: Let's give him a round of applause.


William McDermott: Thank you, Kash. Thank you.


Kasthuri Rangan: Thank you.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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