Is the Network Dead?
Toussaint: Fragile, complex networks are the enemies of business agility.
Mike Toussaint of Gartner joined us at AI in Action to deliver this message: The network is dead. In his talk, this industry thought leader discusses how Covid has driven a digital transformation for businesses, and how the network is at the core of that transformation. Ultimately, he says, the network as we have known it is unsustainable.
Listen as he shares his thoughts and expertise on the current digital transformation, where the new normal is consistent, secure delivery of business value –– anytime, anywhere, on any device, and at scale. An audience Q&A follows his presentation.
You’ll learn
Why it’s so hard for network teams to talk about the business, applications, or users (hint: they are too busy putting out fires)
The top three current motivators for investing in AI or ML
What the future state of the network looks like
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
0:00 well it's great to see everyone again
0:02 I'm Mike Toussaint I'm an analyst at
0:05 Gartner I'm the lead author on the wired
0:08 and wireless magic quadrant and I'm here
0:09 to deliver the message that the network
0:12 is dead
0:13 now that's an interesting message to
0:16 bring that I'm at a networking company
0:19 with an audience full of networkers but
0:21 I wanted to really Express the gravity
0:23 of where we are today it is so great to
0:26 see everyone in the faces
0:28 um back in person after all that we've
0:31 all been through and but everything has
0:33 changed and covered the pandemic has
0:36 been
0:37 both the worst thing and the best thing
0:40 at the same time and we're going to talk
0:42 through that because it's changed our
0:45 expectations of everything
0:47 it's been bad because most of us have
0:49 lost loved ones it's affected us but in
0:53 the same token it's been the most
0:56 prolific driver of digital
0:58 transformation for business and at that
1:01 core transformation is the network and
1:05 ultimately the network as you know it
1:08 can't support the way forward the
1:11 network is dead
1:13 and for those of you who admitted to
1:15 still have 3650s and 2960s on your
1:18 network
1:19 this resembles a lot of the networks we
1:22 see today
1:24 it's interesting I've always been in
1:26 networking throughout my entire career
1:28 and if we look at the state of the
1:30 network it's manually configured
1:33 it's hard it's going to do one thing
1:38 it's going to give you connectivity and
1:39 you think about it the network was
1:41 really made to do a lot of other things
1:43 besides provide connectivity
1:45 so it's always interesting anytime you
1:46 do a network project at the end of the
1:48 network project you get everything
1:50 connected
1:51 and you can ping everything and you're
1:54 done and your CIO or your CFO or your
1:58 CEO may ask well hey is it optimized for
2:00 my new Voiceover IP system
2:03 probably not
2:04 okay
2:05 um is it going to support my new
2:07 application well I'm not really sure
2:09 okay what about all of our users do we
2:12 do capacity testing do we know
2:13 everything we need to know
2:15 probably not and ultimately we see that
2:18 the way it's built
2:20 most of you are afraid to touch your
2:22 network
2:23 during non-maintenance windows and it's
2:25 funny because if we look at how the
2:27 network is built it's pretty brittle one
2:30 thing one setting one IP address
2:34 you plug in the wrong cable into the
2:37 wrong port on the switch and you can
2:38 bring down your entire network matter of
2:41 fact
2:42 for all of you engineers in the audience
2:43 who here's the question who has not
2:47 brought down their Networks
2:50 right exactly because I was going to
2:52 tell you if you raise your hand and you
2:53 have not please leave
2:55 because you are not a network engineer
2:58 it is a rite of passage for you to
3:00 destroy your entire network during
3:02 production hours
3:05 so your network moves packets
3:07 it doesn't really do much with
3:08 applications you can say well Mike Mike
3:10 Mike
3:12 we've done qos
3:14 have you now
3:15 you have because it's funny because
3:18 Cisco office order qos
3:21 you've probably spent a lot of money
3:22 trying to optimize your your
3:25 applications and your users voice has
3:28 got its own VLAN your printer's got its
3:30 own VLAN you've got a maybe a servicenow
3:32 VLAN you've got a uh a cloud VLAN and
3:36 it's all just there it doesn't
3:39 dynamically move if somebody wants to
3:41 change
3:42 talk about change right if you want to
3:45 change your network you're not going to
