UPDATED 16:00 EST / NOVEMBER 29 2018

CLOUD

Customer acceptance and financial results show that Nutanix vision is making an impact

Behind the earnings posted by Nutanix Inc. on Tuesday was a clear indication that its transition from a traditional software licensing model to one more focused on subscription business was gaining traction. Subscription revenue now accounts for more than a third of Nutanix’s sales and climbed above 100 percent year-over-year in the same period.

Analysts believe the most recent results represent a signal that customers are responding to the vision outlined by a number of Nutanix executives at the company’s major gathering this week in London.

“Even though customers are only using core products, it does help that Nutanix is laying down this vision of next steps,” said Joep Piscaer (@jpiscaer), guest host of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s mobile livestreaming studio, during the second day of the .NEXT Conference. “Customers are struggling to go from their current on-premises three-tier virtualization layer up to an application focus in the cloud. It helps to guide customers to where Nutanix wants the customers to go.”

Piscaer was joined by Stu Miniman (@stu), co-host of theCUBE, and they discussed Nutanix’s role in delivering hyperscale to the enterprise and the impact of recent news from Amazon to migrate its cloud technology to the data center. (* Disclosure below.)

A packaged hyperscale solution

One of the factors fueling Nutanix’s growth has been its success in offering a hyperconverged infrastructure solution that integrates storage, virtualization and compute into an easy-to-deploy package. Enterprises without large research and development budgets don’t have to build this solution from scratch.

“When I look back to the early days of Nutanix, their mission was they took hyperscale, what the really big guys were doing, and they were going to bring that to the enterprise,” Miniman said. “They’ve done a great job of packaging that. They’ve met the customers where they are.”

Concurrent with the Nutanix conference in London, Amazon Web Services Inc. has been holding its own event this week in Las Vegas. The public cloud provider announced an on-premises data center model on Wednesday called Outposts, which mirrored its own cloud operation.

Amazon’s bold move into the enterprise data center has left analysts to speculate on its impact for the industry, particularly since Nutanix has built its own set of tools, such as a Kubernetes distribution called Karbon, to facilitate simpler cluster management.

“If you compare Outposts to the work that Nutanix is now doing with Karbon, technologically it isn’t all that different,” Piscaer said. “But it’s a matter of perspective for which customers are being helped in which way.”

Watch the complete video interview below, and be sure to check out more of SiliconANGLE’s and theCUBE’s coverage of the .NEXT Conference. (* Disclosure: TheCUBE is a paid media partner for the .NEXT Conference. Neither Nutanix Inc., the event sponsor, nor other sponsors have editorial control over content on theCUBE or SiliconANGLE.)

Photo: Nutanix .NEXT

Since you’re here …

… We’d like to tell you about our mission and how you can help us fulfill it. SiliconANGLE Media Inc.’s business model is based on the intrinsic value of the content, not advertising. Unlike many online publications, we don’t have a paywall or run banner advertising, because we want to keep our journalism open, without influence or the need to chase traffic.The journalism, reporting and commentary on SiliconANGLE — along with live, unscripted video from our Silicon Valley studio and globe-trotting video teams at theCUBE — take a lot of hard work, time and money. Keeping the quality high requires the support of sponsors who are aligned with our vision of ad-free journalism content.

If you like the reporting, video interviews and other ad-free content here, please take a moment to check out a sample of the video content supported by our sponsors, tweet your support, and keep coming back to SiliconANGLE.