Workday delivers strong Q4, sees strong demand for AI offerings
Workday reported better-than-expected fourth quarter earnings as the company saw strong demand for its AI products and more penetration across industries.
Workday reported better-than-expected fourth quarter earnings as the company saw strong demand for its AI products and more penetration across industries.
For Michael Storey, Chief Experience Officer at RentSpree, customer experience (CX) is intertwined with processes that can be simplified, a bevy of user experience metrics and teams across the company that realize strong CX equates to strong business results.
Five9 is betting that the contextual data layer above AI models will be just as critical to enterprises, and potentially be the difference in return on investment.
Walmart continues to bet on leveraging AI, optimizing its supply chain and developing a host of related businesses that'll grow operating profits.
Palo Alto Networks reported better-than-expected second quarter results and indicated that demand was helped by the need for AI-driven cybersecurity and enterprises consolidating platforms.
Freshworks is planning to expand by courting enterprises fed up with their SaaS providers and layering in AI in its platform. Freshworks is also looking to land ServiceNow defectors.
Monday.com said it is landing more CRM customers and large enterprise accounts as it outlined plans to double-down on its strategy with a consumption model for AI.
Uber addressed long-running concerns about its autonomous vehicle strategy with a plan that revolves around partnering and leveraging its data platform to manage workloads and rides.
Intel is still on the hunt for a CEO, but the company's fourth quarter results were better-than-expected even as sales fell from a year ago in every division except for network and edge computing.
Starbucks is leaning in on process improvement for mobile orders, optimization and technology to get wait times down to 4 minutes in most of its cafes, said CEO Brian Niccol.