3:47 do it on the Fly because like I said
3:48 you'll probably break something so when
3:50 you get to the point where you want to
3:52 change something just to put a printer
3:54 on a network you got to change you got
3:56 to add vlans you've got to change IP
3:58 addresses in many cases you may have to
4:00 add another routing protocol you have to
4:02 do all kinds of crazy things and
4:04 ultimately we see that this means that
4:07 you as Network Engineers become very
4:09 inward facing you've heard it mentioned
4:12 that network teams are putting out fires
4:14 you come in at nine o'clock you're
4:16 putting out fires you leave at five
4:18 o'clock you're putting out fires you go
4:19 to training you can't even do training
4:22 because you get a call on your cell
4:24 phone the network is on fire
4:26 so it's like wait a minute this can't be
4:29 the way and this means that the network
4:31 teams can never face outwards you can
4:34 never talk about the business you can
4:36 never talk about the applications or the
4:38 users because you're busy trying to
4:41 manage the network
4:43 and ultimately we see that this costs
4:47 and this is real cost right this is not
4:48 just Mike Tucson saying well you should
4:51 be looking to transform your network
4:54 digital transformation
4:56 is sub-optimal or fails to the tune of
5:00 900 billion dollars per year
5:03 because in depart the network is not
5:06 ready to support that
5:08 so if we look at well what's expected
5:11 now
5:12 all of you have a new way forward a new
5:14 mantra it's a to deliver consistently
5:18 business value from any place at any
5:22 time on any device that's what you have
5:24 to do it's not a matter of well you know
5:27 I've got my land running well what about
5:29 your win well I got my Wan running what
5:31 about the wireless LAN well I've got
5:34 that running well what about security
5:35 you've got to do it all you've got to do
5:38 it from anywhere and we know that
5:39 ultimately if you don't what happens
5:42 well
5:43 if you don't have pervasive Wireless
5:45 people will leave
5:47 if you don't have a capability to have
5:49 people work from anywhere they will
5:52 leave your customers will leave
5:55 your profits will tank it's it's bad
5:57 trust me I work for Gartner we know
5:59 these things
6:03 um it's funny because one of the ironies
6:05 to all of this is that because of the
6:08 way we've always been doing things for
6:09 the last 30 years
6:11 we do things through maintenance windows
6:13 and I always laugh when it comes to
6:15 maintenance Windows you've heard me harp
6:16 on this maintenance windows
6:19 does your CEO know that he or she is
6:22 waiting for a maintenance window for a
6:24 change that's going to affect the
6:25 business your customers
6:28 work with maintenance windows
6:31 do your end users wait for maintenance
6:33 Windows they don't and then we can't do
6:36 this anymore so this we look at the
6:37 state of the network it's not just about
6:39 connectivity it's about visibility it's
6:41 about everything else and to do that you
6:44 have to have the ability to understand
6:46 what the network is doing what's on your
6:48 network you can't do that with the
6:49 existing tools so if we look at
6:52 everything you've been hearing about
6:53 today AI ML and everything else
6:56 automation
6:58 we look at a survey we had and one of
7:02 the top reasons to do this
7:05 is to improve customer experience
7:08 and at the end of the day this is what
7:09 we're all here for
7:10 the network is not about the network the
7:12 network is not just providing email and
7:14 all and all of that stuff the network is
7:16 about the business and the role of the
7:18 network is to get the hell out of the
7:20 way
7:21 so that you guys can do business so
7:23 Amazon could be Amazon so Tesla can make
7:26 EVS so the rest of you can do your
7:28 business that's what it's all about so
7:30 you have to be able to automate those
7:31 tasks you have to be able to have the
7:33 tools like Ai and ml that can look into
7:35 the network and correlate data at a
7:37 level that we cannot
7:39 we've been doing this for 20 years 30
7:41 years you're good as Network engineers
7:43 and Architects we get it but at this
7:45 point Ai and ml can do it better and it
7:47 can free you to do other things that you
7:49 should be doing
7:51 so we look at netops 2.0 as the way
7:54 forward it's an automation first
7:56 approach it's about deep Network
7:59 visibility application the ND user
8:02 analytics it's about using Ai and ml to
8:05 quickly correlate and fix those those
