Cornerstone OnDemand slightly misses Q4, still sets record This article is sponsored by:
Despite recording record revenue in Q4 2013 of $54.9 million, Cornerstone OnDemand slightly missed forecasts. Even so, the outlook is bright.
Despite recording record revenue in Q4 2013 of $54.9 million, Cornerstone OnDemand slightly missed forecasts. Even so, the outlook is bright.
Tableau's Q4 results were well above analyst expectations. The market rewarded the company with a big uptick in the price, valuing Tableau north of $5.3 billion
Losses may have doubled at NetSuite, but the revenue growth is impressive as the firm builds an increasing stake in the larger enterprise market.
IBM hit earnings but missed revenue forecasts in Q4. Hardware is the big drag but there are new lines of business to cheer up the market.
SAP signals accelerated cloud growth as the core on-premise business shrinks. Margin will take a hit along the way.
Oracle has started defining its success in SaaS in terms of bookings rather than revenues growth. Is it signalling a strong cloud future, disguising its currently lacklustre SaaS performance — or both?
SAP marginally misses analyst expectations for Q4 2013 but doesn't rock the market. Even so, important questions remain.
TIBCO rounded out a rocky year with record numbers and both top and bottom lines. 2014 promises to be interesting as it pivots to a cloud model and redoubles its efforts to capitalise on operational analytics
As Meg Whitman tucks into her turkey today, the woman whose mission it is to save Hewlett Packard from itself may well be reflecting on what can only be described as a mixed bag of a day yesterday.
Xero has understood the value of building a platform for growth and not just another software. This is helping it bring new functionality while instilling confidence to expand aggressively.
Workday not only blew out its numbers, it upped its full year forecast and announced the appointment of Jerry Yang to the board. It all makes for heady stuff.
NetSuite did well in Q3 but the top line numbers belie a sales mix that was skewed by a handful of very large deals.