State of the Cloud 2023 with Bessemer Venture Partners
1. UP NEXT: State of the Cloud 2023
with Bessemer Venture Partners
Caty Rea
VP
Bessemer Venture
Partners
Janelle Teng
VP
Bessemer Venture
Partners
Mary D'Onofrio
Partner
Bessemer Venture
Partners
2. State of the Cloud 2023
with Bessemer Venture Partners
Caty Rea
VP
Bessemer Venture
Partners
Janelle Teng
VP
Bessemer Venture
Partners
Mary D'Onofrio
Partner
Bessemer Venture
Partners
4. -60%
-50%
-40%
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
Jan 03, 2022 Jul 04, 2022 Dec 30, 2022
The SaaSacre of 2022
-51.3%
EMCLOUD
-33.8%
NASDAQ
-19.7%
S&P 500
-9.2%
Dow Jones
Net Change Source: BVP Cloud Index
Jan-2022 Jul-2022 Dec-2022
5. 0.0%
1.0%
2.0%
3.0%
4.0%
5.0%
2020
2019
2017
2012 2013 2015 2016 2018 2021 2022
10-Yr US Treasury yield
Avg EMCLOUD EV/NTM Rev multiple
10.29x
(10yr avg, trailing)
13.09x
(5yr avg, trailing)
7.48x
(5yr avg, 2012-2017)
Source: CIQ, FRED
3.9%
5.7x
Major headline of the year: hiking interest rates leading to cloud
multiple compression
30x
25x
20x
15x
10x
5x
0x
2014
6. Software IPOs came to a halt, and M&As
slowed
Source: J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley
$0B
$50B
$100B
$150B
$200B
$250B
$300B
$350B
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
AGGREGATE VALUE OF SOFTWARE M&AS
$0B
$4B
$8B
$12B
$16B
$20B
$24B
$28B
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
AGGREGATE VALUE OF SOFTWARE IPOS
7. 2023 started off with more light at the end of the tunnel
+25.4%
EMCLOUD
+31.7%
NASDAQ
+6.5%
S&P 500
+16.9%
Dow Jones
Source: BVP Cloud Index (as of 8.15.23)
Net Change
Jan-2023 Mar-2023 May-2023 August-2023
-10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
12. Source: BVP Cloud Index (11.30.21)
-20% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 120% 140% 160%
40.0x
60.0x
10.0x
0.0x
20.0x
30.0x
50.0x
70.0x
1-Factor
R² = 0.34
Growth vs. profitability trade-off
is top of mind for cloud CEOs,
especially after the market
paradigm shift
Efficiency
Score
NOV ’21
IN NOV ’21, AT PEAK MARKET EXUBERANCE…
the ratio was 6:1 in favor of growth
RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF GROWTH TO PROFITABILITY: 6:1
2-FACTOR REGRESSION
Revenue Growth
Co-efficient
39.8
FCF Margin
Co-efficient
6.3
EV/NTM Rev Multiple
13. 0.0x
2.0x
4.0x
6.0x
8.0x
10.0x
12.0x
14.0x
16.0x
18.0x
-40.0% -20.0% 0.0% 20.0% 40.0% 60.0% 80.0%
TODAY
RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF GROWTH TO PROFITABILITY: 2:1
The ratio is closer to ~2:1 in favor of
growth
TODAY,
2-FACTOR REGRESSION
Revenue Growth
Co-efficient
14.7
FCF Margin
Co-efficient
8.9
Source: BVP Cloud Index (8.15.23)
EV/Forward Revenue
Growth vs. profitability trade-off
is top of mind for cloud CEOs,
especially after the market
paradigm shift
1-Factor
R² =0.35
Efficiency
Score
14. HOW DOES THIS TRANSLATE
TO THE PRIVATE MARKET?
Total Valuation
$659B
Average Multiple
26x ARR
Average YoY
ARR Growth
55% YoY
15. WHEN ARE YOU AIMING FOR CASH-
FLOW BREAKEVEN?
Majority of Cloud 100 companies will be
profitable by the end of 2024
23%
5%
34%
32%
6%
Already Cash-Flow
Positive
By End of 2023 End of 2024 End of 2025 2026+
Even with slowing growth,
Cloud 100 companies have
adjusted to the public
market’s focus on efficiency:
23%
Of The Cloud 100 are
profitable today
62%
Of The Cloud 100 will be
cash-flow breakeven by the
end of 2024
16. Burning
meaningfully
less in 2023
Burning slightly
more, slightly less,
or about the same
IMPLIED YEAR-OVER-YEAR
CHANGE IN BURN IN 2023
Unprofitable Cloud 100 members
7%
36%
58%
Derived from Cloud 100 survey results of CY22 and CY23 burn ranges. Excludes cash-flow positive Cloud 100 members.