8:07 fires that you keep trying to put out
8:09 that you never do
8:10 I speak to so many customers
8:13 that have especially Wireless Right
8:15 Wireless is like doing voodoo it could
8:17 be anywhere at any time you know that
8:20 channels and channel widths and rssis
8:23 and everything else it could be anything
8:25 depending on floor and everything else
8:26 if you look at Ai and ML and those
8:28 capabilities
8:30 to really troubleshoot and deliver the
8:32 most optimal Network this is where you
8:34 need to be and then finally and this is
8:36 really important
8:37 we've been talking about technology it's
8:39 also about moving from network teams to
8:43 cross-functional teams we've been
8:45 talking about the end user and we've
8:47 been talking about business and we've
8:50 been talking about security those all
8:52 need to come in to that to build your
8:54 end-to-end solution because you can't do
8:55 it with just a network team working
8:58 alone now the security team working
8:59 alone or the application team working
9:01 alone
9:02 so this is what we want to we want to
9:03 build here this is the network of the
9:05 future the future State it's managed
9:08 from the cloud now it's funny
9:10 I get a lot of calls Mike you know that
9:12 that Cloud's scary it's it's very
9:14 dangerous
9:15 it's not
9:17 um moving to the cloud frees up so much
9:19 res so many resources
9:22 um and reduces Opex Ai and ml absolutely
9:25 a part of the network and we've been
9:27 talking about this we're not talking
9:28 about bandwidth we're not necessarily
9:30 talking about routing protocols Ai and
9:32 ml at a at this future state will be
9:35 able to automate the network at all
9:37 levels now granted I know I think
9:39 Tesla's in here somewhere
9:40 there is no true autopilot and if you
9:44 try to do it you know on you know just
9:46 automation no one has reached that point
9:48 yet
9:49 but it's coming we wrote a note a couple
9:52 of months back on the on the levels of
9:55 AI and ml automation
9:57 so we came up with a scale it's very
9:59 similar to self-driving cars zero
10:01 meaning no automation
10:04 to three meaning full automation the
10:06 truth is where the industry is today is
10:09 about two
10:10 and a 2 means that it can troubleshoot
10:14 it can do root cause analysis it can
10:16 understand patterns it can take really
10:19 obscure patterns on things going on in
10:22 the network and correlate it and really
10:23 give you good data so it does that well
10:25 we also see the the the way the network
10:28 is built
10:30 we want to start looking at the network
10:31 as a holistic end-to-end fabric not just
10:35 a bunch of things connected together not
10:38 just a router connected to another
10:39 router at layer 3 or switch connected to
10:42 another switch at Layer Two now we're
10:44 talking about listen do deploy your
10:46 layer through underlay and don't touch
10:47 it anymore
10:48 work with your the the layer 2 overlay
10:52 and that's where your automation that's
10:53 where the magic can take place so start
10:55 looking at your network in a different
10:57 way and that also gives you that that
10:59 capability for agility to move between
11:02 um uh automation for vlans and you no
11:05 longer need to be locked in for static
11:07 connections uh connections and
11:09 separations but that is the future of
11:12 networking
11:14 but there's a there's there's definitely
11:15 a trap
11:17 new skills are required you've heard
11:21 a lot of talk about apis and it's true
11:23 apis are required understanding python
11:28 understanding
11:29 um rest understanding programming it's
11:32 coming
11:33 as a network engineer all of my career I
11:36 don't know how to program and that will
11:38 make me obsolete
11:40 so ultimately this is the way forward
11:42 you're definitely going to have to you
11:43 know retrain reskill but that means that
11:46 you're freed up to do other things
11:48 and makes you more valuable so
11:51 conclusion
11:52 the network I'm talking about today in
11:55 2022
11:56 is the network that you should I'm going
12:00 to rephrase that not should must
12:04 have
12:05 by 2025. if you're going to survive and
12:08 it's going to be sink or swim so
12:10 ultimately the network Renaissance is
12:12 here this stuff really works it's not
12:13 back in the day when you're trying to
12:15 glue stuff together or it really wasn't
12:17 real networking this is real and that
12:20 means that you have to start procuring
12:21 things now
12:23 you want to begin with the business use
12:24 case I wasn't really talking a lot about