~60% of unprofitable
Cloud 100 companies
meaningfully
improved burn
in 2023
Burning meaningfully
more in 2023
Budget priorities have shifted to
adapt to the changing
macroeconomic landscape
17. After years of defying gravity, the average Cloud 100 growth rate fell
to 55% in 2023
60%
65%
90%
80%
90%
100%
55%
65%
95%
100% 100%
110%
120%
70%
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Average Top Quartile
CLOUD 100 GROWTH RATES
18. 9x 8x
11x
13x
23x
34x
30x
26x
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Average
+278%
2016 to 2021
Footnote: Data reflects trailing twelve months from July of each year
Cloud 100 multiples continue to reset through 2023; ARR multiples
have fallen 21% since the peak in 2021
(21%)
2021 to 2023
CLOUD 100 MULTIPLES
19. Top tactics for Cloud startups to drive
efficient growth
GROSS MARGINS
1.
1. Negotiate with hosting providers
2. Monitor and optimize cloud usage
3. Improve code to unlock performance and cost
improvements
SALES & MARKETING
2.
1. Review sales attainment, rep-by-rep
2. Review your quotas and sales comp
3. Clearly define focus on ICP
G&A
3.
1. Reduce real estate expenses
2. Negotiate and optimize vendor spend
3. Leverage software and automation
R&D
4.
1. Drive product roadmap prioritization
2. Drive engineering effectiveness
3. Create a culture that values ingenuity over
headcount growth
PEOPLE
5.
1. Freeze headcount for a period to understand
impact on the business
2. Leverage zero-based budgeting
3. Streamline overlapping projects
PRICING & PACKAGING
6.
1. Experiment with raising prices
for new and old customers
2. Consider adding volumetric
or tiered pricing components
3. Default to annual upfront prepayments
Read on Atlas
20. GROSS MARGINS: CASE STUDY
SendGrid found seven-figure cost savings by refactoring the
most “expensive” pieces of their email infrastructure
software
To do that, they had to balance two objectives: optimizing costs and developing
new features. To execute this, the engineering team:
Tactic
Improve code to unlock
performance and cost
improvements around cloud
hosting
1.
Re-wrote a microservice in a more performant language
In another case, the team re-wrote and re-optimized the pieces of an old daemon
over a multi-year period
2.
1.
Cloud-based email marketing platform processing
130B+ emails per month
22. GlossGenius’s initial success was driven by strong organic evangelism among independent
stylists who were often owner-operators of their own business.
As GlossGenius continued to scale, it layered on new acquisition strategies, such as
referral programs and paid channels, and tracked each channel closely.
The north star for GlossGenius: Double down on channels that
demonstrate best-in-class LTV/CAC of >3x and CAC payback
under 8 months
2.
Leading SaaS and payments platform for 60K+ beauty and
wellness companies
SALES AND MARKETING: CASE STUDY
Review CAC at a channel-
by-channel level to
understand which channels
are performing best and shift
spend accordingly
Tactic
23. G&A: CASE STUDY
During the macroeconomic pull-back, it was important for
Capmo to look at rationalizing
SaaS usage
Capmo realized 33% savings on strategic contracts and 50% faster time to
contract approvals by leveraging a third-party vendor called Vertice for two key use
cases:
1.
2.
Negotiating proactively with vendors
Increasing oversight of applications to identify opportunities for optimization
3.
Negotiate and optimize
SaaS vendor spend
Tactic
Construction management software used in
40K+ construction projects
25. Research & Development best practices:
LLMs offer efficiency to every internal function
Administrative
a. Document/email drafting
b. Scheduling
c. Task management
Management
a. Decision support
b. Improved communication
c. Performance analysis
Marketing
a. Content creation
b. Market analysis
c. Campaign optimization
Sales
a. Lead generation
b. Collateral creation
c. Forecasting
Customer Support
a. AI chatbots
b. Knowledge base upkeep
c. Sentiment analysis
Software Engineering
a. Code generation/review
b. Bug analysis
c. Documentation
HR
a. Recruitment assistance
b. Onboarding and training
c. Policy management
Legal
a. Document automation
b. Legal research
c. Compliance assessment
26. Four steps to LLM adoption
ANALYZE BUILD
Self-evaluation: inner workings of your company & product Experimental action Long-term strategy
INTERNAL AUDIT:
Look inside - identify departments
and functions where AI tools
can have most impact
1.