12:27 the you know role of our sleeves let's
12:28 talk about technology because we're not
12:30 there yet let's talk about your business
12:32 requirements let's talk about why you
12:35 need it then we can build the technology
12:37 use case after that that's where you
12:39 define the technology use case and then
12:42 what's most important when you get this
12:44 all together
12:45 a robust proof of concept is absolutely
12:48 mandatory don't take my word for it that
12:52 this stuff works don't take sujay's work
12:54 for it don't take sudir's word for it
12:57 pocket lab this up make them prove that
13:01 this stuff works whether it's it's
13:02 Juniper or Cisco or anyone else you want
13:05 to make sure that they're showing put
13:06 their money where their mouth is but
13:08 ultimately you've got to start on that
13:11 road today this is your North Star and
13:14 by 2025 you're going to be there
13:16 um but it's it's hard right we've all
13:18 been trained in a certain way we've all
13:20 come to certain expectations but we
13:22 think that ultimately The Way Forward is
13:25 the network at the core of business and
13:27 this means I'll end this on the note
13:30 that finally as Network Engineers we can
13:33 hold our heads up high now we're no
13:36 longer or you shouldn't be relegated
13:39 down to a room in the basement we are
13:41 actually at the core of business we
13:43 should have the funding that shows that
13:45 we're at the core of business because at
13:47 this point if you don't you're going to
13:49 run into all kinds of issues
13:54 thank you Mike
13:59 how many of you uh your companies are a
14:03 Gartner client raise your hands
14:05 wow only maybe uh maybe 10 15 of you so
14:10 those 15 people know how much it got it
14:13 costs to actually get access to Gartner
14:16 I don't get it yes Mike doesn't get paid
14:20 on that so unfortunately but this is our
14:23 opportunity for one of the most
14:25 Brilliant Minds in the market the
14:27 thought leader in our industry the
14:30 primary author for the wired and
14:32 wireless LAN 21 billion dollar magic
14:35 quadrant this is our opportunity to ask
14:38 questions for free right so uh we
14:41 intentionally left about 10-15 minutes
14:43 for us to ask questions of Mike so for
14:47 every question
14:48 has to be good maybe every question will
14:51 give away Marvel speaker plus a couple
14:54 of other charge keys so if you have a
14:56 question please come up to the mic and
14:58 and stand up uh for everybody that's uh
15:00 uh that's not tired and sleeping uh
15:02 please walk to the bike uh and we'll
15:04 have a few questions uh but Mike I'll
15:07 start with uh maybe a couple first of
15:09 all your closing slide Vision 2025
15:12 phenomenal you said the network has to
15:15 be about user experience has to have ai
15:17 and um you know we have to upskill and
15:20 start with API and we finish with the
15:22 park sounds great
15:24 where do people start yeah when what do
15:26 you tell people
15:28 God I have all this existing Network
15:30 that I can't wave of wand yeah where do
15:33 I start yeah and this is why it's really
15:35 important to understand what you're
15:38 trying to do
15:39 I get a lot of calls at Gartner and they
15:41 send me of a bill of materials hey I've
15:43 got 100 switches they're all you know 10
15:44 gig
15:45 um I'm you know it runs ospf is this the
15:48 right bill of materials
15:49 I have no idea if the right to build
15:51 materials it's like saying that hey I've
15:54 got a I've got a recipe here I've got a
15:56 bunch of things can I make a cake well I
15:59 don't know what is it you want so the
16:01 first thing is to understand what the
16:04 core drivers are what are you trying to
16:06 do what are you in business to do then
16:08 take a look at your current Network
16:10 where's the gap or your computer or your
16:13 end users complaining about Wireless
16:15 you know um are you do you know that
16:18 your your core Network can't support any
16:20 growth what can't you do today
16:23 understand the gap between business and
16:25 technology and go there and it's always
16:28 if you're going to talk to a consultant
16:29 you're going to talk to Gartner which
16:30 you absolutely should you know Shameless
16:32 plug
16:33 um you definitely want to come to us
16:36 with a business case I can't tell you
16:37 how few customers have a mature business
16:40 case done they're still building this
16:43 out as a technology Endeavor when again
16:46 the remember the role of the network
16:48 is to get the hell out of the way of the
16:50 business so they can do what they need
16:52 to do so let's let's come with a
16:54 business case let's understand where you
16:55 are today and then let's build a walk
16:58 run fly
17:00 um path forward let's start walking
17:01 today it doesn't make a difference that
17:03 you're still running 36.50 I'm not even
17:06 running that at home so you got wow um
17:09 but you you
17:10 it's best to say that listen we're
17:12 beginning to walk and we're walking in
17:14 the right direction then not walk at all
17:16 so it's a hard journey the longest
17:18 journey begins with the first step in
17:20 that first step is the hardest awesome
17:21 and I think the next one oh sorry
17:24 question yes yes sir please stand up
17:27 question to ask is related to that
17:29 migration you know actually the slide
17:31 you showed at the very beginning you
17:32 know up is not good
17:34 a lot of senior leadership on the
17:36 business side consider up to be good
17:38 yeah absolutely
17:44 yep
17:46 yep
17:54 how do you present that in such a case
17:56 you know so that you can you know
17:58 convince the business that you can do
18:01 this business better yeah you know just
18:03 so you don't think okay please introduce
18:06 yourself that's a great question
18:07 introduce yourself though introduce
18:08 yourself oh I'm sorry I I'm Jeff
18:10 actually I'm with the cosmos resource
18:13 and Resident engineer awesome thank you
18:15 so again the question I have is you know
18:18 in the past what I've done is what we
18:19 call share the pain you know I'll make
18:21 it hurt for the business folks and then
18:22 they want me to fix it uh but what's a
18:25 good strategy going forward yeah
18:26 absolutely so so again let's start with
18:30 a non-technical conversation I mentioned
18:32 that the way you have to go forward with
18:34 this
18:34 is that up while it while it used to be
18:38 good enough because that's all we could
18:39 get you were happy if you could just
18:41 ping things we're beyond that at this
18:44 point so as I said look at the great
18:47 resignation if you someone if the users
18:49 come in the office and your network
18:51 sucks they're going to quit
18:54 how much is that going to cost you if
18:56 you're if your customers can't
18:59 speak to the customer service reps or
19:01 your system is down and they go
19:03 somewhere else how much is that going to
19:04 cost you
19:05 the the point here is we need to stop
19:08 being Pennywise and pound foolish we've
19:11 got to start playing the long game it's
19:13 not just about little green uh blinking
19:15 lights and that's our definition of up
19:18 what's the definition of up now is is
19:21 that you're providing a great end-to-end
19:24 experience and you're supporting the
19:26 business the way it's supposed to be
19:27 supported anything less
19:30 it's not it's not the future and matter
19:33 of fact it's not even current so where
19:34 you're going to end up is you're going
19:35 to end up spending more in the long run
19:37 because of a failure of insight on the
19:40 short term
19:41 make sense and Jeff uh you know without
19:45 actually making the Shameless plug to
19:47 Gartner absolutely speaking to Gartner
19:50 there are two ways that we we bring
19:52 customers your leadership to understand
19:54 that there is a better future either you
19:57 speak to Industry analysts or to other
20:00 customers who have done this before and
20:02 and have soon seen the light in the
20:04 transition right and and so uh either
20:07 way absolutely whoa we have actually
20:09 several questions yeah uh there you go
20:11 please how are we doing I'm George
20:12 beckmezia and I have a question do you
20:15 provide the same recommendation to OT
20:17 manufacturing customers as you do to
20:20 Enterprise with regards to Cloud
20:22 management and fabrics because those
20:25 networks are much more
20:27 sensitive right to outages and they
20:31 oftentimes need to work in isolation
20:33 right yeah so that's a great question so
20:36 the the advice we're giving is not just
20:39 for the Enterprise now granted
20:40 Manufacturing vectoring networks have
20:42 different requirements there's different
20:44 bandwidth requirements but there's going
20:46 to be more security requirements right
20:48 because if I can take over your PLC and
20:51 do all kinds of crazy things I can do I
20:52 can pretty much take over your network
20:53 so if you look at the security
20:55 requirements on a manufacturing Network
20:57 they're actually more stringent because
20:59 you've got a lot more headless devices
21:01 so if we even look at adoption for iot