BUILD A LONG-TERM PLAN:
Consider downstream implications for
competition and defensibility (what’s your
AI “next act”)
4.
REEVALUATE THE
PRODUCT ROADMAP:
Use first principles and an AI-
native lens to assess product
roadmap
2.
TAKE FIRST STEPS:
Choose actionable projects and
get busy road-testing capabilities
3.
27. 55% of The Cloud 100
have announced
generative AI products or
features in the last 8
months
CLOUD 100 COMPANIES
USING AI / ML
65%
5%
30%
The relevance of AI in cloud cannot
be understated, with AI taking
center stage in cloud product
development
Embedded AI in
features to
enhance core
applications
AI-Native
Do not use AI /
ML in their
product
28. How Cloudinary’s embedded AI strategy boosts
productivity for current users and unlocks incremental
TAM
Increase customer satisfaction and
engagement with AI-powered
productivity gains
1.
TAM expansion by enabling non-
technical professionals to make what
used to be developer-grade media
modifications
2.
NDR multiplier through selling additional
seats to adjacent functions (e.g.,
marketing)
3.
OUTCOMES:
Cloudinary’s new Generative Replace feature uses
natural language prompts to detect and replace
objects in photos.
Cloud solution for managing digital
media assets
Founded in
2012
2023 Cloud 100 Rank
#81
AI case study
Embedded AI
29. Databricks’s acquisition of MosaicML to further its
platform functionality in AI
In July 2023, Databricks completed its $1.3B
acquisition of MosaicML, a platform enabling
enterprises to create, train, and deploy their own
generative AI models
<
Rapid expansion of Databricks’s
generative AI product portfolio,
supporting launch of Lakehouse AI
(platform for accelerating generative AI
model production)
1.
Creates a cost-effective, unified
platform for customers to manage and
analyze data at scale, including for
proprietary AI models
2.
Further strengthens Databricks’s
leadership in democratizing data and
AI for its 10K+ existing customers and
new logos
3.
OUTCOMES:
Unified platform for data, analytics,
and AI
Founded in
2013
2023 Cloud 100 Rank
#2
AI case study
Acquisition
30. How DeepL’s AI-native architecture enables the highest
quality real-time language translations for businesses
and individuals
DeepL uses neural machine translation (NMT) and
deep learning to power its hyper-localized language
translations
<
High-quality translations that resonate
with native speakers by capturing
cultural context
1.
High degree of accuracy that earns the
trust of business users for cross-border
contracts and corporate communications
2.
OUTCOMES:
3.
Ability to expand product suite
to adjacent capabilities beyond
translation to sell to new teams – e.g.,
DeepL Write, PDF translations
Real-time AI-powered language
translation
Launched in
2017
2023 Cloud 100 Rank
#100
AI case study
AI-Native
32. REWRITE THE
PRODUCT ROADMAP
⎻ Predictable, repeatable sequences
of workflow within your product
PRODUCT
WORKFLOWS
⎻ What do users write or speak after using your
app? (e.g. emails, reports)
⎻ Is your app part of a larger predictable work
sequence - will an integrated product win?
CROSS-PRODUCT
WORKFLOWS
⎻ Reading/writing within app
⎻ App-specific language
YOUR
APPLICATION
Look at your product from first principles and rebuild
your roadmap
33. AI innovation is rapidly evolving
FULL STACK
MODEL + APP
APPLICATION LAYER
COMPUTE PROVIDERS
DEVELOPER TOOLS AND ENABLERS
HORIZONTAL FOUNDATION MODELS OPEN SOURCE AND/OR VERTICAL MODELS
Consumer AI-native AI-native SaaS Apps Embedded AI
35. State of the Cloud 2023 Key Takeaways
2.
YEAR OF EFFICIENCY
Through the macroeconomic market
reset, public and private cloud companies
have pivoted to focus on profitability
4.
AI INNOVATION
AI adoption increases not only productivity, but
also drives product innovation and new
avenues for growth among cloud players
1
.
REBOUND IN CLOUD
2023 saw more macro stabilization
compared to the sharp market pullback
seen in 2022, and the IPO window shows
early signs of life
3.