21:03 it's even more so on your side of the
21:06 house than it is on the Enterprise
21:08 because in the corporate space we see
21:10 far less iot devices you got a
21:12 thermostat here but you see more so on
21:15 yours
21:16 building out of fabric I'm really
21:18 understanding you know what those uh
21:19 those those devices are doing that's
21:21 even more so and even and yes to your
21:24 point it's even more sensitive to
21:26 outages but remember
21:27 the point here is moving away from doing
21:30 reconvergence if a if you're
21:32 reconverging your routing protocol or
21:35 just spanning tree or those other things
21:36 being able to go to a fabric will give
21:39 you more flexibility more security and
21:41 it gives you a central point that you
21:43 can manage from a policy standpoint so
21:46 all of the reasons that you should be
21:48 doing this is even more Amplified in
21:50 your in your neck of the woods
21:52 thanks Verna
21:55 Robert Eubanks I thank you for your
21:57 presentation today a couple quick
21:58 questions I'm curious Gartner's stance
22:01 on the global ramifications of the
22:03 supply chain and how that affects the
22:05 future growth into new networks that you
22:08 talked about today yep wow and then I
22:11 asked this to sit here all the time
22:12 what's the status of the supply chain
22:14 you you can't make this up it couldn't
22:16 get any worse for for Network vendors or
22:20 for for any technology companies right
22:22 because if we look at
22:24 um even though covid you know
22:26 technically originated in you know the
22:28 APAC region what we saw was that China
22:31 I had you know only so many cases so
22:33 they were still open while we were
22:35 closed so that was something that when
22:37 we got back up we're saying well look
22:39 China is able to support us and and that
22:42 whole region can support the supply
22:43 chain well they came into where now
22:46 they're closing down and we're opening
22:48 up so all of those resources is
22:50 problematic then you you add to and
22:53 again you can't make this up you look at
22:54 the war in Ukraine and the two leaders
22:56 of rare medals fighting each other that
22:59 too is going to is going to slow it down
23:01 so whether it's pricing whether it's
23:03 supply chain the new normal for us take
23:05 Ukraine out of the equation what I would
23:08 have told you if you had called me prior
23:10 to the invasion in February was The New
23:14 Normal will be be happy with 92 you know
23:18 120 days with the current state of
23:21 supply
23:22 with the war in Ukraine now we're saying
23:25 look you know six months a year
23:28 that's probably the new normal until
23:30 those two stop fighting and then we can
23:33 bring
23:34 um and we can bring the supply chains
23:36 back online so it's going to really
23:38 pretty much be nasty
23:40 for at least another two years three
23:42 years before it gets better so plan
23:44 ahead and to that point I just wanted to
23:46 add
23:46 Gartner advice on supply chain and we
23:49 wrote we just wrote a note what to do to
23:51 the long lead times on wireless on
23:53 networking
23:55 plan ahead plan I had planned ahead
23:57 those of you who do your budgets yearly
24:00 you better start thinking 18 months 24
24:02 months down the line I'd rather have you
24:05 and I'm sure would rather have you buy
24:07 the stuff now stick it on the dock you
24:09 call Sadir and say look I don't want to
24:11 put maintenance on this thing he'll
24:12 probably say fine I'm not going to
24:14 charge you maintenance just buy it put
24:15 it there we'll put it in production and
24:17 we'll worry about that then then to be
24:19 in a situation where you don't have the
24:22 equipment you have a new site opening up
24:24 people are moving in and you're getting
24:26 another call from your VAR telling you
24:28 what it's probably going to be another
24:29 six months so plan ahead uh on the
24:32 supply chain out um there is a secret
24:34 word if you tell us you're ditching a
24:37 rubber or shooting Cisco in the head we
24:39 will ship your APS tomorrow so that's
24:42 the secret handshake so uh um uh where
24:45 is ml uh from University of Washington
24:47 he's in the building he said if you got
24:49 me a thousand there he is a thousand
24:52 WiFi 60 APS by the end of July sorry end
24:56 of June you know we got a deal and he's
24:59 got 500 of them coming this week and a
25:01 few more later we have magic we can work
25:03 work with us please
25:06 Ah that's where yours went we didn't
25:10 tell you that
25:12 so I have kind of a comment