TACTICS FOR PROFITABLE
GROWTH
For founders building in cloud,
opportunities to drive efficiency are
present across every function
The future of the cloud economy will be efficient, and will be heavily
influenced by AI
36. UP NEXT: SaaStr Fan Fav: The Latest
2023 Napkin Reveal with Christoph Janz
Christoph Janz
Partner
Point Nine Capital
Hinweis der Redaktion
Greetings and welcome to our Annual State of the Cloud PresentationIt’s been a strange year to say the leastWhen we checked in last April we were reeling from the rapid collapse of SaaS multiples…SaaS businesses themselves were still performing quite well, with more companies than ever crossing the $100M “Centaur” revenue markBut given the massive crash in valuations and tightening of financing it was hard to argue that the State of the Cloud was anything but gloomy.And a year since has certainly brought more bad news for the cloud than we’ve seen in decades: challenged financings and exits with some notable exceptions, macro headwinds, continued meltdowns in crypto and even in core banking pillars that felt unshakeable.But the beginning of 2023, the SaaS world changed with the launch of Chat GPT. ChatGPT shone a spotlight on the power of large language models to change everything - giving SaaS leaders the biggest opportunity we’ve ever seen to deliver jaw dropping products.It’s like we’re living in the cloud multiverse - despite gloomy daily headlines we have a front row seat to the most exciting wave of change ever to hit the cloud landscape…making us as optimistic about the State of the Cloud in 2023 as we’ve ever been.And we that wave is coming fast, so let’s get started.Today we’ll given and industry update on the public and private cloud market with Janelle and Caty, then dive into case studies on how to drive profitable growth, and then finally how AI innovation is changing the SaaS ecosystem for the better.
Let’s dive in!
Thank you Mary!
As Mary mentioned, it is no secret that cloud companies took a drubbing in 2022 in a severe market pullback event that we coined the SaaSacre
Within the year, the BVP Cloud index slid down over 50% which was a more marked decline compared to other indices.
A main driver of the pullback was the external shock of hiking interest rates. Within the year, we moved out of a hyper-low interest environment at record breaking speed, leading to multiple compression and a significant amount of macro uncertainty.
Within the year, the average forward trading multiple of the BVP Cloud Index reset below the trailing 10-year average as well as pre-pandemic long-term averages.
Beyond multiples, macro instability impacted business fundamentals as cloud companies faced many headwinds stemming from recessionary fears, including lengthening sales cycles and tighter customer budgets.
With such a bleak macro backdrop in place, SaaS IPOs came to a screeching halt, which was a stark contrast to 2021’s IPO frenzy.
Similarly, SaaS M&A activity in 2022 also slowed but remained slightly more robust for several reasons:
It was a record year for private equity sponsored deals, especially take-privates
And on the strategic side, there were several announcements of blockbuster acquisitions including Adobe’s announcement to acquire Figma which marked the highest acquisition multiple offered for a software company of scale. While that acquisition has not yet closed, this example reinforces that best-in-class cloud companies can command a valuation premium even in tough economic times.
Suffice to say, conditions were gloomy in the cloud world last year, but things seem to be looking up in 2023.
Year to date, the BVP Cloud index is already up over 25% since the start of the year!
As highlighted, a lot of the uncertainty in 2022 stemmed from changing macro conditions, most notably the rapid interest rate hikes in an attempt by the Fed to curb inflation. 2023 saw more macro stabilization including slowing inflation and the CBOE Volatility Index remained healthy this year.
As visibility improves around future macro equilibrium, we’ve seen trading multiples for cloud companies normalize in the range of what we’ve seen for pre-pandemic long-term averages.
Growing clarity around steady-state conditions has helped to assuage the hesitant behavior in the IPO market that we saw in 2022 and there are certainly more signs of life! Just a few weeks ago, marketing automation cloud behemoth Klaviyo announced its S1 filing, which marks the first pure-play SaaS company to re-open the cloud IPO window since 2022’s SaaSacre.
We anticipate that many of the best private cloud companies will follow suit.
On the M&A side, similar to what we saw in 2022, activity remained robust especially in terms of private equity-sponsored deals. On the strategic side, a recent megadeal was Databricks’ $1.3bn acquisition of MosaicML, a pioneer in large language model operations, highlighting how companies are making big investments into AI.
At Bessemer, we’ve partnered with the world’s best cloud companies since the inception of the concept of cloud computing. We fundamentally believe that the cloud model, with its recurring revenue nature, low marginal distribution costs, and strong net-dollar retention dynamics, is perhaps one of the most attractive and resilient business models to be invented.
So how have cloud companies adapted in the face of one of the toughest years in the history of the cloud economy? Well, with the markets pulling back in 2022, we witnessed a paradigm shift from the age of excess to the age of efficiency for many cloud companies.