25:14 to what you're talking about the fabric
25:15 my name is Ross I'm from data endure
25:18 um
25:19 and I want you to kind of comment back
25:21 on it so you're talking about the fabric
25:23 and what the Network's doing what the
25:24 business needs are right the way I've
25:27 always approached it is more what's the
25:28 application and moreover what's the
25:31 workflow within the application for the
25:33 certain departments right so how does HR
25:35 use CRM versus accounting sure right
25:37 because those are in two entirely
25:38 different things and that's that's how I
25:40 design fabric is saying okay what's the
25:43 expectation of that application and
25:45 build requirement from there because
25:47 nobody has business requirements they
25:48 think they do by saying I wanted to do
25:50 these six things that's a wish list it's
25:52 not requirements requirements are how
25:55 does the application have to perform for
25:57 your specific case even though it's the
25:59 same servicenow is a great application
26:01 to talk about that right because it
26:03 could do a thousand things yep so that's
26:06 kind of the way I approach it and I'm
26:08 kind of wondering you know when you're
26:10 talking about the fabric and you're
26:11 talking about I think you were going
26:12 here a little bit the business part of
26:15 it what's your comments on pulling those
26:17 workflows out and pulling those
26:19 individual needs of the application
26:22 versus thinking about the fabric and the
26:24 overall business need absolutely great
26:26 question and we are violently in
26:27 agreement because ultimately workflows
26:30 people applications that's all your
26:34 business right so if you looked at the
26:35 business plan that's what you'd be
26:37 talking about because you didn't buy an
26:39 application because well we just bought
26:41 an application you didn't move from
26:42 on-prem Voiceover IP to Cloud voice over
26:45 IP you didn't put a new call center just
26:47 because you you had nothing better to do
26:49 so to that point you know when I'm
26:51 talking about business requirements it's
26:53 a macroscopic point but absolutely that
26:56 business plan should be should be
26:59 totally broken down into each contingent
27:01 parts and that's exactly what you're
27:03 talking about now you're talking about
27:04 workflow now you're talking about
27:06 applications now you're talking about
27:07 user requirements now you're talking
27:09 about application requirements
27:10 absolutely so we're in agreement just
27:12 top down
27:13 awesome last question thank you they put
27:16 me on the spot so it's like so Marriott
27:19 International you are influencer for for
27:23 the other businesses so Gardner as as a
27:26 product I have like a personal question
27:28 how do you know that you are
27:31 thinking outside of the box and what is
27:34 your control to making those
27:35 recommendations yeah
27:37 you know as as an analyst and I thank
27:39 you for that question
27:41 we sit and we look at current States and
27:46 what can be what should be and it's
27:49 interesting because as a network
27:50 engineer I'll tell you how I ended up at
27:52 Gartner
27:53 I was a network engineer and we were
27:54 having this really deep conversation on
27:56 bgp timers
27:58 and I had this out of Body Experience
28:00 bgp timers we just spoke about a throw
28:04 an hour about that that's not what's
28:07 important right so if we look at the
28:09 constant the contingent parts
28:11 I was I was thinking listen this is what
28:14 it should be doing these are the things
28:16 that are needed and these are the holes
28:18 and if to the point we had earlier
28:21 constant thinking about the way we've
28:23 always done things that's always driven
28:26 me crazy when people say hey Mike but
28:29 that's the way we've always done it I
28:30 get like hives and I break out and start
28:32 scratching so so from a Gartner analyst
28:35 perspective we get to think outside and
28:38 even so we're encouraged to think almost
28:40 too unconventionally we have research
28:42 that's called um Gartner Maverick we're
28:45 pretty much
28:46 I can I can really go outside of the box
28:48 so it's about really understanding the
28:51 currency of the market when I feel that
28:53 I've captured
28:54 something that it's just not googleable
28:56 it's something that's over and above
28:58 that then I hopefully have done my job
29:00 and when I speak to you guys and and you
29:03 know I get wow you know we didn't
29:05 consider that we'll add this to our list
29:07 and I know you know we've done right