Within the year, we saw many cloud companies shift their focus toward profitability instead of growth which is visualized powerfully by this chart. Today, the 10 highest valued BVP Cloud Index companies (by forward revenue) are driving an average of ~14% FCF margin, which is double the average FCf margin from the Top 10 cohort a year ago.
Efforts to drive profitability did not go unnoticed by investors. The market responded to this paradigm shift and cloud leaders that took swift action to boost efficient growth were rewarded for their initiative.
Let’s contextualize this into a heuristic mapped to public market valuation sentiment: At the height of bull market exuberance in 2021, a ~1% improvement in revenue growth had the same impact on cloud valuations as a ~6% improvement in FCF margin. So revenue growth was more important from a valuation perspective than profitability by a factor of 6.
Today, the tide has turned, and this ratio stands at 2:1 in favor of growth, where a ~1% improvement in revenue growth has the same valuation impact as ~2% increase in FCF margin.
So we’ve discussed what happened in the public markets. I’ll now pass it over to Mary to walk us through what happened in the private markets.
Efforts to drive profitability did not go unnoticed by investors. The market responded to this paradigm shift and cloud leaders that took swift action to boost efficient growth were rewarded for their initiative.
Let’s contextualize this into a heuristic mapped to public market valuation sentiment: At the height of bull market exuberance in 2021, a ~1% improvement in revenue growth had the same impact on cloud valuations as a ~6% improvement in FCF margin. So revenue growth was more important from a valuation perspective than profitability by a factor of 6.
Today, the tide has turned, and this ratio stands at 2:1 in favor of growth, where a ~1% improvement in revenue growth has the same valuation impact as ~2% increase in FCF margin.
So we’ve discussed what happened in the public markets. I’ll now pass it over to Mary to walk us through what happened in the private markets.
As a guide for what we’ve been seeing in the private markets, I’ll highlight a few key trends we’ve observed in this year’s Cloud 100, the definitive list of the top 100 private cloud companies that we at Bessemer Venture Partners, along with our colleagues at Forbes and Salesforce Ventures, compile each year.
As Janelle mentioned, 2023 has been such an eventful year to date, and this has been clearly reflected in this year’s Cloud 100 list. First, with macroeconomic uncertainty fueling shrinking budgets, longer sales cycles, and public market multiple compression, 2023 was one of the most challenging years for private cloud companies in recent memory. As such, this was also the first year we’ve seen the total Cloud 100 list value contract, with the total valuation of all companies in the Cloud 100 at $659 billion, down 11% year-over-year.
We also saw the average ARR multiple drop to 26x for companies in the Cloud 100, and average ARR growth decline year-over-year to 55%. I’ll dive into some of these trends in the following slides.
Despite the slowing growth rates, however, we’ve seen the top 100 private cloud companies scale with strong operational efficiency.
Almost one quarter of Cloud 100 list honorees are already cash flow positive, and over two-thirds are forecasting to become cash flow breakeven or profitable by year-end 2024.
When we focus on the cohort of Cloud 100 companies that are unprofitable, ~60% said that they have meaningfully improved burn in 2023. Only 7% said that they’ve chosen to meaningfully increase burn this year.
This again supports the overall trend we’ve seen in both private and public cloud companies, with companies focusing on prioritizing profitability over growth in this macroeconomic landscape.
On the growth front, after years of defying gravity, we’ve seen the average Cloud 100 growth rate decrease to 55%, down from an average of 100% in 2022.
The top quartile companies are growing 70% year-over-year, down from an average of 120% in 2022.
Alongside declining growth, we also saw the average Cloud 100 ARR multiple decrease yet again to 26x, down from 30x in 2022 and 34x at the peak in 2021.
The declining ARR multiples do also reflect the public market contraction we’ve witnessed - at the same time, it’s clear to us that Cloud company fundamentals, supported by the improving trends in efficiency, are more important than ever. For founders who are building in the cloud, my colleague Caty will now discuss the key strategies we’ve consolidated on how to drive efficient growth.
Thank you Janelle and Mary
Increased focus on profitable growth > question for founders is how to apply
Accumulated tactics from public and private cloud co’s by major P&L bucket
COGS, S&M, G&A, R&D, and Pricing and Packing > Incremental profitability
For each major area, explore how BVP portco applied a tactic
Sendgrid case study
Gross margin = ceiling for profitability and big impact on valuation
Public cloud companies with gross margins <60% structurally find it difficult to drive over 20% of FCF margin
Major driver this past year companies have employed to improve GM is optimizing cloud hosting costs
Effective strategy that SendGrid took = improve underlying code to unlock performance and cost optimization.
Found 7 figure cost savings by refactoring the most ‘expensive’ pieces of their architecture
Sendgrid did this themselves but whole ecosystem of cloud cost management software has evolved
GlossGenius S&M case study
Avg public SaaS company spends ~30-40% of revenue on S&M = largest bucket of opex and most important to optimize.
GlossGenuis = SaaS and payments for beaty and wellness - honed in on S&M efficiency as it grew
Initially, organic growth BUT as they scaled, incorporated inorganic channels.
Key was tracking each channel against a north star benchmark
GlossGenius = sub 8 month CAC Payback and at least 3x LTV / CAC
Double down on channels that hit these metrics
Cut those that did not.
Capmo G&A Case Study
G&A = smallest bucket but cost center
Variety of ways to optimize like rationaizing real estate footprint, increasing internal function automation or negotiating and reducing software spending
Capmo = Munich-based construction software company that successfully leveraged this tactic to negotiate 33% off a few key, large software contracts and increase speed to approval by 50%.
Capmo leveraged Vertice to do this, but companies can negotiate independently or can leverage a growing ecosystem of SaaS optimization services and software like Vertice, Vendr, Tropic and others to fight SaaS sprawl
Last bucket = R&D
Most fraught - overcutting in R&D can lead to short-term wins but degrade competitive advantage over the long-term.
Despite challenges, R&D can be optimized by leveraging engineering efficiency benchmarking tools like Jellyfish or Allstacks and driving product roadmap prioritization by force ranking projects by ROI.
LLMs = major way to drive efficiency internally
Automating content creation in marketing to code generation in engineering to document review in legal
We encourage companies to conduct an audit to identity where AI tools could have impact internally, as well as evaluating the product roadmap to see where AI could have a major impact external impact
Start deploying AI quickly while building a long term plan for competition and defensibility
The relevance of AI in the cloud can’t be understated – 55% of The Cloud 100 have announced generative AI features in the last 8 months
Within the Cloud 100 cohort, 70% of companies are leveraging AI / ML, generative or otherwise, in their products today. 65% are pursuing an embedded AI strategy, where AI is integrated to enhance features within a core flagship application, while 5% are AI native
Cloudinary, a cloud solution for managing digital media assets, pursued an embedded AI strategy that enabled the company to expand user productivity and TAM
The company released new Generative AI features, such as Generative Replace, Generative Fill, and AI-powered image captioning to enhance the capabilities of its Programmable Media image and video APIs. For example, the Generative Replace feature uses natural language prompts to detect and replace objects in photos. If we look at the image on the slide, a user in Cloudinary can use AI to identify and transform the subject’s black sweatshirt to a white designer suit using a simple prompt: “gen_replace:from-shirt;to_designer_suit.”
The outcomes of this strategy are: 1) AI-powered productivity gains for users, 2) TAM expansion through enabling non-technical users to also leverage Cloudinary to make previously developer-grade media modifications, and 3) relatedly creating an NDR multiplier by allowing Cloudinary to reach new user personas and functions, such as marketers
In July, Databricks acquired MosaicML, a platform enabling enterprises to create, train, deploy generative AI models
This acquisition furthers Databricks’s platform functionality in AI, leading to 1) rapid expansion of Databricks’s product portfolio, supporting the recent launch of Databricks’s Lakehouse AI platform, 2) creation of a cost-effective, unified solution for customers to manage the data for their own proprietary AI models, and 3) strengthens Databricks’s mission in democratizing access to data and AI for its customer base of 10K+ logos and beyond
DeepL is a real time AI-powered language translation platform that leverages neural machine translation and deep learning
This enables DeepL to develop 1) High quality translations that resonate with native speakers, 2) Translations with a high degree of accuracy that can be used in critical business settings, and 3) Ability to expand product suite to adjacent capabilities such as DeepL Write
Adopting AI can drive internal efficiency and product innovation among SaaS players
Rewrite product roadmap
AI not only boosts efficiency but also product innovation
To incorporate AI into your product, look at product from first principles and rebuild roadmap
AI innovation is rapidly evolving
Thank you all for joining us today
We are now happy to open the floor to questions
Despite a turbulent last few years, the cloud economy is showing early signs of a rebound
Re-opened IPO window, renewed focus on efficiency and rise of AI in spurring innovation, but also efficiency within the cloud ecosystem